Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 84
Regents Name Two Buildings For Teachers
Administration Changed To Frank Strong Hall And Chemistry to E. H. S. Bailey Chemistry Lab.
Dr. Frank Strong and Dr. Edward H. S. Bailey, two former members of the University faculty, were honored recently by the Kansas Board of regents when that body officially named two Campus buildings after them. Henceforth the administration building will be known as "Frank Strong hall" and the chemistry "barn" will be designated as the E. H. S. Bailey chemical laboratories." Dr. Frank Strong, who came to the University in 1902, was the sixth Chancellor. He served in this capacity from 1902 until 1920, when he
retired and became professor of constitutional law, a position he held until his death in August, 1934.
I. S. B. M. C. A.
A native of Venice, N.Y., he received his three degrees from Yale practiced law in Kansas City for several years, and then served as superintendent of schools at St Joseph, Mo., and at Lincoln, Neb. He came to the University when he was appointed president in 1900. Mrs. Strong is still a resident of Lawrence.
Taught in Leipzig
Dr. Edward Henry Summerfield Bailey came to the faculty in 1883, 10 years after he received his bachelor of philosophy degree from Yale. In the interim he had taught for seven years in Leipzig, Germany. He retired from active service in 1921 and died June 1, 1933.
It was largely through his influence that Dr. Robert Duncan was brought here to establish the firs course in industrial chemistry ever brought here to establish the first university institution of higher learning.
ours "Rock Chick JawkY. AuckW." yell. He was a charter member of Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity in 1890, and also played an instrumental role in the founding of the Kansas
It was Dr. Bailey who, with two other members of the science department of 1886, composed the fam-
BENEDICT CAMPBELL
City section of the American Chemical society.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1938
Buildings Were Never Named
Although the two University buildings recently named have been completed for some time, C. M. Harger, chairman of the Board of Regents, points out that they have never been officially named. Construction of the administration building began fairly early in the administration of the man for which it is now named, and was completed shortly after he retired to be succeeded by Dr E. H. Lindley.
The chemistry building, which was completed in 1900, has no name except the facetious one, "Bailey's Barn," brought about by the fact that it appeared too large for the department of that early date. Now the building is badly overcrowded by the departments of chemistry and chemical engineering and the laboratories of the School of Pharmacy.
Highway Patrol Checking On 1938 License Plates
Topkie, Jan. 31 (UP)—Members of the state highway patrol are not relaxing their vigilance in arresting officers equipped with 839 license plates.
Superintendent J. B. Jenkins said today the patrol still was under orders to arrest those who have not purchased the new black and white
Establish Scholarship In Petroleum Engineering
Establishment of the George A. Spang memorial fellowship in petroleum engineering, to be awarded for the 1938-39 school year, has been announced by Eugene Stephenson, chairman of the department of petroleum engineering, recently established at the University.
A stipend has been provided by the children of Mr. Spang, one of the largest manufacturers of cable tool machines that operate plants at Butler, Penn.
While the scholarship is intended primarily for graduate research into some problem of oil field operation, it will also be appropriate for undergraduate of unusual preparation.
Birthday Ball Makes Profit Large Crowd Plus Good Music Puts President's Dance Over
An estimated number of 750 persons danced to the tune of more than $4,000 celebrating the President's birthday at the Memorial Union building Saturday night, the proceeds of which will be used for the Children's Infantile Analysis after deduction of approximately $100 for expenses.
Final reports of the proceeds of he dance have not been made, but ticket sales at the door were unusually heavy, amounting to more than $215. Expenses of the ball were reduced by $20 when University officials donated use of the Memorial Union for the dance.
The lobby of the Union was generally crowded and many attended as spectators. The crowd enjoyed the music of Red Blackburn.
Clark Howerton, T38, was chairman of ticket sales on the Hill. Other students working with him on the sales committee included: Bill Conner, c'38; Bill Ferguson, c'38; Michael Cox, c'38; Bralp Wire, c'41; C. H. Mullen, c'39; Maurice Bridemont, b'33; and Charles Alexander, c'38.
HAY by WIRE
.wrong or right is he
--finals are over. Everyone knows this but it is still a refreshing memory. Those who still count themselves as among the blessed are enrolling for the next heat. The registration line yesterday morning was about equally divided between new students and boarding house steward's. There seems to be an unusually large turn-over this semester. Maybe it is spring fever or lack of shekels. Don't know.
You may not be able to read this that says psychologist famous a but we waste all our time coming back He line ee of beginning the to contends that the reading should be and page the across forth and back not ricky. The eye reads in a series reader could speed up his reading jump the eliminating by time We're too mixed up to say whether
The above paragraph is not pied, though it may appear to be so. For those who haven't succeeded yet, the second line and end of the second line from the first.
TO THE LAWYERS
I love sometimes to cut a class.
To watch the pretty wenches pass
Near Green hall;
To sit down on the steps and ponder While Nature's blooms fill me with wonder.
cuties.
Slim and slender bleacher beauties
What a bevy.
wonder:
"Whence it all?"
"Whence it all?" Fancy females, thin and plumpy, Grapeful, jiggling, smooth and
Light and heavy,
Short and shapey grand-stand
outs
I must wake from this enthrall—
I've a class in Fraser hall.
Upon the hour.
Back to learning's rock of ages Filled with gray and musty pages Dull and sour.
bumpy, Light and heavy;
"What I learned in Logic . . . I love you; therefore I am a lover. . . All the world loves a lover. . . You are a lover. . . Me. . . Therefore you love me. . ."
The fellow who we heard recite this little gem had better take a course in Life I before he banks too 'ch on his Logic.
Weather
Kansas: Mostly cloudy Tuesday and Wednesday. Rising temperature Tuesday. Colder central and west Wednesday.
Jayhawks Face Huskers Tomorrow
Nebraska Five Invades Mt. Oread With Hope To Victory Over 'Team To Beat in Big Six'
Nebraska's Cornhuskers will sweep down on the University Campus Wednesday night and the prospective invasion carries with it much of the excitement of a Kansas-Nebraska football game, but not quite the same fear for Kansas cohorts. This meeting will be on the basketball court.
Nebraska has come a long way in basketball the last few years, but the Jawahras still hold the position of the team to beat in the Big Six. Nebraska tied Kansas for the conference championship last year and was early season favorite for the title this year, only to have Kansas usurp that place as the season progressed.
Kansas has not yet played the brand of basketball of which the players seem capable, but the Missouri game saw considerable improvement in their play and the game with Nebraska may see the Jayhawks making the most of their latent power.
The Jayhawks have a strong pair of scoring guards in Fred Pralle and Dick Hearn, but the front line has not yet scored as consistently as expected. Consequently the forwards have been able to stay on the starting pair varying frequently.
Forwards Still Undetermined
Final examinations for the first semester kept the Jayhawks off the court for a week following their game with Missouri, but recent practice sessions have whipped the men back into shane.
Don Ebling, sophomore, and George Golcey, 6 feet, 3 inch letterman, have been getting the starting call in recent games, but are not far ahead of Lyman Corlor, Loren Florell and "Swede" Johnson.
Featureting the practices has been the accurate shooting of Harp and Ebling. The two sophomores have been swishing the net from all angles and should account for some handy points against Nebraska.
Amen a Nebraska Threat
Golay has shown more life and fight in scrimmages and may repeat his high point performance of the Kansas State game. Praille continues to be the team's most consistent scorer however.
Nebraska, heavily favored to win the conference title at the start of the season, tripped over Missouri in its first league start. The Huskers' star forward, Paul Amen, was able to play only a few minutes in that game because of an injured knee and his importance to the team was shown in Nebraska's second Big Six game, in which Amen scored 17 points. The Husker star is in top shape again and should give the Jayhawk guards a busy evening Wednesday.
Continued on page 4
Letters are listed corresponding to the last names of students.
The forthcoming dinner to be given by the Lawrence chapter of American Association of University Women, Feb. 8, recalls that the University was among the first state universities to h ave co-education. The dinner is celebrating the centenary of co-education in America, and is to be addressed by Dr. Louise Pound of the University of Nebraska.
Today's Erollment Schedule
8:30 to 10
10:30 to 12
15:30 to 16
15:30 to 4:50
V, L, T R
J, A, F
I, K
V, C, K
F, P, A, Y, U
U.S. Accepts Jap's Apology Tokyo Offers Her Most Profound Regrets; Ends Slapping Incident
When the University opened in 1866, it was under a law which provided for a separate "female department," but no provision ever was made for such a department. Men and women—boys and girls, rather, for they were all of sub-college grade—entered classes on a parity.
A.A.U.W. To Celebrate Centenary of Co-education
The Tokyo government conveyed "profound regrets" and promised a thorough investigation and appropriate punishment of the offending soldier. Allison was slapped Jan. 28 while he and Charlie Riggs, a member of the faculty of Nanking (American) University, were investigating mistreatment of a Chinese woman who allegedly was a kidnapped from University property. On instructions from Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Joseph Grew, Ambassador to Tokyo, launched a stern protest and demanded satisfaction in 24 hours.
That women at the University early felt their independence is evidenced by minutes of the College faculty. In April, 1883, as appears from the record, the case of one Dora Stubbleford, of Lawrence, and later of Coffeville, came before the faculty. It appears that although registered as a sub-freshman, Miss Stubbleford had evinced a desire to enter the university's computer program. The professor in charge of the course told her she could not, whereupon, to quote the faculty minutes, she had spread the report among the students that she would speak anyway. On the appointed
Bitter cold which rolled southward from the frozen MacKenzie Basin and for the second time in a week laid a paralyzing blanket of snow and ice accross the Middle West through the Atlantic seaboard Monday night.
Professor Doan To Speak At Journalism Conference
Edward N. Doan, assistant professor of journalism at the University, and recently elected president of the National Association of Teachers of Journalism, has accepted an invitation to speak at the meeting of the Southwestern Journalism conference at Waco, Tex., March 25-26.
Washington, Jan. 31 (UP)—Japan's apology for the slapping of Acting American Consul John M. Alison at Nanking by a Japanese soldier was accepted by the state department today as satisfactory and the incident was considered closed.
The lowest 24-hour reading was recorded at White River, Ontario, where it was 50 degrees below zero. The highest 24-hour reading north of Sault St. Marie, Mich.
Temperatures fell 46 degrees in 24 hours in the Middle West and a blizzard howled across the northern peninsula of Michigan where wreathy residents just were beginning to swim. The foot drifts left by last week's storm.
Cold Wave Moves East
Forecasters said the cold wave originated in mountainous masses of frigid air piled up at the edge of the Arctic circle.
(By The United Press)
Mid-winter floods harried lowland homes in the Rock River Valley of west central Illinois.
Professor Doan will speak on "The Right of Privacy" The Southwestern conference is made up of schools in Alabama, Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana.
day, she took her place on the platform, and did give a declaration, whereupon Chancellor Lippincott promptly suspended her. The faculty concurred in the action, and the young woman was duly suspended until the latter part of the month.
"Oh, I knew those girls; there were none finer. Two of them were daughters of Lawrence ministers. But, then, they were sub-freshmen. One of those girls, I recall, used to amuse her fellow students by making faces, and once Professor Robinson caught her at it.
The minutes are silent as to the nature of the "disorder," but Miss Hannah Oliver, professor emerita of human development in those days, gives this explanation:
Minutes of the College faculty exist back to Jan. 1, 1870, the fifth year of the University, and early pages are filled with reports of faculty action in matters of discipline. However, only one case involved young women. In April, 1870, three young women were cited for "disorderly conduct in the class room," and were laminated.
"We really appreciated our opportunities in those days," continued Miss Oliver. "There wasn't much levity, for we were all anxious to get as much as we could from our University education."
'Gold Shirts' Fight Troops In Mexico
Followers of Political Exile Rodriguez Kill 25 In Skirmish Near Texas Border in Tamaulipas
Matamoros Mexico, Jan. 31 (UP)—More than 25 were killed today when armed troops identified at one place as Mexican fascist "gold shirts" fought with federal troops and police in the state of Tamaulipas near the Mexico-Texas border, it was reported tonight.
Travelers returning from Ramirez 30 miles from here, said that 18 men had been killed in fierce fighting there. Military and police authorities refused to confirm the report. However, United States newspaper men who attempted to go to Ramirez were turned back by the officials.
Mexico City dispatches said the revolutionists were identified semi-officially as members of Los Dorados—the "golden shirts" who follow Nicolas Rodriguez and are opposed to regime of President Lazaro Cardeno.
It was also reported that the bands crossed into Mexico from the United States. Rodriguez, in exile, had been traveling up and down the border.
Authorities admitted that four persons were killed this morning in a battle between officers and armed snugglers. Unofficial estimates set the number at seven. Chief of police Miguel Cardales said the men had been identified as members here had been identified as members of the "gold shirts."
Propose Series Of Radio Talks
A series of radio addresses on various phases in problems of choosing a vocation has been announced by the University radio station, K-FKU. The talks are to be given chiefly by deans of the various schools of the University, and will extend from Feb. 2 to March 18.
Among the talks will be "Aids to Vocational Choice," Paul B. Lewson; "Teaching in the Elementary Schools," and "Teaching in Secondary Schools and High Schools," Paul B. Lewson; "Proof. Allen Crafton"; "Medicine," Dean H. R. Wahl; "Foreign Languages," Prof. J. Neale Carman.
"Mathematics," Prof. U. G. Mitchell; "Entomology," Dr. L. Laurence Woodruff; "Business," Prof. John G. Blocker; "Geology," Dr. K. K. Landsing; "Engineering" (two talks) Dean I. C. Crawford; "Pharmacy," Dean L. D. Havenhill; and "Law" (two talks), Dean F. J. Moreau.
Missionary Here For Conferences
Dr. E. K. Higdon of New York representative of the i.e International Missionary Council, comes to the University for a series of conferences with student religious groups today and tomorrow.
Dr. Higdon, who was a missionary in the Philippine Islands from 1917 to 1937, will be entertained by the Christian Church young people's cabinet this afternoon and will speak tonight at Myers hall at 8 o'clock.
Tomorrow afternoon he will be a guest at a tea for Christian Church women at Myers hall, and at a service in the honor of the First Christian Church.
School Children Help Pay for John Curry Murals
Toppek, Jan. 31 (UP)—School children over the state are being asked by W.T. Markham, state superintendent of public instruction, to contribute their nickels and dimes to assist in paying for the John Stuart Curry murals, planned for
Approximately $5,000 of the necessary $20,000 already has been pledged.
Corsage Goes With Ticket
East Lansing, Mich., Jan. 31. (UP)—Every student who buys a ticket to the Michigan Junior Jay Hop, at $7.50 a ducat, will receive a corsage from his girl, delivered the night of the dance.
Women's Glee Club
The Women's Glee Club will practice t his afternoon at 5 o'clock in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall.
Two principal officers of the American Society of Civil Engineers just installed at the annual meeting in New York, are graduates of the University, Ivan C. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and returned to the University from attending the installation exercises.
The new officers are: President:
Henry Earle Riggs, class of 1886, and
vice-president Edward N. Noyes,
chief executive of the degree
of civil engineer in 1925.
Dr. Riggs was for years dean of the School of Engineering at the University of Michigan, and Mr. Roberts is consulting engineer in Dallas, Texas.
Dean Crawford retired this year from the board of directors of the national society. He was chairman of the Institute on membership qualifications.
Dr.E.M. Poteat To Talk Here
Noted Cleveland Pastor
Is Convocation Speaker
Next Tuesday
Dr Edwin McNeill Pteast, pastor of the Euelid Avenue Baptist Church of Cleveland, will speak at a university convoction next Tuesday to open religious emphasis week
The week of religious activities sponsored by the Student Christian Federation will also feature evening programs Tuesday and Wednesday, and noon luncheon forums Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.
Dr. Poteat, whose Cleveland church is famous as the "Rockefeller Church," will lead the lunchroom forum discussions at the Union cafeteria and will speak at the Tuesday night meeting in Fraser Theater and the program Wednesday night in Hoch auditorium.
The well-known religious leader is a former missionary and author of many books. From 1917 to 1926 he served as a missionary of the Southern Convention at Kafeng, Honan, China, and for three years was an associate professor of philosophy and ethics at the University of Shanghai. In 1929 Dr. Potec became pastor of the Polem Memorial Church in Raleigh, N.C. and last year began his work at the Cleveland Baptist church.
A four-year course of flight training in the U. S. Naval and Marine Corps Air Service for college graduates and undergraduates has been made available by recent legislation. Applicants must have at least two years of university or college education, be citizens of the United States, and between the ages of 20 and 39. Applicants must agree and agree to remain so for the first two years of active duty with the navy.
Navy To Enroll Air Applicants
Students from Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska and western Missouri are to send their applications to Fairfax airport, Kansas City, Kan. The training course is started with one month's instruction at Fairfax airport. Then the cadet is sent to the U. S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola Fla., where he is given the complete course in flight training.
Upon the completion of the course at Pensacola, naval personnel are ordered to one of the aircraft squadrons of the fleet for the following three years, and marine corps personnel are assigned as squadrons of the fleet marine corps
The pay offered to the cadet during the first year of training at Pensacola, is approximately $105 per month. He is given a $10,000 life insurance policy, furnished with uniform equipment and provided with safety equipment after the course at Pensacola and while on active duty with the fleet, the cadet receives approximately $150 per month.
The quota of students assigned to the Kansas City district is approximately forty. These students will be sent through training in groups of eight every 30 days, commencing May 15.
Rpresentative of Dow Chemical Company to Interview Students
A representative of the Dow Chemical company of Midland, Mich. will visit the University this week to interview chemical engineering students who may be interested in entering the company's employ. A representative of Dupont's is expected shortly.
Oklahoma Still Paces Conference
Sooners Score Victory
Over Wildcats; Remain
Undefeated in Big Six
Basketball Race
Standing of the Teams:
Led by McNatt, sophomore ace who paced the night's scoring with
Norman, Okla., Jan. 31. (UP)—OKlahoma's "boy scouts" maintained their unebatten status in the Big Six by running over the Kansas State Wildcats. 54 to 30.
16 points, and Martin, veteran guard who had 15 points, the Sooners built up an early 13-to-2 margin, never to be threatened.
| | WL | Pct. | Pts. Opn. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oklahoma | 0 | 1,000 | 151 | 102 |
| Kansas | 3 | 1,800 | 147 | 119 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 1,771 | 160 | 112 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 1,500 | 150 | 102 |
| Kansas State | 1 | 2,000 | 150 | 127 |
Kansas State—30 fg ft f
Burns, f 0 0 f
Klimek, f 0 0 2
Fulton, f 0 0 2
Boss, f 0 1 0
Boeh, f 0 1 0
Cleveland, g 2 5 3
Poppenhouse, g 0 0 3
Kramer, g 0 0 1
Neaves, g 3 0 1
Deter, f 0 0 0
10 10 13
Oklaima—54 fg t f f
Walter, f 4 2 1
McNett, f 7 2 2
Roop, f 0 0 2
Benton, f 1 0 0
Grayson, f 0 0 0
Shirk, f 0 0 0
Mullen, c 1 0 0
Kerry, c 1 0 0
Haugh, g 0 0 1
Mesch, g 3 0 2
Martin, g 7 1 2
Snoodgrass, g 0 0 2
Snosegut, g 0 0 2
Gish, g 0 0 2
Francis, g 0 0 1
23 8 15
Score at half, Oklahoma 33, Kansas State 10.
Missed free throws: Kansas State, 12: Oklahoma 10.
Officials: John Lance, Pittsburgh Teachers, and John Bolds, Kansas.
Oklahoma's decisive victory last night over the down-trodden Kansas State Wildcats definitely establishes the Sooners as the Big Six title favorites and removes all but the 'innest possibility that the 49-46 victory over Kansas in the opening conference game was a "fluke."
The Oklahoma offensive powerhouse which has rolled up 151 points in three games appears much too potent at this stage of the race to mount a convincing pass or Nebraska and should coast over other conference opposition.
However, the Sooners face their critical test Saturday night against the Cornhuskers. If Oklahoma can take this hurdle successfully, there will be few bumps remaining on their road to the championship.
Chinese Forces Smash Japanese Advance
Shanghai, Feb 1 (Tuesday);—(UP) Chinese forces, throwing all available reinforcements into the attack, smashed at the spear head of the japanese advance near Ming Kwang today, slaughtering more than one thousand Japanese, according to Chinese reports.
Reported the bloodiest battle since Shanghai, with slaughter on both sides already running into thousands, observers believe the fate of Ming Xian is the turning point in Japan's island campaign south of the Yellow river.
Kansas City Nominates
Whitten as Coalition Candidate
Col. Fred E. Whitten, 16, has been nominated as coalition candidate for the office of mayor of Kansas City. Whiten is an attorney and a member of Phi Alpha Delta fraternity. Whiten broke with the Pendergast organization eight years ago. His nomination came as a result of the election fraud disclosed in the recent cases in Kansas City.
Committee Reports Loans
The University committee on student loans has received application for loans aggregating $6,000. The maximum of a single loan is $100, except for medical students, where the maximum is $200.
Chianusso Is Guest Soloist
Jan Chipusssu, associate professor of piano at the University, appeared in a special episode of the Kansas City Philharmonic presented a concert in Topeka last week.
PAGE TWO
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1928
≈
Comment
A New Leaf
—Or Is It?
Jan. 1 may mark the official beginning of the new year for most persons, but for the student it is of no greater significance than is the beginning of a new semester.
Then he is enabled to turn over a new leaf! clean, unbleamed by such things as flanks, back-work, and vows unkept. Then the future takes on a more promising hue—sometimes—
Sometimes, of course, the delinquent one may be right: College is "nuts"; everybody can "get away" with apple polishing but him; the professor actually is "all wet"; low grades, well, they just "don't count"; the student is always wrong.
But a sign on the registrar's bulletin board reminds us, "It is easier to keep up than to catch up."
If complaining students would just remember that.
In fact, we often wish we could.
. Senatorial Culture
—A la Mode
Are you interested in the reasons for the decline of civilization in Egypt? India? Would you acquire some of the latest information on modern Haiti?
If you are, you need but read the filibustering speech of Senator Ellender against the anti-lynchming bill now up for consideration in the Senate.
To the end of last week, this lusty senator, sided by a strong laynx and strict parliamentary rules of debate, had expended six days and $4,000 worth of space in the Congressional Record in expanding upon these fascinating topics.
If you are interested in the bill itself, the speech of this Louisiana senator should be avoided, however, for it is not even being mentioned.
Filibustering is being spurred on by three thoughts: (1) that the Senate will eventually tire of the continuous talk; (2) that by introducing amendments the floor can be held indefinitely; and (3) that the Senate must sooner or later shelve the bill to clear the way for more pressing legislation.
According to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, total lynchings of both Negroes and whites have reached 5,115 since 1882. Twenty-six lynchings occurred in 1935, 13 in 1936, and 8 in 1937. A great majority of these lynchings took place in poor rural sections whose per capita bank deposits, income, and educational facilities were below the state average and whose citizens lacked emotional and recreational opportunities.
The bill seems to be a worthy one. At least it has "teeth" in the following provisions: (1) State police officials, by its provisions, are held liable to imprisonment for failure to prevent lynchings; and (2) counties in which lynchings occur are liable to a fine of from $2,000 to $10,000.
In the meantime a great deal of valuable time and money is being expended in senatorial "hot air." Which leads us to wonder if an equal or like amount of money expended in the matters of educational and social improvement of these people might not yield better results in time to come.
Supreme Court Rules 'Yes'
The long-debated question, "Can the National Labor Relations Board sit on hearings involving unfair practices?" was settled yesterday by a ruling of the Supreme Court, announced by Justice Brandeis. The ruling was a decided affirmative in which no dissent was announced.
The ruling involved two companies, the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation Limited,
and the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry dock company, who had appealed a board ruling which, they pled, was out of the board's jurisdiction since they were not engaged in interstate commerce.
The ruling of the court was: (1) The U. S. district court is without power "to enjoy the board from holding hearings"; (2) that such courts are without the power "to prevent unfair practice" and Congress has, therefore, vested that power in the board; (3) that the grant of such power is constitutional because the rulings of the board are subject to review by the Circuit Court of Appeals insuring against illegal action on the part of the board; (4) but that the power of enforcement is not the board's such power coming through the Court of Appeals upon application by the board.
This ruling is highly important in that it helps to define certain powers of the board which have been in question almost since its establishment under the terms of the Wagner Labor Relations Act; and that it is a distinct victory for the administration's labor policies.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Cancellell's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication day and 11:50 a.m. on Wednesday, February 28.
Vol. 35 Tuesday, February 1, 1938 No. 84
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will have a stamp meeting Sunday, Feb. 6, at 3 o'clock at Henley house. Students will be locked in their collections.-Ruth Pengel, Chief Yeasman.
ENGLISH MAJORS: Students desiring to enter or to continue the course in Reading for Honors will need a minimum of 8 hours of the days of enrollment. Hours: 9-12, 2-5. Transcripts should be brought if possible. J. M. Bursham, R. W.
JAY JANES: There will be a meeting Wednesday
for the Fine Room at the Union building,
-Roberta Cook.
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: The psychological examination will be given at 2:30 Friday afternoon, Feb. 4. New students who have classes in Psychology or Human Services will instruct about being excused from class — A. H. Turney.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
PUBLISHER
DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
MEMBER
KANSAS
1000
PRESS ASSOCIATION
Editorial Staff
FESTOR IN-CHIEF
EDITORIAL EDITORS: MARTIN BENTON and DAVID W. ANGENTINE
TOM A. FILM
ANGENTINE EDITORS
News Staff
MANAGING EDITOR MARKIN GORELL
CAMPUS EDITORS BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CLAUSN
NEWS EDITOR BILL FITZGERALD
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERTON
SPORTS EDITOR FLOM TORMANCE
DEVELOPMENT EDITOR DAVID COWEN
MARKUP EDITOR LOUIS FOELEE and JEAN THOMAS
RUNWAY EDITOR HARRY HILL
RUNWAY EDITOR JUNE FLOOD
Kansan Board Members
ALICE HALEMAN-JULIUS
RICO JUCOHUO RICO
MARTIN MARKEY
KENNETH MORAH
GRACE VALENTINE
COCHRANE CLAUDIA
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZJOGARD
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EDWARD BARNETT
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Distributor of Collegiate Digest
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press
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Ware-Huls
Miss Frances Ware, daughter of Mrs. W. C. Ware of Larned, and Donald Huls of Ottawa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Huls of Lawrence, were married Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Alpha Delta Pi house. Rev. C. A. Puls of Trinity Church, performed the ceremony
Preceding the service, Barbara Edmonds, c4; 50, "Oh Promise Me" and "Because," accompanied by Corinne High, fa38, who also played the Bridal Chorus from "Lobengri" for the processional, and "Lieberestraum" during the pronouncing of the vows.
The bride, who was given in marriage by her grandfather, F. D. Nichols of Lawrence, was attended by Mrs. Henry Muth of Washington. Ted Hurtt of Hutchinson was attendant to Mr. Huls.
Those assisting at the reception following the ceremony were: Miss Peggy Lawson and Miss Selma Hensler, Kansas City; Mo., Mrs. Roberta Row, Larned; Miss Harriet Dumnie, Ord. Neb.; Mrs Jean DeanHendert, Golden, Colo., and Miss Margaret Shrum, Coffeyville.
The couple will be at home after Feb. 2 at Ottawa, where Mr. Huls is a reporter on the Ottawa Herald.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Huls are graduates of the University. The bride is a member of Alpha Delta Pi, and of Theta Sigma Phi, journalism sorority. Mr. Huls belongs to Sigma Delta Chi, journalism fraternity.
∞
In celebration of the end of the final week, members of the Sigma Chi fraternity entertained with a formal dinner dance last Thursday night at Evans Hearth, with the freshmen in charge of the party.
Music was furnished by Clyde Bysom's orchestra. Mrs. Ed. Charles and Prof. Laurence Woodruff and Mrs. Woodruff were chaperons.
The guests were:
Jody Stewart, c40
Margaret Gillie Carson, c40
Mary Ainten Warden, c40
Elizabeth Barclay, c1une1
Bryden Stephenson, c40
Bret Smith, c39
Maxine Almon, c40
Bryden Gee Sylves, c40
Nancy Johnson, c40
Mary Jane McGovy, c40
Mary Neol, c1une1
Roberts Faulk, f5a9
Rebecca Eichinger, f49
Jean Eichingerer, f49
Helen Moore, c8f
Alex Masonale
Lytton Jones, c4u1
Dorothy Jones, c4i1
Isabel West, c4w
Margaret McCary, c40
Henry Lennard, c4h1
Dennis Collins, c4d1
Catherine Dunkel, cd38
Mary Guild, c4f
Mary Cale, c4f
Arnold Rusha
Lena B. Funk
Maxine Miller, c4l
Jan Roberts, c4l
Roberta Walker, c4l
Bettry Rogers, c4unl
V
Mr. and Mrs. L, W. Dantorf,
Tulsa, Okla., announce the engagement of their daughter, Dona Inez,
Hutchinson, to Edward Lee McEem-
shire, with the McCoin of Lawrence. The wedding will take place early in March.
Miss Daworth is a graduate of the Tulsa high school and a former student of the University of Oklahoma. Mr. McCain, who was graded a B in Math 1055, is office manager for the Goodyard Service stores in Hutchinson.
The international relations study group of the American Association of University Women will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 with the leader, Mrs. Carter Harrison. The group will include Ms. Mary Kee and Members of War in Asia" Members of the League of Women Veters are invited to attend the meeting.
building. The husbands of the Dames will be guests for the evening. Hostesses and Chairs Mrs. Rhea Edmonds and Mrs. Raymond Whitia.
The K.U. Dames will hold a box supper tonight at 6:30 in the women's lounge of the Administration
Delta Chi announces the pledging of the following:
--bert J. Cleary, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cleary of Lawrence, took place Thursday at 12:30 p.m. at the first Presbyterian Church. The ceremony
Jack Goldberry, e41, St. Joseph, Mo.
James McNaughton, Leavenworth
Bill McCune, Watauga, Tenn.
Mr, and Mrs. Henry Pack, Kansas City, Mo., were luncheon guests at the Stigma Kappa house yesterday.
Bill Black, Kansas City, Mo., is a guest at the Triangle fraternity house.
Bi Kappa Alpha announces th epledging of Fred Tegeler, e uncl. of St. Joseph, Mo.
A board meeting of the American Association of University Women. Woman of Interest took 200 book, at the home of Mrs. Woldermuth, Geltch, 1028 Colonial court.
The Alpha Delta Pi Alumnium club will meet Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock with Mrs. George Hedrick, 1133 Emery road.
Wetherill-Cleary
The marriage of Miss Helen Wetherill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Wetherill of Denver, Colo., to Herbert J. Cleary, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cleary of Lawrence, took place Thursday at 12:30 p.m. at the first Presbyterian Church. The ceremony
was read by the pastor, Rev. T. H.
Aszman, in the presence of members
of the immediate families only.
Continued on page 4.
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Just Call K.U. 66 or Place Your Order at the Kansan Business Office, East of Watson Library
TUESDAY, FEBRIARY 1, 1928
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Society-the ceremony was followed by a wedding breakfast at Eva Hearne Mia Cleary and his bride left at St. Peter's Church, where they will be at home at Valley Park.
Continued from page 2
Palms and gladiolus in shades of pink and yellow banked the altar.
The bride has just completed her work for a degree from the school of fine arts at the University, where she majored in public school music Mr. Cleary received his degree from the school of fine arts here in 1936 He is now teaching music at Valley Falls.
Out of town guests who came for the wedding were:
--charge were:
Mrs. and Mrs. Ira Watherill, Denver
Mrs. and Nora Kesler, Lima, Ohio
Mrs. Lucia Boyle, Denver
Mrs. and Mrs. Allan Weaver, Council
Grand.
The Wives of K. U. Engineers gave a bridge party last Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Frank L. Brown, 32 members being present. Prizes were given by Mrs. T. H. Marshall, Mrs. R. C. Fitch and Arthur Whitney.
Miniature blue quiz books were used as tallies, the valentine idea being carried out in the decorations. Members of the committee in
Mrs. Don Haines, chairman
Mrs. F. L. Brown
Mrs. C. G. Bayles
Mrs. F. W. Hamlin
Mrs. F. L. Raymond
Mrs. Richard Koopman
The University Women's Club will meet Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Memorial Union building for its annual finance tea. Ms. Leonard Axe is general chairman of the committee arranging the tea.
Russell-Henderson
The marriage of Miss Dorothy Jeann Russell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. W. Russell of Kansas City, Mo. to Charles V. Henderson, Jr. of Louisville, took place on Thursday evening at 8 o'clock at the Country
Join The Crowd
at the
BLUE MILL
Club Christian church in Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. Henderson is a student in the School of Business at the University and is a member of the Louie Kuhn dance orchestra. He and his bride are at home in Lawrence at 1316 Kentucky street.
Continued on page 4
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GIRLS: Rooms at Oread House, 1225
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Phone 678
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"AT AUCTIONS in my warehouse in Farmville, North Carolina," says Mr. Branch Bobbitt, "Lucky Strike buyers; know what tobacco they want and they'll keep bidding right up until they get it.
"Well—it's a cigarette—it's the tobacco that counts. I know tobacco and I know what tobacco is in what cigarettes. So that's one reason I've smoked Luckies for over five years now."
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Buy It At The Bookstore WHERE STUDENTS GO
University Textbooks and Supplies
Zipper Notebool Fountain pens Stationery K. U. novelties
Zipper Notebooks
Waste baskets
Pennants and banners
Student lamps
Laundry Cases
Fraternity and Sorority crested stationery
Student budget books
R
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Main Store 1401 Ohio
TWO BOOK STORES
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Annex
1237 Oread
2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1938
No-Center-Jump Rule Brings Only Few More Scores
With the Big Six basketball season one-third over, scoring this year under the no-center-jump rule is less than 3 per cent higher than it was last year, comparison of corresponding games shows.
In the 10 games played up to January 21, the six teams had made a total of 688 points, whereas the total for corresponding games of last year was 651, just 17 less, or a difference of 2.6 per cent.
Oklahoma, in its two games shows the greatest increase, with a total of 97 points against Kansas and Iowa State, while the scores against those two opponents last year totalled only 54. Oklahoma's schedule with eight remaining games, will have the benefit of four additional players, newly eligible. Kansas State on the other hand, feels the loss of Groves, conference high scorer, with a total this year of 112 points for four games against 149 in the same games last year, a drop of 30 points.
The other teams are not far from last year's scoring, Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa State, each with four games played, have 5, 8, and 11 points respectively more than for corresponding games last year, while with only two games played, is 13 points behind last year's total.
On defense, Missouri and Kansas State have better records than last year's, but other teams have persevered. They score more than they did last year.
Society--
Continued from page three
Prof. and Mrs. Carl A. Preyer, Prof. and Mrs. Allen Crafton, and John Moore, a graduate student in the University School of Fine Arts, went to Toppeka last Thursday to attend the annual meeting of the Kansas Authors' club. A number of musical compositions by Professor Moore were featured on the programs, which were held at the King Jayhawk.
Thursday afternoon, Miss Carrie Sloan of Topeka, a graduate of the School of Fine Arts, sang Professor Preyer's composition, "The Lord's Prayer." She was accompanied by Miss Eleanor Cooke. Both Miss Sloan and Miss Cooke are studying with Mr. Preyer this winter.
Mr. Moore, also a pupil of Mr Preyer, played two of his compositions.
Gunboat Captain in College
Seattle, Feb. 1 (UP) - Capt, Fred W. Griffiths, 65, retired naval reserve officer, is the oldest student at the University of Washington
Start the New Semester Right — with an Adequate Dictionary Webster's Collegiate. $3.50
Funk & Wagnall Collegiate Standard. $3.50
Merriam Webster New International. $20.00
Dictionary stand. $12.00
Cassell's German or French. $2.50 each
Come in and see them
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. St.
After 37 Years' Service, Chemistry Building Receives Distinguished Name
The Chemistry building, which has served the University for 36 years without a name, has at last been officially christened. And by naming it the "E.H.S. Bailey Chemical Laboratories," the Kansas Board of Regents has paid a belated tribute to the man who has probably been greater service than any other in establishing the state on the map of the world of scientific research.
When Edgar Henry Summerfield Bailey died on June 1, 1933, after 50 years of affiliation with the University, he left a few pieces of his collection to equal in his field. But probably even more important and widespread was the influence he had exerted and the inspiration he had provided for a younger generation of scientists, his students, who have continued in the paths his instruction and interests opened for them until many of them became cocretes men in the world of chemical research and experimentation.
Continued from page 1
Face Huskers--
Bob Parsons, mainstay of the Nebraska team has not been scoring as heavily as usual in recent games, but can be counted on to break loose against the Jayhawks. Parsons has been one of the outstanding guards in the conference the past two years and appears a certain bet for all-Big Six honors this season.
Floyd Ebrahug, Nebraska's 6 feet 6 inch senior center, is also a cause for worry on the part of Dr. F. C. Allen, Kansas coach. Ebrahug gave Kansas a good deal of trouble last week as the Haskers downed Kansas 37-12.
Filling the other two positions on the Nebraska team are Bill Kovenda, forward, and Alton Werner, guard. Werner is also Worrieser. Worrieser is from Frankfort, Kans.
Between halves entertainment for the game will consist of a table tennis match between four experts from Kansas City.
R.O.T.C. Graduates Receive Appointments
Six members who were graduated from ROT.C. Thursday received appointments as second lieutenants in the Officers Reserve Corps of the U. S. Army, and were assigned to the following sections:
James Herbert Hail, c'38, bau artillery-reserve; Kenneth Wesley Willey, c'39, bau artillery-reserve; David Matthew Carle, c'38, infantry-reserve; Frank Mebbien, c'38, infantry-reserve; N a 1th + Greenstein, c'38, infantry - reserve; Daniel James Citron, c'38, ordnance- reserve.
He lived to see the chemical department grow from a total enrollment of 35 students working in a basement room under the tutelage of himself, the only faculty member, until it had its own building in the basement room in 1900 and rolled in classes taught by 35 faculty members.
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He lived to see Dr. Edward C. Franklin, one of his first student assistants, elected president of the American Chemical Society with its 15,000 members. At the celebration marking Dr. Bailey's 40 years at K. U. Dr. Franklin was one of the principal speakers.
Famous Men His Pupils
He helped to found the local chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity which corresponds to the Phi Beta Kappa of the College; he helped to establish the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society; his interest in the chemistry of foods was largely responsible for the establishment of the state food and drug laboratory, and for the passage of the Kansas pure food laws.
Then there was E. E. Slosson, who became the best scientific journalist of the time and helped establish Science Service for the popular discoverer. Other of "Baby's boys" included Elmer V. M. Colmcillum discoverer of
But one can not help feeling that the greatest satisfaction of his life came in watching the men whom he had directed and encouraged as students taking their places in the forefront of the rapidly growing profession to which he had devoted his life.
Phone 1300 10th & Mass.
CARTER
Also largely because of his interest and that of Dr. Frank Strong, another former faculty member honored similarly by the regents, Robert Kennedy Duncan came to Lawrence as professor of Industrial Chemistry, thus establishing the first department of its kind in any American college, and laying the foundation for the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research, the foremost society of its type in the world.
Phone 548
735 Mass. St.
Typewriter Exchange
LAWRENCE
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When rushed for time—an unexpected party—or a surprise "out of town" date—just call Ann Ruble at the Davis Shop. She will be glad to bring a selection of dresses or suits, with accessories, to your home and give you her personal fitting at no extra charge.
Phone 472, 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 1906W after 6 p.m.
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gam; and Prof. Hamilton Perkins Cady, now head of the department so firmly established by Dr. Bailey at KU.
vitamins A and C; Staffor who investigated the use of waste wood products at Oregon; Erine C, Case; professors of paleontology at Michi-
It has been a long time in coming,
but the University should certainly
fegratified that this grand old
Kansas man of science has at last
received a permanent monument on the Campus in the building which he helped to plan and provide for years ago.
15
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↑
Now In The Post
"Guess who dropped in today! ..a BLACKMAILER!"
p
Sir William almost choked over that one. Would his wife never take things seriously? Just because she'd once been a showgirl was no excuse. And then to give the bounder a fiver—! "What's the matter, darling," asked Lady Julia, "wasn't that enough?" . . . It was plenty. Look what happened. (Look in the Post, on page 8.)
Good Old Julia by MARGERY SHARP
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Ralph F. Armstrong's sanctioning case history of a Government project *Homeestead*, Inc...MAKING A CONFESS. Not so easy when you're an armed reporter, with a gun in your rabba and a "busiest" debauteur on your reads. Read a short story by Lee Dietz. ...Continues Frank L. Kluchborn tells you that MEXICO USES U. S. MONEY TO INDUCINE U. S. INTERESTS. Also, stories by Price Day and Richard Howells Watkins; serials, humor, cartoons.
WHY IT MEANS WAR TO BOYCOTT JAPAN
People love to join movements. Boycott Japan? "Sure," they say. But what happens then? Embargo and boycott are equivalent to blockade — in fact, are blockade means war. A writer who has heard the strategy behind American and Japanese diplomacy reports on the steps we are taking along a familiar road.
We Love a Crusade by GEORGE FIELDING ELIOT Formerly Major, Military Intelligence Reserve
THE SATURDAY
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FEBRUARY 5,1935
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
LAWRENCE, KANSAS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1938
NUMBER 85
Record Enrollment Expected
Thirty-eight New
Students Register f o
Spring Semester T h a n
Last Year
Registration of 241 new students for the spring semester was announced last night by Registrar George O. Foster. This is 38 more than had registered at the same time last year. If the number completing their work or withdrawing for other reasons is normal, the spring enrollment will be the largest in the history of the University.
Last year a total of 4351 students enrolled for the spring semester to set a new high by 312. Normally, graduation, scholastic, financial, and other reasons take a toll of 500 to 600 students the second semester, making the student body several hundred smaller.
A new University all-time record was set last fall when 464 students enrolled, 65 more than in 1936, and with the apparent increase in new students it appears that a new recurrence for the spring semester will be set.
Figures given out last night did not include new registrations at the Kansas City division of the School of Medicine. Normally that branch reports a large number of new enrollees, especially in the nursing courses.
Walter E. Myer, editor of the Weekly News Review of the American Observer, will lecture today in the auditorium of Liberty Memorial High School. His lectures are open to the public without charge.
American Observer Editor To Lecture at High School
Myer will speak at 1:30 p.m. on "The Situation at Washington," and again at 4 p.m. on "The Issues of Secondary Education." The second lecture will be held in the Lawrence schools, but both lectures are open to the public.
The American Observer is widely used in schools all over the country in the study of political science.
HAY by WIRE
--with walnut finished pieces. The single beds have both springs and inner spring mattresses. Each room has one hand-hook rug. Radiators are built in, and lights turn on when closet doors open. Bedroom doors have been raised several inches from the floor to accommodate electric heaters with all which bathrooms are provided are turned on with hand switches.
We were reading the Daily Texas the other day and came across this little fable with a moral. This being the case of the final stretch, it seems fitting:
Come, let's sing the saga Of Myrtle the Turtle,
Who beat Harold the Hare At the low and high hurdle.
Oh, Myrtle the Turtle Was slow in her classes,
But it was puffy yet on Fifty-yard dashes.
The gist of the matter Is that Harold the Hare Never was very good At staying in there. Sir Harold, outrun, tore His cotton and swore. He had lost intramurals To a slow sophomore. Said Myrtle the Turtle, "I've found in the clinches, It isn't a matter Of feet, but of patches. While Harold the Hare But this back I was really quite busy At taking up slack." The moral is this: If you stay in the lead, You really can't tarry, You'll have to proceed.
A-men.
For a first-hand look at fagged-out people you should stand at the bottom of the west stairs in Robinson gym and watch the students who have just finished enrolling. They brighten a little as they come to the stairs; but the stairs ill that they have to engage in at the bottom of the stairs. You can hear the family coffers great from away up here.
With all the registering and enrolling going on we decided to see if we could find the name of the first student to register in the University of Kansas. Mr. Foster, the registrar, dug into the files for us and found the catalogue for the year 1866, the first for the University. That year 29 gentlemen and 26 ladies, as they then were called, enrolled for work. As far as can be determined the first student to enroll in the University was John William Fisher of Lawrence. Charles
Continued on page 2
New Watkins Nurses' Home Is Completed and Occupied
By Agnes Munert, c'40
Watkins Nurses' Home, recently completed—the two-story building and the hospital—is now occupied.
Trailing behind white clad Doctor McClure recently, after entering through the back door, I obtained one definite impression of the place—the impression of light. Light flowing windows on the smooth birch woodwork, on the cream colored and green stippled walls, on the yellow lighting fixtures.
Wall brackets furnish the light for the living room, for there is no central fixture. The overstuffed furniture is in mauve and green. Two built-in bookcases of the same smooth birch are waiting, and opposite them are built-ins that cover the black marble fireplace stands in contrast against the wall.
On the opposite side of the hall are the kitchen and four bedrooms, one of which has a private bath, the third has a separate bedroom, share our, bathroom.
The second floor has a dormitory, six bedrooms, and three baths, one with adjoining dressing room. The bedrooms are all furnished alike
Naval Race Is Foreseen
Washington, Feb. 1. — (UP) "The United States, Great Britain and France "almost certainly" will construct super-battleships weighing more than 40,000 tons, if reports that Japan is building three 43,000 ton dreadnaughts are verified. Admiral William D. Leahy, chief of naval operations, told the House naval affairs committee today.
Testifying for the second day on President Roosevelt's program to increase the navy's fighting strength 40 per cent over treaties limits. Leabry added that Japan had embarked on such a program but he added significantly:
Reports of Japanese Shipbuilding May Start General Fleet Increases
"If a nation builds ships in excess of the treaty limits (35,000 tons for capital ships), the treaty nations ally to protect them. Cleare to build equally large ships."
He said that the island empire gives out no official information regarding its naval program, but that "we have information published in a building about very much larger" than existing trenalty limitations.
Five bands furnished music for a recent "Fortnightly" at the University of Minnesota.
The basement divides into four rooms. There is a heating room, a large room which may eventually be equipped for recreational purposes, and two small ones which will be used as laundry rooms.
One enters the laundry, after passing through the recreation room, and stares at the efficient-looking tubs. The gaze progresses from the cement floor that slopes to a drain in one corner, up the uninteresting walls, past the one window, to the steel gray pipes above, back again to a point above the tabs, and lo, a boudier lamp.
Twelve nurses, attendants and doctors now live in the beautiful building. Although this does not fill it to capacity, 12 women in one building—well, you know how that would be.
Traffic regulations will be enforced starting this morning, according to George Snyder, Campus cop. No parking will be allowed on the Campus drive by anyone connected with the University from the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. without parking. Drivers with licenses should be careful to park in the zones marked on their licenses.
Two places adjacent to the Campus are available for cars without parking licenses. They are the vacant lot west of the Observatory, and Lilac lane—the drive from Miller hall to Fourteenth street.
University students wishing to take a competitive examination for appointment as flying cadets for training at Randolph field beginning March 1 should call at the R.O.T.C. office for information immediately.
Army Seeks Flying Cadets
Parking Rules To Be Enforced
The examinations will be non-academic. Applicants must provide a certified document from the office of the registrar of the University showing that he has completed satisfactorily at least one-half the work leading to a degree that normally requires four years of work, or must pass an examination which is considered equivalent.
The examinations will be given at Fort Leavenworth.
Professor Writes Libel Article
"Legal Actions Involving Presentations of News—1937," is the title of an article by Prof. Edward N. Doan of the department of journalism which appears in the Editor and International Year Book for 1938.
Beginning with a discussion of the principal common libel cases of the year, it continues with a consideration of a new aspect of the legality of news presentation—that concerning the publication of misleading magazines.
E. N. Doan Prepares
Paper for Editor and
Publisher International
Yearbook
Passing to a less controversial subject, it also lists and interprets the most important state legislation introduced in regard to publishers during the year, and points out the implications both of that finally passed and that rejected. Of especial interest here is the mention of attempts in Kansas recently to limit the constitutionally guaranteed freedom of the press. Such attempts failed, however.
The yearbook, which is the foremost contemporary reference compilation on the periodical-publishing industry, is almost monumental in scope. So, is the article by Professor Doan.
Prepared and written in the nature of a survey of all the important law suits involving newspaper publications during the past year, it fills six tightly crammed columns of small type.
The final section of the article deals with cases of contempt of court in which judges fined reporters and other newmen for publishing information which they held, in the form of public until the end of the trial.
Interior Views of Nurses' Home
Professor Dean has been asked to write a paper on the libel laws of the United States for the Institute of Public Press of the University of Paris.
Men's Glee Club Broadcasts Tonight
CHINA
The University Men's Glee Club will present a 15-minute concert over station KF36 this evening at 6 o'clock. Prof Joseph F Wilkins will direct the concert, and Robert Glotzbach, c40, will accompany.
The program will include the following numbers: "Bromes Sing On" (Grieg); "Sylvein" (Sinding arranged by Baldwin); "Land Sighting" (Grieg), solo by Claude Dorsy; "Song of the Flea" (Moussorgsy; arranged by Reddieu); and "Song of Mophthepites in Auerbach's Cellar" (From Goethe's "Faust").
[Black and white photograph of three women in traditional African attire, seated on a rock-like structure. One woman is wearing a tall hat with a decorative crown, another is wearing a headscarf, and the third is dressed in a long skirt and shiny top. They appear to be engaged in a conversation or activity.]
The view on the top left is one of the nurses' entrance on the hospital side of the building. The woman on the left is Grace O. Scott, dispensary nurse, the nurse on the steps is Eileen Shields, head nurse, and Mary Viola Provost, staff nurse, is on the right.
On the top right is shown one of the sleeping rooms in the new home.
WATKINS
HOME,
UNIVERSITY
OF
KANSAS
The two views at the bottom are of the living room. The three women seated from left to right area Mary Vicia Provost, Alma Ott, staff nurse, and Eileen Shields.
NOTICE
Karl Kleo, bursar, announced yesterday that fees are payable immediately after enrollment. Those paying their fees should bring with them their cards when enrolling and their identification cards.
NOTICE
the next meeting of the Mathematics Colloquium will be held tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. Ernest Reiberberry, gr, will speak on "Coastal of Curves," presenting material from his master's thesis.
NOTICE
The first midweek varsity of the spring semester will be held in the Memorial Union ballroom tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock.
NOTICE
Nominations for beauty queen for the Hobnail Hall to be held Feb. 18 are due tomorrow. They will be presented to the library desk in Marvell hall.
A.A.U.W.
To Celebrate
University Women To
Hold Banquet Tuesday
At Union Building
Sponsored by the local branch of the American Association of University Women, a formal dinner will be held Tuesday, Feb. 8, at 6:30 p.m. at the Union building, celebrating co-education in the United States.
Dr. Louise Pound, professor of English at the University of Nebraska will be the principal speaker, taking for her topic "A Century of Co-education." a lecture of prominence and a past officer of many national groups. Dr. Pound is president of the American Association with whom she was in a vice-president of the American Association of University Women.
Chancellor E. H. Lindley made the following statement in regard to the anniversary celebration:
"It is an amazing fact that women had to wait until the last century for educational opportunities equal to those of men." The advent of computer science and university marked a great advance in civilization in America.
"The celebration by the A.A.U.W. of the centenary of this impressive, though belated, new freedom should be a major event not only for co-eds but also for all friends of education."
The meeting is open to all women of the University and of Lawrence Letters have been sent to all senior and graduate women at the University in an attempt to interest them in attending the celebration.
Mss Maude Elliott has charge on the sale of tickets, which may be secured until Saturday night at Bell's Music store, and at the office of the adviser to women and the Spanish teacher. Phone reservations may be made with Mrs. J. W. Murray, Mrs. F. P. O'Brien, or Miss Elliott.
Ballet Russe To Appear Here
One of the greatest dancing groups of the world and the largest ballet ever to appear in Lawrence, the Monte Carlo Ballet Russe will give one performance at Hoch auditorium Monday evening. Feb. 14.
Three ballets will be presented: "Auron's Wedding," "Sylphides," and "Prince Igor." A company of 125 dancers and musicians make up the group, which brings its own symphony orchestra. This is the fifth American tour of this group and includes as maître de ballet, Leonie Masine, and such ballerinas as Irina Baronova, Alexandra Daniolva, and Tatiana Riabouchinska.
As this is an extra attraction for the season it will not be included on the activity ticket. Reservations for seats may be made at the Fine Arts office, Bell's Music store, and the Round Corner drug store.
England Urges Concerted Action in Mediterranean
London, Feb. 2. (Wednesday) — (UP) The British government, determined to call an immediate halt to attacks on shipping in the Mediterranean, today asked the powers operating under the Nyon accord to tighten up the naval forces to tighten up the international naval patrol and suppress "mariayac."
Jayhawks Meet Huskers In Crucial Conference Tilt
captain Anthony Eden, the British foreign secretary, urging immediate action, was understood to have given Genova at 4 p.m. (am. EST).
Hoch Auditorium Will Be Scene of Important Cage Battle Tonight; Teams Are of Almost Equal Strength and Contest Will Determine Second Place In Standings
It will be a case of dog-eat-dog tonight at 7:30 as the powerful Nebraska Cornhuslers meet the Jayhawkers on the Hoch auditorium court in a game that will make the victors the favorites to stop the rampaging Oklahoma Sooners. It will practically eliminate the loser from making a serious threat toward the conference crown.
Tonight's Starting Team
By Elon Torrence, c'39 Kansan Sports Editor
Starting Team
M
PETER M. KELLY
PILVESTER CHMIDT
DON
EBLING
The two teams were co-champions last year, and whereas Kansas lost most of its starting five by graduation last spring, Nebraska has a host of veterans back and was considered ruling fa-
TARA MAYER
(1)
FRED PRALLE
Of these five players, Schmidt, Prall, and Ebbing are sure of status against the Haskins tonight. The other two, Galay and Corlis, are fighting it out for one of the forward posts. The other
P
GEORGE GOLAY
starter will be a sophomore, Dick Harp, who has worked up to a regular position since the season started.
youce GOLAY
a sophomore, Dick
worked up to a reg-
nament the season starte
Band To Play In Kansas City
The University band of 52 pieces, under the direction of Prof. Russell L. Wiley, will make a concert tour in City, Kan., on Friday, Feb. 11.
The band will present two 50-minute assembly programs in Wynandotte and Argentine High Schools, a 30-minute broadcast over radio station KAMC from 5:30 to 6:00 p.m. A free program is available by the mission High School at $ 8 o'clock.
Numbers to be featured on the programs are the introduction to the third act of "Laughrin'g" by Wagner; "Virginia, A Southern Rhipsody," by Haydn Wood; "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Dukas; "From Africa to Harlem" by David Bemnet; and "The Ink Spider" by Robert Boyle, fauel, Louis Maser, faun¹, and Leo Horecck, c41.
The band will travel by bus and will return Friday night. This is one of the weekend concert trips taken during the spring semester.
Regular rehearsals began this morning at 7:30 in Hodak auditorium. Anyone wishing to try out for the band should see Professor Wiley immediately at his office in 302 Frank强劳 hall.
The spring concert, which is scheduled for Feb. 28, has been changed to March 7. On Feb. 28 the band will be in Topeka, where it will give a point concert with the Topeka High School Band and the Army Band, under the direction of Harold Bachman, and Marshall's band of Topeka. Each band will present a short concert and then a mass concert will be given
New Orleans Reports Severe Earthquake
New Orleans, Feb. 1—(UP)—O. L. Abell, in charge of the seismograph of the conservatory at Loyola University of the South, late today reported an earthquake of "very severe amplitude and duration," probably 6,000 miles distant. He was unable to determine direction. The seismograph continuously registered the shock from 1:24 to 4 p.m.
vorite for the title before the season opened.
The Huskers have been disappointed all year long and lost to Missouri in a big upset in their conference opener. Since then they have won rather unimpressive victories over Kansas State and Iowa State.
Kansas has had a successful season so far, in view of the games won and lost, the only blots on the record being a non-conference loss to Drake and the loss to Alabama in the opening Bl Siixe. In conference play
Sooner fray, Kansas State defeated handily and Iowa State was given a severe beating. Missouri was lapped on her home court—a job that is always hard to accomplish.
lame a Toss-n-
Nevertheless, with present conference standings showing Kansas one-half game ahead of the Huskers, the game looms as a tossup, with my edge going to Nebraska on the axis of greater experience. The lornbusers are expected to have our seniors in their starting lineup, whereas they are only two seniors in the whole Kansas squad.
Elmer Dohrmann, 6 foot 5 inch giant, made a fine showing in the Nebraska victory over Iowa State, Saturday, and will probably get the starting call at forward with Paul Amen. Coach Harold Browne is well acquainted with the capabilities of Dohrmann and Amen, who were the first team ends on the Nebraska football team, as Browne is the Huskers' end coach. Amen and Dohrmann had plenty of practice catching passes in football and can hard a basketball as well.
The practice of using a tall player is "goal guard" will be demonstrated in the game Wednesday by Floyd Baugh, 6 foot 6 inch Nebraska center. Al W尔汉斯堡, 6 foot 7 inch Kansas center. Ben Hickman, Big Hit Six, last year the practice of batting away from the basket.
2baugh strengthens Huskers
The value of th is maneuver is brought out in the fact that Wellhausen made a co-championship team out of what promised to be a very ordinary five. In Big Six names they were defeated only by Nebraska at Lincoln and by Kansas in a large part this showing was due to the number of certain goals batted away by Wellhausen.
Consequently Ehaugh's goal guarding should be a valuable addition to the Husker defense and make it difficult for the Jayhawks a score as much as they have been in recent games. Much depends on him but on Hancock and Frye's long shots-shots that are easily blocked.
At the request of Nebraska's coce he Bask-O-Lite goals, with the netal framework around the net, vill not be used in Wednesday's name. Apparently Coach Browne will make the netal framework with his hand and jam up his fingers when attempting to block shots.
Forward Position Unsettled
George Golay, Lyman Corlis, and Loren Florell have been putting up a spirited fight for the disputed forward position. The other four starters are fairly definite, but that one position remains open.
Corlis has been doing some exceptional passing on the fast break and he may start in Golay's place against the Huskers. Corlis' ball handling stood Kansas in good stead at Columbia when the Jawhays were endeavoring to protect their lead over Missouri.
Nebraska will have a considerable height in width with Dohrmann, 6 feet; 5 inches. Eaough, 6 feet; 6 inches; Eaough, 6 feet; 6 inches; On continued page 4.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1938
≈
Comment
Elephantus Politicus And the Dodo Bird
The speech of Glenn Frank in Topeka at the Kansas Day Republican hodge-podge was not of the brand that will make the elephant wag his trunk with unusual vigor.
But even if Mr. Frank's charges were true, they're not the hypodermic that the elephant needs. Mr. Frank should be sufficiently astute to realize that President Roosevelt has been called everything from "Communist" to "Fascist" and back again to "class traiter" with impunity.
The Republican party can beat Al Smith or Cox or Davis with words and phrases, but not Franklin D. Roosevelt. The man has a smile, a radio voice, a fascinating personality, and—though perhaps he-skelter—some new ideas. And you can't beat that combination with less than a similar or better combination.
If the Republicans would win, let them muzzle Dot Thompson, Walt Lippmann, Frankie Kent, "Sully" Sullivan, and Herb Hoover; or at least divorce themselves from such unpromising bedfellows. Then let them utilize the abilities of undoubted scholars as this same Glenn Frank—stripped, of course, of epithets and dead cats—Andrew W. Cordiac; Charles P. Taft, and William Allen White.
Let these men build a program as friendly, as humanitarian, and as public-spirited as the one which, despite his many changes of front and personal confusion, Franklin D. Roosevelt has been attempting for the past six years.
With these men free to steer a course, clear of the cries from bearded reactionaries who keep slipping over the starboard rail, the Republican party stock may rise. As it is, the party threatens soon to have earned this classification: "Elephantus Politicus (extinct) which once roamed this country in countless thousands and now has gone the way of hoop skirts and the dodo."
Great Britain Has a New Ally
When the Japanese-British conflict in the Orient first began, there must have occurred to many persons who have studied the policies and "hates" of Heart, the following question: "Which will he hate more, Britain or Japan?"
Throughout his life, Hearst has endeavored to portray in a personal embodiment, the two "perfect" evils: Great Britain and Japan.
His hatred of the former led him into serious difficulties with our government—into a senatorial investigation, in fact—because he insisted before we entered the war that Britain was wrong and Germany was right, and maintained this to the edge of our entry. Immediately after the war was over, he depicted us as a "cat's paw" for England. Paradoxically enough, his whole policy was in complete denial of his professed and self-manufactured creed of "Americanism."
His utterly false translation of a Japanese book, published in his Sunday supplements in 1912, roused public opinion in this country to a war-pitch against Japan, which was allayed only when our government officially and publicly denounced it for the lie it was, and offered formal apologies to the government of Japan.
Such acts often repeated, led W. D. Wheeler,
writing in Harper's Weekly a few years ago,
caustically to remark, "Hearst voices lie and
Heartst papers lie."
Yes, we wondered what the Hearstian reaction would be to the Anglo-Japanese tension. The recent writings of H. R. Knickerbocker are his answer—flat and not in the leanslip.
Knickerbocker's reporting smacks of the Richard Harding Dainty flavor. Davis, it will be remembered, was Hearst's star reporter in Cuba in 1897-1898. He was the man who helped to put over the Cisneros affair which had so violent a reaction in the United States. He also engineered the Olympia affair which promised even better results until Pulitzer pricked the colored bubble of its being, exploding it harmlessly into nothingness.
We cannot say that Knickerbocker is lying, or exaggerating, and the day of the flamboyant newspaper hoax is, we believe, but a page in journalistic history.
But it is an easy matter to report the sayings of an individual as the driving motive of a race. It is easy to find an ignorant, chauvinistic individual and quote him as the oracle of a people Davis was adept at that.
We can say that a rational and informed mind must question most of what Knickerbocker has to say.
We See In the Paper
One hundred fifty-eight children were killed as were 300 other civilians, according to yesterday's reports, while 700 more were wounded in the insurgents' air raids on Barcelona. The children, fleeing from an orphanage, had taken refuge in the basement of an old church when the insurgent airplanes bombed the church dome causing the building to collapse on them. This raises the total deaths for January to 1,080 civilians killed and 2,000 wounded in raids on government towns behind the battle lines.
Three thousand Chinese and 1,000 Japanese were slaughtered last night in Japanese victories on warfronts west of Shanghai, according to reports.
Who says war isn't a glorious affair?
A New Plan In Community Education
Dr. Philip C. King, president of Washburn College, has advanced a new plan for the cultural improvement of the community in opening to the citizens of Topeka the privilege of auditing both the cultural and practical lecture courses at Washburn.
No college credit is given for auditing, but people have the same opportunities for improvement as are given regular college students.
Courses open to auditing during the second semester are those in history and political science, philosophy and psychology, natural and physical science, art and music, literature and journalism, home economics, foreign language, business training, investments, taxation, accounting and economic theory. Practically all college classes are offered to the public.
The experiment is new in community education. Immediate benefits to be derived are self-evident, but what they may be in the future is largely a matter for speculation.
The large bulk of a people does not take readily to education extended beyond a purely practical field. The effects of this experiment will be felt, primarily, in only the small group which will take advantage of this opportunity. And to them it will undoubtedly be a blessing.
But since cultural improvement is largely a process of slow diffusion throughout a group, there is every reason to believe that in time the effects will become more widespread.
It will be an interesting experiment to ob serve.
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular publication date from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
(the first week).
Vol. 35 Wednesday, February 2, 1938 No.85
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will have a stamp meeting Sunday, Feb. 6, at 3 o'clock at Henley house. Students will gather their collections—Ruth Fergalong Yecamms.
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: The psychological examination will be given at 2:30 Friday afternoon, Feb. 4. New students who have classes which conflict with their examination should see their instructors about being excused from class—a. A.H. Turney.
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JAY JANES: There will be a meeting at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine room, Memorial Union building —Roberta Cook.
University Daily Kansan
FORTUM-ON-CHIP
ASSIGNEE, MARTIN BUNION AND DAVID W. ANGELLE
CAMPBELL
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
News Staff
NBA Big Bars
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOOELE
CAMPUS EDITORS BILL TYLER AND GLUCEE CLANSON
NEW EDITOR BILL FITZZELAER
SOCIETY EDITOR DOMINIC ROMAN
SPORTS EDITOR ELON LORENTRON
MAKEUP EDITORS LOUIS KNOCKEL and JEAN THOMAS
REWRITE EDITOR HARRY HILE
STUDIO EDITOR LOUISE LODDY
Conspicuous among new enrollees is the Lock family, which moved to Lawrence from Columbus, to enroll en toto in the University this semester.
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collelside Press
From their home town comes information that Mrs. Ebbel Lock, the mother, is a prominent woman in the community. She is president of the American Association of University Women in Columbus, also a member of the local Shakespeare Club, and an active worker on the campus. She also holds two degrees from the University.
Whole Family Moves Here To Enroll in University of Kansas
This spring, desiring to complete her master's degree in history, she resigned the position as principal on the faculty of the Cherokee County Community High School, which she has hold for the last 14 years.
Last Wednesday she returned to the institution from which she already holds A.M. and B.S. degrees in education, accompanied by her son and daughter, who also wish to be graduated from the school which they attended. They have taken residence at 612 West Fourteenth street.
Distributor of Collegiale Digest
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
Patricia will be a senior, majoring in social sciences. She attended the University several years ago.
Maurice enters with advanced standing from the Kansas State Teachers' College at Pittsburgh. He intends to major in accounting and enter the School of Law at the completion of his business course.
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Services, Inc.
242 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
CINEMAS EDITOR GAN FRANKISCO
GREGORY
"I know I shall like it here, in the spirit of the HIL," he said. "KU is sort of a family unit. KU was graduated from the School of Law, and all my
Entered as second-class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
uncles—in fact, almost all the relatives I can remember—have degrees from the University."
School Stop Signs Uniform
Uniform school stop signs were recently approved by W. T. Markham, State Superintendent of Public Instruction and George Reid, Safety Engineer for the Highway Department. These signs and an approved safety aid use are expected to be highly beneficial to state school officials.
Haywire--
Continued from page 1
Edmund Fisher was probably right behind him, so at least it was one of the Fisher boys.
The qualitative analysis students were pleasantly surprised last week when they came to take the final. The questions were of the Little Audrey type...If Little Audrey mixed hydrogen and oxygen and lighted a match, what would happen? ...(Our answer would be, bang!) The questions involved much more chemistry than the one above, but the unique wording put the students more or less at ease.
Another hangover from last week's rounds of coffee and aspirin is this little saga: The representative of a coffee company, checking up on the story of an old mountainer who reputedly drank 24 cups of coffee a day, asked him if it were true. Finding it was, he asked him if that the coffee didn't keep his breath "Wall" drawn the old fellow "it helps."
Rental Typewriter
For $500 per Only Semester
CARTER'S STATIONERY
Opposite the GRANADA Theatre
Phone 1051
A. F. of L. Makes Bid For Aid of Manufacturers
1025 Mass.
Miami, Fla., Feb. 1.—(UP) The American Federation of Labor tonight began an unprecedented attempt to organize the purchasing power of its members behind manufacturers who employ them. It promised to spend six million dollars annually on goods made or serviced by federation affiliates as an inducement to industry to seek A. F. of L contracts.
Officials indicated the new program is designed to seek A. F. of L. contracts. The position of the federation constitutes another indirect attack on the rival Committee for Industrial Organization.
They explained the A. F. of L is seeking, in effect, a quid pro agreement with as many manufacturers as possible to sign contracts with its affiliated unions in return for a guaranteed market. The inference, they said, is to encourage employers to abandon C.I.O. agreements.
Green Shirt Leader Defies Agreements
Bucharest, Rumania, Feb. 1.-(UP) -Cornelia Codreanu, leader of the green shirt fasciat iron-guard, today defended government agreements abolishing all military organizations throughout Rumania.
Law Requires Safety Be Considered in Towing Cars
Codreena attacked the government for interfering with the electoral campaign now under way, accused government authorities of arresting several of his iron-guard members and commanded the organizations to define "how the iron-guard will have to protect their own electorate."
The Kansas law requires that safety be the main consideration when one vehicle is towing another on the highways. It is required that an adequate drawbar or other containment装置 be installed if the consimons of a rope, chain or cable there shall be attached thereto a white flag.
Let Us Furnish Your
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
Sheaffer, Parker Fountain Pens
Note Books Note Papers
Slide Rules Drawing Pencils
Ink, Quink, Scrip Laundry Bags
We Deliver
Neighborhood Service at Downtown Prices
"Sandwiches and Fountain Drinks"
COE'S
DRUG STORES
1345 Mass. 411 W. 14th
Phone 521 Phone 516
Where Students Go
THE BOOKS AND THE PARK
Buy It At The Bookstore
Used and New
TEXTBOOKS
University Supplies
Rowlands.
TWO BOOK STORES
Main Store Annex
1401 Ohio 1237 Oread
WE DELIVER
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Hill Society
Bill Mitchell, Tueson, Ariz., a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, is returning to school this semester.
∞
--in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him.
Albert J. Sohch, national chapter supervisor of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, who is on a tour of the United States, is visiting at the chapter house here. Mr. Sohch, who is from the Kansas Beta chapter at Manhattan will visit 98 chapters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
--in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him.
Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Emery Josserand, ph.
Franklin Bennett Clay, Jr. "36 who is now working for the Clay-Leddy Grain company, was a week earlier at the Alpha Tau Omega house.
X
The Triangle fraternity announces the pledging of Bill Black, e'41.
--in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him.
Brandon Gennesse, e38, and Stanford Thomas, e38, members of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, are returning to school this semester.
∞
Kappa En Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Dale W. Whitaker, e'39, Robert and Robert L. Leeming, e'49, Raymond.
Guests at the Alpha Omicron IPC house last Sunday were: Janet Turner, Kansas City; Mo. Lloyd Rocky, Eureka; Roy Kelcun, Roy Kelcun, and Don Simpson, c'38.
~
∞
Phi Kappa Psi fraternity announces the marriage of Frank S. Allen, 179, to Miss Lois Turner of Independence, Mo., which took place Feb. 7, 1837, at the home of the Rev. L. W. Harper of Independence. The marriage had been kept secret. Allen is a former member of the Men's Student Council and chairman of the Phi Delta Phi He was elected to Sachem in 1936, and is a member of Phil Delta Phi, legal fraternity.
The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold open house this afternoon and evening for students of the University at its new chapter house at 1433 Tennessee street. The hours are from 5:30 to 7:30 and from 7 to 10 o'clock.
About twenty members of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority went to Kansas City, Mo. Monday night, to attend a dinner at the Hotel Muehlenbruck.
New 'Card Shark' Game Goes 'Round in Dallas
The Sigma Kappa sorority will entertain at the W.S.G.A. tea this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock in the lounge of the Frank Strong building.
Dallas, Texas, Feb. 1—(UP)—a new game, "Card Shark," is going the rounds in Dallas, and those "in the know" crawl from their beds in the small hours of the morning to keep the fun going.
It starts when a hostess asks a guest to select any card but a face card from the deck. Then the guest is told to telephone a certain number and ask for Mr. So and So, the "card shark" and inquire what card is being held. The answer is always correct.
The solution is simple. A group of friends first arrange to put the stunt over. They agree on a code as follows:
A deuce calls for a first name
a starting with B, a trey A and c on.
on. The last name starts with H, S,
for a heart, a brace, club or
diamond.
If a guest draws a deuce of diamonds, he is told to ask for M. Bert Dent, the "card shark." The "shark" figures a B and a D equals deuce of diamonds.
Japan Makes Great Advance
Shanghai, Feb. 2. (Wednesday) — (UP) Japanese troops were reported today to have pushed a hole in the Chinese lines along the Chih river on northern Awei front and advanced 43 miles in the greatest advance they had made in a single day during weeks of fighting.
Chinese soldiers, who o' yesterday asserted that the Japanese had been driven back, were silent today on the fighting around Linhkwalkun. An unconfirmed Chinese report, however, said that Chinese soldiers had surmised about a possible attack, causing Japanese to begin preparations for evacuation.
The Japanese were driving on Hichouch, Chinese base in north China, from north and south. The southern army was reported 100 miles south of Hichouch-at the intersection of the east-west Longhai and north - south Tiensian - Hukou valley. The Japanese was engaged in a heavy encounter around Taingi, 100 miles to the north.
But in 24 hours the Japanese were reported to have drawn the jaws of their trap 23 miles closer to Huchow.
Hospital Notes
Harry Alden, e38, underwent an operation for the removal of his appendix in Watkins Memorial hospital yesterday.
Joe Van Siekel, fa'41, is ill in the hospital with pneumonia.
Dr. Frederick Ford, resident physician in the hospital, who came here from the University of Michigan, has resigned to become an assistant physician in the Santa Fe hospital at Topcka.
Speller Wins on 'Misspell'
Lorain, Ohio, —(UP) -Glenn Mae Steel won the Longfellow Junior High School spelling contest. She spelled "missell" correctly.
Blind Student Symbolizes Progressive College Youth
John Urich, c39, symbolizes progressive youth as found in the American college or university of today. He is the type to which baccalaureate speakers often refer as "the hope of future America." Except for one or two factors he might well be the winning candidate in a lot of these elections for the "most representative college man" still popular on some campuses in the spring of 2016. Urich has been clamorous bliss.
Now a junior, he has accumulated 74 hours of college credit. Sixty-two of these have A grades attached to them; the other 12 have B's. But he is by no means a "grind". He keeps informed to the minute on current affairs. His student associates capsize him something of an authority already in his chosen field, labor relations.
Teaches Braille in Summer
He can tell you the significance of the latest move made by John L. Lewis in the game of chess he is playing against William Green. He can also tell you what Dizy Dean is likely to do to the Yanks next summer—if he plays. He has his own radio and follows his favorite programs faithfully. He enjoys a good movie occasionally, especially if it is a musical. His hobbies are radio, music, and sports.
During the summer he helps to pay for his education by teaching Brille to men and women who have special needs in the school for the Blind in Kansas City, Missouri.
He himself graduated from this school where his father, a Kansas City lumberman, had sent him, before he enrolled in the University as a freshman. One can imagine the seemingly insumountable difficulties inevitable in his position as a student here.
Overcomes Numerous Handicaps He can not see the charts and diagrams with which professors are
COMING The Event of the Year
S.HUROK presents
Col. W. DeBasil's
BALLET
RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
A Company of 125
With Symphony Orchestra
Elaborate Dancing - Gorgeous Scenery - Brilliant Costumes
ONE EVENING ONLY
The Most Successful Spectacle of the Century
Monday Evening, Feb. 14
University Concert Course (Extra Attraction)
Seats now selling - popular prices: $2.00, $1.50,
$1.00, 75c and 50c at School of Fine Arts
Bell's Music Store
Round Corner Drug Store
HOCH AUDITORIUM
D. M. SWARTHOUT, Manager.
But an one who knows John Urich could picture him waving raffa' baskets in some basement room, or going from door to door in the city selling brooms to pitying housewives. He wanted to be a lawyer—a labor lawyer—and to do that he must have the necessary education, eliminated by a high school diploma or to overcome the difficulty which stood in his way.
First he learned to utilize a metal device for writing Braille with which he could take extensive class notes. Then he found he could obey the instructions in the text and outside material necessary to his grasp of his chosen subjects. He had already learned to use a typewriter, and with the aid of this machine he can prepare his written assignments satisfactorily. He can also read from the documentation and his grades to date prove how well he has kept his vow.
Next fall john will go into the School of Law. "I want to become a labor lawyer," he says. "Right now there seems to be little call for that type of work, but I believe that this aspect of the legal profession loom larger and larger in the future. American labor is coming to realize that it needs trained men—legal men—as its leaders, in order to avoid the chaos which has too often been its condition in the past. That!
Aspires To Be Labor Lawyer
Thus John Ullrich, physically blind but with a starting insight into the problems which confront a world he has never seen, looks confidently to the future. He is preparing himself for a useful life, and he has committed
Two out of five traffic deaths are pedestrians, and safety authoritative report that this ratio has obtained in the United States since 1837. Of the 70,800 motor vehicle fatalities between 2015 and 2016 were pedestrians. Most of the pedestrian deaths occurred while crossing intersections.
Forty Per Cent of Traffic Deaths are Pedestrians
A Meal Ticket Will Save You Money
is where I intend to come in," he smiles.
$2.75 Value
$2.75 Value
for $2.50
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub document Memorial Union
Note Books
Zipper Books
Note Book Fillers
Slide Rules
Drawing Paper
B RICK ' S "ON THE HILL"
Sub-basement Memorial Union
Welcome Students
We're glad to see you back for the spring semester
Try Our Special Plate Lunch 25c
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Opposite the GRANADA Theatre
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ECONOMIZE
By Patronizing
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Sponsored by W.S.G.A.
We have been buying and selling textbooks for years. K. U. students have learned to save at the Book Exchange.
Room 6 Sub-Basement
Union Building
Open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
It isn't too late to advertise vacant rooms for rent in the Kansan.
Let's All Go to the Game Tonite
Help K.U. Win the Big G
VARSITY
houses of the District
TONITE - TOMORROW
TO
ONE 10C TO
ALL
Until 7 than 15c
Dorothy "Hurricane" Lamour "Jungle Princess"
No. 2
Greatest Actor in His
Greatest Creation
CHARLES LAUGHTON
"Rembrandt"
Friday - Saturday
No. 1
Your Favorite and Mine
He m TOUGH Forgers gun shot SHY!
Buck JONES in Boss of lonely Valley
And a First Run Special to Chill and Thrill You
SUNDAY
Joel McCrea, Barbara Stanwyck 'Internes Can't Take Money'
We Show the Best and Leave the Rest!
DICKINSON
The Students Choice
Shows 3-7-9 25c 't1 7
NOW!
ENDS
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Here's the Happiness---
and the Sonia---
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ETHEL MERMAN
EXTRA! WALT DISNEY'S
"COUNTRY COUSIN" in Color
FRIDAY!
FRIDAY!
Hitting the High Note of the Year in Joyous Romance!
GRACE MOORE
MELVYN DOGLAS
"I'LL TAKE ROMANCE" STUART ERWIN
SUNDAY!
FREDERIC MARCH
in
Cecil B. DeMille's
'The Buccaneer'
Help K.U. Retain Her Fame
Attend the K.U.-M.U. Game
PATEE
Week 10c Till 7
Days Then 15c
Buck Taylor
BETTER DAVIS
"Marked Woman"
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TIM MCCOY
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ZORRO - CARTOON
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and
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1000
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Also --- Color Cartoon Latest News Events
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X-TRA BRADDOCK vs. FARR The Complete Fight
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WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Game Tonight Heads Week's Big Six Play Conference Race Will Either Be Clarified or Furt he Complicated By Next Few Games
Standings of the Teams
W L Pct.
Oklahoma 3 0 1.000
Kansas 3 1 750
Nebraska 2 1 675
Missouri 2 2 200
Kansas State 1 4 200
Iowa State 1 4 200
Games This Week Tonight—Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lawrence
Saturday—Iowa State vs. Missouri at Ames; Nebraska vs. Oklahoma at Norman.
Results of the Past Week
Nebraska 35, Iowa State 32.
Oklahoma 54, Kansas State 30.
By Carl Lundquist
Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 31—(UP) —Kansas and Nebraska, co-champions of the 197 Big Six basketball title race, and co-favorites in the current quest for the hunting, will meet tonight for the first time this year in a game that headlines conference activity this week.
At the beginning of the season, the coaches of the two teams each respectfully forecast a championship for the other team. While Dr. Forrest C. Allen of Kansas and W. H. Browne of Nebraska were then exchanging gratitudes. Oklahoma's of the league lead and caused gossip to the effect that they might intend to stay there.
Nebraska was slow getting under way in an unimpressive triumph over Iowa State, but the final sprint which brought victory proved that the team had the wherewithal to win. The Cornhuskers are big, most of the more seasoned campainers, and it is generally believed that they have been playing below the standards of which they are capable.
The game with Kansas should furnish a test, and will either establish or eliminate the team's title potentialities. Kansas, after a week's recess, has shown considerable improvement in general floor play, and will be in peak condition for the invasion of the Huskers.
Whatever the game at Lawrence fails to produce tonight, probably will be provided when Nebraska journeys to Norman for a game with Oklahoma Saturday night, and the possibility of further complications in the three-way title chase is strong.
State丘 displays unexpected strength in almost upsetting Nebraska, and will be prepared to make a battle of it against Missouri at Ames in the other Saturday night encounter.
All new students must take the psychological examinations which will be given Saturday morning.
Men's Intramurals
Basketball
14. 21
Volley Ball
Play in men's intramural basketball will get under way next Monday. Schedules for the games will be available this afternoon at the interscholastic conference of tomorrow for next week will appear in tomorrow morning's Kansan.
Volleyball
The following volley ball games
are attempted.
At 5 p.m.: Beta Theta PI vs. Sigma Chi; and Delta Upsilon vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
At 7:30 p.m.: Phi Mu Alpha vs
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Delta
Theta vs. Phi Kappa Psi.
Will Remove Men on Ice Floe
More Motor Accidents To People of College Age
Moscow, Feb. 1.—(UP) —Ivpn Paimon, commander of the Soviet north pole expedition, whose party is adrift on ice north of Greenland, reported by radio today that his base station has been broken up by crumbling 'ice' and is drifting on separate flones. Papimon reported the latest location of the party of four as 74 degrees, 16 minutes north latitude, 16 degrees, 24 minutes west longitude.
The Soviet news agency, Pass, reported that, while the fiascures did not offer immediate danger, it had been decided to take steps toward removal of the Papinin's group.
Safety authorities report that high school and college ages are dangerous periods for motor vehicle drivers. Figures show that accidental deaths of boys and girls from 15 to 30 years increased in 13 per cent from 1922 to 1833, and the increase for people from 20 to 23 years was 157 per cent. Statisticians estimate that if the present accident rate is very low, 100 boys and girls 16 years of age, 12 will be killed or seriously injured and 65 more will receive minor injury due to automobile accidents.
Girl Astounds College With Tame Reptiles
Ga, Ga. FEB (1)-UP
of her sex, Miss Gri-
freshman student at
State College for wo-
collect, domesticate,
snakes and other re-
Miss Baker, a resident of Macon,
Gas, may be seen about the campus
most any day sunning her pet
sails, Alyssa and Samuel. She
also has several chameleons as per-
nants, which she wears in dress or
pants.
The chameleons are fastened to small chains which Gertiehad has attached to two gold pin. They adapt the chains readily as dress charms she says.
Gertrude's roomates feel differently about snakes and other reptiles, so she has to keep her pets in the biology laboratory.
OWL
THE TROUBLE JAZZ COMPANY
"SCREECH" (Sponsored by the Owl Society)
THREE HOURS OF DELIGHTFUL DANCING with
RED BLACKBURN Saturday, Feb. 5
Admission — Six bits
'Owl Screech'
Saturday Night
The annual "Owl Screech" will be held in the Memorial Union ballroom Saturday night from 9 to 12 o'clock. Red Blackburn's orchestra
C. H. Mullen, c39, chairman of the Owl Society committee in charge of the dance, promises plenty of special features. Other members of special features include Harvey, c39; Jim Bounds, c39; Keith Fierley, b39; and Marvin Cox, b39.
This is the first event in the social season of the spring semester. It will be held in place of the regular varsity scheduled for that night.
The Owl Society is an honor organization for junior men. It sponsored the publication of the "Freshman Bible" which appeared for the
Javbawks--
Tickets may be purchased from any member of the society.
Continued from page 1
Werner, 6 feet, 1 inch; and Amen
6 feet.
Kansas' lineup will be Golay, 6 feet, 3 inches, or corlis, 6 feet, 2 inches; Ebling, 5 feet, 11 inches; Schmidt, 6 feet; Praile, 6 feet, 2 inches; and Harp, 6 feet, 2 inches. Four ranking table tennis experts from Kansas City will provide between-halves entertainment.
New York, New Britain. (U-P) —Tommy Farr, British heavyweight champion who lost a close decision to Jim Braddock 10 days ago, flatly rejected tonight promoter Mike Jacobs' offer for a fight with Max Baer.
"Why? Why should I help to reevaluate Baer as a contender?" said Farr. "I have beaten him once and the agreement I had with Jacob specified that the winner of my fight in Baer I was not the winner, and, despite Braddock's retirement, I do not wish I am obliged to fight Baer."
Scoring Ratios of Big Six Teams After Monday's Game
Av. Scores Of Ratio
Oklahoma 50.3-34 .149
Kansas 37.7-267 .124
Nebraska 1.291
Kansas 32.5-29.5
Iowa State 30.3-37.4 .80
Kansas State 28.4-40.4 .70
On offense, the Big Six teams rank in the same order as that of games won. Oklahoma's defense, on the other hand, is poorer than that of Missouri, Kansas or Nebraska, and this holds the Sooners to an offense ratio—points scored for each point scored by Missouri. Of Kansas which is just a fraction below Missouri on defense, has the next best ratio of 1.24, and Nebraska and Missouri are close together, with a slight edge to Missouri.
Highway Patrol Renders
Variety of Services to Motorists
You use of services were rem-
ended for the last six months
during the last six months of 1937
by the Kansas Highway Patrol. Reports show that there were 3,188 services rendered to automobile and railroad workers in these activities included changing
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
of tires, pushing to start, giving enough gasoline to enable motorists to reach the next town and moving of towns or debris from the highways.
PHONE K.U. 66
GIRLS: Rooms at Oread House, 1225
Oread. One-half block from campus.
Board if desired. -88
Sleeping porch with twin beds. Phone 3051, 1126 Ohio. -89
ROOM FOR BOYS: Well furnished, comfortable room in quiet apartment home.
BOYS: Rooms and board, $18.00 per month. Room, $7.00. 1031 Mississippi.
SKATES and SLEDS GUNS and AMMUNITION Basketballs
RUTTER'S SHOP
WAVE, new styles, any style
RUTTER'S SHOP Your Locksmith
your Locksmith
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
---
SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty work also
END CURLS, $1 up, inquire
7 Experienced Operators
New Equipment Added
IVAN'S BEAUTY SHOP
9411j Mass. St. Phone 533
Next door Keeler Book Store
HELLO GUYS, Place for one with three other men in 4-room apartment with or without cooking facilities. Very reasonable. Apply 1250 Oread, Apr. 15. -88
BOYS. Well furnished, comfortable rooms.
One single. One double with twin beds.
Also room mated wanted. Meals if desired.
Phone 21800. 910 Ohio.
-66
FOUND: Man's block leather glove for that left hand in KU parking zone No. 3. Call at Kanian Office, Journalism Bldg. 3-816
ROOM FOR BOY: Single, near campus, 18
304 West 14th St. Phone 2093W. -6
PHONE K.U. 66
Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St.
Shampoos ... 25c up
Finger Waves ... 25c (dried)
Oil Permeants ... $2.50 up
WAVO BEAUTY SHOF
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
GRADUATE WOMAN Approved single woman, ideal location, strictly modern, private home. Graduate or employed woman.
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ROOM for one or two students in private home; first floor, private entrance, no other rooms in house. Nice location. Approved. Plain 2499. J138 ... 768 -
FOR RENT! Apartments also aleeping room, Clean, comfortable, well furnished. Large closet closet. Plenty of hot water. 1340 Vermont. Phone 2596-1340 Vermont.
SHAMPOO and 25e WAVE, dried
Oil. Drops = Fish SWAKE and
Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and
Wardrobe 500
Wave, dried, 50c
End Curls $1.00 up, Complete
PERMANENTS, Any Style
$1.00, $1.50 up, complete
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
7321/2 Mass. Phone 2353
IVA'S
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanents $1.50 up
Phone 323 941½ lbs. Mass. St.
...my good reason for smoking Chesterfields
I find they give me more pleasure than any cigarette I ever smoked.
And if a man isn't getting pleasure from his cigarette he might as well quit smoking.
Chesterfields are milder .they've got a taste that smokers like . they have everything to give a man MORE PLEASURE.
eason
Weekly
Radio Features
LAWRENCE TIBBETT
ANDRE KOSTELANETZ
PAUL WILSON
D.
Chesterfield ..they Satisfy
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
State Refuses Bids For Work on Dyche
NUMBER 86
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 1938
State Business Manager Says Prices Offered for Reconstruction Are All Too High; Board of Administrat To Discuss Matter With Board of Regents
No contract. let by the state business manager for the completion of Dyche museum because the bids submitted for the work were too high, according to H. H. Lane, curator of the Museum of Natural History.
Before Dyche museum was close it was one of the most interesting spots on the University Campus. It attracted persons from all over the country, and each Sunday crowds of visitors viewed the unusual display
Bids were opened Monday, but all were found to be unsatisfactory. The board of administration has taken the situation under consideration and will meet soon with the Board of Regents to discuss the matter.
The museum was condemned as unsafe more than five years ago, and the museum articles were removed to archive. It has remained closed since.
On Feb. 16 of last year, Governor Walter Huxman signed
The exhibits, which were packer and stored at various places over the Campus, form one of the outstanding historical exhibits in the world. The unusual manner of display of these exhibits in their natural habitat and in positions true to their age marked the exhibit as unique and authentic.
In 1933, with the combined funds of $25,000 granted to the University by the state legislature and a grant of $10,465 from the PWA, the entire inner structure of the building was removed, and reinforced concrete floors and steel pillars and beams were installed. It has remained in this unfinished condition.
bill which provided $55,000 for the completion and restoration of the museum.
Last summer, architects' sketches for the completion of repairs on Dyche were received from the state building were checked by Cuarator Lane.
HAY by WIRE
---
Old pappy ground hog saw his shadow yesterday and according to the best tradition we have six weeks of winter ahead of us. If the rest of the winter isn't any worse then the winter will be lucky. If he wants to be hole hog or none it's all right with us.
The held naming of the Ad and Chemistry buildings is ok with us, but with all due respect we think that the Chem building should be called Strong hall. Did you ever walk on the windward side when the space smelled like rotten eggs? Chemistry Laboratories is too long to fit those little signs that are put out for the benefit of visiting teachers, etc.
The new storm doors at the library have provided one of the best smoking rooms on the Campus. Before the doors were put up it was like striking a match in a wind tunnel. The one library door which survived the hurricane last week opens with average pull now.
Time back up and sat down on Professor Doan's editorial students yesterday afternoon. They were greeted with a curious smile and the magazine. The test quite promptly separated the comic readers from the front-pagers.
An engineering student suffered an accident last week during finals that probably wouldn't happen again in years. He handed in his icro notes with his final paper to a colleague, some kind of danger, but this it dangerous even to look into the matter. Even engineers get on the wrong track sometimes.
An unknown gentleman nearly met his end yesterday morning. He was standing under the balcony in Central Ad. and a notebook descended from above, missing him little. It if not that he had a notebook probably would have been so heavy that it would have pushed him through the
We were reading in one of the latest almanacs yesterday and came on this interesting fact that may ex-
Continued on page 2
To Choose Beauty Queen
Editor Robert Pearson, c38, yearend announced the annual Jayhawk magazine beauty contest open to all University women.
One queen and four attendants will be chosen. Results of the contest will be published in the final issue of the magazine.
Contestants are urged by Pearson to submit photographs as soon as possible. The deadline for entries is March 15.
The contest will be judged by Raoul Walsh and LeRoy Prinz, officials of Paramount Pictures, Inc.
"We chose these judges," Pearson said, "because of the widespread interest in the forthcoming Paramount picture, with which both are connected."
Walsh is director and Prinz dance supervisor in "College Swing" starring Martha Raye.
Fifteen photos will be selected here from the pictures submitted and from these the photophy officials will make their final decision.
"We are continuing the idea started last year," Pearson said, of choosing only one official beauty queen for the year. There is no prize other than the honor of winning."
There are no qualifications for entrance, he said.
Mary Jane McCoy, c'40, Pi Phi entrant, won a similar contest last year.
Students Lose To Marauders
Marauders invaded the Hill when three University students at the Phi Delta Theta house host $55 million in cash that was valued at $55 early this morning.
Thomas Cogrove, c'41, was robbed of $5 in cash and Joseph Weaver, c'41, lost $30 in cash a d a wrist watch valued at $10. Another wrist watch, valued at $45, which belonged Valentille Township, c'41, was also taken.
Fine Arts Students To Present Recital
Believed to have occurred at 3 o'clock yesterday morning, the burglary resembled the series of burglaries which ended with the apprehension and confession of two mer recently.
The regular Fine Arts student recital will be held in Frank Strong auditorium this afternoon at 3:30.
The program is: "Concerto in D Minor," adagio religioso and (Vieuxtemps), violin solo by Paul Stoner, fa '40; "Euides Melodique" (Mozkowski), piano solo by Martha Jackson, fa '40; "Air" (Purell-Popper) and "Scherzo" (Van Goons), cellos solo by Rita Gusaulta, fa 'uncl; and "Am Meer" (Schubert-Wilhelm) and "Prelude et Allegro" (Kreisler), violins solo by O1 g aft, sta fp.
Authorized Parties
Phi Delta Theta, Memorial Union. 12 p.m.
Aspiring Announcers To Try for Position
Tomorrow
Fireside Forum, Congregational Church, 12 p.m.
Pi Kappa Alpha, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Varsity Dance, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Triangle, chapter house, 12 p.m. ELIZABETH MEGUIAR.
Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
Truyots for positions as announcer for the University's radio station, KFKU, will be held at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10. Miss Mildred Seaman, assistant program director for the station, asks that young men interested in trying out confer with her within the week. She will be at her office in room 109 Fraser from 1:30 to 1:30 daily.
Judges of the tryout will be Prof. Allen Crafton and Prof. Robert Carlwerd of the department of speech, director of the meritorious associate professor of voices.
Prime requisites for a radio announcer, Miss Seeman said, are a good radio voice, and a good language sense. Familiar with French, Spanish, and German is desirable. Ability to meet possible emergencies in the studio also is desirable.
Preference has been expressed for students who will be in the University at least two years more than those expected to go on to law or medicine.
Late Wire Japan Makes Vicious Attack
Shanghai, Feb. 3 (Thursday)—(UP) Japanese troops were reported today to have launched a whirlwind attack in northern Anchorage, some of the most toxic cities, shattering Chinese resistance south of the Ewair river, and bringing an area of 275 square miles under their control. The Japanese news agency, whose correspondents are the only newsmen permitted at the front, reported that the Rising Sun flag of Japan had been raised after a military exercise in Yuzhanz, Peng Peng and Ping Yuan, culminating a five-day drive.
No Warning Before Attack
Carthagena, Spain, Feb. 2, —(UP)
—Four survivors of the British steamer, Endymion, torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean with a ship from Gibraltar. The ship was attacked without warning by a “pirate” submarine.
Ice-Breaker To Aid Scientists
Moscow, Feb. 3 (Thursday).—(UP) The ice-breaker Taimir was ordered at 1 p.m. today to rush to the rescue of four Soviet scientists and a little dog adrift on a fast-crumbling fce boe off the Greenland coast.
The departure of the steamer was ust ahead of schedule following a radio message from the helplessly frifting scientists last night stating hat their foe was breaking into maller chunks almost hourly.
Severe Bombardment in Madrid
Madrid, Feb. 2. — (UP) Insurgent artillery bombarded the center of Madrid tonight in one of the most violent shellings in months. Shells crashed among homeward -bound crowds, causing 20 casualties.
Rebels Take British Steamers
Barcelona, Feb. 2. —(UP) -I was reliably reported here tonight that two British steamers carrying carriages sailed in a burned by Spanish侵航 cruisers.
Announcement of the annual "Alluring She and Fascinating He" contest will be made in the February issue of the Sour O w l magazine, James Coleman, c'38, editor, said yesterday.
Sour Owl Will Conduct He-She Contest Again
Details of the contest will be contained in the Valentine's Day edition. to be available Feb. 15.
Prizes, while not yet definitely set probably will be trips for the winners, Coleman said.
Bill Grant, c'39, business manager of the magazine, will direct the contest. Voting faults, which were rumored捕断 last year's contest, will be eliminated in a new round to be announced if the next issue.
R. W. Warner, professor of electrical engineering, will be in Atchison today to address the noon meeting of the Rotary Club and tell of some of the developments that have taken place in the electrical industry during the past year. He will also demonstrate a few pieces of apparatus that have recently been perfected.
Jody Stewart, c'40, and Anthony Onofrio, c'40, were elected last year.
Professor Warner To Speak in Atchison
The magazine will contain pictures of freshman women who are outstanding as prospective winners.
Britain Asks Aidin Sub Quarantine
London, Feb. 2.—(UP) —Great Britain tonight asked France, Italy, and seven other nations to agree to a "quarantine" of all mariners in the Mediterranean in order that all maurading undersea craft might be sunk on sight in case they attack the neutral ship.
Plan Advanced To Stop Submarines By Firing On Unidentified Boats In Mediterranean
The plan prepared by Britain's foreign secretary Anthony Eden was conveyed to Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy and Premier Camille Chauptemps of France through the French and Italian ambassadors who were called into consultation to find a means of halting a new wave of "piracy" in the Mediterranean. Orders Will Be "Shoot To Sink"
If the quarantine plan finds favor with Italy and France as well as Britain—the they are responsible for the "anti-piracy" patrol established last Sept. 12—any submarine along the v.s.l Mediterranean trade route will be confined to identity and remains on the surface will be the target of "shoot to sink" orders.
The other adherents of the anti-piracy accord, signed at Nyon, Switzerland, will be asked to cooperate in the plan. They are Soviet Russia, Roumania, Bulgaria, Egypt, Jugoslavia, Greece, and Turkey.
They will be asked to sign pledges agreeing to keep their new boats in ports or in territorial waters. The idea was discussed when the anti-pirate patrol was set up five months before the invasion. Bolivia Plains Checking Methods
Orders Will Be 'Shoot To Sink'
The British proposal for steps to wash out the "pirayce", was precipitated by torpeding and sinking of the British steamer, Dendymion, off corthegana, Spain, Monday with a loss of 10 British lives, followed angry demands in behalf of common decency for wholesale seizure of Generalisimo Franco's Spanish insurgent warships.
Britain Plans Checking Methods
Under the "quarantine" plan any submarine found outside Spanish territorial waters would "automatically be released to allow liability to attack as soon as located."
The British plan also provides for methods of checking on the movements of all submarines of the Mediterranean powers, enabling the "anti-piracy" warships to track down their identity without delay.
Develops New Explosive
For several years now the student, Wendell Zimmerman, has been working on the problem. There are at least 12 explosives in the RPX group, but the most powerful have not been carefully tested, he avers.
Berkeley, Calif., Feb. 2—An explosive four times as powerful as TNT is the jealously guarded secret of a tail and bespectacled graduate student in physics at the University of California.
Although they showed four times the power of TNT, the recent tests did not develop the full power of the group, he said. Strength of the explosive has not been exaggerated, however, he added.
"The explosive or explosives submitted to the United States and England are not the strongest of the group." Zimmerman said, "and are different from those I think would be most successful. My reticence toward these two governments was deliberate."
Meanwhile, the department of physics wonders about Zimmerman's project. He has never revealed it to them, but possibly his computations may shed light on unsolved problems of atomic structure, it is said.
Commercial possibilities of the material may be considered when the inventor obtains a patent. He has none now. He can't pay for one.
Because he has been "misquoted by various newspapers," Zimmerman requested the Californian, student newspaper, to make these points clear.
Difficult, but not dangerous, to make, the explosives are made from inexpensive materials obtainable in the United States, Zimmerman said.
"First, foreign governments and the U. S. War Department have never been informed by me of all the RPX explosives, of which there are many. Nor have I at any time disclosed any information about the formulas or formulas of the RPX group. In fact, I have no desire to inform any government of complete details."
ALL NEW STUDENTS
All new students must take a psychological examination at 2:30 p.m. Friday in Fraser theater.
NOTICE
Students who plan to apply for scholarships (gift or loan) for 1938-1939 should file their applications before March 1 with Miss Persis Cook, executive secretary, room 1, Strong强 ball.
mittee on Aids and Awards U. G. Mitchell, Chairman.
Applications for Watkins hall and Miller hall residence scholarships for 1938-1939, or for the renewal of such scholarships, will be made by March 1, 1938, with Miss Elizabeth Megiaur, chairman of general scholarship committee, room 20, Frank强 Hall.
NOTICE
committee on Aids and Awards U. G. Mitchell, Chairman.
NOTICE
All members of the Women's rifle队 who have been called are to report today at the rifle range in Fowler shops. There will be no meeting of the team tonight.
Helen Ward Denlinger,
President, Women's
Rifle Team.
NOTICE
There will be a special meeting of the W.A.A. today at 4:30 in Robinson gym.
Protest 'Flunk Fees'
Ruth Baker, president.
University of Oklahoma
Students Petition f o r
Removal of $3 Fine
Norman, Okla., Feb. 2.—Reviving opposition to the much-debated "funk fee" at the University of Oklahoma, a student political party is circulating petitions against the measure and has notified the administration that letters of protest will be sent to parents of students and to state officials if the petition is ignored.
Rules of the university provide that a student must pay a fee of $3 for each credit hour of work failed.
The move received an icy reception when it was made known to President Bizzell.
"The students are wasting their time," he stated flatly. "The fee will be collected."
Leon Davis, Oklahoma City, the spokesman for the Sooner party, said that support of the Administration party would be sought in circulating the petition, which will be presented to the board of regents next Monday.
Board Will Not Rescind Action
"We believe that the university should try to better its relationships with the students," Davis said, "and the flunk fee is not the way to do it."
Asserting that the party did not wish to embarrass the university unless forced to, Davis said, "We hope we will not have to resort to bad publicity for the university, but we want it to be a big enough to warrant such a fight."
President Bizzell stated that the board has set an unalterable course and would not rescind its action to collect the fee.
"I have been instructed to collect the fee," he said, "and I will collect it."
Failing students who can show the board just cause for failing a course will be relieved of paying the fee.
Money collected from the fee will be applied to a tutorial system to help students who are in danger of failing.
No One Wants To Flunk
David stated that if such a plan were put into operation to keep students from falling, there would not be enough money to pay the tutors the next year. This would cause a great amount of failures again, he said.
"It is a vicious circle," he remarked.
Davis said levying such a fee is a legislative function, not a function of the board of regents, and that if the university needs money it should go through the regular channels of the state legislature.
Attacking the flunk fee itself, he accused the administration of assuming "students want to flunk."
"No one wants to flunk," he said, "and there is no point in adding insult to injury."
Jayhawks Win Tilt From Huskers; 48-33
Kansas Quintet Outplays Taller Nebraska Team To Remain in Running for B i g S i x Conference Title; Fred Pralle and Don Ebling Star in Fast-Moving Game
A fighting Jayhawk basketball team last night showed Nebraska and the rest of the Big Six that Kansas is still very much in the running for the championship by trumping a tall but impotent Cornhusker five in Hoch auditorium. The final score read 48 to 33 after Coach "Phog" Allen's team had led only 24 to 16 at half-time. The victory put Kansas firmly in second place with 4 games won and 1 lost as the Jayhawkers ended their first round of conference play.
Running Score-with Parsons, Nebraska guard, for scoring honors of the game. Parsons also had 6 field goals and 3 free throws. However, it was Don Ebble, sophomore forward, who stole the spotlight, scoring 3 field goals and 7 free throws for a total of 13 points, and in addition holding Amen, ace Husker forward, to only 3 points. Ebble also played a good floor game, intercepting passes, taking rebounds, and often steadying the Kansas team when it had a tendency to "go wild." Game Starts at Fast Pace
Fred Pralle, veteran sharpshooter, led the Kansas scoring with 6 field goals and 3 free throws for a total of 15 points, to tie
FIRST HALF
**KU NU**
| | | SECOND HALF |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| 1 | Parsons | 26 | Ebling |
| 2 | Pralle | 28 | Pralle |
| 3 | Ebling | 29 | Pralle |
| 4 | Ebling | 17 | Ebaugh |
| 5 | Eblingen | 31 | Corlis |
| 6 | Parsons | 33 | Harp |
| 7 | Parsons | 19 | Harpmann |
| 8 | Ebling | 36 | Harp |
| 8 | Thomas | 38 | Harp |
| 10 | Schmidt | 31 | Harp |
| 12 | Pralle | 22 | Parsons |
| 12 | Schmidt | 29 | Ebling |
| 9 | Dohrmann | 23 | Kowanda |
| 16 | Corlis | 41 | Eblingen |
| 13 | Corlis | 41 | Eblingen |
| 11 | Dohrmann | 42 | Praille |
| 19 | Corlis | 42 | Parsons |
| 21 | Corlis | 44 | Parsons |
| 22 | Grillum | 46 | Corlis |
| 22 | Eblingen | 26 | Ebaugh |
| 15 | Parsons | 27 | Parsons |
| 23 | Eblingen | 47 | Parsons |
| 24 | Eblingen | 29 | Parsons |
| 16 | Amon | 31 | Ellott |
| | | 48 | Florell |
'Red' Probe To Continue
Ralph T. O'Neil, Topeka, and Dr. H. L. Snyder, Winfield, members on a committee appointed by the Board of Regents to investigate rumored rape cases, arrived on the Campus yesterday to continue the investigation.
No action will be taken by the Board of Regents until a complete and detailed report has been submitted by the committee.
Hitler Seeks Army Leader
Berlin, Feb. 2. — (UP)—General Walter Von Reichenburg, commander of the seventh German army corps in Bavaria, was summoned to Berlin tonight as Adolph Hitler struggled to find a successor for War Minister Werner Von Blomberg and solve a growing crisis.
Should the post go to General Von Reichanen, a stubborn and ardent Nazi would be placed in supreme command of Germany's vast armies, for he is one of the nation's outstanding military leaders who have not joined the army "clique" in opposing Nazi party policies.
It was stated reliably tonight that the 59-year-old Baron Blomberg, whic is on a hongyuan on the Italian island of Capri with his 25-year-old bride, he has been be "reliaved" of him but had not yet submitted a formal resignation.
General Von Reichenan arrived in Berlin from his Munich headquarters amid a flurry of reports that he would be selected to succeed Baron Blomberg or would at least be elec- tors of some other high office in the army.
Hilfer was in almost constant conference today over the situation precipitated by Baron Blomberg's retirement.
Hospital Notes
Joe Van Sickel, fa'41, who is ill with pneumonia, was reported last night as slightly improved.
Fredericka Dorothy Seaver, c'38 has recovered from pneumonia and was released from the hospital yesterday.
The condition of Allen Dean McCoy, c'41, who recently underwent an operation for removal of a bullet, accidentally shot two weeks ago, continues to improve. McCoy was been confined to the hospital ahead.
Hunter Finds Field Gun
Cleveland, Feb. 2. - (UP) -Hunting with his dogs, Anthony Battaglia turned up a 150-pound anti-airstair gun lying in a field near his home. Police scratched their heads and said probably it had been stolen and then abandoned when the thief could find no buyers.
Standing of the Teams
Lyman Corlis, junior forward substituting for Golay, also played good ball, getting 9 well earned points on 4 field goals and a free throw. Harp
W L. W. Pct. T.P.O. P.
Oklahoma' 3 0 1,000 151 102
Kansas 4 1 800 103 125
Missouri 2 1 500 103 119
Indiana 2 2 500 103 127
Iowa State 4 1 200 151 187
Kansas State 4 1 200 142 102
played a fine defensive game with the difficult job of guarding the towering Ebauh. Harp also scored 5 points, all in the second half Schmidt, playing in the "quarterback" position, turned in a good floor game and scored 4 points before going out of the game on fouls.
The game started out at a fast pace and seldom dragged during the entire contest. Nebraska had a big weight advantage over the Jayhawks, but superior Kansas ball handling and cleverness made it appear that the Cornshuakers would do well the tail. Nebraska came into the Kansas players slip around them and take away rebounds, or else Nebraska would fumble the ball out-of-bounds.
Lead Changes Quickly
Parsons sent the Huskers off to an early lead by converting on Golay's foul. Praille then crossed up Apen, better known as an end on the Nebraska football team, by dribbling around him for a setup.
Amen countered by sinking a side shot, his only field goal of the game. Here Ebling made two free throws on Werner's foul and Kansas went back in the lead 4 to 3. Parsons scored a field goal, followed by Pralle's driving around Amen for another setup. Parsons got another goal and Ebling matched it with a setup, followed by a free throw by Thomas. This tied the score at 8-all. "ralle Makes Long Shot"
Kansas sparted forward with a goal by Schmidt, followed by one of Pralle's long swishing shots from out near the center of the court, shot as only Pralle can shoot them. Schmidt made another as Nebraska called time out. This made the score 14 to 8. Dohrmann made his entry into the tame and a little later sank a free throw. Corils and Ebling added goals for Kansas before Dohrmann made a field goal for the Huskers. Corils made a free throw and field goal, followed by Grimm's setup. Nebraska called time out with the score 21 to 13.
Ebling made 3 free throws for Kansas after this, and Parsons hit a field goal. Amen ended the half with a free throw.
Lead Is Never Threatened
The Jawbawers opened the second half with a rally that gave them a lead that was never threatened. Ebling and Praille made field goals and Praile a free throw before the Huskers started their second-half scoring with Ebaugh's charity toss, making the score 29 to 17.
Kansas came back with goals by Corlis and Harp, while Nebraska ran its score up 3 points on Dohrmann's then-harpoon. The Raptors then Harp and Prule hit the basket from the field while Parsons counted on a field goal and free throw.
As the game progressed it became Continued on page 4.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1939
💡
Comment
Laugh, Chumps, Laugh! Or the Tale of a Name
Hereafter, says the Board of Regents, the Chemistry building will be designated and known as the "E. H. S. Bailey Chemical Laboratories," and to the Administration building will be given the more dignified name of "Frank Strong hall."
The risibilities of the student body are easily excited, and from all parts of the Campus comes laughter, ranging from chooling chuckles to cacophonous cachinations. Let it be understood: A student going to "Bauley Lab" or to "Bauley hall" could give vent to ordinary laughter; but the student going to "H. S. Bauley Chemical Laboratories" could not possibly do less than to emit cacophonous cachions. Who could?
Can anyone who knows students as a type, who realizes their preference for a "prom" to a "promenade," a "hop" to a "dance," or a "quit" to an "examination"—can he, we say, imagine a student substituting "E. H. S. Bailley Chemical Laboratories" for "Chem" of "Chemistry" building? Likewise, "Strong hall" might be fitting, but few students will bother with "Frank Strong hall."
So laugh mirthfully and melodiously, students. Cacophonous cachinations may be forgotten, or saved for more hysterical occasions. And so, too, probably, will the names of—need we repeat them again?
The Three Black Cats; Or Save the Canary!
Political campaigns in the past have made some strange bed-fellows, but the present-critical condition of international affairs makes stranger ones.
On the editorial page of the New York Post for last Monday is a Jerry Doyle cartoon depicting the three black cats of Fascism eyeing, in a possessive manner, the canary bird Democracy which Uncle Sam is jealously guarding with a new $800,000,00 defense shotgun. Ten pages forward is a news story in which Admiral William D. Leahy tells the House naval affairs committee that the new appropriation is necessary to keep Fascism off the American continents.
The Post—ultra-liberal New York daily, erstwhile opponent of "capitalistic militarism," and bitter仇er of Mayor Frank "I Am the Law" Hague of Jersey City—does not like Fascism and probably does not adhere any admiral in anybody's navy. Admiral William Leahy, chief of operations of the United States navy, also does not like Fascism and has probably been conditioned not to respect greatly the opinions of New York's "red rag." But upon Roosevelt's proposed 800 million dollar navy of aggression, both are agreed.
And this is the way it has always been. In times of crises, extremists of both right and left eagerly employ what seem to be the most effective means for accomplishing their ends. They do not realize that the means inevitably determine the end. The Post and Admiral Leahy seem not to realize that if this new navy is ever called into action, there may be clamped down upon America the tightest dictatorship that the twentieth century has known. European example of the current style of autocracy will fade in comparison.
Uncle Sam has more to fear from the 800 million dollar shotgun which Cartoon Dale and Admiral Leahy have placed in his hands than from the Fascist cats across the fence.
---
Radio Education For American Public
The American public will be given a wide educational opportunity by a recent action of the Federal Communication Commission setting aside 25 high-frequency broadcast channels for use of non-profitable educational stations.
This action by the commission is the result of a several years' campaign carried on by educators to get more recognition for education on the radio.
Dr. John W. Studebaker, United States commissioner of education, said regarding such a program, "I believe that radio is destined to affect the scope and progress of education, and therefore, our national life in general, with results quite as revolutionary as those which followed the invention of the printing press."
The commission has made the following specification: "These reserved airwaves shall be licensed to organized non-profitable educational agencies for the purpose of transmitting education programs directed to specific schools in the system for use in connection with the regular courses as well as for routine and administrative material pertaining to the school system."
This class of stations will be authorized to transmit only educational and entertainment programs to the general public, and not sponsored commercial programs.
These channels, providing adequate facilities for service to every city and town, offer education to a far larger number of persons than any
other agency could do it. Radio can transmit education to every home where a receiving set is found. The potentialities of such a program are tremendous. And listening to the same program, people will be drawn closer together in their feelings, thinking and action.
Is It Really Salmon— Or Japanese Herring?
That the United States send a fleet of planes and bombers to destroy Japanese salmon poachers in Alaskan waters was the suggestion made by Representative Sirovich, of New York, in a house committee report this week.
According to statements by various authorities, the matter is becoming one of grave concern to the people of Alaska. Norman Walker of the Alaskan senate, predicts that within five years salmon will become extinct in Alaskan waters if some immediate preventive action is not taken.
Just prior to the depression, government statistics revealed a capital investment of $67,000-000 in Alaskan fisheries, with an annual take valued at $40,000,000 of which salmon furnished about four-fifths.
The matter of extinction is not exaggerated. In 1925, owing to the boom given the salmon industry by the World War, the salmon were so depleted that, fearing extinction, President Coolidge instructed the secretary of commerce to take some action for their preservation. As a result, salmon fishing was entirely forbidden in some districts and was firmly restricted in all others.
Since that time, poaching has been a serious problem. Legally, salmon may be taken only at spawning season when they leave the sea to spawn in the fresh water of the rivers. However, poachers outfit small craft with complete equipment for canning the catch, and remain out from port until they have caught and canned a full load. Salmon caught in salt water have never reproduced themselves.
The Japanese have been consistent offenders in violation of a treaty made between their own and the U.S. governments. Hence all the bitterness of Representative Siriovich.
However, his plan of plane patrol of the waters in question is not new in any respect save that it is aimed solely at the Japanese. A similar suggestion of law enforcement was made more than a year ago. But since Alaskan poaching, though not as great as Japanese, is quite prevalent, the plan was aimed at all poaching in Alaskan waters.
It would seem, then, that the representative is gunning for Japan rather than for poachers.
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Channelell's Office at 11 p.m. preceeding regular public day and 11:50 a.m. regular school day.
Vel. 35 Thursday, February 3, 1938 No. 86
--of the question, he continued.
I agreed that this was right, pointing out, however, that Chinese soldiers always welcomed us, but that Japanese soldiers gave us a grunt and a bayonet in greeting.
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will have a stamp meeti on Saturday at 3 o'clock at Henley house. Students are asked to help their collections - Ruth Feng Charles Yeamans.
DILETTANTE COMMISSION: Rub Fengel will incite a series of lectures in a discussion on favorite passages from the Bible, and bring their own books with passages to discuss. The meeting will be at 7clock this evening at Henley Park.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITTED
to freshman students wishing to become candidates for admission. Students should send in applications to the K.U. athletic office or before Feb. 1, 1983 in case of James Gillis' death.
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: The psychological examination will be given at 2:30 Friday afternoon, Feb. 4. New students who have classes where they are being tested may consult their parents about being excused from class—A. H. Turner.
W. A.A. There will be a special meeting of W.A.A. members please be present—Ruth Baker, President
University Daily Kansan
DAVID E. PARTRIDGI
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRUNCE, KANSAS
Editorial Staff
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Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Japanese Soldier Asks Reporter To Get Both Sides in Chinese War
Editor's Note: These random notes from the front lines in China were written by Jack Belden, United Press Staff Carrie more than 10,000 miles in covering various war fronts.
(Copyright 1938, by United Press)
Hankow—By-Mail "Foreign reporters always go to the Chinese, never come to the Japanese." It was the Japanese infant caption speaking to me.
"They should listen to both sides of the question." he continued.
"We do not want to fight," the captain said. "The Chinese started this when they fired upon us."
Another bit of conversation, this time with a Chinese army captain, ensued after I asked him how he liked being a soldier.
Soldier Never Sees Wife
“Well, what’s the use of pretending,” he said. “It’s not so good, but then it’s not so bad either. But I don’t get much chance for reading or studying. Before I was a soldier I knew some English, but I’ve never had any trouble with it. So see my wife at all. There’s no sense in a soldier being married.”
A street scene in war:
Fifty bodies were lying in a heap under a straw matting. Two soldiers would go out and pick one out and lay it in the middle of the road. Then some one would come out of a small room to see how the man's paper with the man's name on it. This was placed across the man's chest and his picture taken.
The Dead Were Their Friends
I didn't think Chinese soldiers in went for that kind of sentiment. I asked some soldiers standing near by if they really knew the names of the dead or was some fictitious name put on the little slip of paper.
"They were our friends," was the answer. "How could we help but know their names?"
Chinese Can't Work, Can't Eat
A scene in the open field:
Walking under the blazing sun through fields for an hour, finally I came upon two Chinese working men sitting on a rock under a piece of matting slung upon a stick. "Come and sit down."
They offered me a dirty cup of water.
"Come and sit down," they said. "It's cool under here."
"Have you seen any Japanese?" I asked.
I was trying to get through a few words after a particularly heavy bombardment. Pan, the manager, under a table, his at face twitching.
"No. They were striking at each other for two days. Today there was no firing so we came back. Tell your country to make them stop fighting. We can't work. We can't eat."
"I won't send any more messages tonight," he said. "It's too dangerous."
I wasn't going to lose without an argument.
"You are a telegraph operator, you must. Your country will be proud
Scene at a telegraph office:
Then I reached under the table and grabbed his long gown.
"I resign. I'm going home," Pan whimpered.
"Come," I said, "the firing has ceased. Confessions he has said: "To know is easy, to do is hard." It is easy to know that you and I are afraid. We must know that world know we are afraid. We must do something about it."
Just gibberish, but I could think of nothing else to say. But it had it's effect.
"All right," said Pan, "I'll send 10 words."
Pasadena, Calif., Feb. 2- (UP)—One of the most regular attendants of recent years at Pasadena's annual Tournament of Roses is Thomas J Randolph, BLI, alias 'Scafire' McClusky, who served a form for stage coach robbery. He comes each year to the tournament, is allowed to see it, and then is invited by the police to leave own. He departs promptly.
Close Bismarck Indian School
Bismarck,N.D.,Feb.2.-(UP)-The Bismarck Indian school, established 32 years ago has been abandoned.
Phone K.U. 66
Because the U.S. Indian Bureau feels that its educational program can be better developed on reservations, the institution here has been abandoned and the work will be transferred to reservations schools at Fort Yates and Fort Totten, N.D. The more than 100 pupils here will be divided between Fort Yates and The Toucan members of the Sioux, Chippewa and Blackfoot tribes of the Dakota and Montana.
Visitor Briefly Welcome
San Francisco, Feb. 2.—(UP) -Mrs. Gadys Stafford is a kid of the few women of the world who have had trouble raising girls. 13. Her marriage last June to Forrest Robbins, a young plumber's helper, to which her mother had consented, was annulled under a statute denying the right of consent
CLASSIFIED ADS
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried 50c
BOYS: A large, double room, three-winged, furnace heat, hot water at all times. Close to town and campus, proved. 30 per kg, 103 River phone. 3088. +89
ROOM for one or two students in private home; first floor, private entrance, no other rooms in house. Nice location. Phone: 2493, 1J28. To see.
ROOM FOR BOY: Single, near campus. $8.
304 West 14th St. Phone 2095W. -83
Girl, 13. Divorcee
--statute defying the right of consent to parents when the child is under 18.
Hollister, Calif. — (UP) — Busses have become such an integral part of American life, it seems, that special etiquette is needed for them. The English class of the junior college which is preparing to publish a book on modern etiquette will cover such fields as good behavior at dances school, restaurants, and on trains and buses.
- Same as $1.00 up, Complete
PERMANENTS, Any Style
$1.00, $1.50 up, complete
Wave, dried, 50cc
End Curls $1.00 up, Complete
REMANUFACTURED
FOR RENT! Apartment; also sleepin
room. Clean, comfortable, well furnished.
Large clothes closet. Plenty of hot water.
Room is equipped. Phone 2186.
1340 Vermont.
There are 31 girls in the 1937 graduating class. Over the period of three decades since its establishment in 1905 the school has had an average enrollment of 100, directed by a faculty of from 10 to 20 men and women—some of them women—some of then Indians. Formerly the school was also permitting the enrollment of boys.
BOYS: Rooms and board, $18.00 per month, Room, $7.00. 1031 Mississippi
ROOM FOR BOYS: Well furnished, comfortable room in quiet apartment home
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
The Bismarck was one of 30 such non-reservation schools opened in the early years of the century. Eventually all of the education will be handed in the various reservations.
The institution was maintained neatly by grants from Congress.
7321 $ _{2} $ Mass. Phone 2353
Phone K.U. 66
Bus Etiquette Taught
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanents $1.50 up
Phone 723 841/4 Msg St
IVA'S
Phone 533 941 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St.
LOST: Small gold watch, either downtown or in vicinity of gym. Wear. If found please call Betty Smith, 1274, 1232 Lau..89
Rustlers Go Modern
BOYS: Two quiet, roommates roommate wanted. Double rooms, one twin beds. $8.10 and $8.00. Campus House. 1245 Oread. -32
BOYS: One single and one double room on
2nd floor. Also a first floor apartment,
nearly furnished. Private entrance. 314
West 14th, phone 2023. -89
HELLO GUYS: Place for one with three other men in 4-room apartment or without cooking facilities. Very reasonable. Applicate 1250 Icds, Apt. 15. -88
BOYS. Well furnished, comfortable rooms.
One single. One double with twin beds.
Also room mate wanted. Mealt if desired.
Phone 21800, 910 Ohio.
-86
*FOUND: Man's black leather glove for the left hand in KU parking zone No. 3. Cal at Kanan Office, Journalism Blvd. -88
Topeke, Feb. 2—(UP) —Modern cattle rattles riding in huge motor vans instead of weather-borne sadness; cattle in the cattlemen's cage on the cattlemen's Kopau
Herds are being invaded and choice stock is being stolen by the cattle thieves, who work swifty, out the stock wanted, load the stolen animals into the vans and streak for the highways.
Cattle Thieves Ride Range in Motor Vans To Select Stock
Will G. Went, Kansas state livestock stock commissioner, said today, a special investigation is at work now on ratting cages in western and southwestern Kansas and a report probably will be made soon.
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
West said the cattle thefts are increasing in their frequency and that the rousing gangs apparently are well organized.
Thefts Are Increasing
"They probably co-operate closely with owners of butcher shops who are in with the gang," West said. "Operating as they do, in most cases under cover of night, and using hushes or guards to prevent any difficult to frustrate their raids."
Stockmen Organize Vigilantcs
Words of warning have gone out over the state to Kaiser stock owners to use care in attempting to guard their heads. The modern rustler, they are told, usually is heavily armed while one of the gang is equipped with a machine gun.
Stocking Overseas Visitors
--plain how the boys do it. According to the thing, Aeonia mens concerned love. It didn't say why, so we'll let it go at that.
RUTTER'S SHOP
Your Locksmith
1014 Mass. St.
Phone 219
SKATES and SLEDS GUNS and AMMUNITION Basketballs
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
As in early days when hard riding rustlers raided the extensive cattle ranges of the southwest, Kannan stockmen now are organizing vigilant societies. Winchester and six-layer oiled oilled and made ready for business
Cattle stealing is still a serious business, even though it is being done by modern racketeers instead of the outlaw ranger.
West said he expected to have detailed information soon on all cattle raids in the state.
The state livestock sanitary commissioner indicated he would disclose methods being taken to halt rustling on Kanaas ranges after he had received word from investigators.
Farmer Flips Pair Of Pruning Shears; Brings Down Plane
Hugson, Cal., Feb. 2—(UP)—Harvey Kingley believes he is the only man in the world who ever brought an airplane down with a pair of shears—even if it was acid-dental.
Kingery was working in a field at pruning, when Clarence Nelson, student pilot, came roaring along in a two-plane passenger plane about 58 feet.
Geologist Explains Sleet Usually Is Only Glaze
In a spirit of fun, Kiaqeng threw his pruning shears into the air only to be amazed at seeing the plane fly in a plowed field in a half mule away.
The plane was traveling at a speed of 100 miles an hour when Kingery's pruning shears struck it.
The shears had struck the rear spar of the plane's left wing, damaging an allergen and making a forced landing necessary.
True sleet, Young said, falls from above as rain that has turned to ice, although a mixture of falling ice and rain ordinarily gains this designation. But when rain is still rain when it reaches the earth and then freezes immediately upon coming in contact with objects having a temperature below freezing, it is glaze, Young said.
Lexington, Ky. Feb. 2- (UP) that forms on streets, causes pedestrians to lose their equilibrium and automobiles to skid precariously, may be blamed in most instances on ordinary glaze and not on asbestus or other substances. David M. Young, instructor in geology at the University of Kentucky.
Havwire--
"Is your Packard friend coming tonight, daughter?"
Continued from page 1
"Wodge brothers?" "No—this is Willys Knight."
Some way will have to be invented to keep out the ghosts in the new He and she contend the Sour Owl is going to run. The boxes were stuffed tighter than grandmain's turkey last time.
Searching the SUN to improve telephone service ...
Lighthouse
For years Bell Telephone engineers have been making exhaustive studies of solar data from observatories all over the world. They're learning how and why periodic
sun spots affect radio telephony. And are applying their findings to give you still better trans-oceanic and ship-to-shore service.
Good evidence that telephone engineers will go to great lengths to make your telephone service more dependable, far-reaching and valuable.
Why not telephone home offender?
Roles to most points are lowest any time
after 7 P. M. and all day Sunday.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2. 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PACE THREE
Hill Society
The Thursday team what club will meet this afternoon at 1:15 with Mrs. Jane MacLean, at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house.
Chi Omega announces the pledging of Louise Higgins, Norton.
∞
The K. U. Dames sewing group will meet this afternoon with Mrs. Clark Howerton, 1201 Connecticut street.
心
Alpha Delta Pi announces the pledging of Peggy Dodd, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. George Hedrick entertained the Alpha Delta Pi alumnae club at her home Tuesday evening. Refreshments were provided following the business meeting.
Kappa Kappa Gamma announce the pledging of Margaret Wilsch Kansas City, Mo., and Martha Morgan, Eureka.
Maurice Cook, Chanute, Emmett Park, Chanute, and Richard Newell, Kansas City. Mo., members of the New York City school returned to school this semester.
∞
Kappa Alpha Theta will hold open house Sunday for members of the faculty of the University.
.
Pi Beta Phi announces the pledgai of Virginia Anderson, St. Louis
V
Charles Enos and John Hoffman both of St. Joseph, Mo., were visitors at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house yesterday.
Golf Profession To Satisfy Dizzy
The University Women's Club will hold its annual finance tea this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the Memorial Union building, Mrs. Leonard Axe and Mr. Joseph Barker will attend the茶会. The proceeds are to go to the scholarship fund of the club.
Sarasota, Fla. Feb. 2. (U-UP) In Dizzy Dean, ever retires from baseball because of salary differences—as he has been threatening to do—he can make a comfortable living playing golf—according to Dizzy Dean.
The lanky, laughing Dean, here for the third annual National Baseball Players' Golf Tournament, coasts that his wins on the golf course during the past few months have amounted to a sizable sum.
$800 on a Bet
"I figure this Bobby Jones golf course has been worth about $7,000 to me in the last two seasons," said Dizzy, reflectively.
"Winning a hundred or so a day as as easy as shutting out the Cincinnati Reds."
"Last year I won plenty, including a check for $800 that I promptly spent for a new automobile for my wife.
Dizzy explains his technique thus:
George Jacobus, P.G.A. president says Dizzy is one of the most deadly acculate putters in the game.
Plays "Game-on" Game
Dizzy uses one of the most amazing putting stances in all goldfloor. He hurps over the hall, his left toe on a line with the ball and his ong right leg protruding a yard or more to the southwest. But he strokes the ball and drops them in from all angles.
Dizzy explains his technique thus:
"I never try to beat a fellow over one or two holes. Then I get another match with him. Never snow a fall under, 'cause then he won't play you again. Just win by enough to make him keep thinking he can eventually beat you out."
Paul Wauer, the Pittsburgh Pirates' hitting star, was sitting at the table with Dizzy, fingering the handful of cards he had just won from the Cardinal's ace.
"Diz." Warner warned him, "You might have won $7,000, but if I were you I wouldn't tell anybody what it lost."
College Dean Signs Up To Play With Orchestra
Oberlin, Ohio, Feb. 2—(UP) Dean Carl F. Wittke, of Oberlin College, sit scarcely noticed among the 90 members of the Oberlin Conservatory orchestra when it first appeared in Finney Chapel.
The versatile deem—he plays both the violin and the French horn—signed up for the school orchestra shortlist from Ohio. He's enrolled in University this year.
Dean Wittke is a well-known authority on Canadian history. Busy times face the musical dean. He must divide his time between teaching and the writing of history books and practicing the violin.
What Minnesota's climate was years ago is being sought in tree rings by a graduate student at the University of Minnesota.
Ohio Students Solve Early Rising Problem Bu Complicated Alarm
Columbus, Ohio, Feb. 2. —(UP) At exactly 6:30 every weekday morning, a deafening noise such as is usually associated with a boiler factory rumble through a lodging house near Ohio State University's campus.
That's William Edwards and Howard Unrue getting up.
Both Edwards and Unure, junior and sophomore engineering students from Ironton, Ohio, had an intense dislike for getting up in the cold. Instead of complaining, they decided to do something about it.
A series of pulleys, weights, props and wires, all attached in some remote way that only the engineering team can operate on a common alarm clock, is the result.
When the clock's hammer descends at 6:30, a wire attached to it sets to work some mechanism that eventually pulls a prop from beneath the raised window. The window drops with a bang, and in doing so tugs on some more wires and pulleys, turning on the pilot light in the stove, starting the radio and lighting a light "bowe it."
The first time the gadget was put into operation about a year ago the window closed with such a crash that pictures fell from the walls. This was remedied by encasing the sill with tuber tubing.
Co-ed Refuses To Wear Shoes
Mimiepaolis, Feb. 2.—(UP)—Inspired Larsen, a Hawaiian at heart despite her Norwegian name, received a "hoak" and she's mighty proud of it; proud of it especially since it provides the proper trimming for her hair. She has had the Delta Delta Delta zorrority at the University of Minnesota.
A "holoko" is the standard dress he became accustomed to when she wed in the Hawaiian Islands as a hild.
Miss Larsen is 19 and a commercial art student at the university. She was born and spent the first dozen or so years of her life on one of the smaller of the island group. She grew up like other girls on the island and never learned to wear shoes. In school until she was 12 and her parents moved to Honolulu. She never has earned to like them.
The girls in the sorority house were shocked when Ingrid came down to a formal dress dressed in the "holoko" and without shoes. The "holako" in appropriate enough (even though the bare feet seemed out of place.
"I don't care what anyone says," Miss Larsen explained. "T'll be nice and wear shoes out of doors while I'm at work, when I get indoors, off they come."
Fertilizer Made From Rubbish
Recommends Sane Diets
Ames, Iowa, Feb. 2.—(UP)—Beware of the "Alice-in-Wonderland" condition? if you seek that sylph-like figure, is the warning to women given by Miss Ruth Cessan, nutritionist at Iowa State College.
"The safe and sane way to achieve the syllabic-like figure which is preferred for appearance and health's sake is the hard, slow way of diet in a healthy diet. Alice-in-Wonderland potion may destroy health or even cause death."
Iowa State Nutritionist Warns Against R i g i d Reducing Methods
However, she pointed out that there is danger also in reducing weight by reducing the food intake unless the diet is balanced. The diet must contain enough protein, minerals, vitamins and water to maintain health, she said.
"There must be protective foods—milk, green vegetables, and egg fruit. Assuming that these 'musts' are in the diet, it may be varied to gain or lose weight as a physician prescribes."
Here are the nutritionist's suggestions for losing weight:
- ove jam for toast. No cream for cereal–milk, instead. Fruit for dessert–no cake or pie. No hot breads—they call for swaffles of butter; some butter, however, for Vitamin A. Lean meat instead of fat. Vegetables with out cream sauce. No sugar and not stuffing for baked apples.
o gain weight, she suggests that the "don'ts" be changed to "dos." A weight 10 to 15 per cent above the average at 45 should call for a trip to the doctor, Miss Cessna said. "A person 15 to 20 per cent underweight at any age may not be getting the proper diet."
Uncle Sam's Milk Drinking Is Below Adequate Minimum
Washington, Feb. 2.—(UP) - Percapita milk consumption in the United States is increasing, but still is below the "adequate minimum" established by the home economics bureau of the Department of Agrifac
The bureau of agricultural economies reported milk consumption per capita in cities and villages, including cream in terms of its milk equivalent, was 38.2 gallons in 1950, an increase of 3.24 per cent over 1955.
The home economics bureau reports each child needs a minimum of one quart of milk a day—or 90 gallons a year—and that each adult should drink one pint a day—45 gallons a year.
Data gathered from city boards of health indicate that the greatest increase in per capita milk consumption occurred in North Central states where 4.8 per cent more milk and cream were used in 1938 than in 1935
I HERE are times when the occasion calls for a white starched collar—whether it be a House Party weekend, a trip to the city, or an important Saturday evening date. . . The Kent is a new style Arrow collar with wide spread and square corner points. It is set off particularly well when worn with a colored shirt. 25c
The increase in the South Atlantic states was about 1 per cent, in the South Central states about 3 per cent, in the Western states about 2.8 per cent and in the North Atlantic states about 2.7 per cent.
AFTER THE SHOW.
THE KENT
Ober's
HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
A NEW ARROW COLLAR FOR YOUNG MEN
T
Mes. Marie Wilkins, lylie coloratura, and Mary Jane Bruce, fa38, accompanist, will be heard over station KFKU, tomorrow evening from 6 to 015 o'clock. The following program will be presented:
Marie Wilkins To Present Varied Program Over KFKU
Una Voce Poco Fa ("Barber of Seville" by Donizetti).
The Coo-Coo Clock (Grant-Schaefer).
Temple Offers Nurse's Degree in New School
Tales From the Vienna Woods (Strauss-LaForge).
Philadelphia, Feb. 2 — (UP)—
New College of Nursing opens Feb.
9 at Temple University, officials have
received a Bachelor of Science degree.
The need for such a college was inspired by a desire of the university administration "to co-operate fully with the national movement to place nursing as a profession and professional foundation," it was announced.
"For the young high school graduate there is an additional advantage of bridging the gap between the high school and the hospital work or which the student may be too round." Dean Walk said.
Dr. George E. Walk, dean of the university's Teachers College, will supervise the new school. He said the pre-nursing course of study would provide a cultural and scientific background for professional work in nursing.
The driver who is tempted to operate a motor vehicle in a careless or negligent manner should realize that about two out of every 10.000 people in America meet death each year through traffic accidents. Figures of the National Safety Council reveal that in 1936, accidents cost Americans $120 a second or $3784,320.000.
Accidents Cost $120 a Second
Members of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.
C.A. advisory boards and cabinets will hold a conference Saturday in Topeka, at the Hotel Kansas. The men will hold an all-day retreat and women will join them in the afternoon.
Y.M. and Y.W To Confer
Projects which could be more effectively accomplished through cooperation of the two student organizations will be discussed, and policies of program setup for the coming year will be formulated. Eleanor Slaten, c38, and Paul Moritz, c39, will preside.
the personalist of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board is: the Rev. J. F. King, Harold G. Ingham, Dean Paul B. Lawson, Prof. Bert A. Nash, Prof. R. Johnson, Prof. J. Wheeler, Prof. R. Maddock, Prof. H. C. Tracy, Prof. G. Dukeing, Dean F. J. Moreau, Prof. J. P. Jensen, and Fred S. Montgomery.
The personnel of the YW.C.A. advisory board is: President, Miss Rosemary Ketcham; first vice-president, Mrs. Joseph King; second vice-president, Miss Helen Titsworth; third vice-president, Mrs. W. J. Baumgartner; fourth vice-president, Mrs. G. E. L Windlust; secretary, Miss Anna McCracken; treasurer, Mrs. K. Bruner; Mrs. Kal Badiun; Mrs. P. Meyer; Mrs. lei Suter, Miss Amida Stanton Mrs. J. F. Kell, Mrs. Marie Miller, Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, Mrs. R. M. Davis and Mrs. F. O. Russell.
F. A. D.
A.S.M.E. Meets Tonight
The A.S.M.E. will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in Marvin hall. A motion picture from the Diamond Power Specialty corporation will be shown.
A Combined Conference To Be Held in Topeka For Project Discussion
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WEAVER'S
Y.W.C.A. Completes Cataloging of Books
Cataloging of books in the Y.W.
C.A. library at Henley house is
completed and books are now
available to students either for reading
at Henley house or for checking out.
The work was done by a CSPP pro-
gram.
The books are listed under the following classifications: Biography, Devotional Materials, Literature, Psychology, and Religion.
Motor Vehicle Fatalities Increase In Rural Areas
The general trend in motor vehicle fatalities is toward more deaths in rural areas.
Traffic deaths for 1936, totaling 37,000, an increase of 4 per cent
The New and Modernized Dickinson We Show the Best and leave the Rest!
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DICKINSON
Don Ameche "HAPPY LANDING"
Ethel Merman - Caesar Romero Also—Walt Disney's Cartoon
Friday - Saturday
Two Grand Stars in the Hit
Comedy of the Year!
Space Moore
TELL TAKE ROMANCE
Melvin Deyles
Nalen Waltley - Stuart Erwin
A COLUMN PICTURE
SUNDAY!
From the Most Thrilling Pages of America's History Comes the Raiding Story of the Pirate Who Saved the Nation!
FREDERIC MARCH
Cecil B. DeMille's
'The Buccaneer'
FRANCISKA GAAL
AKIM TAMIROFF
Adr a Cost of Thunders!
When You Come to Town Why Not Drop Around
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Dorothy 'Hurricane' Lamour
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It's Up to Varsity Por and That's
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CHARLES LAUGHTON "Rembrandt"
Tomorrow - Saturday
Hits - Hits - Hits
They Must Fall Out of Heaven
No. 1
Newsy.
LAUGH-LADEN ROMANCE!
That's
MY STORY
CLAUDIA MORGAN-WILLIAMLUNGMAN
HERBERT MUNDIIN - RALPH MORGAN
HOBART CAVANAKA
N.K. UNIVERSITY PICTURE
No. 2
Buck's Ridin' Again
BUCK JONES
"Boss of Lonely Valley"
SUNDAY
Barbara Stanwyck
Joel McCrea
"Internes Can't Take Money"
over the previous year's, and the entire increase of 1,430 deaths was entirely in cities under 10,000 population and on the open road. This trend toward more deaths in rural areas have prevailed since 1901.
PATEE
Week 10c 'Til 7
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TODAY ENDS
SATURDAY
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Hortes and Thieves!
Tim McCoy
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RAYMOND PAIGE
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DICK POWELL
ROSEMARY LANE
HUGH HERBERT
FRANCES LANGFORD
"HOLLYWOOD HOTEL"
BENNY GOODMAN and His Swing Band
Also—Color Cartoon Latest News Events
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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.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1938
MindCoaching For Football Victory Urged
Jock Sutherland S a y s
Game Today Is More
Of an Intellectual Game
Than 20 Years Ago
Pittsburgh, Feb. 2. - (UP)—Success of modern day football teams depends more on the team's mental attitude than upon its ability to outwit the Sutherland, head football coach at the University of Pittsburgh, believes.
Dr. Sutherland, whose 1957 Pitt Panthers were acclaimed in a nationwide poll as the best team in the country, says football today is more of an intellectual game than it was 20 years ago. Hours formerly spent running men up and down the field are now consumed in so-called "skill" sessions, quarterback get-togethers and scrutinizing slow-motion movies of games played, he pointed out.
Mind Before Muscle
"Upon the mental attitude of a team depends victory more than on its ability to play," the Pitt coach declared, a trace of a Scottish accent in his voice. "Some of the best players I ever coached were men present, until they played in college, but players who had spirit."
The husky Scottsman believes colleges owe it to their athletes to use as many substitutes in games as possible, instead of playing one team for the full time. He carries out this plan in regard to his own teams.
Dr. Sutherland had little patience with those antagonists of football who think athletes waste time. These opponents don't realize, he said, that the average student wastes twice as much time as the athlete, who is forced to play and study hard to remain on the team and at the same time stay in the running scholastically.
Relaxation Is Needed
The famous gridiron mentor has other interesting things to say about football teams. He believes that the tenseness that often creeps into a team preparing for a hard game is relieved considerably by a dance or a sight-seeing tour on 1 long road trips to keep the mind off the game. He said that football players are not normally good dancers, despite the fact that they must be graceful in order to execute the twisting, swivel-hipped running that backfield men are required to do.
That football has become more complicated in the years following its infancy is shown by Dr. Sutherland's remark that in 1916, six plays were enough for a football team, "but last year's Pitt team had to learn 60, and was forced to use every one of them."
Woe to Saxophonist's Foe
San Francisco, Feb. 2.—(UP)-Municipal Judge Thomas Foley advised Julius Hall to hit saxophone players hereafter in the stomach and not in the mouth. He ordered him to pay the cost of restoring two teeth which he knocked from the mouth of Saxophonist Donald Crisler and also to pay his salary for the time lost while undergoing repairs.
Members of the Kansas Highway Patrol are now engaged in a rural school safety program. Appropriate posters, pamphlets and other literature are distributed in rural areas by the patrolmen, who also make numerous talks to Kansas school children.
Highway Patrol Engaged
Superior, Wis, Feb. 2.—(UP)—Mrs. George Turgus the cat,牛猫, became homeisher when his owner took him to Fort Wing for a visit as he slipped out of the house and walked the 40 miles back to his Superior home. The trip took the cat three weeks.
Cat Walks 40 Miles
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansas Sports Editor
There was a fine turnout last night to see "phog's" Jayhawkers "knock down and walk on" the Huskers, considered as the best bets for the tournament, opened. No early 3,000 spectators came to see, and they did not go away disappointed. Fast action, brilliant ball handling on the part of the home team, thrilling shots, and a victory to suit the tastes of the majority, all should mean a good crowd for each of the two remaining home games.
Pralle's 15 points put him up in third place in the average-pergame scoring in conference play. In 5 games he has scored 55 points for an average of 11 points a game. Only McNatt, sophomore Oklahoma forward, with an average of 12.33 in 3 games and Blahnik, Iowa State guard, with an average of 11.8 in 5 games rank above the Kansas star.
Statistics being gathered under the supervision of Ed Elbireg give some interesting sidelines on the game. According to the figures we received, Kansas made 17 field goals out of 32 attempted shots. This gives Kansas a win percentage made by one player was by Corlis who made out of 6 attempts—an average of 67 per cent—which is plenty good shooting.
Eling made 3 field goals in 8 attempts and coupled with his free throw record of 7 in 8 tries, gives him a high average for the evening. Prale made 18 attempts to get his 6 field goals.
Now if the Jayhawkers can bick Oklahoma on the Norman court and repeat last night's rout when they win Lincoln, don't everything be lovely?
We have a bone to pick with Lawrence Grauerholt, Kansas State College sports editor. In last Sunday's Topika Daily Capital, the K.S.C. journalism students put out the paper, Grauerholt took over Gene Kamper's "Ribbiting on Sports" column. In the column our friend Grauerholt gives a "student's views" on the athletic setup at Manatee High School and the basketball at State and at Mount Oread, he say, "Allen carries on a more extensive recruiting program than Root does."
We are led to say immediately, "It's a lie!" However, Grauerholz tempers his first statement a little by adding, "Phg visits high schools over the state frequently, not expressly to get material, but at least to build good will and friendships." In criticism we offer the fact that
Air Bombings Irk England
London, Feb. 2. —(UP) —The House of Commons tonight adopted a resolution expressing its "growing horror" at the bombardment of defeasible civilians in Spain and Germany, which would halt to theault a raids on open towns.
House Makes Resolutio
Against Bombardment
In Spain
The resolution, which passed without dissenting vote after Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden revealed that the government took the initiative several months ago to halt civilian slaughter from the air, was presented by Morgan Jones, Scottish Laborite.
"It is the opinion of the House," the resolution said, "that the growing horror of the aerial bombardment of defenseless civilians should be expressed in an international agreement. Government to assert its influence to and the House urges His Majesty's this end."
these visits are at the invitation of the school authorities of the various schools visited, and not at Allen's initiative, as he infers.
It has long been a practice among high schools to invite prominent coaches to come and address various gatherings such as athletic banquets. Winning coaches usually attain more prominence and are the ones that get these invitations. Can Root help it if he doesn't carry on a more ex-acting "recruiting" program, a Graetzel coach? If so, he will develop more of a name for himself and then perhaps he will get his share of the invitations.
Of course "Phog" will try to make as many friends and to make as good an impression as possible on these trips, but what coach doesn't? Let me also point out to my friend Grauerholz that when Waldof came into prominence at Kansas State, he was one of the most sought after speakers in the country for food and drink. He recorded a *t* accepting after-dinner speaking engagements would put any of the Kansas coaches to shame.
Perhaps you have guessed the reason for our ire; it's that word "recruiting" that brings up memories of 1930 when Kansas was crucified by other Big Six schools for "recruiting and paying" of athletes, practices that all other conference schools carry on to a greater or lesser degree. Kansas was just not fortunate or else clever enough to keep it under cover as he sister schools in the Big Six did.
Men's Intramurals
The men's intramural basketball schedule will get under way again Monday with the following games being scheduled for the week;
Monday—5 'o'clock, A.K. Psi, W
Cyclones, east court; Phi Mu Alpha
, bulldogs, west court, 6 'o'clock,
Blanks vs. Optimists, east court; Rumold's Boys vs. Hexagons I, west court.
9:15. Phi Gam vs. Acacia, east court; Phi Pi "B" vs. Theta Tau 'B', west court
Tuesday -- 6 o'clock, Galloping Ghosts vs. Obers, east court; Hellhounds vs. Hexagons II, west court; 9:15, Theta Tau vs. Westminsters, east court; K.E.K. vs. Jaybirds, west court.
Wednesday — 6 o'clock, Rumold's
Boys vs. 1200 Tennessee, east court;
Blanks vs. Bulldogs, west court; 8.30,
Delta Upsa vs. A.T.O., east court;
Delta Upsa vs. C.C., west court;
S.A.E. vs. S.P.E., east court; Kappa
Sigma vs. DiaCh, west court;
Thursday--6 o'clock, Whitakers vs. Gasshouse Gang, east camp; Campus Raiders vs. Trojans, west camp 10 o'clock, Phil Delt "B" vs. Beta "C", east camp; Phi Chi vs. 1200 Tennessee, west camp
Friday—6 o'clock, Galloping Ghosts vs. Blanks, east court; Panamanians vs. Obes, west court. 7 o'clock, D.T. vs. Phi Delt's, east court; Phi Delt's vs. Sig Ugn "B." west court. 8 o'clock, Rock Chalk vs. Hell-onshore. 9 o'clock, KKEK, West court. KKEK, West court. 9 o'clock, Phi Pai "B" vs. KEK.B." east court; Gashouse Gang vs. Theta Tau, west court.
Saturday--Kappa Sig "B" vs. Pi KA.B.-'E" east court; Sig Nu "B" vs. D.T.D-"B". 'W' west court; 9 o'clock Chi Gam vs. P.S.E. east court; Sig Chi B-"i" vs. Phi Psi "C" west court; 10 o'clock Beta Theta Psi vs. Acacia, east court; A.K Psi vs. 120 Tennesse, west court; 11 o'clock Triangle vs. Dunkel, east court; Panomannions孙 Gi Chi C-"i" vs. S.P.E. Triangle; 12 o'clock Gi Chi C-"i" vs. S.P.E. Triangle; S.A.E.C-"i" vs. Phi Giam C-"i" west court; 1 p.m. A.T.O."B" vs. Acacia "B" east court; Phi Giam B-"i" vs. S.A.E."B" west court
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Coroner Must Report All Motor Accident Deaths
The Kansas law requires every coroner or other official performing like functions to report in writing to the Motor Vehicle Department by the tenth day of each month the death of any person within his jurisdiction, and an accident involving motor vehicles or circumstances of the accident are also to be reported by the coroner. This information is used in compiling vital statistics for the state with reference to motor deaths.
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KITCHEN
He Stars
MOTORCYCLE
DON EBLING - FORWARD
Jayhawks Win-
Continued from page 1
Continued from page 1
rougher and the Jayhawks made 4 free throws out of a possible 5 as the Cornhuskers were held to a single point.
With the score standing 42 to 23 against his team, Parsons made a
field goal, the Jajahwakers made 2, one on Prall's drive to the basket and the other by Corlis' shot from under the basket.
Entertainment between halves was provided by four expert table tennis players from Kansas City.
As Coach Allen began sending in
reserves during the last 7 minutes
the Nebraka attack became stronger,
and the team from Lincoln ran its
tracks, while the Jayhawks
collected only 2 rebounds on free throws
by Reid and Florle.
Nebraska goes on to Norman to meet the first-place Oklahoma Sooners Saturday night. The next game for the Jayhawkers will be with Kansas State here Monday night.
The box score:
Kansas (48) 3 g ft mf tp pf pfl
Belfing, f 3 7 1 2 3 6.5
Durand, f 0 0 0 0 0 3.0
Golay, f 0 0 0 0 0 5
Corls, f 4 1 9 0 22.5
Johnson, f-g 0 0 0 0 2 12.5
Schmidt, c 2 0 2 4 35.4
Pelade, g (C) 6 3 1 2 15
Harp, g 2 1 0 5 1 29
Kappelman, g 0 0 0 0 1
Nebraska (32) g f ff tp ft pf pf
Amen, f 1 1 1 1 1 40.0
Davison, f 0 1 0 1 1.5
Davison, f 0 1 0 1 2.5
Kovada, f 0 1 0 1 1.5
Ehaugh, c (C) 1 2 3 4 2 40.0
Parsons, g 0 1 2 3 2 40.0
Grimm, g 0 1 2 2 12.5
Grimm, g 1 0 1 2 2 6.0
Ellott, g 1 0 1 2 1.5
Grimm, g 1 0 1 2 1.5
Officials: Reeves Peters, Wisconsin
Pat Mason, Rockhurst.
Attendance: 2957
Former Football Player Dies at Cottonwood Falls
Earl A. Miller, 24, a former football player at the University, died Tuesday night at the home of his parents, John Miller, Cotton-wood Falls.
He is survived by his parents and one sister, Mrs. Carl Winsor, Wichita.
Town Registers Bicycles
Daily Motor Accident Toll High
Columbia, Mo. — (UP) — Bicycles will be licensed and registered here much the same as motor vehicles are, in an effort to stop the thefts of the man- bike and by riding. No charge will be made for the registration or license plates.
Each day the casualty list is approximately as great as the number of people who live in a city the size of Mt. Vernon, Washington.
America's daily toll from motor vehicle accidents is 100 killed, 287 maimed and crippled for life, and 3,233 temporarily disabled.
A Meal Ticket Will Save You Money $2.75 Value
for $2.50
Sub-basement Memorial Union
UNION FOUNTAIN
He Stakes $2,500 a Week on His Knowledge of Tobacco...
Robert W. Barnes Independent Buyer one of many tobacco experts who smoke Luckies
"Now I know Lucky Strike tobacco and it's top-grade. That's why I've smoked Luckies for eight years now.
"I OFTEN invest $2500 a week in tobacco—$2500 of my own hard-earned cash," says Mr. Barnes. "So you can see that the only way I've stayed in business 10 years is to know tobacco."
"Lots of other independent buyers, auctioneers, and warehousemen I knows smoke Luckies for the same reason."
Yes, sworn records show that, among independent tobacco experts like Mr. Barnes, Luckies have over twice as many exclusive smokers as have all the other cigarettes combined.
LUCKY
STRIKE
Sworn Records Show
That...
w
WITH MEN WHO KNOW TOBACCO BEST-IT'S LUCKIES 2 TO1
HAVE YOU HEARD "THE CHANT OF THE TOBACCO AUCTIONER" ON THE RADIO? When you do, remember that Luckes use the finest tobacco. And also that the "Teastring" Process ensures certain harsh irritants found in all tobacco. So Luckes are kind to your throat.
Order Your DAILY KANSAN Today
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Per Semester
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Just Call K.U. 66 or Place Your Order at the Kansas Business Office, East of Watson Library
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Add Course To Improve Reading Skill
N e w Project Directed By Prof. Bert A. Nash Intended for Efficiency In Reading
An extensive program for improving reading ability among college students will be carried on this semester by the School of Education in co-operation with the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The project will be under the direction of Bert A. Nash, professor of education, and will continue throughout the semester.
Three Short Periods Weekly
"We can use efficiently three or four groups aggregating about 100 students," said Doctor Nash. "All work must be co-operation and regular attendance."
Students who feel they are not reading as effectively as they might are invited to confer with Professor Nash at 110 or 16F in Fraser hall, any morning, and make appointments.
The program, when it is fully launched, will call for three periods of 20 minutes each week. Students will be given exercises in various types of reading—science adventure, literature, history, and the like. There will be a gradual stepping up of the material.
"Similar tests at Indiana, Dartmouth and other institutions have disclosed college students with reading ability that is, ability to read and comprehend no higher than the average student level. How To Have a Hundred Students."
Preliminary to the course will be individual tests to check for cye defects, and there will be also the task of checking eye movements in reading.
"We hope to have a hundred in the group. These will be assigned to sub-groups roughly of the same standards of reading ability, and efforts will be directed to improving the ability in each sub-group."
The School of Education is just completing tests for the 3,006 pupils in the Lawrence public schools, and is now tabulating its material to find how much knowledge it shows the greatest difference from their general intelligence. Many pupils have a fairly normal reading ability, but when a pupil shows reading ability of a year or more below the level of his general intelligence, the educators seek a method of improving the reading skills of their students. Testing
Have Equipment for Testing
In fact, there is one fourth grader,
an omnivorous reader, who has
the reading comprehension of a ninth
grader.
Lawrence tests have shown, for example, instances in which pupils in the ninth grade read with the ability of fourth graders, and some in the eighth grade who have the ability of the tenth to twelfth grades.
The School of Education has equipment for testing eyesight, including equipment that records on film the movement of the eyeball as the subject is reading. A metronome is used to test and improve reading ability. This device displays text matter a line, or even two-thirds of a line, at a time, and its speed can be varied to accommodate the stumbling primary grader, or th most rapid college reader.
This school stuff is a great life.
We have been to class just five hours so far this semester and we're six chapters and three papers behind. Maybe we relaxed too much after the exam, but we've learned much measuredheits heard so far, the coming semester holds great promise of being rough and ruty for ye studies.
HAY by WIRE
What has happened to the marching song that we sang not so many
Continued from page 2
College students have just about taken over the bowling alley down town. Bowling is making a comeback, with some universities even installing alleys in their union buildings. We're still nursing a twisted finger from our last and first game. After watching the 10 wood pins was thought of a 16-pound ball you would swear that the pins were mailed to the floor. The game is a great reducer for the ladies.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938
Continued from page 2
Issue Call For Relavs Nomination
James Gillispie, ph, senior manager of the Student Relays committee, is issuing a call for nominations for freshman membership on the committee. Persons wishing a place on the committee are asked to make application to Gillispie at the athletic office on or before Feb. 12.
The Relays committee handles many of the details in entertaining the athletes who come to the Kansas Relays. The committee has one senior, two juniors, four sophomores, and seven seniors each year are by "promotion" from the ranks. Gillispie has been on the committee four years now.
New Students To Take Test Will Hold Psychological Exam in Fraser Hall This Afternoon
About a hundred students will take the freshman psychological test today, according to Prof. A. H. Turner director. This examination, which is required for all new students, will be given at 2:30 this afternoon in the theater. Teachers of 2:20 classes will excuse those who are to take it.
This is the sixteenth year that the tests have been given to incoming University students. Seventeen years ago the experiment was tried upon 106 students, and in 1821 psychological examinations have been found of increasing value.
According to Professor Turney, the intelligence tests are used in many ways. Students are informed of their own standing thereby. Advicegains gain knowledge of standing of those students who are marked "unsatisfactory."
Often the records are consulted by employers who want further detail about a prospective employee's qualifications. Educators and psychologists also draw general conclusions which help in mapping out future plans.
More than a thousand students took the examinations last fall and many of these have learned their scores from Mr. Turney.
Offer Specialties At 'Owl Screech'
The "Owl Screech" will open the social season of the spring semester tomorrow night with Red Blackburn and his orchestra furnishing the music. This is the annual dance-sponsored event, honor society for junior men.
Several specialties will feature the evening's entertainment. Hervey Vigour, e38, and Dick Jenner, e38, will play some ocarina duets. They performed on the Campus last year for the ballet billed at one of the local theaters.
Vernon Berkey, c'40, will present some imitations during the evening He plays the trumpet like Henry Busse and does other acts of like nature. This is his first public appearance on the Campus.
The dance will be from 9 to 12 in the Memorial Union ballroom. Tickets may be obtained from memorial.com or at the Memorial Union desk.
England and France To Crusade Against Pirates
Paris, Feb. 3. —(UF) –Great Britain and France tonight cleared 70 warships for action and embarked on a sink-and-fight crusade against “pirate” submarines in the Mediterranean following unofficial indications that Fasist Italy will join in the bold plan.
Dispatches from Rome said that Premier Mussolini, encouraged by the efforts of British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden to "allay suspicion" that an Italian submarine might have been responsible for the new outbreak of "piracy," appeared to be agreeable to the new scheme.
Authorized Rattles
Phi Delta Theta, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Tomorrow
Pi Kappa Alpha, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Triangle, chapter house 12 p.m.
ELIZABEZ MEGUIAR,
Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
Triangle, chapter house, 12 p.m.
ELIZABETH MECUAD
Varsity Dance, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Ballet Russe Was Feature Of Coronation
Saturday
Fireside Forum, Congregational Church, 12 p.m.
For its first performance at the University, the ballet will bring a company of 125 with an accompanying symphony orchestra.
Command Performance Given Before England's Monarch; Has M a d e Several World Tours
A truly metropolitan show comes to the University on Monday evening, Feb. 14, when the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, largest of the Russian ballet companies, appears in Hoeh auditorium.
Ballet Russe is a world-famous organization and has made several world tours. This is its fifth American tour.
In London's Covent Gardens the ballet was a feature of the English coronation season, and gave a command performance before the king and queen. Its London management presented the de Bali company in three coronal phases of one month each, with the London Philharmonic Orchestra accompanying. Capacity audiences greeted the company for its performances at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York.
Dean D. M. Swarthout, manager of the University concert course, under whose auspices the ballet is to appear, states that in his 15 years as manager of the course, no greater attainment has been brought to the University.
Tickets are on sale at the School of Fine Arts office, Bell Music store, and the Round Corner drug store.
Students Visit New Theta House
More than 500 guests attended the Kappa Alpha Theta open house Wednesday afternoon and evening when members of the sorority re-enter University students at the new chapter house, 1433 Tennessee street.
The entire house, from the recreation room in the basement to the third floor, was open for the inspection of guests.
Many gifts were received from other sororities and fraternities, including silver platters, pitches, candles, jewelry, cards, picture cards, card tables and flowers.
Members of the sorority will hold open house for faculty members and town friends Sunday afternoon from 10 a.m. in the evening from 7 to 10 o'clock.
The new housea was completed on Jan. 1. The house formerly occupied by the sorority at 1116 Indiana now houses the Triangl fraternity.
Berlin. Feb. 3. — (UP) - A dying antelope, retreated on agile on its hind legs, head thrown back, a throwing pierce spearing its side, is the form of a giant dog that Cainnam's "last colonies" which has just been completed in Manheim.
LATE ENROLLMENT
Lost Colonies in Monument
LATE ENROLLMENT
College students who are enrolling for the first time and students wishing to make changes in their schedule will enter the east door of Robinson gymnasium tomorrow morning from 9:30 to 11:30 o'clock. Advanced standing students and those transferring will enter at the north door at the same time.
NUMBER 87
Parking Committee To Meet
A special meeting of the
W.S.G.A. and M.S.C. Parking
Committee will be hold tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in the morning to the Memorial Union building.
All those wishing to appeal traffic violation penalties are asked to present themselves at that time. Frank Harw, c38,
acting chairman, Parking Committee.
Later he co-operated with Henry Seidel Canbury to found the Saturday Review of Literature, and he is probably most familiar to American
At the beginning of the war he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the air service. After the Aristice, with h is old position no longer open, he worked for six months writing advertisements sloggy in the art agency. Some of these sloggies are still by-words in the profession.
OWL TICKETS AVAILABLE
Tickets for the "Owl Screech" are available at the main desk of the Memorial Union building.
Sale of tickets to the Student Christian Federation banquet, to be given in honor of the Rev. Edwin Winslow, of Omaha, Nebraska, began yesterday afternoon.
Dinner To End Religion Week
Poteat Will Be Guest At Federation Banquet Next Thursday
The banquet closes Religious Emphasis Week, which is being sponsored by the Student Christian Federation with the co-operation of the University convocations committee the MSC.C.-W.S.GA. forum board and the Lawrence Ministerial Alliance.
Eleanor Slaten, c38, chairman on the publicity committee for the week and Idella Campbell, c38, chairman of the final banquet, spoke briefly regarding plans for the banquet and sale of tickets at the regular bi-balance Student Christian Federation meeting in Myers Hall yesterday.
The Rev. Dr. Potet, pastor of the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church in Cleveland, served for 13 years in China as a missionary and professor of philosophy at the University of Shanghai. Before this last year and before he left, he was pastor of the Pullen Memorial Baptist Church in Raleigh, N.C.
The Rev. D. Potate arrives in Lawrence Tuesday morning for an all-University conversation. The convocation will open this year's RE conference, a three-day meeting of which is "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confusion."
Long and Lean and Lissom' Is Poet-Critic Who Will Speak Here
Will Interview Majors In Chemical Engineering Today
June graduates in the department of chemical engineering will be interviewed today by S. L. Starks, director of technical employment for the Dow Chemical company, Midland, MN. Mr. Starks, professor of chemical engineering received word yesterday of Mr Starks' plan to visit the Campus.
"Long and lissom, with spidery legs. He speaks slowly and smiles readily., he's Brown and smoothface a and gulless; and a and in whatever guse, he will recognize poetry if it be there."
Mr. Benet is no library or drawing room poet. He has lived a life of varied experience, and his writings are even more varied. Born of a line of American military men in Ft. Hamilton, N.Y., in 1886, he received a scientific education at Yale University. After a year or two of "puttingter around" he obtained the position he now commands by correspondence, and rose from office boy to associate editor, a position which he held from 1910 to 1917.
Joseph G. Hoyle
That is the way someone has described William Rose Beret, internationally known poet, critic, and author, to the University to lecture Feb. 11.
He has published s i x books of original poetry, most famous of which are "Merchants from Catbury" (1912) and the "Falconer of God" (1916). He also wrote essays, translations, and edited various collections and anthologies.
college students as the "Phoenician" of "The Phoenix Nest" column is that magazine.
His first wife was a sister of Kathleen Norris, the novelist, and his second wife was Eleanor Wylie, considered the finest contemporary woman poet at the time of her death in 1928. He is the elder brother of Stephen Vincent Benet, of "John Brown's Body" bale.
Let Contract For Dyche Completion
Bid for Reconstruction Of Condemned Building Goes to J. C. Constant Of Laurence
J. T. Constant, Lawrence contractor, yesterday was awarded the contract for reconstruction work on Dyche museum, according to a report issued to University of Kansas officials by J. A. Mermis, state business manager. Constant's bid on the proposed rebuilding amounted to $46.728.
The general contract does not provide for completion of the work. Alternate items have not been decided upon definitively.
A. D. Jacobson, Kansas City. Mo.
received the plumbing contract on a
bid of $630. Mermis said that
the electric wiring contract will not be
reached.
Additional wiring and plumbing are to be installed. A basement floor and mezzanine floor are also listed for construction.
The contracts were not let last Monday when the state manager opened the bids. They were declared too high.
In November, 1952, the building was condemned and closed. Grants of $25,000 from the legislature and $10,465 from Public Works Administration were given for removal of inner structure of the building and for general reinforcement of floors, pillars and beams.
A fund of $55,000 was granted by the state legislature last February At that time an unsuccessful attempt was made to obtain a federal grant.
Lawson Talks On Vocations College Dea advises Against a Too Hasty Choice of Life-Work
In opening a series of radio talks from station KFKU, addressed more especially to high school students of Kansas, Paul B. Lawen, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, advised precipitate choice of a life-vocation.
"The girl who marries in haste is liable to repent at leisure; neither should you marry your life to a job that requires you to work a great deal," said Lawson.
Dr. Lawson urged, on the other hand, the desirability of studying a variety of subjects in high school and of taking at least two years of the general cultural subjects of a university before making final decision.
"Of course you can't stop to learn something about very many of the nearly 32,000 different kinds of vocation that now attract mankind, but that doesn't mean that because you like mathematics in high school, you should decide without further inquiry you should take up a vocation that depends largely on mathematics.
"And remember, no matter what your final choice, you will never regret having a broad foundation for the field of your specialty, for the height to which you build the pyramid of your life's vocation will depend in large part upon the size of its base."
Dr. Lawson cautioned his hearsens especially to make their own decisions. "I have seen students at the University of Kansas over - persuaded by friends, or even ordered by parents, to take courses in which they were unhappy. I have seen students come successes when they switched to the course of their own choosing."
Fireside Forum Will Hold Dance
Fireside Forum, Congregationa University people's organization, will celebrate the arrival of the new semester with an old-fashioned barbieri from 830 to the parish house of the Plymouth Congregational Church.
"The only requirements for ad mission will be 15 cents and an appropriate costume for barn dancing", said Z尼恩 Fowler, c39, chairman of Forum parties, yesterday afternoon.
John L. Hunt, general secretary of the Y.M.C.A., will lead the square dancing and reels.
Cook Announces Residence Scholarships
Miss Pennis Cook, executive sec
retary of the University committe
on aids and awards, yesterday an-
nounced the following scholarships:
Residence scholarships at Watkins
Catholic School, c38, and Evalyn McCool, c40.
Residence scholarships at t Miller hall to Cléojeane Smith, c'uncl, and Lois Sholander, c'38.
Names Law Honor Roll
Dean Moreau Nominates Twenty-Two Students For Rating
Dean Frederick J. Moreau has announced that 22 students have been recommended for the honor roll and approved by the faculty of the School of Law.
Law students must have better than a "B" average to make the honor roll, and must be approved by the school. Of the 10 may be chosen from each class.
Class of 1938: Glenn W. Dickinson, Jr, David H. Fisher, H. Heerog. Donald, Dainal A. Hansen, Tom B. Ise, Richard O. Jones, Patrick B. McAnany, Erick A. Roberts, and Charles M. Tansey.
Those chosen are:
Class of 1939: Omer G. Voss, John M. Rounds, Honor M. Curat, Harold C. Cook, Oscar F. Belin, Harry S. Deutch, William R. Kirby, Bill House, Burton C. Mader, and James M. Hauseh.
Class of 1940: Kenneth B. Wallace,
Charles E. Henshafl, Charles W.
Ward.
Insurgent Planes Bomb Ambulance Train
B Barcelona, Spain. Feb. 3. — (UP) — The Loyalist government announced today that, pending the outcome of British and French efforts to obtain a "truce" in the bombing of open towns, its air force will cease bombarding civilian population from the air.
Simultaneously with the announcement, a fleet of *Insurgent* planes sweep down on a French-American food and ambulance convoy near Fidurerus, along the Franco-Spanish border, and he convoys with heavy loss of life.
Four American ambulances in the procession escaped the bombs and raced at full speed into Barcelona, while the other trucks, mostly loaded with food, turned about and returned to Perniguan, France.
Several of the French trucks in the convoy were hit and destroyed, killing three French drivers and injuring nine others.
Nine Spanish civilians were killed and heavy damage was done by the Insurgent bombs.
WaterColors Are on Display
For the month of February the Spooner-Thayer museum is showing a collection of water colors by Milford Zornes of Clarmont, Calif.
California desert and marin scenes predominate in the collection. There are, however, portraits of several Mexican landscapes and a representation of the Thames river in London; the Hudson river from Jersey; and several New England pictures. One of these is a striking portrait of sea life along the Atlantic, with boats at the wharf in the background; and another is a counted-fish illustration.
Among Mr. Zornes' California scenes is one of Yosemite valley, an exquisitely colored painting entitled "At Sunset," and a picture of the "Torrey Pines," which are among the oldest trees in the world. A more artistic version also exhibited, its title being "Morning on South Main."
Mr. Zorres was born in Oklahoma was educated in California, and is a member of the California Water Color Society, the Fine Arts Society of San Diego, and Laguna Beach Art Association. He lived in the same town with Millard Sheets, and his was ardent pupil. Mr. Zorres is represented in the Post Office building at Washington, D.C., by 17 water colors depicting the carrying of the United States mails.
Engineers Near Peak Enrollment
Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the School of Engineering announced yesterday that the total registration of that school has reached 658, which is within ten of the maximum registration for the first semester.
Presnell Takes Husker Position
Member of Jaghawkier Football Coaching Staff Will Hold Similar Job At Nebraska
Glenn Presnel, who has held the position of backfield coach on the varsity football coaching staff since the beginning of spring practice last year, yesterday accepted the offer of a position with the university, maybe, the University of Nebraska.
The move came as a surprise to Gwinn Henry, director of athletics, and to Prof. W. W. Davis, chairman of the athletic board.
Maj. Lawrence M. "Biff" Jones, director of athletics and head football coach at Nebraska, came to Lawrence Wednesday with the Cornusker basketball team and contacted Henry and Head Football Coach Ad Lindsay, before presenting his offer to Presnell. Both Henry
T. S. WOODS
CLENN PRESNELL
Opportunity for Promotion
and Lindsay expressed the desire to keep Presell on the coaching staff, but left the matter up to Presell for a decision.
It is understood that the job at Nebraska carries with it a good salary increase, but, what is more important, it offers a chance for more rapid promotion. Nebraska has been for years in the national spotlight in the football realm and the success of a young man as assistant coach there has grown. If you want to step into the position of head coach at some "big time" football school.
Prof. W. W. Davis, upon being questioned regarding the plans of the athletic board to meet the situation, said that the board would meet within a month and would take action, after the recommendations of the athletic director of the school have been asked to study the situation and recommend a candidate or course of action.
No Plans for Filling Vacancy
Last night Henry told a Kansan reporter that, owing to the suddenness of Presnel's decision, he had not yet any plans for filling the vacancy. However, he stressed the fact that he would recommend what Head Coach Lindsey desired. "We want to do whatever suits Lindsey and the rest of the staff, for after all they are the ones who will be hired." Presnel said. "If there is a man desirable to Lindsey who is obtainable, then that man will be recommended for the position."
Henry, Lindsay and Davis each expressed deep satisfaction with Presnel's activities as assistant coach, and with the wooer he fitted into. The two were also the voices voiced regrets at seeing the perennial young coach's departure.
KFKU To Give Boy Scout Program Tomorrow Night
Station KFKU will present a Boy Scout program tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock that will bring to the microphone several Lawrence officials. Paul Campbell, area scout executive, will be interviewed on Scout anniversary plans by Chief of Police Jude Anderson; Fire Chief Paul Imagalint; C. E Birch, city school superintendent; J. M. Mott, city physician; and Mayor Alfred Lawrence. Prof. W. A. Dill, a member of the area executive committee, will be announcer for the broadcast.
Ask Engineers To Sell Books
Students in the School of Engineering are urged to buy or sell their books as soon as possible at the MVR Institute, a new in operation in Marvin hall.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938
≈
Comment
To All New Students
---A Special Warning
"Stamp out syphilis, enemy of youth," is the slogan adopted by the Chicago Health department, according to a statement by Dr. John L. Rise, health commissioner. More than $400,000 will be spent this in Chicago's war on venereal disease. The money will be used to find, diagnose, and treat cases of syphilis.
"I am convinced," said Dr. Herran N. Burden, president of the Board of Health, "that it costs far less money to fight syphilis than to tolerate it. Us spread from one person to another constitutes a growing economic burden to the municipality and to the individual."
One reason why syphilis wrecks so many lives is that in its early stages the disease creates little personal discomfort. Syphilis is highly infectious in its early stages and may be contracted unknowingly. Slowly the disease grows and intenches itself throughout the system. Years later syphilis may strike with dreadful results—may cause partial or total disability, blindness, insanity and death.
Syphilis is preventable and curable. To secure an effective and speedy cure, treatments ought to be given in the early stage of the disease; the sooner the better.
Fortunately, everyone can easily learn if he or she is infected, by taking the Wassermann test, facilities for which are being extended throughout the country.
We recommend that all new students, as well as those who have been here and who have not already done so, apply at once for the free Wassermann test given at Watkins Memorial hospital.
Applaud University English Requirements
Emporia Gazette
We note with approval amounting to an accordade of appeasae that the Kansas papers are cheering K.U. for insisting that before a student shall enter on his final year he shall be able to write clear, simple English and express himself with some degree of illuminating intelligence.
The prime object of an education should be to communicate thought. But the average college student, whether he comes from the small college or the big one, seems to have entirely neglected that phase of his education—the phase which makes it possible for him to talk and write with any degree of clarity. Perhaps this lack reflects a low grade of intelligence, a confused mind. But it is certainly a lack and no student of the University should be given a degree, whether in law, engineering, pharmacy or the fine and liberal arts, who can't sit down and write 500 or 1,000 words upon any subject which he has discussed, or upon any general topic of human interest that might come up in a casual conversation, and write it understandingly, simply, in fairly short sentences and with non-technical words. The student who cannot do that is certainly ignorant, no matter how many facts he knows about his particular branch of learning. The ignorance of the rising generation, college graduates and all, accounts somewhat for the increase of crime.
This Year 40,000
---How Many Next?
Motor car accidents caused the death of 39,700 persons last year in the United States, according to a report made by the National Safety Council. Motor-accident fatalities have mounted steadily since the council started organized safety work in 1913. From figures of previous years we may assume that more than 40,000 persons will die from automobile accidents this year.
According to data compiled by the United States department of commerce, the principal causes of automobile fatalities are: excessive speed, driving on the wrong side of the road, leaving the roadway, not having the right of way, and reckless driving. These five causes, accounting for approximately nine out of ten of all fatal accidents, involve the driver.
Since the driver is responsible for the majority of the accidents, drastic means should be taken to keep off the road: those who persist in driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor; those who constantly disobey traffic laws and regulations; and those who are habitually reckless drivers. Most of the states have drivers' license laws and traffic laws. Strict enforcement of these laws by an efficient highway patrol system could eliminate many irresponsible drivers.
A constructive program of education should be started for young drivers. Young persons, before they are allowed to drive on the public highways, should be given thorough instruction on how to drive a car. They should also be made familiar with the traffic laws and regulations. These young people should be given practical lessons in real automobiles on the road. They should be taught, not only theories of safe driving, but what is more important, safe driving
≈
habits. Being safe is a habit which can be acquired under instruction and drilled into a person until he cannot, within reasonable limits, make blunders. Training our youth to form safe driving habits is one of the best methods of decreasing automobile accidents in the future.
"Should we be led into war, our fleet would certainly not wait for the enemy here," said Representative Byron Scott of the House naval affairs committee. But that's silly, Mr. Scott. You know perfectly well that our fleet never has waited for the enemy. We even contemplate sending it out looking for the war.
Campus Opinion
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kaman. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited.
Get Prepared
I think the President is taking his first step in the right directing when he asks for a bigger navy.
Everyone knows that Japan has had a chip on her shoulder for years when it comes to the United States I think we'd ought to knock it off for her and make her like it.
I got so interested that I read some of the stories in the Kansas City Star about Japan. They only go to prove what I have been heard. It was a story about the Japs who plan to ride up and down the streets in rickshaws drawn by Americans and Englishmen. Here we are, the two biggest nations in the world, taking control of the city.
I’ve read in the past where the Japs could land troops in Mexico (there’s another country we ought to whip too) and attack this country. That’s another reason why I think Roosevelt is right in wanting a stronger navy. I think we should have a stronger army to go. We need to use weapons like Germany and Italy all line up against us looking for trouble. We could whip them all right, but it might be a pretty hard job.
We've only got one real friend in the world and that's England. She'd always help us if we got in trouble of that kind, but I still think we ought to be prepared. We had a lot of friends have happened in that. What if we had been.
And some one ought to make these pacifists shut up. I get mad every time I hear one. Personally I'd consider it an honor to fight for the greatest country in the world. Good old America. Preparedness.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 1 p.m., preceding
regular publication day and 11:30 a.m.
Vol. 35 Friday, February 4, 1933 No.87
--the Flowery North and the Flowery South and then there wouldn't be any more China. A soldier had said that he was going to fight my onion, too, so I repitated it.
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will have a stamp meeting Sunday, at 3 o'clock at Henley House. Students needed to take their collections--Ruth Forgel, Charles Yemans.
KAPPA PHI There will be an important meeting between the Electron of officers, and the members of plaques will be held.
"OLOGY" COMMISSION: The "Ology" Commission will allow 45 a半小时 at Henley House Kwint Burton
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION: The psychological examination will be given at 2:30 this afternoon in Fraser theater. New students who have classes which conflict with this examination should see their instructors about being excused from class.-A. H Turney.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FACULTY OF ENGINEERING
MEMBER
KANSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
PUBLISHER
DAVID E. PARTRIDG
EDITOR-ON-CAPITA
ASSOCIATE EDITORS MARTIN BENTon and DAVID T. WANGIENCE
MARTIN BENTON
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOEHLER
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GUILIAN CLAUSE
NEWS EDITOR BILLY SMITH
SOFTWARE EDITOR DOROTHY NETTELTHER
SPORTS EDITOR ILAN TORRENCIE
MAKEUP EDITOR LOUIS FOCKLEE AND JEAN THOMAS
RWYMITY EDITOR JIM HAREL
JEAN FLOOD
Enron's Note: More random notes from the Chinese war front, written by Jack Belden, who has travelled more than 10,000 miles along Oriental firing lines covering the underland war for the United States, from where yesterday's dispatches left off.
Kansan Board Members
ALICE HARDMAN-JULIEN
J. WHORO RUSCO
DAVID E. PARTINGE
KENNETH MORRIS
GRACE VALENTINE
JOCKE BROWN
F. QUIANTINEN
WILLIAM FIZZIGARD
DREW MELCHIOHN
CHARLES ALEXANDER
EDWARD BANNEY
MARTIN BENTON
MARVIN GOEBEL
JANE PLOWER
MOREN THOMPSON
CLAUDE DOREY
ELTON E. CARTER
ALAN ASHERT
CHARLES ALEXANDER
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press Distributor of Collegiate Direct
Adjustant Ju sat out in the court-yard fanning himself and he had a chair brought for me. The shells were flying right over our heads. "Fish' Story About Mosquitoes
(Copyright 1918, by United Writers)
A bridge commander's headache in the middle of a forest was too severe. Five large Chinese dishes were prepared before me, but I could do no more than peck at them with trembling chickpeats. A soldier sat beside me and watched. I told myself I was not afraid and that I was exhausted from constant pain. "Oh no, didn't like the soldier to watch me that way."
American Correspondent Finds Chinese Whoppers Beat Yanks'
"Very poor aiming," said the adjunct. "This is really nothing. The particles are packed so close together that they cannot move through these mosquitoes that are really bad."
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
As I had on shorts, I began to notice the mosquitoes, too. I told Adiantur Ju that in my home town in New Jersey four mosquitoes could pick up my blood and some sap, asumped for he thought only in Mongolia they drew them that big.
(Copyright 1938, by United Press)
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"When I was fighting with Feng Yu-Isiandi." Ji rejoined, "we used to send medical supplies up to the front by mosquitoes."
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kane.
A junior officer who was standing near me shook his finger in my direction and said with pride:
"You can't talk over Adjutant Ju."
'Where Is America?'
I was welcome in a Chinese dugout when I told them how scared I'd been when their guns went off. A dozen soldiers bombarded me with questions. They were mostly country I was a sort of currency to them.
Where was America? they wanted to know. How far was it? Did you get there by boat or train? Have you mountains in America? Why does everybody dance in America? That's awful. If you're 27 years old, why aren't you married? In America, do they have fat men?
Wanted Foreigners' Opinions
A Chinese regimental officer of officer picked up a stone and in classical Chinese drew me a question on the ground.
"What is your worthiness' opinion? Should the middle kingdom fight?" I told him yes, China should fight and if they didn't Japan would grab
The officer remained silent. We walked along together for a while then said goodbye.
Maliopoulos, Lewis, Anthony Zhronic, c'uncel, and Ricket Burdon. c'40, read original manuscripts for criticism after the election. Formal initiation services 'will be held soon for new pledges.
He saluted with a "Thank you." "It's often hard to know what foreigners think about these things," were his pardoned words.
Elect Michalopoulos Chancellor of Quill Club
George J. Michalopoulos, $sp$, was elected chancellor of the Fehr Neum chapter of the American College Quill Club at its meeting in the Green room of Fraser Hall last night. He will succeed Kenneth Lewis, c$39,$ who was forced to resign because of a heavy scholiastic schedule.
Nine Widows in One Block Seek Eligible Bachelors
Dodge City, Feb. 3 — (UP) —
Kansas City widow recently sought
the aird of Mayor Nevins in he
runs for Kansas rancher
man for a husband."
The woman wrote Nevins that there were nine widows in her block. She didn't explain whether she was speaking for herself or her neighbors but suggested that the mayor round up the eligible bachelors in the southwest and arrange for them to correspond with the widows.
She said she believed she would be proficient in shoveling dust after storms.
Haywire-moons age? It wasn't a bad ditty. Maybe the band could get an arrangement, and beat it out at the basketball games. The crowd at the basketball game the other night took its bawling out for booing in good humor. It seems as if the referee has lost his eye-sight at times, but the best of the bleacher reifs would do worse if handed the whistle and pushed on the floor. It's 10 men against two.
Continued from page 1
Word was seen in that situation in the damper states here and there have invented a new game called "one-two-threes." The game is played with five dice. The player rolling the most one's names the drink, the one rolling the most two's drinks it, and the player with the most three's pays for it. Three deceivers of the game are trying to catch that elephant, arguing about the decision at third base, and whether the new was the required one and a hat racups high, respectively.
We were startled to read the other day that it froze in Hell. This one happens to be in Michigan. Realize that we have some snappy back-onacks have some snappy back-onacks
[ the hook, such as "I'm going to Hell to get some ice."
Meadows green and trickling stream
Brings back days past to me.
When I was young and full of fun,
I lived in a quiet neighborhood.
Before I reached this sorrowful
Before I reached this sorrowful stage
Of grief, of care, of college,
Before I went away from home
To get my share of knowledge,
A happy farm boy was I thought
Who toiled the whole day through,
With never a thought of a troubled
world.
throng;
A wretched thing am L.
A wretched thing in life —Daily of Collegian
Nor the things it will do to you.
But now I've tasted tainted fruit
Of a mad world rushing by.
And it pulls me on among the
An instructor in English at the University of Texas got even with some 'bright boys' in his class. Before the professor came to class, one of the students wrote on the board, the other will not meet classes Wednesday.
by the time Dr. Jones arrived, another student had applied the eraser; to leave "Dr. Jones will not meet his lasses Wednesday." Not to be outdone, Dr. Jones erased one more letter.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1935
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
}
Here on the Hill
an account of Mt. Oread Soccer
DOROTHY NETTERTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m. call K.U.25; after 5 call 2702-K3
Dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house Wednesday night were:
∞
Bill Hyer, Olathe
Bob Manning, Olathe
Bill Arbur, Olathe
Don Williams, Olathe
Maurice Buckman, Olathe
Mr. and Mrs. R. Foster, Topcake
Mrs. Charles H. Klusman, Topeka,
was a guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi
house Wednesday evening.
The Sigma Kappa alumnae group of Kansas City, Mo., entertained a luncheon at the Murchiech Galler College, where members of the active chapter attended.
心
--held in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building yesterday afternoon. An informal program of games had been planned by the committee.
Mrs. Frank W. Spencer, Denver,
was a house guest of Kappa Alpha
Theta yesterday.
Virginia Rizzo of Detroit, a member of the Sigma Kappa sorority, has returned to school this semester.
Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pledging of Dorothy Noble, Kansas City, Mo.
∞
About a hundred women attended the annual Finance Tea of the University Women's Club, which was
Mrs. Leonard Axe was general chairman and was assisted by the following committee chairmen; Mrs. Waldemar Gelch, receive; Mrs. G.W. Bradshaw, tea table; Miss Wealty Babcock, refreshments; Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, serving; Mrs. John Kister, finance; and Mrs. H.W. Hargis, program. Miss Hannah Oliver and Mrs. William L. Burckdied poured.
Kenneth Campbell, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon at Raleigh, NC, has been transferred to the local chapter at the University.
2.
A meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers was held Wednesday evening in the men's room of the Memorial Union building.
The following officers were elected:
President, John Butterworth, e38;
vice-president, George Gordon, e39;
secretary, Thomas H. Miller, e40;
treasurer, Edward Baker, e39.
∞
Members of Theta Epsilon, Baptist women's group, will give a rush tea
24
.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house Wednesday night were:
Ferris Summers
John Tyler
Ernie Wells
Bob McLeod
Steve Howbert
Tuesday evening at the home of the Rev. C, W. Thomas. Miss Mary Cavanness is in charge of arrangements
Members of the Sigma Chi fraternity who have returned to school this semester are:
The following were present
Judy Edison, f40
Jonice Taylor, c18
Jim Harvey, c18
Jennie Bowen, c38
Jane Flood, c38
Jo Steven, c40
Jersey Wine, c19
Jennie Dana, c19
Jean Perry, c40
Ruth Olive Brown, c40
Charlene Burke, f39
Jonny Winslow, c39
Jove Vetter, f39
Ruth Mary Nelson, ed"9
Jane Blanche, c40
Woodshead, c40
Sue Stuart, c41
Billie Ball, c41
Marianne Dillon, c18
Diyath Dipti, c29
Fou Weller, c38
Ibie Nebelt, c38
Rosalind Barre, c18
Rossand Barre, c18
Nancy Kroelz, f41
PHONE K.U. 66
The Sigma Chii fraternity entta-
tained Kappa Alpha Theta sorority with a buffet supper and hour dance last night.
Howard Sails, Kansas City, Mo.
Bill Jones, Kansas City, Mo.
Bill Kiley, Kansas City, Mo.
James Baker, Kansas City, Mo.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
20YES: One single and one double room in
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LOST: Small gold watch, other downward or in vicinity of gym. Reward. If found please call Betty Smith, 1774, 1234 La-89
with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
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See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tonks, tripods, filters and accessories.
+ to Shanghai"
JUNE TRAVIS
WALLACE FORD
— AND —
ZORRO RIDES AGAIN
Color Cartoon
BOYS: Two quiet, roommate rooms wanted. Double, rooms one twin beds, $10.10 and $18.00. Campus House. 1245 Oread. >32
PHONE K.U.66
HILLOU GUYS: Place for one with three rooms in 4-m room apartment with or without cooking facilities. Very reasonable. Appliad 1293, Apr. 17. ... 88
FOUND: Mark black leather glove for the left hand in KU parking zone No. 3. -88 at Kauai Station, Journalism Blvd. -88
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Basketballs
RUTTER'S SHOP
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104 Mass. St.
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ROOM FOR BOY Single, campus park, M4
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Fancy patterned broochcloth Well tailored "Keen-Bill" shirts with soft or non-wilt stools in soft fancy wearers or collars. A large assortment hard finished worsteds. Buy to choose from. Now for next season.
$4.95 Values
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One of the members of the company of 125 dinners of the Bullet Russes de Monts Carlo who will present their entertainment in Hoi Cham is Joan Sirot, an art teacher tour of this company, but their first appearance at the University.
Mary Fitz-Gerald, c40
Catherine Holmes, 1/39
Marjorie Walsh, c38
Fernandez, c40
Nancy Wald, c30
Dennis Simon, c41
Betty Loal Ray, c14
Deeches Nebbia, c4
Robbins Mackenzie, c4
Margaret Strooker, x14
Anita Warden, c14
Robbins Walker, c14
Hadley Hodgson, c2
Juliette Trumble, c14
Elanor Murray, c1
Danielle Friez, c16
Margaret Jones, c41
Jamie Jenkins, c14
Betty Cole, c14
Salle Harren, c14
Mary Jane Shleaker, c14
Marion Springer, c14
Margaret Springer, c14
Mary Ellen DelMorto, c14
Marcus Norris, c40
Alice Ann Jouy, c14
Mary Ellen DelMorto, c14
Pattie Imbush, c14
--to Shanghai"
JUNE TRAVIS
WALLACE FORD
— AND —
ZORRO RIDES AGAIN
Color Cartoon
Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Max Feasler of Garnett.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pack. Augusta, were visitors yesterday at the Triangle house.
PATEE
STUDENT CHRISTIAN FEDERATION
2 Action Hits
Riding Herd on Stampeding
Horses and Thieves!
--to Shanghai"
JUNE TRAVIS
WALLACE FORD
— AND —
ZORRO RIDES AGAIN
Color Cartoon
ALSO
A Thrilla Pocked Action
Spectacle
"Exiled
Week 10c Tit 7
Days Then 15a
TODAY ENDS
SATURDAY
Tim McCoy
The Foster class begins its second semester of the leadership of Mrs. Harold G. Barr, and an化谊 Church young people are in residence for their second semester, by attending a retreat.
Christian Church
'Riding Tornado'
Young People's Forum will begin at 5:30 Sunday evening with a social period including refreshments, and then proceed to an autumn ban, with talk to the young people.
Methodist Church
University classes will meet Sun
Friday. Students will be allowed
Allen will teach one class especially
or athletic squad members and their
friends in 'The Bible' and the same
class as other students. Allen will
lead a discussion of vital problems
presented by the group in a
spectacular setting.
At the morning worship at 10:50
Sunday, Dr. Robert A. Hunt will present a sermon on God's Problem
Wesleyan Chorus Chair. During the unveiling of the church, this service is being held in the Granada theater, though all other meetings are private with their respective rooms at the church.
The Wesley Foundation Fellowship Hour and League will begin Sunday at 5 p.m., the Fellowship Hour and League will be led by the worship and discussion at 6 o'clock. "United Christian Action in a Changing World," the theme of the National Methodist Student Conference, delegates at St. Louis during the holidays, will be the general theme for the opening weeks of the second semester. The Functions of the Wesley Foundation Hour will be discussed Sunday. Alberta
--it's Gabardine for Suits this Spring ..and Elynor gives you two Smart Versions...
We Lose — You Win
VARSITY
Home of the Jayshaws
Tonite - Tomorrow
Rip Rootin' Tootin'
BUCK JONES
"Boss of Lonely Valley"
No.2
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That's MY STORY
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Barbara Stanwyck Joel McCrea
Just One More Day
Joel McCrea
"Internes Can't Take Money"
No. 2
World's Worst Inhuman Rocket Exposed
ANNA MAY WONG
NOW! ENDS
SATURDAY
"ONE IN A MILLION"
'DaughterofShanghai'
--it's Gabardine for Suits this Spring ..and Elynor gives you two Smart Versions...
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GOOD FOOTBALL
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BRADDOCK vs. FARR
The Complete Fight
Round by Round — Blow by Blow
SUNDAY Joan Is Our "Dancing Lady" Again,
It's Her Best Since "Dancing Lady"
Waid, f39, will be the leader. The procedure followed will be that employed by the several commissions at the St. Louis conference.
JOAN CRAWFORD - SPENCER TRACY
"MANNEQUIN"
RALPH MORGAN - ALAN CURTIS
Fireside Forum
Dr. J. F. Brown, associate professor of Speech and Language, will speak in a series of four dictionaries on "Personal Adjustment" co-educted by Brandeis Forum. He opened his Sunfest address at the annual meeting of the Forum at 7 p.m., in the parish house of the Plymouth Conn. Church.
Three new observer members, Cedric Moorhead, c41. Jone McCoy, e39,
and Felen Rice, c33, will be inducted into office at this time.
Lens To Be 'Aluminized'
Pauadena, Calf., Feb. 3. (UP) - Experts at the Calf Institute of Technology have decided that the new orthopedic brace will be perfected perfected will be "aluminum-
12rd" instead of silvered, as has generally been done in the past. Dr John Strong of the Institute's faculty has developed a method of vaporizing aluminum atoms on the reflective side of the big "eye" which will leave a film of only four-millionths of an inch thick.
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SONJA DON HENIE AMECHE "Happy Landing"
Jean Hertolt - Ethel Merman - Cesar Romero
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FREDRIC MARCH
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TWO TIE BREASTED JACKETS WITH A LONG SLEEVES, MATCHING THE SKIRT.
Weaver's
Evaluation of the current performance in different domains.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938
Track Team Opens Season At Nebraska
Poor Training Facilities Handicap Kansas Squad For Meet; Ten Veterans Return
The University of Kansas cinder-
men will swing into action on the
indoor track at Lincoln a week from
tomorrow when they take a shot at
Bhakra Curbhuders, outdoor and
big Box Six champs of last season.
The Jayhawkers are running true to form regarding the indoor running season. Prospects of an outstanding team this early in the program are improbable. In recent years the Kansans have made little impression on the Big Six indoor standings. Facilities for the sport in cold weather are not the best and the team does the best into outdoor schedule is well under way. The Mt. Oreed cindermens consistently threaten the first position in the conference carnival held each May.
Tentative arrangements are being made to compete in the Butler Reilays at IndianaPipes or the annual Conference of Technology Reilays at Chicago.
Ten Lettermen on Squad
Despite the handicaps the Kansas outfit is rapidly developing into top-netch condition, although some of the veterans will not be in shape for the Cornhusker encounter. Coach H. W Hargass has a big turnout reporting regularly every afternoon from the team's squad, and many promising sophomores are filling shoes vacated by veterans.
Following their debut at Lincoln, the Sunflower state performers tackle the Missouri Tigers at Columbia Fob. 26, and then take part in the Big Six championship meet, March 4 and 5, which is also held on the Missouri
Sophomores Make Good Showing
Lettermen returning are: Captain Harry Wiles, 40-yard dash and reails; Forest Hardace, sprints and reails; Marvin Cox, 40-yard dash, high jump and reails; Don Bird, pole vault and high jump; Gordon Clucas, broad jump; Ernest Klamm, mile and two-mile; Chester Friedland, shot and discus; Dale Heckendorn, 880-yard dash; Kenneth Clark, high and low hurdles; Paul Masoner, sprints and relenas. Felen Durand, another letterman, will be available when the basketball season closes.
Sophomore tracksters showing genuine ability at their specialties are: J. D. Richardson, broad jump and sprints; Lyle Foy, sprints and relays; Williams, sprints and 440-yard dash; Charles Toberan, mile and two-mile; Joe Ryan, mile and two-mile; Leon Hepner, mile and two-mile; Knack Wright, high and low hurdles; Ed Wiles, 880-dash and mile; Ray Lawrence, pole vault; Gene Billips, broad jump; Max Replogle, broad jump and 440-yard dash; Jack Turner, shot.
A. F. of L. To Take Drastic Measures Against Lewis
Miami, Fla., Feb. 3.—(UP) The executive council of the American Federation of Labor tonight discharged its standing committee appointed to make peace with the Committee for Industrial Organization, and then went into an extraordinary session to consider advisability of taking drastic measures against the John L. Lewis faction.
The three-man delegation appointed by the council more than a year ago was disbanded by secret notice before the council meeting began.
Two thousand $5 life memberships in the student union, social and recreational center, are being sought at Iowa State College.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
We were interested in what Jim Henderson, sports editor of the Iowa State Student, had to say in his column "Under the Sport Spotlight" following the Nebraska-Iowa State game. Quoting Henderson:
"Darn it, we hate to jump on Nebraska again this winter, especially after razing the Husker football eleven for their apparent roughness on the gridiron last fall. But we just can't hold ourselves back. We would like to say for the benefit of the Nebraska cages that it isn't such a pain being in them it is. In fact, we'd much rather have the Cyclones defeated than have them conduct themselves in such a questionable manner.
"The sportmanship of a crowd is put to the stiftest sort of test when an athlete the likes of Paul Amene steps on the floor. He's a good athlete, we'll admit, one of the best in BIG Six football, and baseball circles. But it must take a lot of will power on the part of opposing players to refrain from violence right out there on the scene of battle. I'm afraid that most of us would have the rightful own judgment to be better and give good judgment and to blow with the—(fill in the blank with the word you prefer; ours was censured). You probably remember that Amen was rejected from the baseball game here last spring for "beefing."
"Why does a coach tolerate such deliberately ussmanspartin-like conduct? It can bring nothing but discredit to the team and to the school. He's about as much to blame as his players. Both teams were playing hard Saturday night and at times the
play was rough. The attitude of the visiting team, however, was deplorable, especially in the closing minutes. Ebaugh, the Husker center, was ejected from the game for争光刺伤 Babe Ryun. This is why the Nebraskans might well have followed his route to the bench. That statement excepts Elmer Drormann, though."
Thus speaks Mr. Henderson. We know that the Cyclones are good sports, and we deduce, therefore, that Nebraska must have given plenty of provocation for such an outburst. All of which leads us to mention the Nebraska games here. The opinion of those of others of countenance, as nearly as we could ascertain, was that the Huskers were far from being a bunch of "Sunday School boys" in their play. The spectators were prejudiced, admittedly, but the rather rough tactics of the Nebraska players were of great importance of the event (even if they didn't those of the officials) and evoked loud condemnation in the form of a chorus of boos.
Arrest Many Drunken Drivers
However, even if Nebraska did force the rough play here, we must say in defense of the Huskers that they couldn't have been as bad as it seems they were at Ames. The type of game Coach Browne's team played here could be blamed to the fact that the officials didn't call the play closely, permitting the degrade to the stage at times. But this time, of the modern home game has progressed so that it is not humanly possible for officials to catch everything. We will let it go at that, with the hope that a nice time will be had by all when Kansas journeys to Lincoln.
During the last six months of 1937 the Kansas Highway Patrol arrested 171 persons for drunken driving. The month of December brought the most offenders, there being 42 arrests in that period.
COMING The Event of the Year
S.HUROK presents
Col. W. DeBasil's
BALLET
RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
A Company of 125
With Symphony Orchestra
Elaborate Dancing - Gorgeous Scenery - Brilliant Costumes
ONE EVENING ONLY
The Most Successful Spectacle of the Century
University Concert Course
(Extra Attraction)
Monday Evening, Feb.14 8:20 o'clock
HOCH AUDITORIUM
Seats now selling - popular prices: $2.00, $1.50,
$1.00, 75c and 50c at School of Fine Arts
Bell's Music Store
Round Corner Drug Store
D. M. SWARTHOUT, Manager.
The Jayhawks, holding down second place in the conference, will rank as favorites on the basis of their 48-33 victory over Nebraska the last place. Wildcats are not expected to be without a battle.
The next game in the Jayhawkers drive to overtake the fast-moving, first-place Oklahoma Sooners will be the contest here Monday night with the Kansas State Wildcats as he opponents.
K-State, Next Court Foe, Plays Here Monday
The most encouraging feature of the Kansas-Nebraks game Wednesday night, was the fact that the Jayhawks' potential power was turned into actual strength. In previous games Kansas had not appeared to be playing up to its capabilities, against the Huskers the Jayhawks played their best basketball.
Lyman Corlis, junior forward from Topeka, his claim to a first string berth by playing an out-standing game. Corli scored nine points and did some fine work on defense.
The other four first-string men, Don Ebling, forward, Sylvester
Intramural elimination swimming meets are Wednesday, Feb. 16, and Thursday, Feb. 17. The final meet is on Friday, February 23. Practice during regular open hours — Monday, Wednesday, and Friday 3:00-4:30 and Tuesday, 2:50-3:50.
Women's Intramurals
Deck tennis doubles start next week. Intramural managers should get their blanks from the office now. Free Throw Contest
Swimming
Basketball - All 60 free throws must be finished by Saturday evening. The 10 women with the highest scores will shoot 25 baskets apiece next week. A bronze medal will be awarded to the higher scorer.
The semi-finals in aerial darts should be played off by the end of next week.
Vehicle Deaths Increase
A picture of the rapid increase in motor vehicle deaths in the United States can be gleaned from the fact that in 1913 there were 4,000 accidental deaths, in 1935 there were 37,000 and in 1936 there were 37,800.
SPECIAL-ent of public instruction, will be in charge of the sessions, which will be addressed by Gov. Walter A. Hux-man.
Schmidt, center, Fred Praille, guard,
and Dick Harp, guard, also played
exceptional basketball against Nebraska.
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SELLING AT---
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SUIT SALE — FURNISHINGS SALE
Aspirex Stop that "Coffin" Contain Aspiri 10c
Big Assortment Valentines 1c to 50c
Sasieni Kaywoodie Medica Yellow Bole Pipes
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
1 lb. Horton's Chocolate Covered Carries 25c
Complete
Laundry Bags
$1.19
Klenzo
Cocoanut
Shampoo
39c
Student Lamps 98c and $1.19
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Educators Meet in Topeka
Topeka, Feb. 3. — (UP) - Educator of Kansas assembled here today for business sessions of the Kansas School Activities Association and the administrative council of the Kansas State Teachers Association.
The activity group held all-day sessions. The administrative council opened a three-day meeting, with discussions of a proposed legislative program highlighting the meeting.
Sunbeam
Shavemaster
Electric Shavers
$15.00
W. T. Markham, state superintendent of public instruction, will be in charge of the sessions, which will be addressed by Gov. Walter A. Hux-man.
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Klenzo Tissues
21c
500's
Cels Tissues
17c
Monogramed to Order Free
1 Pint
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Rubbing
Alcohol
100 Puretest
Aspirin
Both 59c
The delegate assembly of the Kansas State Teachers Association, composed of elected delegates from Wichita, Lawrences, Hayes, Mmanhta and others, nominated by district, for a discussion of individual school problems.
1 Pint Mi-31 Anti-
sootic Solution
1 Tube
Mi-31
Dental Paste
Both 59c
WEATHER
Kansas: Partly cloudy Friday and Saturday: mild temperatures.
Don't Forget The
OWL
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(Sponsored by the Owl Society)
THREE HOURS OF DELIGHTFUL DANCING
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GIVE SWEETS TO THE SWEETEST GIRL You know
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Johnston's and Whitman's CANDIES
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A Special Selection For Her!
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1101 Mass.
Phone 678
Order Your DAILY KANSAN Today
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Just Call K.U. 66 or Place Your Order at the Kansan Business Office, East of Watson Library
SOLVED
Z229
P
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 83
VOLUME XXXV
Religion Convocation Tuesday
Dr. Edwin N. Potate To Speak at Opening Of 'Emphasis' Week a t University
Observance of Religion Emphasis Week will begin Tuesday morning with an all-University convocation in Hoch auditorium at which Dr. David McNeill Potest, pastor of the Edwin Avenue Baptist church, will speak.
M. K. SMITH
Rey. Edwin McNeill Poteat
The week of religious activities is sponsored by the Student Christian Federation with the operation of the University convolutions committee, the M.S.C.-WS.G.A. forums and the Church Alliance. The theme of the week is "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confession."
Dr. Poteat will lead noon lunch forums at the Union cafeteria and will speak at a meeting Tuesday night in Fraser theater and Wednesday night in Hoch auditorium. The closing event of the week will be a banquet Thursday evening at which Poteat will be the guest of honor.
Dr. Potet, whose Cleveland church is famous as the "Rockefeller church," is a former missionary and author of several books. From 1917 until 1926 he served as a missionary of the Southern Convention at Kafeng, Honan, China, and for three years was an associate professor of philosophy and ethics at the University of Shanghai.
In 1923 he became pastor of the Pullen Memorial church at Raleigh N C. and last year began his work at the Cleveland church.
Enrollment To New Peak
Registration of 265 new students for the spring semester during the first week brought the total enrollment of the University to 4893, a new high, high accordion to flow from the institute of Geo. O. Foster, registrar.
Total registration to the comparable date last year was 4862, and new registrations were 226.
Of the 253 registering for this semester, 106 are entering the University for the first time and 159 are renewing previous scholastic courses. Of the new students were 94, and 132 former students again registered.
Fifty-nine counties of Kansas are represented by the newly enrolling students.
HAY by WIRE
--all this high-powered repatriate.
"Sometimes I don't know what I think about love at all," she admits a little dazedly.
Last Friday in one of the town's night-spots, one member of a three-stag party adopted the record machine as his very own. Not only he ward off all comers, but he played the same piece, "Thanks for the Memories," for over an hour. All he would say was that it was Julia Heimbrink's favorite piece. Too bad she was at the Philt DJ contest.
Professor Ress Robertson, putter-forth of ye Economic History, had a little trouble with the names in his 9:30 class. "If you think they are not real names," he noted in his 19:30 class. There are some honeys in it. I mean names," he added quickly.
We have great respect for the freshman medic. Because of th limited number of students who can be handled in Kansas City, the poor
ORGAN RECITAL POSTPONEL
Continued on page 3
LAWRENCE, KANSAS. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1838
The Vesper Organ Recital, to have been given today, has been postponed until Feb. 12 because Hoch auditorium has been prepared for the basketball game this week.
The Ballet Russe is adjudged by Irving Deakin, the eminent ballet critic, as a better company than the Jojo Ballet which appeared here last year, and according to Dean Hammond, it has the greatest show I ever brought here."
Dean Swarthout told the sale of tickets has been heavy the past few days and urged students to make their reservations early. Activity tickets do not admit to the ballet, but it is one of the University concert courses.
Ballet Change Is Announced
These numbers are three of the largest in the company's extensive repertoire and were among those presented when the Ballet Russe appeared at London's Covent Gar-ware, a feature of the coronation 186900.
In its fifth American tour, the Ballet will play 100 cities, covering 300-900 miles. The company is under the direction of renowned fauns Europe ballet director.
Artistic Scope Is Extended
Starred as matre de ballet is Leonide Massine, Russian dancer and ballet choreographer. The balierinas are Ira Barona Roanne, Alexandra Danilova, and Tatiana Riaibochinska.
New Program Consists Of Three 30 - Minute Presentations
The new program will be composed of three 30-minute presentations. "A Hundred Kisses," "Auror's Wading," and "The Gods at A Bering."
Dean D. M. Swartwhort, director of the University concert course, yesterday announced a complete change of program for the appearance of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in Hoch auditorium next night night. An engagement in Kansas City's ABA Theater has necessitated the new program for the University performance of the Ballet.
The artistic scope of the company's presentations has been extended widely by the engagement of Michel Fokine, Russian ballet creator, as producer and technical adviser. Tickets are on sale at the School of Fine Arts office, Bell Music Co., and Round Corner drug store.
Because it was believed some persons would desire to see both performances, the changes we announced by Dean Swarthout were received as a tribute of a tear-gram from S. Hureck, agent for the ballet company.
Second Band Rehearses Today
Numbers Featured in London
This organization, which is under the supervision of Rex Conner, fa38, and James Van Dyck, fa39, is open for both men and women students who can play any kind of instrument. Anyone desiring to enroll in this band may do so by attending today's rehearsal. Credit is given only to students in the School of Fine Arts Membership in the school of self-performing instruments, and may conduct complete scores during rehearsals and concerts.
The first rehearsal of the Second land this semester will be held toay at 3:30 in Hoch auditorium.
Kansas clays, Kansas chalk and Kansas "volcanic ash" are being given rigid tests in the clay laboratories at the University. The clays and ash are proving useful in the manufacture of pottery and the chalk gives promise of being valuable for the manufacture of putty.
Norman Plummer, assistant professor of design in the School of Fine Arts and technician for the Kansas Geological Survey, has been carrying on the tests all year and has created valuable results in pottery metal.
Just now, some clay from Mt. Oread, near the site of the original University building, is being used. Other clays come from Ellsworth county and from near Buffalo in Wilson county.
Regular rehearsals are to be held from 3.30 to 4.30 Monday and Friday afternoons.
By-Products Of Soil on Hill Discovered
'All' Is Revealed by Co-eds In Next Play, 'Spring Dance'
The Dramatic Club's next production, "Spring Dance," might have been named "Sorority Gals Reveal ALL," for much of the stage action revolves around five girls and most of their conversation has to do with various opinions of the opposite sex: "Bull sessions" in the parlor and one of the bedrooms of a sorority house of an eastern girls' college bring to light many hitherto unheard opinions and facts about men.
Wise-cracking Mady says, "The little devils are getting a truffle hard to handle." "Yes-what do they think they are, women?" interjects Kate, who is a hit on the cynical side, who has one picked out just the same.
But Sally says the modern male is changing! "Why, just in the last year there has been a complete metamorphosis."
Women Give Opinions on Love
Frances is a little bewildered by
Business School Sets New Record
Won $290 *Students*,
University School of Business,
the University of Pittsburgh increased 50 per cent over last year's. Dean F. Stockton announced yesterday that it is the largest enrollment in the school's history.
Seniors are now being interviewed for jobs after commencement this spring. A representative of the W.T. Grant company talked with students Friday. A representative of the Firestone Tire and Rubber company will visit the School of Business Feb. 7 and 8.
Six of the 12 graduating students have already found positions. The most recent placement was Kerneth McCormick, who started with Light company, in Atchison.
Freshmen and sophomores planning to enter the School of Business are reminded that the latter is cooperating with the College of Liberal Arts in requiring a language course as provided by the College rules. General work in different fields is also recommended.
Independent Students Dance
Independent women will "wear the pants" when they entertain the men with a dance from 7 to 8 o'clock in the Memorial Union lounge.
Women have the choice of going stag or taking dates to the dance, which is the first Independent activity of this semester.
But for Alex there is only one "We sat on a hill next to the stars and he told me I had a firm little jaw," she said.
Two other women characters are Miss Ritie, "who hath the house-mother's cale eye which pierceeth any thicket," the乳, the Mildred, who is generally fed up with men, "the little busy-bodies; always around when you don't want them and never greets do."*
*Adapted by Ms. Maron.*
Of men, there is the Lippincott. A contemptuous, cancled-camera fleed, he declares: "No little ball of fluff is going to wreck my plan." Teamed up with the school's Alex of the firm little chin, but has a hard job saying good-bye to her
Fair Sex Discussed by Men
Continued on page 3
A number of fellowships and scholarships are being offered by the University for the year 1958-39 to graduates of colleges and universities of recognized standing. Candidates should select majors and file application with Dean E. B. Sloan of the Graduate School on or before March 1.
Fellowships carry a stipend of $400 for the academic year and are open only to students who have completed at least one year of study in a graduate school of recognized standing. The Selden Lincoln fellowship in comparative literature is open to graduate students interested in advanced study in the field of comparative literature.
Will Give Scholarship Fund Committee Makes Grants to 130 Persons For a Total of $6,500
Fellows and scholars must pay regular University fees and are expected to give full time to graduate study. They may, however, be required to educational service to an amount not exceeding six hours a day.
Scholarships carry a stipend of $250 and are open to any adequately prepared graduate student.
Fellowship and scholarship grant are made on a competitive basis. Awards will be announced April 1.
SUNDAY FIRST
Not more than half the students attend their second, semester fees, according to Karl Kloez, bishop of the University. Next Wednesday is the deadline for payments. Beginning Thursday morning a fine of 50 ceas a day for five days, exclusive of Sunday, will be assessed. If fees are not paid by Feb. 15, enrollments of the delinquent ones will be cancelled.
Dykstra Is Chosen As Speaker
SEMESTER FEES DUE
Clarence Addison Dykstra, president of the University of Wisconsin since last fall, and internationally known as the former city manager of Cincinnati, will be the speaker for the sixty-sixth annual commencement services of the University, the evening of June 6.
Former C city Manage
Of Cincinnati To Speak
At Sixty-Sixth Annua
Commencement
Chancellor Lindley yesterday received a note of acceptance from President Dykstra, who had been head of the department of political science here from 1909 until 1918.
Notted in City Administration
President Dykatra came to this University from Ohio State University, and resigned to become executive secretary of the Cleveland Civic League. From that time on he was identified with civic administration, but did not entirely sever his connection with the university. He was professor of municipal administration of the University of California while in Los Angeles.
After two years at Cleveland he went to the Chicago City Club for another two years; then the served as secretary of the Los Angeles City Club from 1922 until 1936. During most of this time he was also commissioner of the department of water and power in Los Angeles, and in 1935 he became the chief and efficiency for the same department. After three years he went to Cincinnati to become city manager. Has Held Numerous Offices
POTTERY FROM KANSAS CLAY
In connection with his administrative duties he has been a member of numerous commissions and committees, including the advisory board of the National Emergency Public Works Administration, and the Ohio State Advisory Committee of the U. S. Employment service.
CARL T. HODGSON
A
APPLYING THE GLAZE
___
THE HISTORY OF INDUSTRIAL MARKETING
APPLYING THE GLAZE
Upper left—Edgar Starck, fa 39, is shoveling fresh clay into the grimder for preliminary working.
THE FIRING KILN
Lower left—Norman Plummer, cer, cornish, placing pottery and best pieces of clay in garden or workshop. Upper left—off for the outflow of the
MIXING THE CLAY
clay after it has been mixed by the three rotating pairs in the long tub. At the right is the first mill pair.
Unoor right -Miss Virginia Hawkinson, fa 38, apables glaze to pottery.
Sooners Trip Huskers; K.S.C. Here Tomorrow
Oklahoma Ekes Out 50-48 Win Over Nebraska To Maintain Narrow Conference Lead Over Jayhawkers; Kansas Starts Second Round of Big Six Plau Against Wildcats
Standing of the Teams
W L. Pct. TP OP
Oklahoma 4 0 1000 210 156
Kansas 4 1 800 153 152
Missouri 4 1 800 153 152
Kansas State 2 4 190 182 222
Iowa State 2 4 .333 188 222
Kansas State 2 4 182 122 202
(By The United Press)
Norman, Okla., Feb. 5. —The largest crowd that has witnessed a basketball game here since 1929, 4,700 persons, saw the Sooners sprint in the last 10 minutes after trailing Nebraska most of the game, to defeat the Huskers 50 to 48. The score at the half was Nebraska 28, Oklahoma 13. The score on the last 3 minutes, when, with the score at 45-11, Jimmy Mennott broke through with a basket giving Oklahoma a 2-point lead.
Then Roop made a free throw, followed by another basket by Walker, Oklahoma forward, which apparently put the game on ice, but Nebraska gave the Sooners a closing scare.
Parsons cracked a basket, glanced at the clock ticking away the seconds and squandered a shot from mid-turn. He looked into patting Nebraska in the running.
As the game ended Amen swept an underhanded shot from 15 feet out that would have tilt the score. The shot was low
Mesch led the Sooner attack with 22 points. Martin's fine floor play and consistent feeding also featured. Amen and Parsons tied for Nebraska's scoring honors with 14 points each.
The box score:
Oklahoma (50) G FTF
Walker, f 6 0 2
McNatt, f 5 1 2
Snodgrass, f 1 2
Benton, f 0 1 0
Roop, f 0 1 0
Mullen, c 0 1 0
Martin, g 1 0 0
Mesch, g 1 0 2
Totals 22 6 9
Nebraska (48) G FT F
Aneroid 1 0 1
Dobrinnock, f 2 0 0
Kovanda, f 2 0 0
Thomas, f 2 0 3
Ethomus, f 2 0 3
Parsons, g 6 2 2
Werner, g 1 0 1
Grimm, g 1 0 1
Eiloh, f 0 0 0
Totals ... 21 6 12
Halftime score: Nebraska 28, Oklahoma 25.
Officials: John Olds, Kansas; Parke Carroll, Kansas City.
Games This Week
Feb. 7-Kansas vs. Kansas State at Lawrence.
Feb. 9—Nebraska vs. Oklahoma at Lincoln.
Feb. 10—Kansas State vs. Oklahoma at Manhattan
homa at Manhattan.
Feb. 12—Iowa State vs. Kansas State at Manhattan; Missouri vs. Nebraska at Columbia.
'Midnight Is the Hour Starts New Broadcasts
A newly created dramatic organization, the Air Guild, will inaugurate a new series of radio broadcasts to tomorrow night over station KFKU with the presentation of "Midnight Is the Hour."
Patterned after national programs such as "First Nighter," the broadcasts will be at 6 o'clock from a mythical "Little Theater on the Hill" and Monday night's "audience" will be taken backstage and given a few moments of backstage talk and excitement.
Monday night's performance of "Midnight Is the Hour," adapted for radio by Louis Fockle, will have an entirely new cast to KFKU listeners. Those who will participate in the premier broadcast are John Straton, c'ancl; Jack Nelson, c'ancl; Cec DeCamp, c'cm8; James Coleman, c'cm8; Elmer McCarty, c'29; Helen Nelson, c'39; Sue Fowler, c'49; Paul Moritz, c'39; Thomas Kennedy, c'38; Edward Carr, c'uncl; and Keith Blinn, c'uncl. Rolla Nuckles, instructor of speech in dramatic art, who will direct the group, also is a member of the cast for Monday夜.
Alexander Will Assist Cameron Sun Publisher
Alexander, who was managing editor of the Daily Kansas during the past nine weeks, assisted the University in various publicity activities and acted as publicity director for the homecoming celebration last fall.
Charles Alexander, c'38, is leaving tonight for Cameron, Mo., to work on the Cameron Sun for several months as assistant to C. P. Darsy, publisher.
By Harry Hill, c'40
Kansas' improving Jayhawk basketball team faces Kansas State College tomorrow night in Hoch auditorium as the next obstacle in its race with the high-flying Oklahoma Sooners.
The Jayhawkers, now in cannot place, cannot top Oklahoma by a victory over the Wildcats, but must defeat their state rivals to stay in a challenging position behind the undefeated Sooner sophomores.
Forwards Have Hit Strides
Again Kansas is the favorite, but none, except the most optimistic Wildcat rooter, will venture to predict a reevaluation of last year's upset.
Kansas will go into the game as favorite over the last-place State quintet, but remembering the second game between the two teams last year, when the Aggies threw a pitchwork into the Jayhawkers' title machinery by upsetting them 33.52 in an overtime contest.
repeat a repetition of their upset. Recent improvement in the Jay-hawker offensive work points to an increase in the margin of 33-21 in the first meeting of the teams this season. Don Ehlong and Lyman-marlis, forward, got 22 points between in the game with Nebraska Wednesday night, and apparently have hit their scoring stride.
The "old reliable" Fred Pralle nurses a special grudge against Kansas State because of his poor show each of the last three years at Manhattan, and is particularly anxious "pour them in" tomorrow
Scoring Likely To Be High
Should Ebling and Corlis continue to click offensively, and if Praile shakes his Wildcat jinx, Kansas should improve on its end of the score, with a strong possibility of a 50-point total, such as Oklahoma has turned in consistently in conference games.
Because of his outstanding work against Nebraska, Corlis is slated to start against Kansas State, replacing George Golay. The remainder of the Kansas lineup will be the same.
The probable starting lineups:
The probable start of meetings:
**Kansas**
Corls F Klimke
F F Klimke
Schmidt C Wesche
Praile G Poppenhouse
Harp G Cleveland
Small Blaze Provides Show For Fire Fans
By the Fire Editor
The fire-haunting instinct in the fire editor was called forth yesterday at the sound of the fire department speeding Hill-bound. He was headed for a late lunch when the chief and other sections of the department sped by him. A turn of the heel, a sprint for a block, and he wound up beside the Commons building to find a blue Plymouth sedan belong to C. G. Coe smoldering after a short-circuit wire had set fire to the motor.
Due credit must be given to the volunteer fire department from the Chemistry building (Pardon, E. H. S. Bailey Chemical Laboratories) which had the fire well under control by the time the city fire department arrived. Credit must be given also to the superhuman telephone operator in interpreting the excited call of "Fire" uttered by Wayne Coe, driver of the car. After considerable difficulty, the operation was able to discover the location of the blaze and informed the city fire fighters. So the Kanaka men knew his eyes were more with smoke, at the expense of a damaged motor and scorched paint on the hood of the car.
Psychological Exam Results
Psychological Exam Results
All scores of the psychological
tests taken Friday afternoon by
many students who were
terminated by Monday morning.
Any student desiring to know his standing may learn the results of an MRI. ABI Turner, director of the psycho-logical examinations.
The meeting Thursday evening, Feb. 10, has been moved up to 7 p.m., because of the lecture in the University auditorium at 8:20. The meeting will be in Oread Training school, and the Rev. H. Lee Jones will speak.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1938
2
≈
Comment
The Walrus Has His Day
It has occurred to us to wonder if our readers may not sometimes become wearied by the constant discussion to current problems? Yes, we know they are important, but yesterday we read of the foreign situation, and all the speculations on the special session of the legislature which will convene tomorrow. Tomorrow we shall probably reverse the order to read again of the special session of the legislature and the foreign situation.
However, there do come timese in our lives when, perhaps, we should heed the advice of our old friend;
"The time has come," the Walrus said, "to
been, or many others.
Of shoes and ships and sealing wax; of cal-
fur.
Now we are well aware of the intention Carrol had in mind when he created this well-known character, but we have always fancied the Walrus as a whimsical, philosophically-minded creature. It may be that we, as readers often will, have almost re-created him in our minds.
His conversation with the Carpenter has always seemed so amusing, but then we must remember, it occurred in the days before labor controversies with all their many torts and retorts. If the famous pair were alive today the Carpenter would undoubtedly hold a membership card in some union affiliated with C.I.O. or the A.F. of L., and the Walrus? Well, he would be able to sit with his friend only upon some uncompleted construction work where, and as carpenters are remuted by the newspapers to sit.
We are agreed the Walrus was philosophically inclined! Good! for who could believe he would waste a beautiful day on the seashore in such fruitful conversation if it were not so?
Furthermore, when he discussed shoes, we are to believe he was interested in price, sale, and production charts? Would he muse on ships in terms of armaments? Not at all. Rather, he would refer to the comfortable personality that develops in old shoes—if he kept them on—or lament bitterly on the diabolical conventions that force one to go shoel—if he took them off.
It is wholly incompatible with our conception of the Walrus that we should behold him discourancing on over-production and crop control of cabbages. Instead of that, he would probably refer to them in relation with culinary terms: "Boiled? umm . . . no, buttered?" or consider them gastronomically: "How soon after eating may one safely take bicarbonate of soda?"
Kings, we are sure, would be jolly old gentlemen with pipes, and bowls enjoyed with orchestral accompaniment. The Walrus never knew fire-eating, smoke-breathing dictators any more than we know kings.
And so, readers, for just one day we sue to your Sunday good-nature, plead a lackadaisical fancy, and indicate this page to the Walrus.
The world today is not really a kindly place in which to live—nor has it ever been. Man has not risen through divine circumstance so much as through his own tenacity and pugnancy. When he ceases to fight, the world ceremoniously throws dirt in his face; unconsciously and anctuously weeps for a moment; and promptly forgets him. It is better so.
The Groundhog Says--
Do You Believe?
We often speak of "animal instinct" which reminds us, last Wednesday was grounddog day, which in turn, reminds us of the indispensable part this little animal has played in the annual spring weather forecast for years beyond recall.
Of course, many may snicker at the idea of placing any reliability in the ability of this small creature to forecast accurately the weather, but then we actually find a "doubling Thomas" in the Bible, so such persons needn't feel original in their crass iconoclasm.
Nor need the groundhog feel his is the only reputation which suffers at the hands of these cynics—we would refer him, of course, to Messrs. Hamrick and Flora. And these men have at hand, the assistance of every instrument modern science has devised to aid them in their observations, besides which they keep elaborate charts of atmospheric pressures and conditions from pole to pole.
His critics may think the groundhog comes for a breath of fresh air; that his alleged ability is the product of superstitions fancy or accident; or that his only use is to the Sunday editor as "feature material," but we know that there are millions who believe in him, and as evidence of the confidence he still retains, we would pose this pertinent question: Who received the more space and publicity in Wednesday's newspapers, Mr. Hamrick or Mr. Groundhog?
Whereupon we take this occasion to warn you, readers, his weather forecast for the next six weeks is: "Continued cold and cloudy with strong winds veering in from the north or northwest; prepare for general winter weather."
And to you doubters who would change from your "winter underwear" in this first false
∼
spring, we offer this aphorism as a reminder. "The way of the cynic is hard." (We think that is the way it goes.)
Campus Opinion
'Preparedness' Rides Again
Editor, Daily News
There is an old saying about the pot calling the kettle black. Of course, the contributor to Friday's Campus Opinion, signing himself "Preparedness," is scarcely of stature comparable to the Japanese nation. I am inclined to think this chip spreads right around in front of his eyes.
"Preparedness" refers briefly to that undoubtable authority, the Kansas City Star, and becomes fighting mad. It appears that he has come upon a tale of Japanese planning to be drawn about the streets in "rickshaw" manned by sweating, enslaved British and Americans, "Preparedness" burns with indignation. How come, asks he, that the two biggest nations in the world will take that rot? He implies that British and American forces should steam over immediately and have swept the Japanese islands as bare as the ill-titled ill in the show "Hurricane," return to read the triumphant announcement in the papers:
"The Jameson (such as are left) are still full-
mer," said Senator John M. McCain, Americans are still riding. "Democracy wine again."
The letter of "Preparedness" was very interesting, though I still think it was written by some really intelligent person bent on pulling the legs of such internal-minded bodies as I. Of particular note is the hispanic origin of this group, a only friend, and that Russia has at last left off bickering with Japan, Germany, and Italy and is lining up with them against the United States. If this is true, then "Preparedness" is right in his piquancy, for, as is known to everyone who reads H. G. Wallace's work any international enterprise "circumvent Russian". Amused.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellery, Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, January 25th.
Vol. 35 Sunday February 6,1928 No.88
--less which they paid for their enjoyment were collected by the book store. But the author's reward for his share in the business was simply the royalty on the single copy sold to the library. If the book was originally priced at $2, his average royalty amounted to 24 cents. In other words, 30 people read this one copy of his book, said 'Thank you very much,' and paid him a total of 24 cents'"
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular weekly meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon in room C. Myers厅. All students and faculty interested are invited to attend - Keith Davis, president.
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION. The Creative Leisure Commission will have a stamp meeting at 3 o'clock this afternoon at Henley house. Students will attend their collections.-Ruth Fengel, Charles Yeomans.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITT-
TION - A freshman student wishing to become canadian should attend the KU athletic office on or before Feb. 12, 1988, in care of James Gillies,
M E. 64, MECHIANICAL LABORATORY: All students enrolled in the M.E. 64, MECHIANICAL Laboratory, see the bulletin on this website or your as-signed laboratory website. Please click on this matter early this week — Arthur Whithey.
NEW ADDRESSES FOR DIRECTORY SUPPLEE MEN
NEW ADDRESSES with changes to their
mestra must reach the new addresses to the Reg
istrar's office at once so that the corrections may ap-
pear in the directory supplement. - George O. Foster
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Phi Delta Kappa will meet Training School, Rev. J. Lee does will discuss the program at Antioch College. The meeting will adjourn in time for the Lecture Course number in the auditorium.
W. S.G.A. The W.S.C.A. meeting will be postponed until Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock because of the A.A.U.W. banquet on Tuesday evening—Doris Stock- well, President.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
APRIL 2015
PUBLISHER
DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
MEMBER
KAINSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
NORTH-CHIP, INC
ASSEMBLY FIGHTERS! MARTIN BENTON and DAVID W. ANGELIUS
ANOTHER EDITION
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR
CAMPUS EDITOR
NEW EDITOR
SOUTH FOREST EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
MARKET EDITOR
LIONS EDITOR
SUNDAY EDITOR
BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CLAREN
BILL FYZERDALE
DOMINIC PEAUROT
FLOY TORMENE
JOSH FOULKER and JEAN THOMAS
JOHN HELL
JANE FLOSE
News Staff
ALICE HALDUMAN-JULIUS
J. WOHREN RUOCH
DAVID E. PARTRINGE
KENNETH MORIN
JACKEY VALLEY JENNE
JOE COCIBRAN
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZGREATBURN
DREW MLAICHUN
EDWARD BARNETT
MARTIN BENTTON
MARVIN GOEBEL
JANE FLOOD
MORRIES KOPELMAN
CLAUDE DORSY
ELFON E. CARTER
ALAN ASHER
CHARLES ALXANDRA*
Kansan Board Members
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of
Collegiale Digest
National Advocate
College Publishers' Representative
240 MADRID AVE.
NEW YORK, N.Y.
CHICAGO • BUSTON • BAN OF FRANKLIN
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
The conscientious writer of modern fiction is fast facing the predicament of the poor horse
Which reminded us of the story about the farmer who, in an effort to economize, began gradually to mix an increase percentage of sawdust with the oats he fed his horse. You will remember that everything proceeded splendidly until the horse unaccountably died of malnutrition.
"The depression was responsible for a great many good things." I heard a man say to the other day, "We learned how little we could get on materially, and how important we were to the literature and the arts were.
Of course one may argue that the author makes enough anyway; that with the publishers, movies and radio clamoring for his wares, he can scarcely be affected by the few readers who "mooch" on him to the extent of reading his work from the dine library shelf.
After all, an author earns his bread and butter with royalties. And royalties are paid purely on a basis of the number of copies of his book that are sold. That is what the average reader, who rents from the corner library in the firm belief that he is doing the author a great service merely by reading his books, fails to realize.
"Take, for instance, these circulat-
ing, ten-cent libraries. Instead of plunking down two buckles when you want a good book to read, all you have to do is pop into the corner drug store, stationery store, news stand, or department store, lay down a magazine, buy a copy of your favorite author. What a goddam they must be to modern writers."
Licensing Offered As Remedy For Ten-Cent Library Pirates
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
By Kenny Lewis
But such pleasant fancies hardly agree with the grim, cold facts. True, there are the Margaret Mitchells and the Kathleen Norrises of the profession, who may clear more than $75,000 a year by utilizing all these sources, but about 87 per cent of our authors averaged something less than $2,300 even in such a boom year as 1929, according to the Author's Guild. Where are they now? Selling insurance, doing publicity, or writing for the pulps, probably. Of course all this cannot be blamed on the corner library. One may even contend that those books the author owned the books at all if they had to buy them. Perhaps some of them wouldn't; but let's look at the way it works out now.
I quote Edward Weeks, long an editor of the Atlantic monthly press, from his excellent monthly book "This Trade of Writing":
"The books placed in the 10 cent library are expected to—and do—maintain an average of 20 rentals. That is to say, 20 households, or about one-fifth of each book in that library before it is finally sold or withdrawn.
B
BRICK'S "ON THE HILL"
Welcome Students
We're glad to see you book for
the spring semester
Try Our
Special Plate Lunch
25c
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!
All Work Guaranteed
ELECTRIC
SHOE SHOP
W. E. Whetstone, Prop.
1017 Mass. Phone 686
Mr. Weeks further estimates that some 40 per cent of the book-fiction printed in the United States is absorbed by these circulating libraries. Hence, by simple arithmetic you have 8,000 readers for every 1,000 copies from which the author of the book receives his just royalty. Surely it is safe to say that least one-fourth of those readers, or some 2,000 of them, would buy the book if that was the only way they could obtain it. And this alone would double the writer's proceeds.
Join The Crowd
at the
There evolves the question: What are we going to do about it? The best solution it seems, is to license them. Peter Freuchen, the famous Danish author, led a campaign in his country for licensing those books sold to the libraries for lending purposes. By assessing a 50 cent charge in addition to the purchase price of all books going into such libraries, the author would perhaps be given permission to use his work. Books so licensed would be furnished with a small stamp placed on the inside cover, stating "This book is licensed for rental purposes," or words to that effect.
BLUE MILL
Although the Danish movement failed because Denmark's socialist government threatened to take away the authors' pensions for this evidence of trade unionism, there is no reason why it might not work in the United States. Anyway, it's worth a try.
The HUMAN ADVENTURE
Mrs. Stover's VALENTINE Candies Exclusively at THE MIDWAY CAFE 1031 Mass.
RIDE THE BUS
For Safe, Economical Transportation
K. U. ROUTE (20 minute service)
Leave 8th and Mass., south of Crown Drug Store, go west on 8th street to Michigan, south on Mississippi to Campus Drive, west to Chi Omega school, back east to Fowler Shops, turns back west on 16th to Illinois, south on Illinois to 18th, east on 18th to Louisiana, north on Louisiana to 17th, east on 17th to Tennessee, north on Massachusetts to 11th to Missouri, Massachusetts, and north on Massachusetts to 8th street.
The Rapid Transit Co.
1818 Massachusetts
SAVINGS
SPRING
Let these prices take you off the fence and put you
in clover.
If you are on the fence . . . do this:
"I'll buy a suit in February" --- or "I'll wait until Easter."
Come dow nto 821 Mass. Street and if you can't sell yourself without any talk from us . . . if the prices and the patterns don't clinch the sale . . . then we'll pass the time of day with you and you can pass up the idea altogether.
Suits at $17 - $22 - $29
O'coats $16:50 - $22 - $29
Oeet's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
A woman stands on a table, raising her hand in a gesture of excitement. Three women sit at the table, engaged in a game of chess. The woman on the left is holding a book, while the woman on the right is playing with another piece. The third woman sits behind them, observing the game.
A Grand Slam In Shoes
Just Arrived — A Complete New Stock of Smart Shoes for Spring.
Roseberry Coff - Royal Blue - Navy Blue - Multi Color Blue
Brown - Multi Color Brown - Black
Royal COLLEGE SHOPS
837-39 Mass.
Knickerbockers are now sold exclusively at the Royal
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1958
2
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHIRTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m.; call KU.12.5 for 1202-783
***
Martin.Britton
Miss Helen Leois Martin, daughter of Mrs. T. W. Martin of Linwood, and Raymond L. Britton, son of Mrs. Fannie Stephenson of Topcka, were invited to the sunny afternoon, Jan. 30, at the home of Mrs. C. C. Burnett, Linwood.
The Rev. A. C. A. Alking, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Prescott, read the service. Mrs. Murray Martin of Kansas City, sister-in-law of the bride, played "To a Wild Rose," by macDowell, as Mrs. Brougham Wayland and Mrs. Natha Coleman, the bride's cousin, lighted the candles. Miss Dorothy Shannon, accompanied by Mrs. Martin, sang "Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life" and "Because." Mrs. Martin played the wedding march from "Lo-hengrin," and during the ceremony she played a soft musical background.
The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Murray E. Martin, of Kansas City, Mo. Her attendants were Miss Helen Dooley of Kansas City, Mo, and Miss Floracea Starr of Needsha. Nancy Marie Martin and Martin, nieces of the bride, acted as the girl and ring bearer, respectively.
At the reception held following the ceremony, Mrs. George Herrick, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. John Hughey, Lilwood; Mrs. Harry Wright and Mester Trendel, sisters of the groom, Topela; and Misses Lena Freeman and Elizabeth Boys, Linwood, assisted.
Mrs. Britton is a former student of the University, and Mr. Britton will receive his B.S. degree in business at 160 Rhode Island street.
∞
Pi Kappa Alpha held its winter formal at the chapter house Friday night from 9 to 12 o'clock
The house was decorated with southern smilax, cut flowers, potted plants, and blue floodlights.
Music for dancing was furnished by Louie Kuhn and his orchestra.
The chaperons were:
Mrs. Belle Wilmore
Mrs. Nelle M. Hoskinson
Mrs. X. J. McCarthy
Gd. and Mrs. Karl F. Baldwin
Dr. and Mrs. W. D.威
The guests were:
Jean Stouffer, c41
William McKenzie, c41
Elva Ottman, c41
Mildred Coul, c41
Bette Wren, c41
Rickhann, c39
Betty Graham, c39
Jean Stephenpee, c18
Roberta Gibon, f41
Greta Gibon, f41
Maxine Almon, c40
Roberta Mitchell, f49
Laura Ladd
Suce Stuits, c41
Martha Jane Stewart, c41
Caryn Clowr, c49
Doris Simon, c41
Jane Iwin, c4nd
Christine McAulty, c40
Karen Kawai, c40
Louise Gavec, c4un
Mary Groebes, c4unc
Bjetjan Van Daventer, c41
Bjetjan Van Duvencel, c41
Bjetjan Bodlington, c40
Melva Grant, fa39
Phyllie M.Pherson, c4nd
Diluc Caldwell, c38
Miranda Dickson, c3d
Bettie Blake, c4und
Virginia Hamrick, Kansas City, Mo.
Shirley Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.
Marcia Taylor, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Gray, St. Joseph,Mo.
Clara Williams, St. Joseph,Mo.
Margaret Tanner, St. Joseph,Mo.
Mike and Mrs. Tom Laron, Kansas City, Mo.
Varl Wond, St. Joseph,Mo.
Clermont Korn, Kansas City, Kan.
Members of Alpha Chi Omega entertained with an initiation banquet last night at 6:30, at Evan's Hearth. They initiated it.
Those initiated were;
Lorraine Pyle, b'uncl
Polly Gowins, c'41
Lionel Lloyd, c'uncl
Looseie Browne, c'41
Veda Merga Strong, c'41
Betty Bridges, c'41
Mary Gareth, c'41
Mary Francon Orlandy, c'uncl
June Hoover, b'uncl
Jen Smith, cuncl
Jane Wake, cuncl
Patty Paine, c'41
Ruth Crazy, ed'uncl
Nielsen Schupp, c'41
Wendy Webster, wuests;
Margaret Lockhard
Betty Ains, '37
Marlory Clark
Mary Birchhead, Fc. Leavenwere
Mary Frances Butler, '37
Mrs. John Blockard
Mrs. Al Luster
Mrs. John Nelson
Miss Parson Cook
Jean Lindgrim is a weekend guest at the Chi Omega house.
--medias start out with two stilts already called on them. Out of this year's class 12 make it be dropped. This makes the competition so stiff that the fellows practically live in the medie building. It takes a lot of intestinal fortitude to get to the place where you can work on the same.
Betty Howard, Kansas City, Kan. isited the Alpha Omicron Pi house atiday.
Approximately a hundred members of the University Women's Club attended the tea given by that organization Thursday afternoon in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building. Contributions for the scholarship given annually by the club were made at this time, and contributions were for the purpose. Informal games formed the afternoon's entertainment.
Mrs. Leonard Axe was in charge of the tea. She was assisted by the following committee chairmen: Mrs. H. W. Hargas, program; Mrs. Walden Gatel, receiving; Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw, tea table; Miss Wheatly
Phone K.U. 66
Candid Camera-lly Speaking
心
house are:
Havwire--
CLASSIFIED ADS
If you have a sick friend in the hospital why not send him or her a card or greeting of so much sort. You're going to need it very long when you can move
Babcook, refreshments; Mrs. Carroll Clark, serving; and Mrs. J. J. Kinter, finance.
Richard Ferris, Garnett
E. C. Goldith, Garnett
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Wood, Garnett
Weekend guests at the Acacia
Dorothy Mullarky, Kansas City Mo., is visiting friends in Lawrence this weekend.
Alpha Kappa Pi, business fraternity,
announces the pledging of
Maurice English 'burel.
THE ARGUS
"See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories."
Dinner guests at the Kappa Eti
Kappa house Thursday night were:
Dorothy Mac Nuffer
Am Shaw
Jim Browne
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the roge."
Mrs. Mimo Stukey was a lunecon
guest at the Chi Omega house Friday
day.
Continued from page 1
with an f4.5 uses motion picture film
WANTED: Used (10-40) Krag riles model 1898. Action and action in good stock barreed condition immaterial. Also Ss phone Model 87, Call Phone 1448.
HIXON STUDIO
Phone A1 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg
Phone K.U. 66
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
What's Happening This Week
Prof. William S. Johnson, chairman of the department of English, left Friday, Feb. 4 for Sarnata, Fla., where he will remain until April.
At the Theaters:
A woman is currently
is found the whole world through
Yet many a lady will turn this page,
To prove her curious, too.
The dightiest insurance inspector who was out of town, for his wife's birthday clothes her a choree for a million kisses as a present. The wife, a little annoyed at his thrift, sent back a post card: "Dear Jim; remember when we were on our birthday chique. The ice-fem minc it for me this morning."
Johnson Leaves for Florida
SHOPPOO and Oil - Dresser - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried, 50c
End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKY BEAUTY SHOP 722½ Mass. Phone 2353
LOST: Wallet. Please call D. E. Singleton,
1607 Tennessee. 1810J. Reward. -88
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE. dried
BOYS: Two quiet, studio roommates wanted. Double room, one twin beds $8.10 and $8.00. Campus House. 1241 Oreden.
-3
PATEE—Sunday through Tuesday—Wheeler and Woebole in "High Fliers," and "Missing Witnesses" with John Littel and Dick Purcell.
● Wednesday through Saturday; Gene Atuty in "The Old Earn Dance" and "New Faces of 1338" with Joe Fenner, Parksakurkus
FOUND: Man's black leather glove for the left hand in KU parking zone No. 3. Call Kasan Office, Journalism Bldg. --88
BOYS: A large, double room, three wi-
ndows, furnace heat, hot water at all
times. Clone to town and rent a condo.
30 per boy. 130 Vermont,
phone 3088. -89
VARSITY — Sunday through Tuesday Joel McCenan and Barbara Sturgey inwck in "Interestes Till Take Money," and Anna Mey Wong in "Daughter of Shanghai." ● Wednesday Thursday: John Hancle, Don Ameche and the Ritz Carlton in "Ons in a Sea of Fishing," and John Ameche in "A Sea of Fishing." ● Friday Saturday: Nino Martini, Ila Napolo and Leo Carlie in "The Gov Degreee," and Walter Connelly and Lonel Stander in "The League of Fright-
HITLO GUYS: Place for one with three other men in 4-room apartment with or without cooking facilities. Very reasonable. Apply 1250 Iosd. Apt. 15. –88
**8029** One single and one double room on 2nd floor. Also a first-door apartment, nicely furnished. Private entrance. 314 West 14th, phone 2025, -89
DICKINSON—Sunday through Thursday; "The Bueconee" starring Fredric March, Francisco Gaal and Akim Tamariff. The weekend
Tracy and Frank Morgan in "Maupinquin," © Thursday through Saturday, "Wise Girl" starring Mirak Hammons and Ravill Mandel.
FOR REENT: Apartment; also sleeping room. Clean, comfortable, well furnished. Large cloak room. Plenty of hot water. Small rooms. Roommate. Phone 2867-1340 Vermont.
If we don't print contributions, we lack appreciation.
We did.—Erion Files, etc., etc.
On the Campus:
around, but it is a heck of a long time to stay in bed. They'll appreciate it.
Likely as not someone will say
If we do print them, the column is full of ink.
I OST: Small gold watch, either downtown or in vicinity of gym. Wear. If found please call Betty Smith, 1774, 1232 La.-89.
If we don't, they say the jokes are no good.
Then there is the story that we heard the other day about the duckling who was so embarrassed because his first pants were down.
If we publish original matter, they think we lack variety.
RELIABLE CLEANING
MONDAY—K-State-Kansas basketball game, Hoch auditorium, 7:30
For girls only.
Getting out a column is no picnic.
If we print the kind of jokes we
like, the kind that we are all
**TUESDAY—Association of University Women dinner, Memorial Union**
bellhouses
IVA'S
Guaranteed
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
Suits Tuxes Dresses Hats 50c
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanents $1.50 up
Phone 333 941½ $1.50, Mass. St.
50c
--ba.
WEDNESDAY—W.S.G.A. House Presidents' dinner, Pine room, Memorial Union building. ● W.S.G.A.-TWM for new women, Memorial Union building. ● Quick Memorial Trusts, Robinson Midwake, 7 to 8 p.m., Memorial Union ballroom. ● Jay James election.
THURSDAY—Independent hour dance, 7 to 8, Memorial Union ballroom. ● KFKU announcer tryouts, $3.00 p.m. ● Student Christian Federation banquet.
SKATES and SLEEDS GUNS and AMMUNITION Basketballs
SATURDAY—Kappa Alpha Theta party, Memorial Hall jailbreak, 9 to 12. • *Kansas-Nebraska dual indoor track meet at Lincoln.*
AT THE DICKINSON
3 garments for $1.25
GRAND CLEANERS
Call 616 Free Pickup and Del
Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliv.
16 Free Pickup and Deliv.
RUTTER'S SHOP
Your Locksmith
1014 Mass. St.
Phone 319
Fredric March and Francesca Goal co-star in *Cecil B. Denille's* production,
"The Buccaneer," now playing at the Dickinson Theatre.
AT THE GRANADA
ALBERT CABOT
Joan Crowdaw as you love her in her most captivating flair in "Mannique" with Spencer Tracy, Ralph Morgan and Alan Curtis now playing at the
Loans Amount To New High
Stouffer Announces a Number of Fellowships Will Be Granted
A total of 130 loans have been granted to 27 women students and 103 men this semester. This, the largest number of loans ever made at once in the history of the student loan fund, entails $6,200.
The entire number of loans, counting those just made, leaves the treasury of the fund practically empty, according to GEO. O. Foster, registrar and chairman of the fund committee.
The student loan fund was established in 1894 by a gift of $164 from the graduating class of the School of Engineering and Architecture. Since then gifts of senior classes, faculty members, alumni, personal contributions and bequests have swelled the 'und to its present total of $20,000.
Loans are to be paid within a year with 6 per cent interest. The payments generally have been most satisfactory with a few exceptions. The student who worked for the fund, which worked more than 12 hours in granting loans this semester, consists of Mr. Foster; Henry Werner, men's student adviser; Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women; Lawrence Woodruff, assistant professor of entomology; Karl Klooz; Laurence Gatto, assistant football coach.
Professor Sherwood's Father Dies After Brief Illness
'All' Revealed-before he and his roommate depart
to take the QWL on his flight. Bye.
Mr. Sherwood, who was 82 years old, had been sick for about a week. He had been retired for some time. Survivors are: one son, N. P. Sherwood of Lawrence, and two sisters, Mrs. Ida Corkins and Mrs. Sarah Corkins, Mr. Sherwood, and Mr. Sherwood was preceded in death by his wife in March, 1933.
E. O. Sherwood, father of N. P.
Sherwood, professor of bacteriology,
died at Lawrence Memorial hospital
Friday night.
Continued from page 1
before he and his roommate depart to join the "New Era" in Russia. Hat, the third from Princeton, just can't understand why anyone should be opposed to the fair sex. "And I don't know why all this talk about spring, either," he says. "I feel good all the time."
Two Yale men, Buck and Doc, who have also come up, for the big college spring dance, get the title of the Brooks Brothers when they come to the affair in opposite ensembles of black and white.
AT THE VARSITY
PETER DEWEY
Joel McCrea and Barbara Stawnyk provide the heart interest in "Internes Can't Take Money," now at the Varsity Theatre.
COMING The Event of the Year
S. HUROK presents
Col. W. DeBasil's
BALLET
RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
A Company of 125
With Symphony Orchestra
The Most Successful Spectacle of the Century
ONE EVENING ONLY
Elaborate Dancing - Gorgeous Scenery - Brilliant Costumes
University Concert Course (Extra Attraction)
Monday Evening, Feb.14 8:20 o'clock
HOCH AUDITORIUM
Seats now selling - popular prices: $2.00, $1.50,
$1.00, 75c and 50c at School of Fine Arts
Bell's Music Store
Round Corner Drug Store
D. M. SWARTHOUT, Manager.
Smart Young Men Like Our Cleaning
with 25 years of experience-
All work is Carefully done
all spots and stains removed
Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE
926 Mass.
KEEP THE GROOM WELL GROOMED
WELL,HOW ARE YOU NEWLY-WEDS GETTING ALONG?
FINE, EXCEPT GEORGE COMPLAINS ABOUT THE WAY MANDY DOES HIS SHIRTS. I DON'T BLAKE HIM
2. (1)
SOMEBODY HAS SOMEONE TO CATCH UP WITH.
ONLY A GOOD LAUNDRY
KNOWS HOW TO DO
SHIRTS RIGHT. TRY THE
INDEPENDENT
AND HE'LL BE
SATISFIED.
MARQUES DE CAMERONS
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1938
Cunningaham Beats Romani To the Tape
Mite Goes in 4:11. But Ben Johnson Steals the Show With Record in 60-ud. Dash
New York, Feb. 5.—(UP)—BEN Johnson, Columbia's black comet ran the fastest 60-yard dash in history tonight at the thirty-first annual Milrose track and field games before a crowd of 16,000 in Madison Square Garden. His time was six seconds flat.
Johnson's performance overhadowed the headlight attraction, the Wanamaker mile, which was won for the fifth time by Glenn Cunningham, the tireless runner, running for the state championship. *Winning Tree Fallst. Slow.*
Winning Time Fairly Slow
Cunningham, who holds the world indoor record, ran in the comparatively slow time of 4:11 as he beat the San Romani, a fellow Kansas.
Charley Fenks of Wisconsin took third place by a shade from Gene Venko, veteran N.Y.A.C. miler, while Don Lash, the Indiana iron man, dropped out of the race two laps from home.
A half hour before, Johnson had turned in the greatest sprinting race ever seen on the Garden boards.
The old mark of 6.2 seconds was set in 1923 by Loren Murchison in New York. Down during the years, several other men equaled it including Emmet Toppino, Jesse Owens, and Eulace Peacock.
Johnson Clips Record Twice
In winning the first trial heat, Johnson equaled it, then clipped it a tenth of a second in winning the semi-finals.
in the finals, the Negro star was
off his mark like a streak, in one of
the most perfect starts ever seen
down the track for the new record.
In the mile run, Cunningham picked up yard after yard as they moved around the oval. He killed off San Romani with a blistering pace, Venkze tried to keep up but he fell behind and was nipped at the tape by Fenke, who was a close third.
Lettermen Play TennisIndoors
Newton Hoverstock, c. 38, and Jame Kell, c. 38, both of Topka, and both two-letter winners in tennis, are working out in Robinson gymnasium while the weather is unsuitable for practice outdoors.
Hoverstock and Kell are the only members of last year's Kansas tennis team returning and they will be co-captains of the team. Other candidates for the team working out now include Merrill Day, c'38, Edward Mirante, 3rd l, and Howard Dunham, c'38.
Matches are being arranged with Kansas State, Nebraska and Missouri, to lead up to the Big Sixt meet in Lincoln the latter part of May. A team of four will be held some time before competition starts.
Require Safety Study
Kansas safety leaders are uniting in an effort to make mandatory course of study in traffic safety in the high schools of the state.
PATEE
Continuous from 2
All Shows 15c All Seats
2 New Features
The Stratospheric Love Life of Two Great Aeronauts!
2 New Features
"High Flyer"
WHEELER-WOOLSEY
LUPE VALEZ
— AND —
What Lets Gangsters
Go Free?
Iowa State Beats Missouri
Ames, Iowa, Feb. 5- (UP)—Iowa State college battled the Missouri Tigers with a varied offense tonight to win a Big Six conference game.
It was the seventh home game of the season which the Cyclones have on in the last few minutes of play.
Geared to stop Blahnik, Iowa State guard and leading Big Six scorer, Missouri was caught off guard when the Cyclone offense centered around Menze and Beresford, sophomore forwards.
Although closely guarded, Blahnik managed to score 10 points to tie with Brown, Missouri center, for high scoring honors.
"Missing Witness"
--all-American George Sauer, whom he had搔起 the preceding season. Milo Clawson was picked as all-conference tackle in 1934.
Women's Intramurals
Free-Throw Contest
Names of the 10 highest scorers in the free-throw contest will be put on the bulletin board tomorrow. They may make their final free throws sometime Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday.
Ouack Club
Members of Quack Club are to continue reporting for practice at the same hours that they had last semester,
JOHN LITEL
DICK PURCELL
LATEST NEWS
BOSKO AND PIRATES
Basketball
Outstanding players on intranural basketball teams have been placed on class teams.
Freshman; Grissell (manager)
Hayes, Leech, Bridges, Wiley, Bell
Jekins, Kerns, Fisher, James, Parker,
Kunshik and Yoamans.
Sophonore: Wisler (manager)
Blaney, Ulm, Lemonie, Ehrek, Woods,
Mercer, Barland, Woodward, Adair,
Brown, Iverson, Irix and McVey.
Junior: Lettter (manager), Variance
Manager, General Manager,
Crery, Paden, Cannon, Gets,
Clurry, Paden, Cannon, Gets,
McLaurent, Bigelow, Bursuck, King
Hawk.
Senior: Baker (manager), Woold, Dresser, Kardan, Klan, Flood, Curd, Rollow, Griffin, Thompson, Gikelson, Sterling, Heitman, Armstrong.
WEDNESDAY
GENE AUTRY
"Old Barn Dance"
Following is the class schedule:
Feb. 10; 8:30, Freshman vs. sopho-
more; 9:15, junior vs. senior;
9:45, 8:30, freshman vs. senior;
9:18, junior vs. sophomore.
Feb. 17; 8:30, senior vs. sophomore.
9:15, junior vs. freshman.
Change In Pool Hours For Men Is Announced
The following hours are announced for the men's open plum at the swimming pool in Robinson gymnasium:
Tuesday; 7 to 9 p.m.
9 p.m.
Saturday: 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday: 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday: .3 to 4.30 p.m.; 7 to
9 p.m.
These hours will be observed until after the Big Six swimming season has been completed March 4. The new schedule for open hours will be announced at that time.
Freshmen Awarded Numerals
Eagle
VARSITY
Home of the Jyhawk
Tonite - Tomorrow Tuesday
F for t e-Yight Athletes
Receive Numerals a nd
Sweaters A fte r Grade
Checkup
Bigger than "Men in White" Better Than White Parade"
Right This Way to the Big Show No.1
Recommendation of 46 freshman athletes for football numerals and sweaters was announced yesterday by Gwinn Henry, director of athletics, following a checkup of grades for the past semester.
At the close of the football season, Coach Ad Lindsay and Freshman Coach R. L. Conger recommended that all who participated throughout the season, and who completed the necessary 12 hours of work at the University, be awarded numerosity grades were checked yesterday.
Barbara Stanwyck Joel McCrea
"Internes Can't Take Money" Plus
She saw men bartered for gold in Chinatown Honky Tonks
Mike Andrews, Robert R. Allen,
Morris Belshe, Robert Buchanan,
Frank Bulkay, Wiliams Ia mBunsen,
Richard Driess, Richard Driess,
Richard Driess, Robbins,
Dugan, Keith Fedeh, H. D. FisK,
Chelber Gibbs, James Greene,
Robert Grubb, Edward Halr, Herbert
Hartman, Thomas Higgins, Wal-
ter
Donald Pierce, Steve Renko, Sidney Reid, Michael Schumacher, David Taylor, Louis Thompson, Dave Tindall, Irwin Travis, Charles Wentleman, Harry White, Richard Wolf
Wednesday - Thursday
Absolutely no raise in prices
Leland Huddleston, Donald Jacka,
Donald Kaul, Francis Lehman, How-
ard Martin, Ralph Malot, Quido
Massare, Charles McDougal, Wilbur
Trevor, Michael Doyle, Joe Miller,
Jock Morgan, Laurence Nelson,
Jerry Orden, Myrn Piggot.
'DaughterofShanghai'
Following is the list:
Washington, Feb. 5.—(UP) The final draft of the administration farm bill, ready for congressional consideration after a month of conferences, faced opposition tonight from western senators.
"One in a Million"
Ready To Consider Farm Bill
It's the picture of the year
No. 2.
You'll Never Forget It
Once You See It!
10c WE ASK
til 7 then 15c
No. 1
SONJA HENIE
DON AMECHE
JEAN HERSHOLT
RITZ BROTHERS
"County Fair"
Next Sunday
"FIFTY ROADS TO TOWN"
Ornond Beach, former Kansas football star and a member of the championship Jayhawker team of 1930, recently was voted the most valuable player to his team and the most sportsmaniakey player in the Ontario Rugby Football Union during the 1937 campaign.
Ormond Beach Is Top Canadian Rugby Player
Beach, who plays with the Sarma, Ont. Imperialis, will receive the Imperial Oil Trophy. O.R.F.U. officials said that in voting for the trophy winner each senior club in the union submitted the names of two of its clubs to the Ontario government club. They said each club's ballot had Beach's name on it.
The former Kansas fullback was further honored by being named to the all-Eastern Canadian and the all-Canadian rugby teams for the fourth consecutive season. The Jayhawk tackle, also made the all-Eastern Canadian team.
While a member of the Kansas Team, Beach was known as the finest line-backer in the conference. Te first won all-Big Six mention when he was named first-team fullback as a sophomore in 1986. He was chosen all-conference in 1987 and returned to school after missing one year. In his senior year, Beach was crowded to the second-all-star eleven by Nebraska's
Chancellor and Mrs. F. H. Lindley left last night for Washington, D.C., where the Chancellor will attend a meeting of the national advisory committee of the NYA on Monday and Tuesday.
Chancellor Lindley Goes to Washington
The committee will discuss the success of its program this year with a view to formulating a program to appoint a President Roosevelt and Congress.
While in Washington they will visit with their son, Ernest K. Lindley, his wife, and their three grandchildren. Ernest K. Lindley recently resigned the position as Washington correspondent for the New York Times and he had since the inauguration of President Roosevelt. He is now Washington correspondent for the weekly news magazine, News-Week.
Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Feb. 6, (Sunday) —(UPI)Spanish insurgent columns, swarming down over the hills north of Teruel, devoy Loyalty lines back from Sanugao road and paved the way for a path at Teruel's outer defenses, a Nationalist commando, and early today.
Insurgents Advance on Teruel
I
---
OUR NEW SPRING PATTERNS ARE HERE!
$25.00 and up
SCHULZ the TAILOR "Suiting You - That's My Business" 924 Mass. Phone 914
0
Camera Club To Hear Doan Discuss Dark Room Equipment
Drop in for Supper Tonite---
Dark room equipment will be demonstrated and discussed by Prof. E. N. Doan of the department of journalism at the meeting of the K. U. Camera Club Tuesday evening in room 102. Club building, including the club and learning various photographic techniques, including experimental printing and developing, are welcome at this meeting.
Open 'til 9:00
Your friends will be here
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-basement Memorial Union
New Records
Always and Always
Dr. Rhythm Larry Clinton
Bear Down
The Big Dipper Andy Kirk
I Was Doing All Right
Love Is Here to Stay Larry Clinton
The Big Dipper
Smoke From a Chimney Tommy Dorsey
You're a Sweetheart
When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain __Kate Smith__
Bell's Music Store
TODAY!
4 GRAND DAYS
GRANADA
Continuous from 2:30
X-TRA! X-TRA!.
Barred from showing in many states but you see it now for the first time in Kansas complete without a single cut.
Inside
NAZI GERMANY 1938
POST WAR CHAOS IN GERMANY!
FASCISM vs. DEMOCRACY!
NAZI PROGRAM FOR YOUNG!
PLACE OF WOMEN IN GERMANY!
HITLER'S RISE TO POWER!
WITH THE MARCH OF TIME
Miriam Hopkins - "WISE GIRLS"
Bob Burns - "RADIO REVELS"
JOAN'S MOST THRILLING LOVE STORY!
From Hell's Kitchen With a Tin Spoon in Her Mouth to a Hoavenly Retreat! Glamorously gowned by Adrian!
ALANNE TURNER
TEAMED FOR THE first TIME!
...AND WHAT
A ROMANTIC
RUMPUS IT IS!
Ivan
CRAWFORD
Spencer
TRACY
Spencer TRACY
Watch this boy Alan Curtis skyrocket to stardom. He is really a ‘find’. He has good looks and can act, too!
ALAN CURTIS - RALPH MORGAN
Also — Color Cartoon Novelty - Latest News
MANNEQUIN"
WATCH FOR!
LAWRENCE'S ONLY DELUXE THEATRE — WE SHOW THE BEST AND LEAVE THE REST!
TODAY!
SUNDAY SHOWS
n 3 - 5 - 7 - 9
1 - 3 - 5 - 7 - 9
DICKINSON
SUNDAY PRICES
10c = 35c
Week Days 25c 'til 7
Only the Dickinson Could Bring You the Mighty Successor to "The Plainsman" — The Story of the Pirate Who Saved the Nation!
A story to thrill the heart of all America!
SAN ANTONIO
The life and loves of Pirate Jean Laffite,
once a name to chill the heart of every
merchant captain, to thrill the heart of every
New Orleans belle... now a name to flame
in undying glory upon the nation's screen
as Cecil B. DeMille re-tells in thundering
sequence the roaring story of the pirate who
saved the nation!
战事图
ADOLPH ZUKOR PRESENTS
Cecil B. DeMille
PRODUCTION
FREDRIC MARCH
"THE
BUCCANFER
A Paramount Picture with
FRANCISKA GAAL
AKIM TAMIROFF
MARGOT GRAHAME
WALTER BRENNAN
and Ian Keith · Anthony Quinn
Conglass Dumbell · Beauch Bondi
Robert Barrat · Hugh Sothern
Louise Carratt · Evelyn Keys
Directed by CECIL B. DeMILLE
EXTRA TREATS!
Betty Boop 'Candid Candidate Fox Moviutone News
L
SOON!
W. C. Fields - Martha Raye - Dorothy Lauro - Ban Blue in "BIG BROADCAST OF 1938"
1
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Louise Pound Talks Tonight At Banquet
National Woman Leader
To Address A.A.U.W.
At Centennial Meeting
In Union Building
W. A. BURNS
Dr. Lorie Pound, a leader in the professional and recreational life of women, will speak to Lawrence and University women on "A Century of Co-education" following a banquet tonight in the Union building to celebrate the centennial anniversary of co-education. This celebration is sponsored by the American Association of University Women.
DR LOUise POUND
LAWRENCE. KANSAS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1938
Miss Pound received her A.B degree from the University of Ne-
Dr. Pound has taught in summer sessions of several of the leading universities and was made professor of English at the University of Nebraska in 1912, the position she now holds.
Mrs. Waldemar Geltch, president of the A.A.U.W., will preside at the banquet and introduce the speaker. The introductory talk by Mrs. Geltch will tell something of coeducation in Kansas. Miss Irene Peabody will sing "The Song of the Robin" from the American opera, "Sharenis" (Charles Wakefield Cadman).
Dr. Pound, vice-president of the national A.A.U.W., is a prominent lecturer, and author and editor of many publications.
scholar in 1922, her A.M. degree in 1895, and his Ph.D. degree from Heidelberg University in 1900. She heidt a doctor of literature degree in 1928.
She is a member of a great many honorary and professional organizations including: Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Professors, of which group she is a member of the National Council; and National Council of English Teachers. She is affiliated with the International Council of English, the Linguistic Association of America, and d is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Theta Sigma Phi, Chi Delta Phi, and Delta Kappa Phi. (Chammon)
She has served as acting state head and chairman of the overseas relief committees, and National League for Women's Service. From 1952 to 1964 she was a member of the Advisory Council of the Guggenheim Foundation.
Dr. Pound's achievements are not limited to the field of education alone. She was state tennis champion in 1891 and 1882 and state golf championship in Nebraska. She won other biennial championships in tennis.
Is Also Sports Champion
NUMBER 89
Dr. Pound will be the guest of Miss Margaret Lynn during her stay in Lawrence.
A number of out of town guest at the A.A.U.W. celebration include Mrs. A. Ross Hill, Kansas City, Mo. national treasurer of A.A.U.W. Mrs. Mary P. VanZile, dean of women at Kansas State College; Miss Susan M. Guild, dean of women at Washburn College; Miss Laur A. Rohrer, past state president U.W. and former secretary of the organization; Mrs J. D. Colt, secretary of the Manhattan branch A.A.U.W.; and Mrs. M. W. husband of the Manhattan branch Members of the Kansas City and Leavenworth branches of A.A.U.W. will also attend.
A special effort is being made to interest the university women and club women in attending this cenennial celebration. Reservations should be made at: F. P. Orian or Miss Maude Elliott. Any woman student at the University who is interested is urged to attend.
Many Guests To Attend
Co-ed Secrets Are Revealed In Coming Play
By Shirley Jean Smith, cunel.
Have you "Ladies of the Lipstick"
ever wondered how to get your
mum? Is there a Joe College on any
campus that hasn't wondered what
women are all about?
The answer to both questions can be found in Philip Barry's "Spring Dance," the Dramatic Club production to be presented in Fraser theater Feb. 15 to 18, inclusive. Tickets for the play will be on sale Thursday at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall.
Although the men of the play believe that "marriage is an obsolete institution," the damsels are not the ones in distress when they set out to escape. They are wrong in thinking that "Love is useful only as a window display."
Prof. Allen Crafton of the speech and dramatic arts department, not only ably directs the production, but amuses the cast with his wit and ability. Yesterday afternoon at play practice he donned a pointer's white-billed cap to move scenery, and the next moment dashed on stage to express prinly the lines of a suspicious housemother. No, he is not in the play, but was merely substituting for a missing actress.
At present one of his biggest problems is that of producing in an imaginary room off-stage the sound of running water loud enough for the audience to be able to hear it. He also admits that a pair of dancers might sit on a chair or space time lying on the twin beds, used in one of the scenes, would help.
The entire east cast to Kansas City last night to see the production "King Richard II."
Speakers Busy Tonight Pastors and Professors Will Address Organized House Groups
In connection with Religious Enphasis Week, local ministers and University professors are speaking in organized and semi-organized houses tonight and tomorrow night on the general theme for the week. "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confession."
This evening the Rev. Joseph F. King, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, will speak at Beta Theta Pi; the Rev. H. Lee Jones, pastor of the Unitarian Church, at 1200 Tennessee; the Rev. T. H. Aszman, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, at Kappa Alpha Theta; the Rev. C. W. Thomas, pastor of the First Baptist Church, at 1247 Kentucky; Bert A. Nash, professor of education, at Delta Upsilon.
Henry Werner, men's student adviser, will speak at Acacia; John L Hunt, gr general secretary of the Y.M.C.A. at Alpha Micron Pi; R. A Schweigler, dean of the School of Education, at Gamma Phi Beta; Otl Templin, secretary of the Endowment Association, at 1011 Indiana; W. H Schowe, associate professor of geology, at Alpha Tau Omega; and R. H Wheeler, professor of psychology, at Delta Tau Delta.
Tomorrow evening the Rev. Mr. King will speak at Alpha Gamma Delta, the Rev. Edwin F. Price, student pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, at Watkins hall; Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, at Miller hall; R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry at Corbin hall; Mrs. Anna Olinger, Westminster hall house-mother, at Alpha Kappa Alpha; and Miss Anna McCracken, instructor in the department of philosophy, at Chi Omega.
--music for background purposes and a complete lack of the old fashioned pantomime.
HAY by WIRE
We heard some of the lawyer kicking about how tough winters were but here is a question that the Crimson run into down at Texas. Try it.
"X had forbid his daughter, Juliet, to have dates with Romeo, whose she knew. Z' he disliked. The door was open. Romeo home one night and met Romeo. X, learning of her absence, got into his car and started after her. He finally arrived in Romeo's parking in Z's driveway. When he arrived, Romeo was trying to kiss Juliet. Thereupon she drew into a meadow and faced Romeo in meo. The bullet missed Romeo but hit and killed Juliet. At this point Z, who was in his house, was wakeful, closing the window, and seeing X running to-Continued on page 2
Dr. Poteat Will Address Convocation
Address to Assembly Opens Three-Day Series Of Lectures in W e w k For Religious Emphasis
Dr. Edwin McNeill Potean, principal speaker of the Student Christian Federation's Religious Emphasis Week, will discuss "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confusion" at an all-University convoction in Hoch auditorium this morning at 10 o'clock.
Dr. Poteat, pastor of the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church, Cleveland, arrived ahead of schedule early yesterday afternoon. He was present at a hurriedly arranged supper yesterday in Memorial Union cafeteria and participated in a brief discussion with members of the Federals Myers hall after the Kansas State basketball game last night.
Earl Stuckenbruck, c39, president of the Brockhaven and chairman of Religion Emphasis Week's planning committee, presided at both meetings.
Dr. Poteat's subject this morning is the theme of the week. The convocation opens a three-day series of meetings, forums, and addresses at which Dr. Poteat is the principal speaker.
Subject Is Theme of Week
The convocation will be followed at 12:30 by a noon luncheon forum in Memorial Union cafeteria at which Dr Poteat will speak and at which Evelyn Brubaker, c'38, chairman of the Y.W.C.A. "Ology" commission, will preside. At 8 o'clock this evening in Fraser auditorium the week's principal speaker will present an address at which Paul Moritz, c'39, president of the Y.M.C.A., will preside.
Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will preside at this morning's convocation and introduce the speaker. The Rev. Edwin F. Price, student pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, will lead in scripture reading and prayer.
Keeps Program Flexible
Wednesday Dr. Potate will again speak at a noon luncheon forum and at a meeting of religious leaders at 4:30 p.m. in Myers h aall at which The Rev. Harold G. Barr, pastor of St. James' Church, will preside. Tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in Hoch auditorium, the Cleveland minister will again speak. At this service Westmaster A Capella choir under the direction of D. M. Swarthowitz, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will preside. His response. Ellen Payne, general secretary of the Y.W.C.A., will preside.
Thursday Dr. Potate will speak at the third noon lunch forum of the conference, and at 5:45 p.m. in the Memorial Union ballroom he will appear as guest of honor at the Student Christian Federation's banquet. Idella Campbell, c'38, president of Westminster Student Foundation, will preside. Tickets for the banquet may be secured at Henley
Continued on page 3
TOAHA'S CAMPUS SCHOOL
To provide time for the all-University convocation to be held at 10 o'clock this morning, the following morning class schedule will be observed:
First period
Second period
Convocation
Third period
Fourth period
TODAY'S CLASS SCHEDULE
The government announced that the icebreaker MMRan, equipped with two airplanes and stocked with six month's supply of food, would be used to support a rescue plan have been made to have a dirigible join the rescue effort.
'The Greatest Personality in Ballet Will Perform for Students Monday
Massine began his ballet career at the 8 age of 16, when Diaghileff, famous European ballet producer, singled him out as he carried a large platter across a crowded stage in a drama at the Maly Theater in Moscow. He was presented in his ballet "The King of Ballet Strauss" "The Legend of Joseph" at the Paris Grand opera house in 1914.
8:30 to 9:15
9:15 to 9:50
10:00 to 10:30
10:30 to 11:35
11:35 to 12:30
E. H. Lindley,
Lindley,
Coming to the University next Monday as maître de ballet and artist collaborator of the Monte Carlo Ballet Russe, is an artista billed as "the greatest personality in ballet today"—Leonide Massine.
Since the World War, durin which he was in Italy studying art, Massine has been engaged actively in the development of the Russian ballet. His later works have been featured by the use of symphonic
His ability as a dancer is shown by the position he fills with the Ballet Russe company. That he is outstanding as a creator is seen in the ballet *Ballets* in the repertoire of the Monte Carlo group of his invention.
The authority for this statement is none other than the eminent ballet critic, Irving Deskin, who called her "the most unrivaled stylist of our time."
Ice-Breaker To Arctic Rescue
Washington, Feb. 7. —(UP) -Senator Wm. H. King (Durham, Utah) today introduced a bill in the senate for repeal of the 1935 neutrality act which, he said, "serves the purpose of aggressor nations but is disadvantageous to small and weak countries."
It was presumed that preparation was made to speed up rescue efforts after all radio communication broke down, indicating that the marooned scientists may be attempting to find their way across the ice in an effort to reach the coast of Greenland, 50 miles distant.
Moscow, Feb. 7 (Tuesday)—(UP)
The Soviet government, mobilizing all available forges to rescue four Russian scientists trapped on a crumbling foe in southern Arctic waters, planned today to utilize its most powerful ice breaker and possibly a dirigible.
The measure, deemed indicative of rising opposition to President Roosevelt's foreign policy, was dropped into the legislative hopper shortly after Senator Henry Johnson (Rep. Calif.) offered a resolution to force Secretary of State Cordell Holl to reveal whether the United States contemplates foreign alliances or understandings.
Johnson proposed his bill while Admiral William D. Leahy, chief of naval operations, was denying before the house naval affairs committee that the administration has foreign commitments of any kind, chiefly for $f$ joint armed action in case of war.
Would Repeal Neutrality Act A c t Serves Aggressor Nations But Not Small Ones Says Senator
The following men have been selected to head the various groups in preparation for the Engineering Exposition to be held during the spring semester. "Railway," Sterling Polson Foley, c.38; "Farmland," Forcich, c.38; "Structural," Arthur Latham, c.38; "Satan," Norwin Souder, c.38; and "Hydraulics," Fleming Scofield, c.38, and Reamy Fitch, e.sp.
Engineering School Prepares Exposition
A. J. HOLLY
"To say I love you in pantomime," Massine explains, "has been ridiculous. It is more interesting to have the meaning of the dialogue translated into movement, than imitated by simple gesture."
Massine has twice been co-production, with Leopold Stowickowi, of successful ballets while continuing her work in a distinguished place among ballet artists.
"Inside Nazi Germany," the current March of Time feature being presented at the Granada theater, has invoked considerable comment among those who have viewed this book by the workings of Hitler's Nazi program.
The film, which attracted attention when it was banned by the municipal censors of Chicago only to be shown after a legal battle, is being shown in Kansas without censorship. Several states have banned the attraction, which was rumored to have been smuggled out of Germany.
Faculty members of the department of political science have been invited to view the film and several such classes in the elementary and high schools have attended it to gain insight into the study of Nazi Germany.
The film portrays simply and vividly how Hitler's program is being carried out by propaganda agents. Most interesting to Americans is the portrayal of the German-American Bund movement in the United States. Twenty-five camps similar to those used to train the youth of Germany have been established over the United States, and have grown to large organizations of Nazi sympathizers.
Nazis Quarantine Churchmen
He demanded, before five black-robed special judges who wore the Nazi swastika on their breasts and opened court with the prescribed order, to disarm the porters, crowding the corridors outside, be permitted in the court room.
Berlin, Feb. 7- (UP)—Nazi secret police clamped a "quarantine" on confessional Protestant church officials throughout Germany today after the Rev. Martin Niemeyer, brought to trial before a zeeret court in New York, over the proceedings by shouting demands for a public hearing.
Judges made quick work of the request and ordered all out of the hage court room who had no official business there.
Immediately afterward the Gestapo (secret police) of Heinrich Hammer ordered the "quarantine" of Neimoeler's colleagues.
Members of the confessionalist "provisional cabinet" who are in Berlin were forbidden to leave the city, while members in the province were ordered to remain where they are.
Japan Reports Chinese Army Revolt
Shanghai, Feb. 7 (Tuesday).—(UP) The Japanese Domei news agency today said in a dispatch from Hong Kong t th at t Hang-Fang, commander of the Chinese “peace preservation” corps at Samsui, 35 miles west of Canton, had revoltled, throwing the town into an uprush.
The agency said that acute tension also prevailed in Shihung, 50 miles west of Canton, after Chinese army troops blockaded the river.
Chinese authority at Canton denied the reports.
Eden Hints British Blockade
London, Feb. 7. - (UP) - Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden intenated strongly in the House of Commons today that the British navy is prepared to seize Spanish insurgent ships or blockade the Balearic islands unless pirate attacks on neutral ships cease immediately.
Naval sources revealed that the virtual naval blockade of the insurgent island of Majeora already has been put into effect with British and French warships, part of a fleet of 70, cruising just beyond Spanish territorial waters alert for the departure of pirate submarines.
The foreign secretary, disclosing that wartime conditions prevail off the coast of war-torn Spain, announced that a formidable fleet of British warships engaged in the new 'anti-piracy' patrol is under orders to sink on sight all submerged subs along the crowded trade routes.
The orders to the British fleet apply only to the zone assigned to Great Britain in the patrol, but the order to the British fleet was scribed to the "shoot to sink" policy.
Inurgent Generalissimo Francisco Franco has been formally warned, Eden said, that Britain will not "not tolerate" submerged mariners in the British zone. A similar note was sent to the Spanish Loyalist government.
Kansas State Gives Jayhawkers a Scare
Frank Root's Wildcats Come Close To Repeating Last Year's Upset; Kansas Employs Stalling Tactics and Manages To Survive Opponent's Last Minute Rally To Win, 35-33
Kansas State College threw a real scare at Kansas hopes for a Big Six title last night but the Jayhawks squeezed through with a 35 to 33 victory in Hoch auditorium to remain at the heels of Oklahoma's first place Sooner. Kansas lead 24 to 18 at halftime.
By Harry Hill, c'40
The Jayhawkers employed stalling tactics to protect a twopoint lead during a wild last minute and staved off a spirited Wildcat rally.
Numbers on Call Board Direct Freshman Engineers
A red button below their number means that the chief adviser, Prof. George J. Hood, wishes to see that person at the earliest opportunity, and a blue button means that the chief adviser wishes to see that student under whose number the button appears. The board is reset every evening.
Independents Postpone Hour Dance
Coach "Phog" Allen's cagers definitely had an off-night, and were impressive only for their ragged play. A crowd of 2116 attended.
A scheme has been worked out in the School of Engineering and Architecture whereby the freshman students in that school are expected to look at their particular number on a call-board which has been constructed on the bulletin board, every time they enter Marvin hall.
The hour dance sponsored by the Independent Students Union, which was scheduled for Thursday night from 7 to 8 o'clock, has been postponed, according to an announcement. The woman was to be admitted to the dance unless asked, and cutting was to be in the power of the women only.
Sigma Chi Reports Burglary
Sigma Chi fraternity yesterday reported to Henry Werner, men's student adviser, the loss of $27 in a burglar Sunday evening.
Victims of the theft were: William Johnson, c'unel; $19; and John Beert. c'41.$8.
The Sigma Chi theft is the second fraternity house burglary of this semester. Last Wednesday night members of Phi Delta Theta lost $55 in cash and wrist watches valued at $55 to an unknown marauder.
The burglar is believed to have entered the house by the front door which was unlocked, it was said.
Burglaries the first semester totaling more than $2,000 were climaxed in the arrest and confession of four persons Dec. 16.
Practice Begins On Student Show
Rehearsal for "Spring Swing,
Sigma Delta Chi musical revue, will begin tomorrow at 4 o'clock in the Union ballroom, it was announced yesterday by James Coleman, c38,
producer.
The opening chorus number,
'Swing in Spring,' will be rehearsed under Jayne Coats, c'39, and Catherine Dunkel, ed'38, dance directors for the production. Music and lyrics for this number were written by Bill Miaissner, c'38, Doug Tarbet, fa40, and Lewis Capeland, fa40, who composed most of the music for the play.
Students Lose Clothes To House Breakers
Bill Askren, 139, and Keith Start, csp, were robbed of four suits, a pair of trousers, and a radio when their room at 1088 Maine street was broken into sometime Sunday evening. Entrance into the house was gained through a rear door which had been left unlocked.
NOTICE
Any seniors interested in photography from the industrial point of view should leave their names at the School of Business, room 114 Frank Strong hall, for interviews.
FEE DEADLINE TOMORROW
Tomorrow is the deadline for the payment of fees. Beginning Thursday morning a fine of 50 cents a day for five days, excludes meals if forfeited. If fees are not paid by Feb. 15, enrolments of the delinquent ones will be cancelled.
With five minutes to play, Kansas apparently had a safe margin of eight points, but two quick Wildcat caskets whitted this lead dangerously. Then Pralle scored the final Jay-
CITA
FRED PRALLE - GUARD
Pralle Again Leads Scoring
hawker points with a free throw and a field goal to make the count 35-28.
But State was not to be downed so easily. Burns hit from close in and Wesche made good a free throw to bring the Wildcat total to 31. Then as the game neared the final minute, Reid, Wildcat substitute forward, bagged his third goal field of the second half and slashed the Kansas lead to two points. Whereupon the Jayhawkers stalled away the closing seconds and Wildcat shot shots were wide of the basket.
Fred Praile, veteran Kansas guard,
led the scoring with six baskets and
two free tosses for 14 points. Sophomore Don Ebble counted nine
bars in the rounse-up position.
Burns paced the Wildcats with eight markers.
Wildeats To Quick Lead
Wesche, starting Aggie center,
opened the seiring in the game with
a one-hand shot from side court
but Schmidt came back for Kansas
with a short one from center to tie
the score at two all. From there the
Standings of the Teams
W L. Pct. TP OP
Oklahoma 4 0 1,000 190 150
Kansas 5 1 833 200 185
Missouri 5 1 400 165 156
Iowa State 2 4 333 188 222
Kansas State 2 4 166 187 227
lead see-sawed until at the end of five minutes the Jayhawkers were ahead 9 to 8. Here Wildcat set plays began to click and Burns, Cleveland and Klmke hit in quick succession to run up the State total to 16. The Redskins set up, and his 7th point of the Kansas total of 11.
After many attempts, Praele scored his first goal on a tip-in and soon after converted after Cleveland's soul. Meanwhile, Cleveland sank an under-handed toss from the side and the score read 16-14. State Praile countered with two baskets, one on his charging lay-up and, Burns and Burns from close in to the count 18-all at the end of 10 minutes.
Kansas Ahead at Half
Florell went in for Schmidt and contributed a tip-in to give the Jayhawkers the lead. Prale scored on a long, looper. Harp hit from behind before the ball crossed the goal线 before half ended, and Kansas lead 24-18 at the intermission.
There was much wild racing up and down the court at the start of the second period but no scoring until Klimek broke the ice after 62%
Continued on page 4
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PAGE TWO
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1928
≈
Comment
Apprenticeship--
Who Will Serve Next?
Once again the University of Kansas has proved to be a place where promising young coaches serve their apprenticeship. It is with great reluctance that we see Glenn Presnell snapped up before he proves any greater threat in developing a Kansas backfield capable of mastering the Nebraska Huskers.
Presnell leaves for Nebraska under offers of a substantial increase in income with the added advantage of opportunity for more rapid advancement presented by a school which is and has long been in the nation's football lime-light.
Undoubtedly one of the factors in the improvement of football at the University last fall was the added spark of a good backfield—a fact for which Presnell must be given much credit. In view of this, it is regrettable that he should leave at this time, especially when backfield material the most promising it has been in several years. Glenn Presnell is well liked by players, students, and coaches and it will be a difficult matter to replace him.
It seems a better contract might have been offered. The University has lost promising coaching-talent in the past to other schools who would pay more. It will be remembered that Larry (Moon) Mullins was once on the staff here as were Lynn Waldorf and others who have made their names as coaches.
Another apprentice makes good. Who will be next?
Students May Become More Efficient Readers
"The greatest cause of failure among freshmen in college is inability to read effectively," according to a statement by Bert A. Nash, professor of education, last year to the freshmen. Now the School of Education, in co-operation with the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, under the direction of Professor Nash will undertake an extensive program for improving reading ability among the University students.
Professor Nash has requested all students who realize they are not reading as effectively as they should to talk with him and join the experimental class. He hopes to have 100 students enrolled in the reading clinic.
In most cases speed of reading is closely correlated with comprehension. Many students who are deficient in comprehension are slow readers. In order to comprehend, a student should be able to read at least 120 words per minute. Of course, different kinds of reading material require a varying rate of reading. But a student should be able to average at least 250 words per minute on textbook materials of average difficulty.
This reading clinic offers to all students an excellent opportunity to make their reading more effective and at the same time increase their reading speed. Practically any college student, or graduate student, can learn to increase his reading rate from 50 per cent to more than 100 per cent by consciously trying, and with no loss of understanding.
In Italy--
God's Rival
According to a recent press dispatch, it was officially decreed by the secretary general of the Fascist party in Italy that the following prayer be offered by Italian school children just preceding their noon day meal:
~
The dispatch did not say whether or not the children of Italy are allowed to pray to God also,
"II Duce, I thank you for what you give me to make me grow healthy and strong. O Lord God, protect II Duce so that he may be long preserved to Fascist Italy."
Firestone Dies; Leaves Ford the Last of Three
There remains today only one of America's "the three" in industry.
There was a time when the three magnates were as chummy as three high school girls. Newspapers carried photographs of them together at play and at work. They represented the most powerful leaders in three of America's greatest industries and the fact that they were business associates added a great deal of color to their well-known friendship.
The death yesterday in Miami Beach, Fl., of Harvey Firestone, 69, pioneer tire and rubber manufacturer, leaves only Henry Ford of the once powerful industrial triumvirate, Ford, Firestone and Edison.
When Thomas Edison died in 1930, Ford and Firestone continued their personal and business relations. Both were consistently opposed to phases of the New Deal, particularly the NRA. Ford successfully refused to join President Roosevelt's industrial recovery program, maintaining that he already more than met the regulations of the NRA while Firestone asserted in September 1934 that the NRA "helped no one" and that "you can't legislate prosperity."
In Firestone's death, America loses one of her great business leaders. A conservative and yet a prophetic industrialist, Firestone was a pioneer manufacturer and an important figure in America. He organized the company which bears his name in 1900 and since 1932 had been chairman of its board of directors.
He was instrumental in investigating and promoting rubber growing possibilities in the Philippine Islands and South America and always encouraged investment of American capital in rubber growing countries.
Editor's Note: If "Sourpus" and "A Beilever in Mankind" will come into the editor's office and sign their letters, they will be published. It is a matter of policy that no Campus Opinion letters be published which are unsigned. The signature will not be printed and the name will be held in strictest confidence by the editor. We invite all letters but they must be signed.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellella's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular publication Sunday from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m.
Vol. 35 Tuesday, February 8, 1938 No. 89
--ward his son's car with a gun in his hand, shot at him but missed, hitting Romeo in the leg. X then ran back to Lister, a policeman who had been notified by Z of the killing of Juliet, overtook X whom he called upon after being arrested. Lister stead of stopping X drove faster. The policeman shot at X, missing him, but killed a seroy cow in a crime that crammed crimes have been committed?
ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION. Dr. Elwain N. Potet will speak at an all-University conventation at 10 o'clock this morning in Hoch auditorium—E. H. Lindley, Chancellor.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITTEE.
Tuesday. All freshman students wishing to become candidates should send in applications to the KU. athletic office on or before Feb. 12, 1958, in care of James Gillespie.
GERMAN LANGUAGE TABLE: All those who wish to speak German are invited to the German school in the city of their union building at $3.90 each evening. The school obligation other than to speak German—W.B. Schaffrath.
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The initiation an waffle shake scheduled for today has been postponed until Thursday, Feb. 10. The supper will be held at the reception room at 4:15 p.m.-Dorothy Hoak, Secretary.
HOUSE PRESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION: There will be a meeting of the House Presidents' Association in the Pentium room at 4:30 this afternoon. Please bring your child to the W.S.G.A. carnival - Sophia Schellenberg, Secretary.
JAY JANES. There will be a meeting Wednesday at 4:30 in the Pine room.-Roberta Cook.
LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: Le Cercule Français will meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in 13D Ad. Members of the club will give short accounts of countries they have visited.-Helen Cooper, Secretary.
M E 64. MECHANICAL LABORATORY: All students enrolled in M E. 64. Mechanical Laboratory, see the bulletin board in the laboratory for your answer. Please take this lesson up on this matter early this week.—Arthur Whitney.
NEW ADDRESSES FOR DIRECTORY SUPPLIER
students who changed addresses in recent months are registered at the Registrar's office at once so that the corrections may appear in the directory supplement—G. O. Foster.
SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: The Snow Zoology club will meet at 5:30 each evening. It will be the regular initiation meeting, Dr. Lemonne of Kansas City will be the speaker—Betty Barnes, Secretary.
PHI DELI KAPPA: Phi Delta Kappa will meet Training School. Fou H. Lee will discuss the program at Antich College. The meeting will adjourn in time for the Lecture Course number in the audition.
TAU SIGMA: Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 this evening in Robinson gymnasium. There will be a program, a business meeting, and beginning work on the symposium program—Catherine Dunkel.
STUDENT FORUM BOARD: There will be a meeting of the Student Forum Board in the Pine room on Thursday, Feb. 10, at 3:30 p.m.—Dean Moore chairman.
WSGA: The WSGA meeting has now been postponed to a nighttime evening at 7 o'clock. Doris Kornblum, President.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Poor of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRUNCE, KANSAS
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOLEBEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILLE TYLER AND GUESS CAMPUS
NEW RELEASE EDITOR DOROTHY NETTENHAM
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SWORY EDITOR JOHN FOWLENCE
MARTY FOCKLEER AND DICK HAYNE
REWRITE EDITOR DICK HAYNE
TELEGRAPH EDITOR HANK HELL
JOURNAL EDITOR HANK HELL
JOHN-CHIPP
INSTITUTE EDITORS MARTIN BENTTON AND DAVID W. ANGSTROT
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INSTITUTE EDITORS MARTIN BENTTON AND DAVID W. ANGSTROT
1937 Member 1938
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BUSINESS MANAGER P. QUENTYN BROWN
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawen, Kansas.
College Women Becoming Less Chaste Than Men?
New York, Feb. 7 - The female o,
the species, according to Dr. William
H. Perry; gynecologist of the New
York University Medical Center,
coming less chaste than the male.
Doctor Parry, making his conclusions from 10 years of observation, told a conference of social hygienists recently that his researches proved that chastity among men is growing, and among women declining.
(By The United Press)
The reason for this, he said, is that women, particularly in colleges, are engaging in emotional experiments, which men are playing football and basketball.
"Young college men are tending to " become more confident," he said. "Among college women it is a well-recognized fact that sexual confidence is the exception rather than the rule."
"Women have been so restricted in the past," he said, "that with the new social freedom they are tending toward new experimentation." He added that while there were studies in sex problems such as birth control, his own study on this education is not broad enough, and entirely too short of the completely rounded course exhazing the possibility of emotional entan-
Doctor Parry said the emotional entanglements of women are one of the most important problems of the "new freedom."
At the last meeting of the FomMedics, an organization for women who intend to enter the School of Medicine, the following officers were chosen: president, Anita Entz, m'41; vice-president, Martha Pimeo, c'm39; treasurer, Virginia Dotter, gr; and secretary, Dorothy Curry, c'mul.
Miss Mary E. Larsen of the department of zoology was elected sponsor of the organization.
Fem-Medics Elect Officers
Haywire-ward his son's car with a gun in his hand, shot at him but missed, hitting Romeo in the leg. X then ran back to Lister, a policeman who had been notified by Z of the killing of Juliet, overtook X whom he called upon after being arrested. Lister stead of stopping X drove faster. The policeman shot at X, missing him, but killed a seroy cow in a crime that crammed crimes have been committed?
Continued from page 1
About everything but putting slugs into a phone we'd say.
These business conferences that the President has been having are getting us all mixed up. After much reading, we believe that we have the answer. Big business is what the little businesses haven't, and little business is what the big businesses have.
A quiet room with lights turned low:
POME
This new ruling making seniors take a test in English may have to be expanded to take in reading if the seniors here are as gullible as Syracuse University ones are. Up there a petition was passed around which beginning like a proposal to elimination of seniors but ended up with a promise to serve five years in a chain gang, 115 seniors signed.
The marching song sounded swell last night but no one seemed to remember the words. Maybe the tape be printed on the linee-leaflets.
A soft touch upon my shoulder;
A warm breath upon my cheek;
A little face against my own—
Who let that darn eat in?
One of our classes discussed the meaning of words yesterday. No satisfactory meaning for the word democracy was given but this one that we heard means a lot to some people: Democracy is a government of the people, by the radicals, and for the rich.
From the South Seas and the Ka-Leo E O Hawaii, the University of Hawaii student paper, come these reflections of wisdom that just shows to you.
Just an insipid Sue
Of this great modern day—
Will never turn grey,
Her lashes are pasted.
She sweep to and fro
Dister a father
Maw' will long ago.
Her eyebrows are penciled.
Her "bloom" is all paint.
And she never would faint.
Her line is as long
As from here to Shanghai.
Yes," No, and 'Why?"
Her eyes are feline-like—
So blaze, my dear.
So be a knicker,
Ipana's best lee,
And Harry and Tom
Gaze with worship-filled eye
With their lure, they
Will never let me
Need Well-Rounded Education
The result, he said, is a tendency in women to lose the fear of experimentation; a more completely rounded education in the field of sex relations would include a study of the dangers of the emotional as well as physical phases.
glements as a result of sexual experience."
Doctor Parry placed the typical sex-career of a college woman as follows: "In the first year home influence still prevails. In the second year girls begin observing and growing more interested. Sexual experience is most likely to begin in the junior year."
Need Well-Rounded Education
He also emphasized that alcheol lays an important part, particularly t vacation time, when girls return from school to school. Girls drink and give in to temptations.
Elect Twente Head Of Schoolmasters' Club
Prof. E. W. Twente of the School of Education was elected president of the Schoolmasters' Club of the American Legion, Friday, at the session of the administrators' council of the Kansas State Teachers Association at Topeka. Professors Bert A. Nash and F. P. OBrien, both of the School of Education, also attended the conference.
The professors attended the Schoolmasters' dinner, Thursday, at the Hotel Kansan, and a dinner for the members of Gamma chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, professional education fraternity.
H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education, attended the annual teachers' appointment bureau meeting yesterday afternoon.
The administrative council opened the three-day meeting, with discussions of a proposed legislative program highlighting the meeting. W. T. Markham, state superintendent of public instruction, was in charge of the sessions, which were addressed by Gov Walter A. Huxman.
The delegate assembly of the Kansas State Teachers Association, composed of elected delegates from Wichita, Lawrence, Lawrens, Manahalia, Chico-City and Parasus districts, distributed individual school problems.
Kansas Art Teachers Discuss City Program
Miss Maud Ellsworth, instructor in education, was in charge of the annual meeting of the Kansas State Art Teachers Association, which was held at the Jayhawk hotel in Topeka Saturday.
Miss Eldsworth was assisted by Dessa Jane Bush, sp, who is in charge of the Oread High School art classes.
After five short talks on the art programs of the city schools of Kansas, Miss Rosemary Ketcham, proclaimed that the outpouring suggested by the talks.
At least 17 of the 85 teachers present were graduates of the University department of design.
"It was the most enthusiastic and successful meeting held by the association in the 10 years since its organization," said Miss Ketcham.
DICKINSON
Week in and Week Out the Dickinson Hos the Hits
Shows 3-7-9
25c 'til 7
Paramount's Flaming Romance of the Pirate Who Saved the Nation!
ENDS
TOMORROW
NOW!
FREDRIC MARCH "The Buccaneer"
FRANCISKA GAAL
AKIM TAMIROFF
Also: Betty Boop - News
THURSDAY!
3 Days
The Gal Who Made the
Nineties Gay!
MAE WEST
"Every Day's A Holiday"
SUNDAY!
The Parade of Hits Continue
With the Biggest Broadcast
"The Big Broadcast of 1938"
W. C. Fields - Martha Rye
Dorothy Lourom - Bean Blue
Shep Field and His
Rippling Rhythm
Spoon—"The Goldwyn Follies"
Offer $350
In Cash Awards
For Plus
A first prize of $200 is being offered by the Religious Drama Council of New York City for the best one-act play on the subject of peace. The prize winning play will be sub-jected in French for an offer of publication.
The contest is to open March 1 and close July 1. Judges will be chosen from leaders in the professional theater or international drama fields.
The other awards will be: second prize, $100 donated by Samuel French; third prize, $50 offered by the Religious Drama Council; and fourth prize, a bronze medal donated by Samuel French.
Professor Ruff To Teach Foreign Languages at Washburn
For further information and a copy of the rules, address: Religious Drama Council, 71 West Twenty-third street, New York City.
The plays must be suitable for production in churches by children, young people, or adults. The playing time must not exceed one hour.
To Address Zoology Club
Prof. Edgar T. Ruff has been appointed assistant professor of modern foreign languages at Washburn College, it has been announced by Dr Philip C. King, president of the college, and Dr Stephen M. McInerney instructor in the department of romance languages at the University last semester.
Dr. A. N. Lemonie and Dr. V. H. Bergmann of Kansas City will speak to the Snow Zoology Club this evening on "Ocular Manifestations of Endocrine Glands" and "Personalities and Endocrine Disturbances" which will be given in 801 Snow Hall at 6:30 p.m.
Engineering Society Elects
The University chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers will meet "Thursday, Feb. 17, at 7:30 p.m. in room 210 of Marvall hall. An election of officers will be held, followed by talks on "Safety" by W. C.McNown, professor of civil engineering, and John Headrick, e38.
Lawrence's Only Modern Theatre
Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 25c 'til 7
GRANADA
JUST ONE MORE DAY
JUST ONE MORE DAY
TODAY ENDS
WEDNESDAY
Barred From Many States but You See it Now for the First Time in Kansas Complete in Every Detail Without a Single Cut!
INSIDE NAZE GERMANY 1938
With the March of Time, Fidel Castro and Fidel Castro and Democracy Next Programs for Young Historians Hilton's Rise to Power
It Is Your Duty As An American To See This Expose!
Katherine Brush's Shop Girl,
Jessie, Is a Made-to-Order
Role for Joan
m
Owen TRAWFORD
IS CAPTIONARIST
Samantha TRACY
IS TERRIFYING
MANDEWIN
ALAN CURTIS • MORGAN
MICHAEL PICTURE
ALSO
Color Cartoon Novelty Latest News Events
SUNDAY
'RADIO CITY REVELS'
THURSDAY 3 DAYS
"WISE GIRL"
Benet To Lecture At University
William Rose Benet, internationally known poet, critic, and novelist, will lecture at the University Friday and Saturday of a special engagement Feb. 10 at Park College.
Mr. Benet will leave for Denver, Colo., following his addresses in Lawrence.
Miss Rose Morgan, associate professor of English, is chairman of the committee responsible for bringing Mr. Benet to the University campus.
Speaks at Colloquium
Petroleum Class to Ottawa
Prof. Mitchell To Speak
The Colloquium is an organization for faculty members and graduate students.
Prof. Eugene A. Stephenson's petroleum engineering class in the design and layout of drilling equipment took a field trip to Ottawa yesterday. They examined the lay-out of the Texas Oil company cost of town.
Ernest Kemberly, gr, spoke on "Contact of Surfaces" at a meeting of the Mathematics Colloquium last Thursday afternoon.
Prof. U. G. Mitchell of the mathematics department will be the speaker at a meeting of the Mathematics club Thursday afternoon at 10:30 a.m. Frank Strong is his subject i. g. is mathematics for the Millions."
PATEE Week 10c Til 7 Days Then 15c
Ends Tonite
Wheeler - Woolsey
"HIGH FLYERS"
And
"Missing Witnesses"
WEDNESDAY 4 Days
"OLD BARN DANCE"
with
"HILLBILLY BAND"
'NEW FACES OF 1937'
GENE AUTRY
'NEW FACES OF 1937
JOE PENNER
PARKYAKARKUS
I
ARSITY
Home of the Joyhawks
"Don Ameche - Ann Sothern
"FIFTY ROADS TO TOWN"
15c 'til 7 then 20 Here's One of the Reasons for Our Success Barbara Stanwey Joel McCrea
TONITE
"Internes Can't Take Money"
Plus
Gongster Thriller of Chino Town
ANNA MAY WONG
'DaughterofShanghai
Wednesday - Thursday
A Double Feature That Tops Them All!
10c
'til 7 then 15c
No.1
SONJA HENIE
DON AMECHE
"One in a Million"
No. 2 Thrills at a Carnival
"County Fair"
Shows That Are Bigger Than the Big Apple
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
-
...
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c. 490, Society Editor
Before $1 p.m. KULI; after $12 p.m. 2702-83
Kappa Alpha Theta held open house Sunday at its new home, 1433 Tennessee street, for members of the University faculty and townpeople, about 400 guests being received in the afternoon and evening. Many bouquets decorated the rooms. Mrs. D.B. Gressel of Winnetka, ill, grand president of the sorority, was an honored guest.
Running the West.
Mrs. Graetet
Mrs. Robert Haggart
Mrs. Jacquette Wheeler
Mrs. Otto Burdettles
Mrs. Laurence Wafferd
Mrs. L. L. Boughton
Mrs. John Brand
Mrs. Kara Ruge
Mrs. J. Mindenberg
The following poured at the te
table:
Mrs. Fred Harris, Ottawa
Mrs. Harriie MacDonald
Mrs. K Gallaway
Mrs. F. W. Spencer, Denver
Mrs. Wilma Miller
Mrs. P. Peterper
Mrs. Richard Wagittau
Music during the reception hours was furnished by Charlene Barber, fa38, violin; and Joe Eichner Benjamin, Ria Russell, fa38, Joyce Vet. fa38, and Hise Nussel, cund, piano.
∞
Triangle fraternity entertained with a housewarming dance at its new chapel house, 1116 Indiana street, on Saturday evening from 9 to 12 o'clock.
Music for the dancing was furnished by Clyde Bysom and his orchestra.
The chaperons were
The chaperons were:
Mary, Clare Wright,
Jane D., David J. D., Haines
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Cheney
The guests were:
Floise Foulh, p4' 50,
Mary Jane Shuckley, c'unl
John Bertiniani, c'unl
Rush Burger, c'unl
Mariell McClelland, f'unl
Mari Thien, c'38
Brian Burnell, b'40
Phyllis Yoke, c'15
Lorraine Long, c'40
Miriam Elli, c'45
Donis Dermond, d'39
Danis Playen, c'40
Marcella Buchheim, c'40
Nell Kimbrough, c'39
Helen Hylan, Horton
Tonia Nunez, Tania
Hannah Kittelson, '36, Kansas City, Mo.
Grace Jacket, Kansas City, Mo.
Betty Matchettie, Kansas City, Mo.
Moivie Forte, Tueka
Wilson Mallack, the Alligator, Catherine Epp, Kansas City, Mo.
Margaret Notberg, Kansas City, Mo.
Georgine Decker, Hudson
Walker Williams, Walker Williams, Wi.
Harriet Jones Gweebesch, Kansas City, Mo.
Wilma Hackett, Kansas City, Mo.
Josseph Randle, Kansas City, Mo.
Maria Greene, Indiana
Elizabeth Newland, Lawrence
Mary Catherine Cogan, Kansas City, Mo.
Lois Friedbach, Kansas City, Mo.
Maria Greene, Edudora
Lawrence, Edudora
Dick Coleman, '36, Boonnville, Mo.
Benjamin Levy, '37, Kansas City, Mo.
Russell Young, '36, Kansas City, Mo.
Maria Green
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kern, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Barber, Blue Springs, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Cutlip, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Minford Sherman, Lawrence
The meeting of the Twentieth Century Club will be held at the home of Mrs. Perry Barber today. Miss Ester Thorne, of the department of sociology, will be the speaker.
The international relations study group of the American Association of University Women will hold the last of a series of five meetings tomorrow evening at 7:30, at the home of Mrs. Carter Harrison. The final discussion is on the subject: "Can We Keep Out of War in Asia?" Mr. Harrison will lead a social hour. Members of the League of Women Voters are invited.
∞
The Music Club will hold a guest meeting Tuesday evening. Feb. 15 at 8.30, at the Colonial tea room, when a costume program will be given under the direction of Mrs. Treury Werner.
the hostesses will be:
Mrs. Vernier Smith
Mrs. G. W. Bradshaw
Mrs. R. A. Schweiser
Mrs. W. C. Simons
Mrs. D. M. Swarthwout
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity entertained with a buffet supper Sunday evening.
The following were guests'
Betty Wytay, c41
Jan Bangle, c40
Dennis Lomio, c40
Virginia Hoadley, f40
Harburt Hardwick, c40
Mary Ann Edgerton, c19
Lizbeth Haney, c19
Clyne Geyer, c39
Carolyn Green, c41
Barbara Bonham, c4unl
Margaret Ramage, c4unl
Maxine Miller, c41
Betty Burcha, f41
Shawnee, f4unl
Helen Snedden
Jerry Pee, c40
Poppy Fglnt
Patti Parrese, c40
Francisco Zentmeyer, c40
Harriet Suldén
Emile Johnson, c20
Nemo Saldén
Bunny Jenkin, c41
Bill Udell, c40
Jean Olsson, c40
The alumni were:
Bill Jones
Howard Sallis
Tilly Tilt
Neil Grayburn
Kenneth Grayburn
Delta Upsilon entertained the fe
Dinner guests at the Pi Kappa Al-
Dedna Essigna exchanged the following at dinner Sunday:
Sarah Taylor, F18
Bryan Van Lieveen, c4-1
Betsy Coulson, c4-1
Jeannette Leech, c4-1
Berry Jane Boddington, c40
Dinner guests at the Pi Kappa Alp
alpha fraternity house Sunday were:
June Johnson, fa'39
Shirley Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Gray, St. Joseph, Mo.
Andela Kent, St. Joseph, Mo.
Guests at the Alpha Tau Omega
Guests at the Alpha Tau U.
fraternity house Saturday were:
A. E. Haas, Kansas City, Mo,
B. R. Young, Kansas City, Mo,
Frank Goodwin, Kansas City, Mo,
W. R. Bendon, Kansas City, Kan,
Stewart D. Damells, Champion, Ill.
Sunday dinner guests at the Chi
Omega sorority house were:
Earl Padfield, c'41
Bob Packard, c'uncl
Sam Thompson, ph
Dave Fisher, '18
The Kappa Kappa Gamma alumna association will meet tomorrow at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Mrs. R. E. Melnin, Miss Marion Handy, field secretary, will speak.
Jack Nelson, e'uncl, were Sunda dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house
~
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Zettel, Giraur are the parents of a daughter, MauKay, born Friday, Feb. 4. "Dutch Zettel," 34, is a member of the Alph Tau Omega fraternity. Mrs. Zette who was formerly Billie Tendal), is member of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority.
Mr. W, F. E. Higgins
Mr. W, F. Hagigau
Mr. Kaweroutee
Mr. Mcheath
Mr. Guy
Mr. Gay
Mia Amanda Stanton
ladynlyon Coop, Meade
Dorothy Je Harvey, Meade
Maddine Clingemple, Chapman
Dorothy Avery, 537, Dodge City
Miller hall will entertain with an hour dance tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock
day were
were
Weekend guests at Corbin hall
Dorothy Bublitz, c'39
Ray Noble, 37
Gordon Cook, m'41
Dinner guests at Corbin hall Sunday
~
Dr. V. A. Boucher, Bartlesville,
Okla., was a guest of Martha
Boucher at Corbin hall last Saturday
afternoon.
Weekend guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were: Shirley Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., and Lois Willecus, Topeka.
∞
20
Margaret Charles, c'40; and Margaret Lucy, c'41; were Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house.
.
Fern Forman and Richie Fay McReynolds, both of Kansas City, Mo. were weekend guests at the Chi Omega house.
Mary Jo O'Connell, b'uncl, and
^
心
The K.U. Dames will have a valentine party tonight at 7:30 in the women's lounge of the Administration building. The hostesses will be Mrs. Thomas Ashley, Mrs. Rufus Edmonds, Mrs. Kenneth Sherrill, Mrs William Jack and Mrs. Albert Palmerie.
"
Ricker hall, 745 Ohio street, will hold open house this evening from 7 to 8 o'clock.
The cast of "Spring Dance," which will be presented at the University next week, went to Kansas City last night to see "Richard II" at the Music hall of the Municipal auditorium. Before next week's play, members of the cast will be entertained at sup. of some Mr. and Mr. Allen Crafton.
~
John Skinner, Kansas City, Mo.
Donald Skinner, Kansas City, Mo.
Shirley Jean Smith, cunel
Guests at the Triangle house for dinner Sunday were:
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Skinner, Kansas City, Mo.
A forward step in the movement for visual education is the showing in Hoch auditorium Thursday night of "The Human Adventure," an eight-reel talking picture based on ancient history.
Man's Beginnings To Be Presented In Film
Two large Western Electric sound projectors will be installed in the auditorium for the film, which is the subject of this chapter. In the community lecture series.
"The Human Adventure" is a unique contribution to the field of education and to the world at large. Although its primary objective is to teach children about film makes it a fascinating, entertaining subject for the layman who wishes to enlarge his knowledge and vision of man's heroic past.
The picture has been produced as the result of research and explorations of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, under the supervision of Dr. James H. Bristet, breast surgeon and director of the institute. A picturesque air route is traced in the film over Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Anatolia, Iraq, and d Persia, which are points visited by some 14 expeditiones sent out by the institute. Eight of these exploring groups are observed while actually engaged in searching for the lost chapters of human history.
Egyptian Air Route Is Traced
Some of the highlights of the film are the sequences in which Dr. Breasted is seen and heard describing the work of the institute, in studying what he describes as "the most remarkable process known to us in the universe: the rise of Man from savagery to civilization."
These include: a flight over the Persian Mountains; flying in Iraq in a sand-storm which reached the height of 15,000 feet; excavations which reveal 14 separate and distinct cities, each built one upon the other; the stables of King Solomon; and wheat from the days of Joseph. An event important in cinema history is the ending of the film, which shows the destruction of pictures on standard size film of Persepolis, the capital of the Persian Empire, built by Darius I the great about 500 B.C.
Three Years in the Making
More than three years in the making, two separate trips were made from Chicago to the Near East to produce "The Human Adventure."
EVENT EXTRAORDINARY
EVENT EXTRAORDINARY
Hurry for Choice Seats
HOCH Monday, Evening
AUDITORIUM Feb. 14 - 8:20
A Thrilling, Glamorous Stage Spectacle
S.HUROK presents Col. W. de Basilis
BALLET RUSSE
de Monts Carlo
COMPANY
OF 125
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
SEVENTEEN
PRODUCTIONS
NEW
BALLETS
S. HUROK presents COL.W. de Basil's BALLET RUSSE
Some 23,000 feet of film were exposed and much of the picture was made from the air in more than 9,000 miles of flying.
THE WORLD'S GREATEST...MOST GLAMOROUS
DANCE ENSEMBLE ... THE BOX-OFFICE
SENSATION OF 2 CONINENTS
PROGRAM—"A HUNDRED KISSES," "AURORA's
WEDDING," and "GODS GO A-BEGGING"
(New Ballet which had world premiere, London
Coronation Season last Summer)
Note: These 3 Great Ballets will not be duplicated in
program given elsewhere in this territory.
Seats Now at: School of Fine Arts
Round Corner Drug Store
Tickets: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 75c and 90c
AUFSIPE UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE
Ft. Leavenworth To Have Museum
Fort Leavenworth, Kan.-Historical memoirs of transportation, now the property of the U. S. army, will be made into a museum here to present a panoramic view of the settling of the Middle West.
A collection of couches, prairie schooners, and other relic dating back to pre-Civil War days will be housed in one of the post's oldest buildings—the red brick structure behind the old firehouse, for formerer of the post exchange.
Lieut.-Col. F. Gilbread, executive officer of the command and general staff school, who has devoted much time to classifying and studying the collection, conceived the idea which is now used by Charles M. Bunel, post commandant.
Plans now await only formal approval by the War Department.
proved by the War Department. The collection not only will serve to picture the mode of transportation in the 19th century development of the United States, but also will carry a sentimental interest because of the connection of several historical figures.
Included in the collection will be a carriage once used by President Lincoln, sleighs which belonged to Gen. George A. Custer and Gen. Nelson A. Miles, and a carriage in which President Grant once rode.
High School Experiments In Student Discipline
(Central Prestigious Corporation)
Chicago—(UF) —A school boy's paradise where pupils study family budgeting instead of mathematics, a daily newspaper instead of history, a museum instead of a party of sociology was described today by Professors Samuel Eevert and C. O. Arm田, Northernwestern University faculty members, who conduct the school.
By Corrinne Hardesty
More than 130 freshmen under the new system not only elect the subjects they wish to pursue, but decide how much and when they shall study, and discipline themselves and each other.
The experiment, with the expressed consent of the parents of students, is being conducted in a township high school of 560 pupils in Evanston, residential suburb of Chicago.
"The teacher's role," Arndt and Everett explained, "is merely to direct the students' interest into meaningful channels. We have no curriculum because our course of study is worked out as the students go along, depending on their interests."
Topeka Police Are Courteous
Topeka, Feb. 7.-(UP)-Patrolmen William Coats and Charles Crank strive to be courteous and helpful. Recently they arrested a man for drunkenness, put his car in the police garage, then took his dog home.
Power Plant Employee Suffers Broken Leg
C. A. Penn, who is employed at the power plant, suffered a broken right leg while on his work to work Friday night. The accident occurred as he slipped and fell while getting out of an auto. Penn was taken immediately to Lawrence Memorial hospital.
WEATHER
Kansas: unsettled Tuesday and Wednesday; somewhat colder in east portion Wednesday.
Dr. Poteat--
Kansan Classified Ads get results.
house, the Memorial Union building, or Myers hall at 50 cents a plate. Dr. Potent has refused to announce the subjects of any but the convocation address, preferring to keep the program as flexible as possible in order to ensure that no one according to a statement made yesterday afternoon by Stuckenbruck.
Have You Tried a CHEESEBURGER SANDWICH?
They Are Swell!
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-basement Memorial Union
1,000 Tobacco Farmers Bank on His Judgment
John L. Pinnix-Independent Warehouseman-is one of many tobacco experts who prefer Luckies...
"At every market I've ever attended," says Mr.
IN THE warehouses Mr. Pennix has managed in Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, 46,000,000 pounds of tobacco have been sold. Farmers travel many miles to bring their crops to Mr. Pennix's warehouse for sale. Reason is that they respect his tobacco experience and business integrity. So surely Mr. Pennix's views are worth your respect, too.
Pinnix, "Lucky Strike has bought the ripest, mellowest tobacco offered. That's why I've smoked Luckies ever since I first became a warehouseman 20 years ago."
Mr. Pinnix's statement is borne out by sworn records which show that, among independent tobacco experts — auctioneers, buyers and warehouse—Luckies have over twice as many exclusive smokers as have all the other cigarettes combined.
ays Mr.
LUCKY STRIKE Sworn Records Show That...
LUCKY STRIKE
HAVE YOU HEAR "THE GRANT OF THE TORACO BUCTIONER" ON THE RADIO? When you do, remember that Luckes use the finest tobacco. And also that the "Teasing" process ensures certain harsh irritants found in all tobacco. So Luckes are kind to your throat.
WITH MEN WHO KNOW TOBACCO BEST-IT'S LUCKIES 2 TO 1
Order Your DAILY KANSAN Today
- Complete University News
- Official Bulletins
- Campus Gossip
- United Press News Service
$175
Per Semester
- Sport News
- Classified Ads
- Campus Opinion Column
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Just Call K.U. 66 or Place Your Order at the Kansas Business Office, East of Watson Library
PAGE FOUR
2
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1938
Oklahoma Remains Out In Front
Cocky Sooner 'Sophs'
Shoot for All Time
Team - Scoring Record
Held by Jayhawkers
By Carl Lundquist
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 7. —(UP)
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 7. —(UP)
The University of Oklahoma "50" Club, which convenes whenever there is a gymnasium and a Big Six conference basketball game, will Wednesday next in the stronghold of the Cornshakers at Lincoln, Neb.
This is not a society item. It might well be a warning notice to the Nebraskas to barricade the basketball hoops with chicken wire, because judging from what has gone on in recent weeks, that probably is the only way to stop the Sooner stumpers who have scored 201 points for four straight games for an average of 50 points a game.
Nebraska already is familiar with the "hit and run" type of basketball which belongs to the sprinting sophomores of Coach Hugh McDermott. The Cornhuskers were the latest team in the league to win 86 for Norman Saturday night in a game which had 4,700 spectators on the verge of panic.
Huskers Seek To Avenge Defeat
The return encounter at Lincoln is especially significant because Nebraska will be urgently seeking to avenge the defeat which put the once-favored 'Huskers out of the title race for keeps.
Bill Martin, the lone senior in the Sooner ranks, may find it hard to steady his sophomore teammates who already are envisioning the first Big Six championship for Oklahoma since 1929, when McDermott's boys won the title with 10 straight triumphs.
The Oklahomaans are coyly, maybe justifiably so. They point to the fact that they have three of the league's highest scorers in Jimmy McNatt with 48 points, Marvin Mesch with 45, and Roscoe Walker with 44. They tell you that they are shooting for an all-time team-scoring record to break the 42.2 points per game average set by Kansas in 1936. They even admit that they are gunning for a new high total to supplant the 68-point record for one game made by another Oklahoma team in 1934, and what is more they may do it.
Kansas Teams Are Like Wine
They are amazingly versatile and it has thus far been the case that when one player isn't hitting the basket, enough of the others are registering to make up for his defiance. As for defense—ask MD-Perl Bell tall you and defend in the world is a good offense.
Kansas State will entertain Oklahoma Thursday, and will complete a big week against Iowa State on the Manhattan floor Saturday. Missouri which upset Nebraska at Lincolns in the first meeting of the teams will have a chance to prove that the victory was no accident when the Cornbuskus come to Columbia Saturday.
To enlist matters there is a rapidly improving Kansas team that can't be counted out of the running Coach Forrest C. Allen's teams are like wine—they improve with age Fred Praille and Don Ebbing have been shouldering a strong attack during the conference season.
Results Last Week
Oklahoua 54, Kansas State 30,
Kansas 48, Nebraska 34.
Oklahoua 54, Nebraska 34,
Oklahoua 54, Nebraska 34,
Missouri 45, Washington 28.
Ping-Pong Tourney Opens Tomorrow
A tournament to determine th. University table tennis team begin tomorrow in the Memorial Union recreation room. Two vacancies on the four-man team will be filled on basis of showing in the tournament.
Entries may be made today at the desk in the recreation room. Pairings will be announced in tomorrow's Katie Curtis fee of 10 cents will be charged.
Art Instructor to Oklahoma City
Wilma Hartman, '36, has been app- nished instructor of art in the Taft Junior High School in Oklahoma City.
Women's Intramurals
Free-throw contest: Finals must be thrown this week. Names and scores of the 10 highest scorers in the first 60 throws are listed. 12; Dotter, 39; Wisler, 39; Bell, 39; Baker, 38; Grizzel, 37; Brown, 36; Burckmann, 34.
--smith drew cheers and boos for his between halves wrestling (?) performances. No decision was given but we heard on good authority that "Chigger" Gillespie, the referee, had won on points...John Burge, Missouri state Golden Gloves' champion and Quidmea salvate put on an interesting boxing exhibition at the other end of the floor. Both boys are freshman football players. . . Obverse, and reverse, form a展览 on in the center of the floor. All the evening lacked was a couple of machine guns to make it look like a miniature of the Sino-Japanese activities.
Along the Sideline
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansas Sports Editor
The Kansas State Wildcats almost pulled another fast one last night in Hoch Audiorium when they gave the title aspiring Jayhawkers a real run for their money. Those two p-ints that were separating the two teams as the game neared its finish looked very small as Reid, Weshe and company kept the ball flying all around the Kansas basket. Reid's entrance into the game late in the second half seemed to be missed and the lanky K-State sophomore tossed in three baskets during his brief stay in the game.
The game was a typical K-State-Kansas exhibition. It was rough although very few fouls were called, and the roughness, along with poor passing in spots, served to slow up the game. One spectator behind the press table remarked that there was more going on in the library, but after looking at the speaker we doubled if he had ever been in the library. Nevertheless the game was dill except for a few bright spots provided by Ebling, Prale, Harp and Schmidt.
K-State's excessive roughing may be excused partially by the fact that they were guarding very closely and much of their roughness may have been unintentional. They have a veteran ball club and last night they were hitting a high percentage of their shots. In their favor it often was. And they have made decisions and handled themselves like sportmen. (It might be added that K-State really had nothing to kick about, but we'll let that pass.)
Prale finally broke loose and scored a few points against a K-State team, but it looked for awhile as though the old jinx was going to stay with him. Fred's long shots suddenly started clicking and he made two beautiful drive-in shots to boost his total to 14. Elbinger started out like a man of his stature, moving to the center position for awhile to cool him off, and he was able to add only 2 points in the last half to the seven he scored in the initial half. Elbinger has been the surprise of the season, both to Kansas fans and to opponents who weren't even figuring on bothering about him. More than a little credit should go to Don for his steady work week, and the team has seen only one forward so far this year that could crowd Ebbing off our All Big Six team, and that is Jimmy McNatt of Oklahoma.
Candid comments—Schnidt* is also drawing favorable comment for the fight he injects into the team while he is in the game. Kansas without Schnidt looks like an altogether different team . . . Deen Ne-
Kansas 'B's Win. 24-20
The Kansas "B" team took a rough and ragged game away from the Kansas State "B" team by a 24 to 20 score. The game was played in a first-round contraction of the evening between the varsity squads of the two schools.
Wayne Nees was the high point man of the game, caging 4 field goals and a free throw for the Jayhawkers. Kellogg was second high point man with two field goals and a charity toss.
The Aggies passed up a chance to open the scoring when Gloy gave a little much advice from the bench. The free toss was missed, however, and the Jayhawks opened the scoring on Johnson's field goal.
The game was tied twice in the opening half, but at the end of the period the Jayhawks were ahead 11 to 9.
Kansas started out strong in the second half and all but sewed the game up when they gained a 20 to 11 lead by the middle of the half. The Agile team came to life, however, and started a rally that can be them within four points of the scoring score. The game ended 24 to 20.
Nees Leads Jayhawker
Scoring With Nine
Points
Kansas. "B" (24) g | f | mf tp | p1 | p2 |
Sullivan, f | 0 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 26 |
Johnson, f | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 12.5 |
Golay, f | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 12.5 |
Hunt, f | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1.58 |
Klein, f | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1.58 |
Owen, c | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 6.5 |
Durand, g | 1 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 11.0 |
Nees, g | 1 | 4 | 1 | 9 | 11.0 |
Kappman, g | 1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 22.5 |
Watkins, g | 1 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 7.5 |
Totals | 10 | 4 | 1 | 24 | 7.50 |
K. State "F" (20) g | ft mit p| pf | pId |
Boes, f | 1 | 0 | 1 | 23.0
Wagner, g | 1 | 0 | 1 | 23.0
Wagner, f-g | 1 | 2 | 3 | 15.5
Kellogg, f | 2 | 1 | 2 | 15.0
Fulton, c | 2 | 0 | 4 | 12.0
Dreher, g | 1 | 0 | 4 | 12.5
Dreher, f | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6.5
Rosine, g | 2 | 0 | 2 | 12.5
Crowley, g | -2 | 0 | 2 | 19.5
Crowley, f-g | 6 | 5 | 26 | 41.0
Box Score
Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Marys, and A. E. Woestemeyer, Kansas.
Officials: F. C. Quigley, St. Marys
CLASSIFIED ADS
Candid Camera-Ily Speaking
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the rage."
Phone K.U. 66
THE ARGUS
$12.50
*ANTIDT*. Used (10-40) Krag rifle, model 1308. Action and stock in good shape, barrel condition immature. Absorbs X-ray. Model #7. Call Number phone 1414.
6 Breakfasts, 50c
1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas
BOYFS. A large, double room, three win-
dows, fireplace heat, hot water at al-
pine. Close to town and camp. Al-
phone. 1-800-355-1095, per boy. 103. Vermeer.
phone 3088.
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50
BOYS: Two quiet, studious roommates wanted. Double rooms, one twin beds. $19.10 and $8.00. Campus House. 1245 Oread. -22
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
732 1/2 Mass. Phone 2353
DUNAKIN CLUB
with on t4.5 uses motion picture film
Phone K.U. 66
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg
with on f4 5
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dric
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MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
7234 Mez Phone 2353
Last night's intramural basketball revealed three cagges with a real scorpion ability as they threw the ball, which battle ended with the Optimists edging out the
FOR RENI: Apartment; also sleeping room. Clean, comfortable, well furnished. Cloth closet. Plenty of hot water. Room. roommate. Phone 289-1430. Vermont
BOYS: One single and one double room on 2nd floor, also a first-floor apartment, nicely furnished. Private entrance. 314 West 14th, phone 2025. -89
FOUND. New pair of ladies' knit wood mittens in snow hall, Identify and pay for ad at Kansan Office. >91
LOST: Small gold watch, either downtown or in vicinity of gym. Reward. If found please call Betty Smith, 1774, 1724 La. 89-
These scoring powers were Sturtevant and Scott in the optimists and participants, but two other members caged 16 points while his teammate Thompson marked up 22 points of her team. Thompson marked up 22 points of her team.
Men's Intramurals
TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG
New Rackets, Balls
RUTT'S Bails, Bats
RUTT'S SHOP
RELIABLE CLEANING
Cyclones (30)
Rumold's (25)
Hexagons (34)
g ft
Sutton, f...1 0
Hossford, f. 2
Cordes, f. 6
Hull, g...4 1
Hull, g...4 1
Komatz 8 2
Suits
Tuxes
Dresses
Hats
Coats
3 garments for $1.25
GRAND CLEANERS
rexagon bumped off Ramolids 34 to 25, and the A.K. Piwall pailed the Cyclones 61 to 30 in the two remaining games of the evening.
50c
27 7 8
Guaranteed
10 512
W.Ferry, f g t 2
N.Ferry, f 1
N.Ferry, f 0
Rich son, c 5 3
Mourg, g 1
Baker, g 1 0
Baker
g f g t | g f g t |
Nijport, f 1 0 | 1 0 Steuber, g f g t |
Wright, f 1 0 | 1 1 Seft, f 1 0 |
French, c 1 0 | 1 2 Wade, c 0 0 |
French, d 1 0 | 1 3 Wade, d 0 0 |
Sturgert, g 1 0 | 1 4 Rison, g 0 0 |
Bruner, o 0 1 | 1 1 Leonard 0 0 |
Thomson, m 0 1 | 1 0 Severt 0 0 |
Gustaf, o 0 0 | 1 0 Severt 0 0 |
Optimists (37)
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliv
The A.O. V球, ball team handily defeated the Delta Chi crew 2 to last night, and Kappa SIG sigreted to Delta Tau Delta as the volley ball team.
the intramural sports season will again get in under way today following a brief up-del during semester finals. Basketball and volley hall schedules
13 412
g ft
R. Rbk. 1,2 I
Dvokn. i
Zink. c -3 0
Jink. e -4 1
J Bk. j.5 2 0
Yoot 1 0 1
IVA'S
Barramau, g 11 f
Barron, f 12
Therp, f 12
Ausin, c 1 1
Austin, c 1 4
Flegid, g 0
Flegid, g 0
Everit, 0 0
Gordon, 0 0
Gordon, 0 0
Shampoo and Wave 33c
Complete Permanents $1.59 up
Phone 333 941% Mass. St.
18 111
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
Wednesday, Feb. 9, 6 p.m.; Rutgers, 8 p.m.; Blankets, 8 p.m.; Bulldogs, 830 p.m. Dell Upalion vs. A.T.O., and Phi Pal av. Kappa Sigma, and Delta P.E., and Kappa Sigma, vs. Delta C.
Tuesday, Feb. 8 at 6 p.m.: Galloping Ghosts vs. Owens, and Hellhounds vs. Hexegons II: 9:15 p.m. Theta Tau fighters, and K.E.K. vs. Jayhoppers.
Listed below are this week's programs for the two mentioned sports: Basketball
are being issued from the intramural office.
Thursday, Feb. 10, 6 p.m.: Whitakers vs. Gashouse Gang, and C. Raiders vs. Trojans; 10 p.m: Phi Delti vs. "C" and Phi Chi vs. "120 Temple."
Saturday, Feb. 12, 8 a.m.; K. Sig "B" vs. Pi.KA. B; and Sing Ni "B" vs.D.TD. "B"; 9 a.m; Phi Gam Vs. "C"; 10 a.m; Betta Theta Pi vs.Acacia, and A.K. Pi vs.120 Tennessee; in 11 m.triangle vs.D.U., and Pamamonia vs. Dumakins; 12 m.sig Chi Gam "C"; and Phi Gam G"; and Phi Gam O"; and A.O. "B", Acacia "B"; and Phi Gam "B" vs.S.E. "B".
Friday, Feb. 11, 6 p.m.: Galloping Glasses vs. Blanks, and Panamanians vs. Owers; 7 p.m.: M.D. Vs. Phi Delt; 9 p.m.: Rock Chalk vs. Hellhounds, and Hexagons II vs. K.E.K. 9: p.m.; Gauge vs. Tha.Theta and Gasgasse Gauge vs. Tha.Thea
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 5 p.m.: Beta vs.
Phi Giam, and Phi Siu vs. S.A.E.
Dai vs. Chi Tai, P.E vs. Pi KA; B.30: Hellbounds
vs. D.U., and Sigma Giu vs. D.T.D.
Wednesday, Feb. 9, 5:10 p.m.: Hellbounds
vs. Delta Chi and A.T.O. vs.
Volley Ball
Thursday, Feb. 10, 5 p.m.; Sigma
Kappa; 7:30; Phi Mu A., vi P.
Kia K, and Beta v.; D.T.D; 8:30;
Sigma A, v.; D.U., and ATO; v.
Sigma A.
Grad Visits Pharmacy School
Mrs. W. P. Woods, Kincaid, who was graduated from the University School of Pharmacy in 1925, and is now manager of the Woods Drug store in Kincaid, a visitor at the School of Pharmacy yesterday.
minutes. Kansas missed four charity attempts during this time.
Continued from page 1
Then Harp scored two quick field goals, the second on a perfectly timed overhead pass from Praille to boost the Kansas clad to 28-20. Here Coach Frank Root sent Reid into the Wildcat line and the sophomore came through with two successive baskets.
Praille was on the scoring end of a successful out-of-bounds play and Ebling angled one in from the side just before Kansas State began their last minute spart.
The box score:
Kansas (35) **ga** g 4 g mft pf tp pfl 40
Ebling, f **g** g 1 g mft pf tp pfl 90
Golay, f **g** 1 1 0 0 0 0 39.5
Golay, c **g** 1 1 0 0 0 29.5
Schmidt, f **c** 2 1 0 0 0 29.0
Florell, csf 6 1 0 0 2 14.5
Johnson, c 6 1 0 0 2 14.5
Johnson, c 0 0 0 0 0 25
Prale, g 17 6 0 2 2 14 1 40
Harp, g 17 6 0 2 2 14 1 40
Harp, c 46 16 3 5 35 5 200
K. State (33) ga g f ftm tp pf tp lf
Klimck, f 14 3 1 3 1 1 36.5
Burro, f 10 3 0 0 0 12.5
Wesche, c 10 3 0 0 0 12.5
Wesche, c 6 3 1 2 7 0.0
Koner, g 4 0 1 0 1 3.65
Pophouse, g 4 0 1 0 1 3.5
Koner, g 4 0 1 0 1 3.5
Totals ... 51 13 94 va—Goals Attempted.
Halftime score; Kansas 24, Kansas
Referees: E. C. Quigley and M. V.
To Be Art instructor
Olive Adelle Krechbiel, 37, major in the department of design, h is been appointed as art instructor in
the New York school, Lawrence, to take the place of Dorothy Wilson, 36, also a major in the department of
The HUMAN ADVENTURE
I
"Swing Into Spring Under a New Hat"
Try on the new lighter weight Hats They spell your name all over them. Stetsons sold by
The new styles, colors,
will appeal to you---
Stettsons "Open Road" $6
Stettsons "Play Boy" $5
Penncrafts $5
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"A DEAD WOMAN IN THE BACK OF OUR CAR? . . well, of all things!"
Funny how different a murder story looks when it's YOU that you're reading about in the headlines. A dead woman turns up in your car (THE ACCUSED FEIGNS SURPRISE). Your wife is rather upset (HORRIC STRICKEN WFIS SHREAKS FROM KILLER-HUSBAND). And so on. It could happen to anybody.
It Could Happen to You by CHARLES HOFFMAN
TODAY, three men run the political empire suddenly left leaderless by the assassination of Huey Long. Who are these men, and how did they win the scramble for power? Who among the inner circle of Huey's leaders lost out, and what happened to the family of the obscure young doctor who killed the Kingfish? Just what is "the second Louisiana purchase" and how are Louisiana people faring under their new political masters? Turn to page 5 of your Post this week for the answers.
Huey's Heirs by F. RAYMOND DANIELL
AND... WHO'S FLYING THIS SHIP? An account of how aviation is slowly but surely being stripped of its biggest risk, human error. By W. A. Patterson . . . ONE WAY TO TELL IF A GIRL CAN REALLY COOK: MARRY HER! A short story about a conscientious cooker, *Cupboard Lover*, by Sophie Kerr . . . WE LIVED A YEAR AMONG THE ESIMOS! A young couple tell you their adventurous story in *Fairest West*, by Ruth and Bill Abbee . . . Stories, articles, serials, cartoons and intimate online on the Keeping Post page.
"If your hound only said 'OUROO' instead of 'YAWMF'
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It near broke Miss Joly's heart to turn down Obie Terry. "You must have Tatar had a moment of anceesty!" "We always owned noble mice," she replied. "I just can't let me popolker blood into thetrain now"... "A wolf takes a turtle."
May the Dew be Heavy by GEORGE SESSIONS PERRY
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Appoint Senior Class Committees
Cowherd Names Groups
To Plan Commencement
Activities a and Handle
Detail Work
Committees to carry on senior activities for this year were announced last night by Grant Cowherd, president of the senior class. Every year these activities are numerous and complicated; each task requires detailed work which cannot be done by the class, meeting in a body.
Other senior officers, who will help co-ordinate the work of the committees, a re Grace Valentine, c'38, vice-president; Estelle Hall, b'38, secretary; and Eugene Ricketts, c'38, treasurer.
The first class meeting will be held in April, according to Cowherd, but the committees, as listed below, will meet at an early date.
Invitations Committee
Phil Rupp, chairman
Frankman Rudd
Katherine Hurd
Eugene Ricketts
John Schumann
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1938
Publicity Committee Martin Witers, chairman Howard Rusco Alix Holdeman-Julius
Top and Gown Committee
Up and Gown Committee
chairman, chairman
Lucile Bottom
McCormick Crouch
John Abley
Alumni Reception Committee
Charles Lueck, chairman
Newton Hoverstock
Marianne Laubauh
Class Gift Committee
Do Vorheuer, chairman
Harry O'Riley
Dori Griffin
Danis Griffin
Senior Breakfast Committee
Dean Moorhead, chairman
Betty Lou McFarland
Dorothy Schmitz
Dorothy Caldwell
NUMBER 90
Class Prophecy Committee
James Coleman
Jane Flood
Class History Committee
Bob Pearson
Mary Ellen DeMotte
en DeMotte
HAY
HAY by WIRE
---
This essence of spring that is floating around in the air has about got most of the questers for knowledge on this Ledge. We were shown the first fly to meet his death via the slapping route. Killing a fly now decreases the potential number of flies by about 30,000 or so. This warm weather makes the young buds, and are they going to get nipped. The weather man promises cold weather any month now. Hope he's wrong.
This war talk has got us scared.
We're not afraid of getting filled full of lead, but where are the boys lying in their electric rages in a trench?
It's funny how many students don't know the names of their professors even after several weeks of school. The time of the class seems to be all that matters. Very few professors bother to introduce themselves at the first of the semester. A student came into Professor Malin's 9:30 class in American People last Monday and stayed for 15 minutes. The fact that it was the wrong teacher didn't impress him. His watch said 14:52 and he was going to stay. After being convinced of the correct time, he decided to leave.
Some of the larger universities are inaugurating a system of teacher-pupil ret-togethers. An attempt is being made to get away from the formal class, and establish a more personal relationship between teacher and pupil. A few informal cups of coffee with your child would then find the prevailing stigma of apple polishing down on your head, and might help to make the whole school system a little more practical.
Christopher Bannister once said that man laughs:
In youth because he knows no better:
In age because he knows so well
—You can take your choice for the following ditty:
1
Smoke-he says
I say—what
He says=smoke
I say—who
He says=you
He says=me
He says=yes
He says-No.
Drink-He says
Continued on page 10
Band Will Broadcast
Program Over KFKU Tonight
The University of Kansas Band under the direction of Prof. Russell L. Wiley, will present a 30-minute show from 6 to 9:30 over station KFKU.
Mr. Wiley announced the program as follows:
"Russalan and Ludmilla," an overt arrangement for military band by Glinka; "Walce Caprice," a trumpet solo composed by T. V. Short, and arranged for trio by Bob Boyle, fa'mcl, who with Louis Maser, fa'mcl, and Leor Hoeack, e4, comprises the "Joyahw Trumpeteres," "Joyahw Trumpeter," and "Veen." A manx tone poem by Haydn Wood; "Cheribiriam," a march by Alford; and "Children's March" by Goldman.
Poteat Opens Religion Week
Minister Presents C as s Of Idealism to Students At Convocation
In a presentation of the case for idealism at the concession in Hoch auditorium yesterday morning, the Rev. Edwin McNeill Potts trans- language movie and comic strip language for the benefit of University students.
Thus using something less than an idealistic interpretation, Dr. Potate, who is pastor of the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church in Cleveland, elaborated considerably upon the story of Esau's selling his birthright to Jacob for a bowl of potage. He drew a contrast between the romantic hunter, Esau, and his "realistic" brother.
Romanticism vs. New Realism
Following this idea, the speaker explained the trends in the world today as based on a conflict between romanticism and a newer realism. He pointed to the dictator countries as realists.
"But they are building an insecure world," he said vigorously, quoting Aldus Huxley, author of the recent book "Ends and Means." "There are words—wonderful words—that save the word—awareness and charity—that is, love and life.
Number of Meetings Held
"Europe is running away from life and from love," he explained. "But this kind of idealism is the most dependable guide. I am glad that if this new generation there is a growing eagerness for idealism—the kind of faith that the Christian tradition has always supplied."
Dr. Potte sat speak on the general subject of "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confusion," which is the theme for a number of meet-aths are being held during Religious Emphasis Week, ending tomorrow.
Dean Paul B. Lawson, of the College of Liberal Arts, presided, and the Rev. Edwin F. Price of the School of Religion, read the scripture, Guy Cox Simpson, instructor of organ, played the organ prelude.
To Inspect Junior Colleges
Beginning a tour of inspection of Kansas junior colleges at Highland Friday, H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education, will determine whether or not their graduates be accredited by the University.
I will judge the 20 junior college in Kansas by a standard of regulations relating to the faculty, budget, finance, and other general features.
Students who transfer from an maccredited junior college are enrolled on condition. If their work in the University is acceptable, their credits from the junior college are accepted. Sometimes students transferring from an unmaccredited college require to take an entrance examination.
Although the Kansas Board of Education conducts an inspection at the same time, the University sponsors a similar investigation for its own satisfaction. Based on the University's inspection is a recipient of grants from other states whereby the universities concerned accept the ratings of junior college graduates as determined by the inspecting state school.
CORRECTION
William Rose Benet, famous poet and critic, will speak in Fraser theater Friday afternoon at 3:30, instead of in the evening as previously announced in the Kansan.
Faculty Member Dies
Mrs. Caroline Spangler Was Widow of Former Acting Chancellor; Will Hold Services Today
Mrs. Caroline Baumann Spangler for more than 20 years a member of the University faculty, and widow of the late William Cornellius Spangler twice acting Chancellor of the University, died at her home early yesterday morning. She was nearly 77 years old.
The University flag was flown at half-mast yesterday in her memory. Funeral services will be held from the home at 644 Mississippi street this afternoon at 2:45 o'clock. The Rev. Joseph King of the Plymouth Congregational church will officiate the burial, with a retirement of the endowment association. Burial will be in Oak Hill cemetery. Pailbearers will be: Harry Downs Owen Carl, Fred Barteldes, Al Bromeliack, Arthur Weaver and
First Woman Superintendent
She is survived by a son, Adolph James Spangler, in charge of agriculture work at the John Carleton College, Steveville, Texas, a part of the University of Texas; and a daughter, Irma Spangler, teacher in the Liberty Memorial High School of Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Spangler arrived early yesterday from Texas.
Miss Baumann, a native of New York City, came from Neodesha to the University in 1877, and received her bachelor of didactics degree in 1881. Two years later she received her A.B. after teaching a year at Neodesha, she went to Bolot, where she was assistant superintendent and later superintendent of schools. She is believed to have been the first woman in Kansas to hold such a position. $ ^{a} $
Had Many Interests
She and Mr. Spangler, a law graduate of 1895, were married Sept. 2, of that year. Mr. Spangler, who had been a clear act of the regents from 1890 to 1885, was made a member of the board in 1889, and the board was made a member of the Chancellor Lippincott, was put in charge of University affairs. Francis H. Snow replaced Mr. Spangler but at the illness and death of Chancellor Snow, Mr. Spangler again was made acting Chancellor. His zeal in searching for a new chancellor in spite of failing health, is blamed for the death of his brother Dr. Frank Strong had been made chancellor.
Mrs. Spangler was a member of the Zodiac club, one of the oldest Lawrence women's clubs, and of the I.C. the predecessor of the Pi Beta Tau interested in suffrage for women, and in the county historical society.
Miss Ester Twente, assistant professor of sociology, was one of two speakers at the Lawrence Town Hall last Sunday. She presented the psychological viewpoint of the subject, "Does Relief Relieve?"
The Town Hall is a regular Sunday evening program, held in the Unitarian Church. Authoritative speakers present their views on important topics. Next week the subject is "New Frontiers in Our Health Efforts." Speakers will be E. K. Musson of the State Board of Health and Mrs. Carroll D. Clark, secretary of the Lawrence Council of Social Agencies and wife of Prof. C. D. Clark of the sociology of seciology.
Professor Twente Speaks On Town Hall Program
"The Human Adventure," an educational film depicting the early history of man as traced through recent archeological investigations, will be shown in Hoch auditorium toorrow night at 8:20 c'clock.
Two large sound projectors will be installed in the auditorium for the showing. The film, which is too expensive for playing at commercial theaters, is being presented on the University community lecture course.
Archeology Film Will Be Shown
The picture tells the early history of man as developed by expeditions sent out by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, under the direction of Dr. James H. Breasted, noted archaeologist and historian.
Activity books will admit to the number.
Business School Adds Two Staff Members
Two more placements of February graduates were also announced yesterday by Dean F. T. Stockton, Don H. Putney is with an oil field machinery company in Ellinwood. The Union Pacific railroad and the Grey River lines are aCe employing Lawrence Mills as ticket agent in Lawrence.
Two new assistant instructors have been added to the staff of the business school. Max Fessler, b36, is teaching a new section in elementary statistics at 9:30. William Cochran, b38, is teaching Accounting II at the same hour. Mr. Cochrane was student manager of the Union building last year.
Cage Squad To Broadcast
University basketball players victorious in 14 of 16 games, will go on the air tomorrow night with a ball on the life of a basketball player.
Members of Basketball Team To Present Play Over KFKU
The play, entitled "The Athlete Goes to College," will be broadcast over radio station KFKU at 9:30 c'clock tomorrow night. KFKU is on the same frequency as radio station WREN, 120 kilocycles.
The Jawhay cagera, 13 in number, will present the play on the 'Physical Education for Health' program, conducted by Dr. F. C. Allen, director of physical education and varsity basketball coach.
Learning in Competition
Once he has enrolled at the school of his choice, the scene shifts to basketball practice and the new man receiving pointers from the veterans. In this action Fred Proule, Sylvester Schmidt, George Golay and Lester Kappelman will discuss the things learned during their competition.
The dramatization of the life of a basketball player will begin with his graduation from high school and his journey to where to continue his education.
All of Squad To Participate
The climax of the program will come with a game scene, featuring a locker room talk between halves by Dr. Allen.
All 13 of the squad men will participate in the program and they include Fred Praile, c'38; Sylvester Schmidt, b'38; George Golay, c'39; Lester Kappelman, c'39; Bob Hunt, c'40; Lyman Corlis, c'39; Loren Florell, b'39; Dick Harp, c'40; Nelson Sullivan, c'41; uncle D Ebling, c'40; Bruce Reid, c'40; Fenlon Durand, c'33; and Carl Johnson, b'35.
Rolla Nuckles, instructor in the department of speech and drama arts, is directing the program and arranging in radio will assist in crow scene.
Miss Beilab Morrison, professor of psychology, spoke on "Personalities and How They Grow" at Independence, Kan., yesterday.
The lecture was the third of five speeches composing a civic forum in Independence, sponsored by the American Association of University Women. Persons who are authoritative have been selected to make the addresses
Morrison Speaks To Forum Audienc
Dean Ivan C. Crawford, professor of the School of Engineering and Architecture, opened the forum Dec 7, with the topic "Engineers in the Desert". Dr Lyle S. Powell of Lawrence smoke jam 51 on "A Yankee in Indianapolis." His talk was illustrated with pictures taken during his travels.
Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts will speak March 2, on the subject, "This Thing Called Classical Music." Prof. W. W. Davis professor of history, will close the forum March 30.
Each address is followed by an open forum for questions. Proceeds from the several programs will be used to provide scholarship loans which will be available to Independence Junior College students.
NOTICE
The first meeting of the students enrolled for the improvement of reading will be held in room 15, Frasher hall, at 4:30 either Wednesday or Thursday, attendance of the student enrolled.
Bert A. Nash
University Women Hear Dr. Pound
Instructor at Nebraska Speaks on Results of Co-education to Large Group Here
"A century ago, Oberlin College first admitted women to its classes; today between seven and eight hundred admit women on equality with men."
Thus Dr. Louise Pound, professor of English at the University of Nebraska, and vice-president of the American Association of University Women, summarized her talk on "A Century of Co-education" here last night for the local chapter of the A. A.U.W.
Co-education Is Expanding
About 225 Lawrence members of the A.U.W. and prominent club women of Kansas City and Topeka, attended the dinner, which was given to the graduates.
"The happy part about co-education in America is that it is expanding, not receding as it is in so many of the European countries," said Doctor Pound. "American parents seem as ready to send their daughters as their sons to college. Whether the economic changes that appear will help the use of women to college as a problem of the future.
Mrs. Waldemar Geltch, local president, presided at the dinner.
"With the growth of co-education, literally hundreds of thousands of women have had college education, and with the increased number of educated women has come the belief that women are capable of advanced study and research just as well as men.
"Twenty, even ten years ago, there was a fairly general feeling that a woman with a master of arts degree had attained about all that might be expected of a woman. Now they are finding their way into the higher degrees and the more difficult problems of education."
Doctor Pound credited state universities with having a large part in this diffusion of education among women.
To Show Film Of Russian Life
"Stalin's Russia," a full - length moving picture of the present day Soviet Union, will be shown Sunday evening at 7:30 in Hoch auditorium by Julien Bryan, roving foreign reporter for the March of Time. The film will secure the presentation of the pictures at the University.
"Inside Nazi Germany," the film that created a sensational stir in Chicago where it was banned for a short time in an effort to prevent any unpleasant diplomatic complications, is also a product of the March of Time. These two films resemble each other in many respects. One touches upon phase I. If H. H. Seidel and Gerhard Kretschmer while the other reveals the high spots of Russian affairs under the iron hand of Josef Salstein.
Bryan will give a lecture in connection with the movie. Upon Bryan's return to this country last September, with the picture, President Roosevelt called for a showing of the film.
A full house heralded the picture when it appeared at Carnegie Hall in New York City last October. Its success has been proven repeatedly by the large crowds that it attracts Student activity books will admit.
Grubb's Condition Permits
Robert Grubb, e'H, who recently underwent an operation for the amputation of a leg which he injured while playing freshman football, is reported to be much improved, and is able to be able. Grubb recently attended one of the local theaters with one of the doctors from Watkins Memorial hospital. Doctor Canuteson said yesterday that Grubb is strong enough to return to his home at Newton tomorrow.
Two Former Education Students Receive Placements
Miss Ruby M. Johnson, a graduate student of the 1937 summer session, who has been teaching in the high school at Attica, has received a position as English teacher in Herington. She also served as a voice teacher in the high school and junior college in Independence.
Ping-Pong Tourney Will Begin Today
The winter Ping Pong tournament will get under way this afternoon in the Memorial Union recreation room when first round matches are played. It is hoped that the finals can be played tomorrow. Two men will be chosen from the teams to fill vacant seats in the i.e. Kansas ping pong team. Fairness as are follows:
Wood vs. Wereford; Black vs. bye
Bixby x Main; Merry; Krause;
Wannmaker vs. bye; Logue vs. Mosey
Wannbrandi vs. Minl; Hill; Gate;
Cooley v. bye; Geryv v. bye;
Gillingham v. Knight; Fower v. bye;
Boyd v. Shupe; Brain v. Gar-
wheed; Wheebee v. Hassen; Lamm v.
Fred Harris Reminisces
Regent Recalls College Days in Address Before C. of C.
"Of course things are done differently at the University now from what they were thirty years ago. I got all my education in university in one building—Fraser Hall." Fred Harris, of Ottawa, Kansas law graduate of 1898, and member of the Board of Trustees for those years, told a luncheon meeting of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce yesterday.
"Tennessee street was mud six months of the year and dust the other six. Today, Lawrence has changed, and the University has changed with me. I doubt if we pee on it or if we get evidence we do have in the University if it had not progressed with the times.
Schools Bear Unjust Criticism
"Parents lose contact with the schools between the time in which they were in the schools, and the time at which their children enter. When the children come home with reports of what is being done, the parents immediately respond. They tell it to that way when I was in school."
"From this fact comes the further act that our educational institutions bear so much criticism. 'The young people of today do terrible things,' we are told. As a matter of fact they don't do nearly as bad things as you did when you were vooled."
Second Home to Thousands
Mr. Harris declared that Lawrence is a second home town to thousands of people of Kansas. Thousands of boys and girls come from the high schools of Kansas every year and in Lawrence have their "first flight on their own wings" "Four or five years later," he said, "they are being graduated, young men and young women."
"They are of a new age," said Mr. Harris, "and have different ideas from what we had when we were in college. But when you hear about reeds, and 'boshevics,' on the Caupus, you have to but look at the products of the University and see that it is not so."
Engineers To Elect Hob Nail Hop Queen
Queen for the annual Hob Nab Hop will be chosen by the School of Engineering at a special election to preside Tuesday and Wednesday of next week.
The five women receiving the highest number of nominating ballots, and eligible for the honor, are Patty Payne, c41, Alpha Chi Omega; Isabel West, c40, Gamma Phi Beta; Roberta Cook, fa39, Gamma Phi Beta; Roberta Cook, fa39, Gamma Phi Beta; Kappa Gamma; and Margie Spearing; c38, Kappa Kamma.
The name of the queen will not be announced until the night of the Hop, Feb. 18.
Mattern's Paintings Hold Place in Oklahoma Exhibition
Karl Mattern, assistant professor of drawing and painting, has a collection of 30 water-color paintings created by him. **Printmaker, Guild in Tulsa, Okla**
Mr. Mattery recently had three of his paintings appear in "Water Color Today." "Snow and Smoke" is the most outstanding. He considers the most outstanding.
Owl Society Meeting
Bill Grant, secretary.
Owl society meeting
There will be a meeting of the Owl society tonight at 9:30 in the Pine room.
Sigma Xi To Sponsor Syphilis Talk
Dr. Joseph E. Moore,
Authority on Venereal
Diseases To Speak Here
Next Thursday Night
Will Not Discuss Causes
Dr. Joseph E. Moore, nationally known authority on venereal disease and a graduate of the University, will speak here Thursday night, Feb. 17, on "Syphilis and Its Control," in the auditorium of Frank强重 hall.
The announcement of Doctor Moore's speech here was made yesterday by Dr. N. P. Sherwood, chairman of the department of bacteriology and president of the Kansas chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society, under who auspices the program has been arranged.
Doctor Moore is editor of the Journal of Syphilis and Venereal Disease and an associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University. He was graduated from the University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1914 and received his M.D. from Johns Hopkins in 1916.
"I think he is the best man in America from the standpoint of konwing syllabis". Doctor Sherwool said yesterday. He was a classmate of Doctor Moore at the University of Chicago and a summer at the University of Chicago.
In a letter to Doctor Sherwool accepting the invitation of Sigma Xi to speak here, Doctor Moore stated that he would not discuss the causes of syphilis because he believed students of the University were more or less familiar with that phase of the problem, but would analyze latest methods of the control of the disease.
Great Value to Students
Doctor Moore will speak in Memphis Feb. 15, and in Kansas City on the night following his Lawrence address. His Kansas City appearance is being sponsored by the Kansas City Academy of Medicine.
"Because of the interest shown in the Wassermann survey and in the subsequent, Wassermann test facilities brought to the University," Doctor Sherwood said, "I believe there is a need for an interest in Doctor Moore's speech."
"While the program is primarily one of Sigma Xi," he said, "we believe the speech will be one of great impact and body."4
Interest in Wasserman
Sigma Xi is a national honorary society composed principally of persons engaged in scientific research. Wassermann tests were made available to University students Dec. 7 with the purchase of equipment by the student health service at Watkins Memorial hospital, culminating a year's campaign by the Daily Kansan. Results are kept strictly confidential and if positive tests are recorded, students are advised as to treatment by the hospital. Before Christmas vacation, facilities of the hospital were taxed to the maximum by student interest in the test.
Al Capone Loses Mind
Sen Francisco, Feb. 8—(UP)—Al Capone, the swarthy, pulggy, No. 1 gangster and racketer of the prohibition era, has lost his mind under the stern discipline and monarchy of Azatzal coast, it was learned today.
Capone, who once ruled the Chicago rackets so completely that he was virtually immune to arrest, today spends his time making and remaking his bed. When he tires of her, he steps back into a figure of bewilderment and detection.
The Sun Francisco News said he was suffering from paresis, a degeneration of the brain which is the result of syphilis. Dr. E d w a r d Twitchell, psychiatrist, admitted he was studying Capone's condition but refused to discuss the case in the story.
Phi Delta Phi Hears District Judge
Judge Hugh Means of the district court spoke on "Practical Experiences in the Law" at a banquet last night of Phi Delta Pi, international legal fraternity, in the Colonial Tea room. Henry Asher, Lawrence attorney, talked on taxation.
This was the first of a series of banquet-forums to be held by the fraternity this semester. O: J. Connell, president of the society, presided.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1938
≈
Comment
ALittle Story With a Big Moral
Yesterday's Kansan related of three more burglaries which occurred on the Hill recently.
Last Wednesday night the Phi Delta Theta house was entered and $35 in cash and $55 in property were stolen; on Sunday night, $27 in cash was taken from the Sigma Chi house, while two students living in a private home suffered the theft of four suits, a pair of trousers and a radio.
In each story there is a point in common, namely, that entry was gained through an unlocked door. Which leads us to the moral: "Keep your doors and windows locked at night and when you leave your house."
Our Bird of Peace---
Is It Dove or Hawk?
Conduct of the state department toward the Japanese empire throughout the present Far Eastern war has led America already perilously close to a diplomatic break with the Niponese government and even to the brink of war.
Cordell Hull in 1933 may have taught the Pan-American peace dove to coo, but high-toned notes which his* department has sent to Tokio and the profuse and repeated apologies which he has demanded since last July have gone far toward embroiling the United Sates in the war. That America yet finds herself in the role of a non-participant in the Sino-Japanese conflict is no fault of the state department.
Since the sinking of the Panay last December there has been nothing conciliatory in the notes which Secretary Hull and President Roosevelt have sent to the Emperor and his Foreign Minister Hirota.
The Panay incident is the first case in point. Hull repeatedly refused to accept the profuse expressions of regret tendered not only to the state department in Washington but to American citizens throughout Japan. He twice refused to accept the word of Japanese officials that the attack was not premeditated, preferring to accept the apparently prejudiced report of an American naval committee of investigation.
Next, following the Panay incident, Hull quite obstinately has refused to withdraw American naval and merchant vessels which now are offering so-called protection to a mere handful of Americans and to investments worth less than one-third the fleet which patrols them.
In the third place, when John M. Allison, American diplomatic representative in Nanking, who had no "inallienable" right to be where he was, was slapped by a Japanese sentry, Hull demanded an apology. After Japanese state officials had bent themselves double licking his boots, Hull maintained that the apology was not satisfactory and demanded a new one.
Lastly, the joint demands of the United States, Britain, and France for disclosure of Japanese naval-building aims represents an unwarranted aggression by these powers upon the sovereignty of a people. Japan is no longer a signatory to the Washington naval limitation treaty since her withdrawal from the London conference in 1936, and hence no longer bound to disclose her intentions for a "second-to-none" navy.
We pray, therefore, for the continuance of the Japanese conciliatory attitude which so far has humored the small boy who keeps writing uncomplimentary fan mail and making unreasonable demands. The United States has gone to war before over no more than a slap in an attache's face or a refusal to answer one of Secretary Hull's notes.
Campus Opinion
I Knew You When—
Kansan:
≈
Editor, Daily Kansan:
(An open letter to "Preparedness")
Dear "Preparedness";
Ever since I left the old District 12 school I've remembered you, and the instant I saw your letter in Friday's "Campus Opinion" I knew you must have seen the little girl with the knobbly knees or the little boy with the freckles, though your final prayer for someone to make the opposition shut up inclines me to the form opinion. But shaky as I am on your biological one, that I can place your mentality on the very first try.
If you are the little girl, then you're the one I bumped when I lived, and the one who told me to quit pushing, who gave me a hair a yank that lowered my heart. If you were the woman, who would show me a thing or two about manners.
If you are the little boy, then you'll remember when I stepped accidentally on your marble and you sided up to me with your jaw stuck out and it tickled. You jumped and ran off, and when I stood there frozen with surprise you sucked me in the eye, and we mixed it all over the table, and of damage to our persons, clothing, and dispositions.
I recognize you, dear "Preparedness." How could I miss? "You're still the same valiant little personality, ready to pull hair or kick it with a toothbrush or listen to. And what more, you've brought the old grade school to college with you. You're still at your whitited desk, torturing us to learn about the complicated voices of Teacher advises the class to know the Pledge of Allegiance by tomorrow. You're still reading your "Current Events" and watching history unfold before you in Chinese ruses, wishing to hell they were home, and with no love for the Japanese
who made the ruins. You're still yelling to the gang to come on and kick the stuffing out of those other guys, but you're not going to do that.
Oh, my dear "Preparedness!" Aren't you being just a little emotionally undressed? You don't think some of us might be just a little embarrassed by your care for our safety and comfort, good to live in ones homeland, to feel a deep and lasting affection for it, to die for it if need be. These are verities as old as man, truths recognized so widely that they scarcely need teaching, and all this prattling is done by the youngest. If they then all right, is poor instruction in any case, "Preparedness," if you're in favor of a bigger navy, why can't you wait and pay your taxes quietly without doing a spring dance about it? If you want to spread your immortal guts over foreign soil to fertilize it, you can do that with no delay and then do so, but don't come around wanting to show us your impending operation. Please don't.
Now Prepared for Anything
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chinellon's Office at 1 p.m., pressuring
regular attendance. No late pick-up. 5 a.m.
Sunday for Saturday too.
Vol. 35 Wednesday, February 9, 1938 No. 90
--statues, flowery decorations, and murals done by famous artists of the fourteenth century.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITTEE:
All freshman students wishing to become candidate should send an application to the KU; athletic office on or before Feb. 12, 1958, in care of James Gillisley.
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics Club will have initiation services and a waffle suppet at 4:15 on Thursday afternoon at the Home Management house.-Dorothy Houk, Secretary.
IMPROVEMENT IN READING PROGRAM: Students interested in the improvement in reading program are asked to call at room 15, Fraser hall, on Wednesday or Thursday of this week. Bert Nash.
JAY JANES. There will be a meeting at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine room.-Roberta Cook.
KEFU ANNOUNCER TROYOUTS: Announce tryouts will be held at 4:30 Thursday afternoon at the studio. All those interested should leave their names on the roster, and in advance - H. G. Ingh, Program Director.
LE CARERIE FRANCAISE: Le Carerie Francis will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in 113 Administration building. Members of the club will give short anecdotes of countries they have visited. Heen Cooper, Secretary.
MATHEMATICS CLUB: There will be a meeting on MATHEMATICS CLUB at 4:30 in 203 Administration Building. Prof. U. G. Mitch, ell will speak on "Mathematics for the Millions." Refreshments will be served. Visitors are welcome.—
NEW ADDRESSES FOR DIRECTORY SUPPLEMENT: Students who changed addresses between semesters should report their new addresses to the Registrar's office at once so that the corrections may appear in the directory supplement—George O. Foster, Registrar.
NOTICE - W.S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE. Notice is hereby given that full refunds on returned books will not be made after today - Edith Borden, Manager.
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Phi Delta Kappa will meet the class on Wednesday, March 14, 2016. Training School, Rev. H. Lee does will discuss the program at Antioch College. The meeting will adjourn in time for the Lecture course number in the audio-visual room.
STUDENT FORUM BOARD: There will be a meeting of the Student Forum Board in the Pine room on Thursday, Feb. 10, at 3:30 p.m.—Dean Moorehead, Chairman.
W. S.G.A. MEETING: There will be a meeting of W.S.G.A. on Thursday evening. Dori Stockwell, President.
W. S.GA.-Y.W.C.A. TEA: The W.S.GA. and Y.W.C.A. will be hostesses at a tea honoring newcomers to the school. A tea for all girls' women's lounge of the Administration building free 3 until 11 each afternoon. All University womens groups are welcome.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
MEMBER
KANSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-CHIEF
ASSOCIATE EDITOR MARTIN BENTON AND DAVID
A. T. ALEY
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
KENNY LUNN
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOFFEL
CAMPUS EDITORS BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CLAMEN
NEWS EDITOR BILL FITZGERALD
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERBOM
SPORTS EDITOR ELON TORRENCIA
MARCHISER LOUIS FOKELEE and JOHN LOAN
FRIEND EDITOR DONNA MARTIN
TELÉGRAPH EDITOR HARRY HALL
SUNDAY EDITOR JANE FLOOD
Editorial Staff
Kansan Board Members
News Staff
ALICE HALDMAN/JULIUS
J. HOWARD RUNO
DAVID E. PASTRIGE
GRETA GRAVINTINE
JOE COCHRANE
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FitzGORDON
MATHEL M. LAUNCHIN
TOM A. ELLIER
EDWARD BANNETT
MARTIN BENTTON
MARKIN GOELBERT
MARKYN KARBE
MORBELL THOMPSON
CLAUDE DORKEY
ELTON E. CARKER
ALAN ASHER
CHARLES ALEXANDER
This exhibit consists of a series of pictures illustrating the development of architecture in Germany. An immense wealth of great monuments of architecture from all periods of twenty centuries is found throughout the museum, and the limited space in the museum, only a part of the pictures are shown.
Art loving Germany in the medieval period made all things beautiful, even balconies and little back doors. The finest existing specimen of late Gothic timber architecture is the medieval high-gabled Butcher's Guild Hall on Market Square in Hildesheim. It has five gables all beautifully carved. Next to the gables is a gallery hall with a picture offering direct contrast—a crude cabin built upon stilts in the water of Lake Constance depicting architecture of a primitive culture of 10,000 years ago.
By Virginia Le Roach, c'40
Lovers of art have for their enjoyment this week, one of the finest collections of medieval and modern German architecture in America, which is being displayed on the second floor of Spooner-Thayer museum.
Pictures of Gothic buildings still preserved in their original splendor reveal massive cathedral-like structures with towers, arches, and carved figures decorating the walls both in and outside. A picture of the hall and balustrade of the Palace of Wuerzburg shows the marvelous
1937 Member 1938
Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of
Collegiate Digest
German Architectural Exhibit Is On Display in Spooner-Thayer
Pays for Baby With 12,000 Pennies
Jersey City, N. J., Feb. 8—(UP)—Dr. Thorpe was paid off today with coins.
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
"We could have have used the pennies several times before but we were saving them for this purpose," Ackerman said.
Re Virginia Lee Roach, c'40
It took seven years to save the 12,000 pennies by William Ackerman, whose wife gave birth to an 8% round bov.
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Services, Inc.
REPRESENTATIVE RENEWABLES
240 MADIAM AV. BOSTON BAY OF FRANCE
CHICAGO BOSTON BAY OF FRANCE
Boston Professor
Lists Study Hints
For Lazy Students
Boston, Mass, Feb. 8.—(ACP) A list of study hints for students who are tired of feverish rushing through belated assignments has been prepared by Prof. Warren T. Powell, head of the department of student counseling at Boston University.
1. Work under pressure; set a deadline inside of which work must be accomplished.
They include:
Entered as second-class master, September 17, 1910, at the pos- office at Laveran, Kane.
2. Make yourself rise above petty distractions; when they come, accept them, then go back to your studying without losing your stride.
3. Assume that you are liable for an account of all that you are study-ing.
6. Feel an interest in your improvement.
4. Maintain an alert questioning attitude and criticize all that you read.
5. Develop habits of positive attack on your studies. Interest seldom comes before effort is made in that subject.
7. Avoid and control emotional disturbances and fatigue.
8. Plan proper length and distribution of study periods, one to two hour units for easy or varied work; and 30 minutes with two or three minute rest periods in between for unfamiliar or difficult work.
The modern Germany still preserves these old Gothic structures, but the buildings which are now predominant in the streets of the German cities are of a much different type. Instead of towering, complex architecture, they are built in simple, sollen lines. The court of a modern housing development in Berlin was built for sunshine and has wading places for children. The material used for the buildings is mainly brick.
This exhibit is brought here by the Creative Leisure commission of the W.W.C.A. Ruhf Fongel, c46, and the Creative Leisure Commission, c-echar-ment of the commission.
June Clayworth Marries Sid Rogell, R.K.O. Director
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Feb. 8, —(UP) June-Laythown, M.G.M. actress, and Sid Rogel, R.K.O. director, were married here tonight in the actress'
Rogel arrived here yesterday, and because plans already had been made for today's wedding, the Pennsylvania law requiring a three-day wait after obtaining the license was waived.
The couple will spend a few days here, they announced, and then will return to Hollywood via New York.
WEATHER
Kansas: Unsettled and much colder Wednesday, becoming generally fair Thursday with colder temperatures in east and south.
London, Feb. 8.—(UP)—Examination results were be announced at Kingston Junior Technical School, and the master, with a smile, was reading out the marks reached in a trick problem in electrical science.
'Math Crib' Errs;
59 Boys Flunk
And One Passes
Out of a class of about 60, he announced 59 failures—and still he smiled.
"And now," he said, "we come to the only boy who, so far as I could see, didn't know me." And he is the only one with the correct answer!
Two Bacteriology Graduates Accept Laboratory Positions
Two graduates, Jane Howe and Jane Wiley, who majored in the department of bacteriology, have recently received positions in labor-
Miss Hosew was graduated 1a st
semester and is now working in the
Hill Laboratories, at Emporia. Mr.
Hosew's doctorate, is a graduate of
the University.
Miss Wiley recently accepted a position as a technician in Denver. She was graduated last June and a graduate has been employed in Kansas City.
Fine Arts Graduate To Teach In Wichita High Schools
Elaine Slothower, fa'37, has been appointed an instructor of art in Wichita. Miss Slothower will have three classes in North High where she will work with Miss Evelyn De-Graw, fa'34, and class in East High where she will work with Miss Eulah Lindner, fa'29.
Is Fourth Graduate
To Teach Art at Des Moines
The university visual education service, famed among universities for work in employing motion pictures in education, will expand its activities with a three-year program financed by the grant.
Now that inventory is completed we have placed
FINAL PRICE tags on this merchandise
Dorothy Wilson, '36, has received an appointment in the junior high school of Des Moines as art instructor. Miss Wilson is the fourth instructor in Des Moines from the University department of design.
One of the films will show the activities of university hospital workers, another the social-civil life of students, and third the effect of the machine age.
SHIRTS Now Half Price
Mineapolis, Feb. 8. — (UP) — Three movie films will be made under the $122,260 grant to the university by the general education board of the Rockefeller Foundation, Dr. Robert A. Kissack, head of the visual education service, has announced.
$1.50 Shirts now --- $ .75
2.00 Shirts now --- 1.00
2.50 Shirts now --- 1.25
Three Movies To Be Made By University of Minnesota
Another speaker on the educational program will be Willard, E. Givens, secretary of the National Educational Association, and the 25th anniversary of Thomas W. Butcher as president of the Emporia institution.
Nationally Known Makes Many Whites Included
Chancellor Lindley Will Speak at Celebration
Now Half Price
Chancellor E. H. Lindley has accepted an invitation to participate in the educators' conference which is to be part of the 75th anniversary celebration of Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia, March 18 and 19.
Entire Stock Not Included
NECKWEAR
$1.00 Ties now ---- $ .50
1.50 Ties now ---- .75
2.00 Ties now ---- 1.00
2.50 Ties now ---- 1.25
Silks and Wools by Arrow and Resilio
One Group at
Men's SUITS
and OVERCOATS
16 $ ^{50} $
Formerly as High as $35
Final Prices
Men's SHOES
$14.50 J & M ----- $10.80
8.50 Bostonian --- 6.95
7.50 Bostonian --- 5.95
6.00 Jarman --- 4.75
Entire Stock Not Included
Ober's HEADSHOPFOOTFITTER
EVENT EXTRAORDINARY Hurry for Chosen State
HOCH
AUDITORIUM
Monday, Evening
Feb. 14 - 8:20
A Thrilling, Glamorous Stage Spectacle
BALLET RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
COMPANY
OF 125
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
SEVENTEEN PRODUCTIONS
• NEW BALLETS
THE WORLD'S GREATEST . MOST GLAMOROUS
DANCE ENSEMBLE . . . THE BOX-OFFICE
SENSATION OF 2 CONTINENTS
PROGRAM — "A HUNDRED KISSES," "AURORA'S WEDDING," and "Gods GO A-BEGGING"
(New ballet which bad world premiere, London Coronation season last Summer)
Note: These 3 Great Ballets will not be duplicated in program given elsewhere in this territory.
Seats Now at: School of Fine Arts
Round Corner Drug Store Bell's Music Store
Tickets: $2.00, $1.50, $1.75, 75c and 50c
Rout Corner $20.00, $1.50, $1.00, 75c and 50c
AUSPICS UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE
THE CORNER GROCERY
Phone 618
Complete line of good quality fruits and vegetables in smaller cans.
Government graded meats at reasonable prices. Cheeses, Pickles, etc.
Students may open charge accounts for convenience.
FREE DELIVERIES
Always a full line of fresh fruits and vegetables.
Phone 618--303 W.13
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1928
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
2
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON. c/40, Society Editor
Before 1 p.m., call mk.812 a1; after 2 p.m., call 729-31
---
∞
John L. Hunt, secretary of the Y. M.C.A., was a dinner guest at the Alpha Onicron Pi house last night.
Prof. Henry Werner was a dimen guest and after-dinner speaker at the Acacia house last night.
V
.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Zeisenis and daughter Jane, of Kansas City, Mo. were dinner guests Sunday at the Sigma Kappa house.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority elected the following officers Monday evening: President, Mary Markham fa'39; vice-president, Phyllis Wheaterill, c'39; cushr captain, Robert Cook, fa'39; pledge trainer, Peggy Chormlee, c'39; treasurer, Harriett Smith, b'39; recording secretary Barbara Bonham, c'39; corresponding secretary, Betty Van Devere, c'41; crest secretary, Claire Connelly c'39; standards chairman, Jane Reid c'39; and house manager, Elva Cheatum, c'40.
Mary Johnt, a member of the Chi Omega sorority who was graduated from the University of Southern California, is residing at the chapter house while doing graduate work here.
Gamma Phi Beta announces the pledging of LaRene Nash, c'41.
~
The K. U. Dames bridge group will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Seigle, 1735 Massachusetts street.
~
Sunday dinner guests at the Alph
Omer soria beauty house were:
Ed Carr, c'anc1
Kirk Owens, c'40
Stewart Jones, c'40
Bill Bunsen, ed 41
At the annual election of officers of the Acacia fraternity Monday evening, the following men were elected:
and the following men were deceased:
Venera Dean, Dick Martin, c19
Benjamin F. Gannon, c19
Junior Dean, John Bondson, c19
Secretary, Richard Treese, c19
Steward, James Steel, c19
Rush Captain, Allen Anderson, c19
~
Kappa Alpha Theta held pledge services for Dorothy Noble, Kansas City, yesterday afternoon.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will entertain with a buffet supper to-morrow evening.
Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity, hold a dinner last evening at the Colonial tea room.
The University Club will hold a valentine dance Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Holmes and Mrs. Karl Klooz will be hosts.
Phone K.U. 66
LOST: "Rainfair" brown garbardine cost,
return for return. Call Ralph Elson.
1247 Ohio, phone 3125. -92
CLASSIFIED ADS
DUNAKIN CLUB
1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas
FOR RENT: Apartment; also sleeping room. Clean, comfortable, well furnished. KU: girl roommate. Phone 2876 KU: girl roommate. Phone 2876 1340 Vermont.
FOUND: New pair of ladies' knit wool mittens in Snow hall. Identify and pay for ad at Kensington Office. -91
E. A.H
Candid Camera-Ily Speaking
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.
6 Breakfasts. 50c
THE ARGUS $12.50
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"Candid Camerouing . . . It's the rage."
with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
Sectional Hatreds Flare Over Anti-Lynching Bill
Washington, Feb. 8. —(UP)—Seccional hatreds flared in the senate today when Senator Joseph F. Guffey (Dem. Penn.) accused a small southern minority of deliberately thwarting democratic majority rule by filibustering the anti-lynching law.
A freshman believes that a pint is a unit of measure. A sophomore believes that a pint is a Pint. A junior believes that a Pint is a boon companion. A senior believes that a Pint is hardly enough—S. and G. At least this is not a pint-less loke.
Protecting that southerners represent only 30 million of the nation's 130 million citizens, Gufley criticized the filibusterers for demanding that they withhold their right and let them have complete control of the lynching question."
Guffey left the senate soon after his attack, which drew the fire of Senator John H. Bankhead (Dem), one of the foes of the pending
Distribute Programs For Teachers' Meeting
"Democracy is based upon the principle that the will of the majority shall prevail," he reminded his Dixie colleagues.
Haywire-continued from page
I say—what
He says—drink
I say—who
He says—you
I say—me
He says—yes
I say—No.
**Neck**—he says
I say—what
He says—neck
I say—who
He says—you
I say—me
He says—yes
I say—w-E—i-1!
An innovation this year is the holding of separate section meetings for geologists.
Preliminary programs for meetings of the Kansas Academy of Science, to be held at Kansas State Teachers College, Pittsburgh, March 16. Students and members with request that titles of papers be submitted by March 1.
Dr. W. H. Schoewe, professor of geology at the University, is president-elect of the organization, and he will his duties with the new fiscal year.
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
Phone K.U. 66
FOUND: Small "Tucktite" handbag near Fraser hall. Call at Kansan Office and identify. -92
WANTED: Used (10-40) Krag tilder model 1894. Action and stock in good shape, bare condition immaterial. Alu S. Model 87. Model 87. Call Palmyra phone 1444.
BOYS: Two quiet, roommates wanted. Double rooms, one twin beds. $8.10 and $8.00. Campus House. 1245 Oread. -22
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
New Rackets, Balls
Soft Balls, Bats
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3 garments for $L25
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Shampoo and Wave 35c
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Phone 333 $941% Mass. St.
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50c
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TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920-22 Mass.
Phone
12
Starred in Ballet Russe
Honor System Cuts Escapes From Prison
THE BALLET OF CINEMAS
Olga Morosova (center), attractive dancer of Col. W. de Basil's Bullet Russe which comes to the University Monday night, shown with Roman Jackiasky (right) and Paul Petroff.
One Hundred Kisses' Is Dance That Depicts Princess Finding True Love
"One Hundred Kisses" one of the threeallets to be presented in Hoch auditorium Monday night by the Monte Carlo Ballet Ruisse is a one-creation creation of Boris Kocho after Hans Andersen's "The Swincher."
Canon City, Colo. Feb. 8—(UP) —Warden Roy Best of the state penitentiary has found the honor system he established four years ago for the 1.345 felons in the state prison highly successful.
By playing upon the crook, the prince attracts the lovely maidens from the castle, who come tripping out to hear and dance to the strange new melody. The princess follows in their train and is herself entraned.
It is the story of a capricious princess who, seeking material beauty, fails to see the treasure of a true love. The princess and her companions are playing when the song of the nightingale attracts their attention. It herds the entrance of a suitor, a young prince, whose retinue enters bearing two caskets. Impatient to see the contents, the princess can scarcely conceal her disappointment when she finds they contain a rose and a case with a singing bird.
The prince is dismayed by her sorrow, but recovers spirit when he hears a swincherd drawing melody from a magic crook. The swincherd changes his habit for that of the prince, giving up his magic instrument in the bargain, leaving the scene, delighted with the trade.
The system, aided by lop-ised haircuts or bread-and-water diets for those who refused to co-operate, was credited by Best with being responsible for a record of only four escapes in 40 months. Before the system was started, there were 66 to 125 escapes every year.
Prison walls were responsible only in a small way for the record. About 300 prisoners are never inside the walls, but live on the prison farm and another 150 are taken outside each day to work.
The old-time devices to detain prisoners such as shackles have been discontinued for the most part at the Colorado prison. Prisoners are e wheipped for serious offences. Attempted escape causes the prisoner to serve his maximum sentence with no time off for good behavior.
"It is the only honor system that ever worked so successfully so far as I can learn." Best said.
Cleveland, Feb. 8—(UPC)—Common Pleas Judge Samuel H. Philibert today asked Mrs. Margarita Hoover, who sought a divorce from her husband, after she announced “Who was the other woman your husband was interested in?”
She wishes to possess herself of the wonderful instrument, and the prince—turned swincher—names his price; a hundred kisses. When he will not bargain otherwise, she yields.
While the forfeit is being paid, the king appears and in fury at seeing his daughter kissing a swinehater, dismisses them all. His majesty retires into the castle, and as the princess, in obedience tries to follow, he bars the door in her face. She fails to escape, but the prince reveals himself, picks up the discarded rose and singing bird, disappears into the night.
The ballet was choreographed by Bronislaiva Nijinska to music by Frederic D'Elkanger, Jean Hugo has provided the scenery and costumes. Other ballets to be presented here by the Monte Carlo company are "The Gods Go A-Begging" and "Aurora's Wedding."
Husband Has Too Many Loves—Divorce Granted
"Your honor," she replied, "it wasn't just one other woman, it was all women." The divorce was granted.
Minneapolis, Feb. 8—UP)—Men
folks who read this are going to talk
about it more than women!
Minnesota Survey Reveals That Men Outspeak Womer
This paradox—women talking less than men—was revealed by Dr. Franklin H. Knowler, assistant professor of speech at the University of Minnesota, who conducted a survey of university and high school students.
Men, he found, like to talk more than women do. At least, they responded, in a list of 165 question, to speech situations more readily than women. Both, he found, are more at ease discussing sports than books, religion than business, and subjects about which they are unaccented than those about which they are uninformed.
They Are Swell!
CHEESEBURGER
SANDWICH?
Have You Tried a
Here's something else: Men are more inclined to bluff than women. But, Dr. Knower discovered, women enjoy giving advice better than men.
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-basement Memorial Union
The most recent collection is the exhibition of architecture showing the development of architectural design in Germany. Experts of many American institutions of art have judged the examples displayed as an excellent representative collection. This is sponsored by the Y.W.C.A., and will be shown this week only.
Spooner-Thayer museum is featuring four special art exhibits this week. A display of architecture, an exhibition of pottery, and a collection of old valentines.
Four Exhibits Are on Display
Milforn Zornes of Claremont, Calif. has 27 water color pictures on exhibition during the month of February.
The display of oil paintings is by Amelia Sprague, one of the first designers for Rookwood pottery in Cincinnati. She formerly taught art at New York State College in Buffalo, but recently retired and is spending the winter with her sister, Miss Elizabeth Sprague, head of the department of home economics at the University.
Valentines which are from seventy-five to a hundred years old are the features of the fourth exhibit.
Williamsburg, Ky., Feb. 8.—(UP)—Administrators of the estate of Bennett Musick, 19, slain son of a United Mine Workers union organizer, today filed suit for $100,000 damages against 20 coal companies. Sheriff Theodore Midtielden and 19 deputy sheriffs.
Mine Companies Sued Over Union Man's Death
The suit charged that the coal companies "entered into a conspiracy with each other and with the sherrif to intimidate, threaten, and prevent, by fair means or forlum, the organization United Mine Workers of America."
The administrators asked $40,000 for the youth's estate and $60,000 purrive damages.
Young Musik is killed Feb. 9, 1837, when a group of men drove past the Marshall Musik home and a valley of shields through the window.
PATEE Week 10c Til7 Days Then 15c
Our Greatest
DOUBLE SHOW
GENE AUTRY
"OLD BARN DANCE"
With the
"HILLBILLY BAND"
AND LAVISH
LAVISH
Laugh and Rhythm Show
'NEW FACES OF 1937'
JOE PENNER
PARKYAKKUS
And a
Hundred New Faces
Zorro Rides Again
Porky Cartoon
NOTE
This Is Gone's Best Picture
and We Are Showing It An
enceance
The HUMAN ADVENTURE
Model No. 20148
THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF JOHN ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Garden Interpretation Institute in Jasper, IA.
Survey and direction by Charles Insisted
TECHNICAL ASSOCIATION BY KIPP PICTURES CORPORATION, INC.
Eight-Reel Talking Picture Sketching Man's Rise from Savagery to Civilization.
THE PHOTOGRAPHIC, "EPIC OF THE AGES"
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Right: A column with a large arch at the top. Left: A column with a smaller arch at the top.
Thurs., Feb. 10, 8:20 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium, K. U.
Identification Cords Admits, K. Ursens 25c
RIDE THE BUS
For Safe, Economical Transportation
K. U. ROUTE
(20 minute service)
Leave 8th and Mass., south of Crown Drug Store, go west on 8th street to Mississippi, south of Mississippi to Campus Drive, west to Chi Omega school, back east to Fowler Shop, turns back west on 16th to Illinois, south on Illinois to 18th, east on 18th to Louisiana, north on Louisiana to 17th, east on 17th to Tennessee, north on Alabama to 17th, east on Massachusetts, and north on Massachusetts to 8th Street.
The Rapid Transit Co.
1818 Massachusetts
Chicago, Feb. 8—(UP)—Federal Judge John C. Barnes today set March 1 as the tentative date for the trial of John Henry Seadlund, 27, confessed slayed and kidnapped by Charles Ross.
Postpone Hearing Of Confessed Kidnaper
Judge Barnes continued until Feb. 28 arrangement of the former lumberjack whose attorneys, Frederick E. Burham and Floyd Thompson, pleased they had not had a chance to confer with their client.
Burnham said both he and Thompson had so many previous professional engagements they had been unable to talk with the defendant.
Seadlund, taken from his cell in the county jail for the hearing, smiled frequently and appeared in two federal officers, handed to two federal officers.
Burglar Steals Watch Dog
Inflamed public opinion resulting from statements given out by government agents in the alleged confession presents a further barrier to a fair trial at this time. Seadlund's attorney asserted.
Trailing on a leash was a German police dog, the watch dog of the restaurant from which the goods were taken.
Lowell, Mass., Fob. 8, —(UP)— Frank W. Shadiat, 20, was held on a burglary charge by police who arrested him for theft of $100, worth of merchandise.
DICKINSON
Shows 3-7-9 25c 'til 7
Last Times Today! —
The Students Choice
The Roaring Story of the Pirate Who Saved the Nation!
FREDRIC MARCH
"The Buccaneer"
FRANCISKA GAAL
AKIM TAMROFF
TOMORROW!
3 DAYS
Aclidah Zuber presents
MAE WEST
"EVERY DAY'S
A HOLIDAY"
A Paramount Picture
EDMUND LOWE
CHARLES CHARLES
BUTTERWORTH WINNINGER
WALTER CATLETTE-LOYD DOLE
HERMAN BING-CHESTER CONKLIN
and LOUIS ARMSTRONG
SUNDAY!
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It's Tremendous! It's Titanic!
Undergoes Appendectomy
Adobe Dice presents
W.C. Fields
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A Permanent Phone
Dorothy Lomour - Mortha Rye
Ben Blue - Shep Fields and his
Rippling Rhythm
Robert Timmerman, e38, underwent an appendectomy Monday night at the Watkins Memorial hospital.
B
Receive Shipment Of Summer Session Catalogues
The summer session catalogue has arrived. Students interested in the courses offered by the University during the summer session may obtain copies at the School of Education office in Fraser hall.
B RICK'S "ON THE HILL"
H
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SONJA HENIE
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Friday - Saturday LOOK!
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Leo Coriola - Nino Martine
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Barred from many States Complete without a single cut
Inside Nazi Germany 1938
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Radio City Inspired It Now Hollywood Immortalizes It As The First Big Musical Smash of 1938
BOB BURNS
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 9. 1938
Tracksters Taper Off For Meet
Dual With Cornhuskers
Saturday Opens Season
For Jayhawks; Squad Is
Rapidly Improving
A rapidly improving Jayhawk indoor track squad will begin to taper off today for its dual meet with the NCAA team at Lincoln Saturday afternoon.
The welcomed let-up will be given the Kansas cinderden after a week of extensive training under the watchful eye of Coach W. H. "Bill" Hargiss, who held trial heats this week for the dashes, hurdles, 440-yard dash, 880-yard run, mile, and the two-mile run.
Kansas Strong in Field
Early-season indications are that Kansas will be strongest in the field events. Don Bird, Big Six champion in the pole vault, should win his event and Gordon Cluacs, who finished second in the broad jump at the conference meet last spring, should place high.
The entire, squad looked good in the trials; however, the men are far from being in top condition. Coach Hargiss is apparently satisfied with the showing made by the team during the past week although he said that it needs lots of hard work to give it the final touches for competition. Many of the men were late in getting started.
Shot Contest Outstanding
Chet Friedland, junior shot-putter consistently heaved the 16-pound ball more than 46 feet last year and his duel with Mills of Nebraska is expected to be one of the features of the meet.
In the high jump Marvin Cox, sen-
ior letterman, will bid for a victory. Cox will also compete in the mile
relay and possibly the low hurdles.
Approximately 24 men will be selected to make the trip, but the personnel has not yet been definitely formed. The group may be by bus early Saturday morning.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
By Date Heekendorn
The Galloping Ghosts of the intramural league broke away on a screaming spree last night as they trounced Obers. 37 to 20.
Knight and Covey 'grabbed the honors for the winners with 13 and 12 points respectively. Robinson paced the losers with 11 count-
In a companion game the Hell
girl scores first, and rose out a stubborn Hummingbird five,
30 to 28. Crabb of the victors easily
captured the No. 1 scoring position
with 13 points:
The box scores:
Gal'p. Ghosts (37) Obers (2²)
Vogel, f g f t f Steland, f g f t
Zeyf, f g f t f Robson, f f. 5
Knight, f c. 5 3 1 Pearce, c 2 0 3
Day, g 1 0 0 Pearce, c 1 1 1
Reed, g 1 0 0 Boardn, g 0 1 0
Hoffine 2 1 1 0 Harris g 0 1 0
--are continuing on their merry way Friday night they subdued the California five, previously unbeaten in conference play, by a score of 62 to 33. Luseti射了11 field goals and 6 free for a total of 28 points. California still remains in the lead on a percentage basis. The Golden Bears have won 5 games and lost 1, while Stanford has won only 4 and lost 1, the loss being to the Southern California Trojans.
Hell Hounds (30) Hexagon II (28)
Official: Niswonger
15 7 3 9 2 10
Officiel Niwenger
Hell Horns
Hell Horns
Fleeson, f. 2 0 0 0 Wilson, f. 3 0 0
Dalton, f. 3 0 0 Wilson, f. 3 0 0
Crabb, g. 3 0 0 Wilson, e. 2 0 0
Crabb, g. 6 1 1 Dairle, p. 4 1 0
Hildt, h. 3 1 1 Blair, g. 2 1 0
Sullivan, t. 3 1 0 Robb 0 0 1
14 2 3 13 2
Officials Thompson and Eno
Late Monday Games
Officials: Thompson and Enns. Late Monday Games
The Phi Gum cagers outdistanced a fighting Alicia Five in a late intense fight. She scored 32, and the Theta Tau “B” team won a victory over the Phi B “squand”
The box scores:
The box scores:
Phi Gam (41) Acacia (32)
| | g ft f | g ft f |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Steiger, f | 3, 1 0 | Watson, f | 8, 1 1 |
| Morris, f | 5, 1 2 | Wood, f | 8, 1 1 |
| Harwi, f | 5, 1 2 | Martin, f | 5, 1 2 |
| Colem, f | 6, 1 0 | Ginter, g | 2, 0 0 |
| Heing, g | 2, 0 0 | Ginter, g | - 9, 0 1 |
| Heing, g | 2, 1 2 | |
18.54
Officials: Thompson and Greene.
Phi Psi "E" (19) Theta Tau "B" (22)
Lledyard, 0 f 1 g f (1)
Roberts, f 2 1 1 Napier, f _6 1
Higgins, c 2 1 2 Bloom, f _1 0
Thomas, g 1 1 2 V.May, c _0 0
Thomas, g 1 1 2 Mays, c _0 0
Wilkes, g _3 1 2 G.May, g _3 1
Wilkes, g _3 1 2 Paulette _5 0
8.36
Official: Niswonger. Volley Ball
The IAE volley ballers looked impressive last night as they handed the Phi Pal squad a 2-0 defeat, breezing through two straight games.
5JE trimmed Pi KA. 2,1, Triangle defeated Sigma Nu 2,1, and Phi Gam defeated the Beta's 2-1 in more closely fought battles.
Rey. Barr To Speak
The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the Kansas Bible College, will speak to members of the "School of Pharmacy in their work," according to the Rev. Mr. Brant plans to tell something about the history of the Kansas Bible College.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansas Sports Editor
Soldom has a team captured the fancy of its supporters as the much-publicized Oklahoma "boy scout" team. The team's youth, speed and amazing scoring ability, coupled with the fact that it has been a long time since Oklahoma won a major Big Six title, all have made the Sooners fans literally go wild. Saturday, 5.347 (according to the official count of the Oklahoma athletic business manager) wild-eyed, cheering fans packed the field house at Norman to see the Sooners nip the Cornhuskers 50 to 48.
If this were 1929 or before-you know, back in the good old days of "a chicken in every pot and two ears in every garage"—in other words in the days of prosperity, and Kansas came up with a young team the like of the Sooners, it might the spark that would touch a drive for a field house that would accommodate the 4.500 students and still give room for the townpeople and other Kansas basketball fans.
Kansas State has been bemoaning the fact that not once this year has a Wildcat athletic team conquered a Nebraska team. Hopes had been expressed that the Purple wrestling team might succeed in downing the Husker grapplers. According to a report, about 10% of hopes were realized, in a big way, for the Kansas State team won $22\frac{1}{2}$ to $4\frac{1}{2}$.
There is no doubt of the need of a field house, not only for basketball but for indoor track. Then there is the need of suitable indoor quarters for the local R.O.T.C. units. But in spite of these needs, realization of the project appears to be in the far-distant future.
Luisetti and his Stanford mates
Other conference leaders in the various leagues throughout th e United States are:
In the Big Ten, Northwestern continues to set the pace with 5 victories and 1 defeat. For not behind is the number of wins with 4 victories and a single loss.
In the Rocky Mountain conference, Colorado is out in front through the efforts of "Whizzer" White and two Kansas boys. The players from the Sunflower state are Jim "Swisher" Schwartz, former star at Sacred Heart, Salina, who attended school here his freshman year, and Jack Harvey, who used to roll in the goals for Frankfort.
Arkansas is the bell-wether in the Southwestern Conference. Paced by their captain, Lockard, and two nationally known football players, Jim Benton and Jack Robbins, famed as the Razorbacks combination, the Razorbacks have made short work of most of their conference opponents.
In the East, Dartmouth and Cornell are tied for the lead with each showing a record of 4 victories and 1 loss.
It is a pleasure to report that Bob Grubb, promising freshman gridster, whose athletic career was cut short by the necessity of a leg amputation is progressing nicely and has recovered to the point where he will return to his home tomorrow. Here's a wish for a speedy and
Pralle Climbs To Second Place In Scoring Race
Fred Pralle, see Jayhawker guard,
climbed to second place in the Big Six individual scoring race by stacking up 14 points against Kansas State Monday night. This brought Pralle's total to 69 points for 6 games to give him an average of 11.5 points per game. Blahm of Iowa State is tied with the senior Kansas guard for second with the same average for the same number of games.
In first place is sensational Jimmy McNatt, scouttist sophomore of the Ohio State football team. Two more SEC seniors hold down the fourth and fifth positions, Mesch is fourth with 11.25 in 4 games, while Walker is in fifth with 11.00 in the same number if contests.
Parsons, Nebraku; Wesche, Kansas State; Harvey, Missouri; Amen, Nebraku; and Martin, Oklahoma, round out the first ten scores. In eleventh place is Don Ebling, rapidly improving Kansas sophomore with 44 points in 6 games for an average of 7.33 points a game.
Following is a list of the eleven leading scorers of the conference, giving the school, games played in, and the overall points, and the average:
Name g fg ft tp avg.
McNatt, O. 4 i 21 6 49 12.0
Prale, K. 4 ii 25 6 39 11.50
Pruille, M. 4 ii 20 6 39 11.50
Mesch, O. 4 i 19 7 60 11.50
Walker, O. 4 i 19 6 44 11.00
Parsons, N. 5 i 19 6 47 11.00
Wesche, K. 6 i 19 15 53 8.83
Harvey, M. 5 i 19 15 53 8.83
Martin, O. 4 i 13 7 33 8.25
Ebling, K. 4 i 13 18 43 7.33
Daily Kansan Classified Ads ge results.
complete recovery for Bob, and a wish for lots of luck. We're sure these wishes will be echoed on the 4,500 students on the Hill.
Athens, Greece, Feb. 8—(UP)—Prince Nicholas of Greece, uncle of King George II, and father of the Duchess of Kent of the British royal family, died at night now in his suite at the Hotel Grande Bretagne, after saying, "I am happy to die in my beloved country."
Father of Duchess Of Kent Dies in Ather
At the bedside of the 66-year-old prince was his wife, Princess Helene-Cladimirea, niece of the late Czar Nicholas of Russia, who had knelt before him and asked the priest administered the last sacraments of the Greek Orthodox Church.
Washington Alumni To Hold 'Governors' Dinner'
Washington, Feb. 8—Washington alumni of the University of Kansas will hold a deferred Kansas Day event known as a "Governor's dinner."
Chancellor E. H. Lindley, who is here conferring with the President's advisory committee of the NYA, will be the principal speaker.
Two former governors of Kansas will be guests and also will speak. They are Secretary of War Harry Merrill and Senator Arthur Copper.
Dean Lawson Address P.T.A
Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, spoke last night at tbe quarterly meeting of the Parent-Teacher association at Wyndotte High School in Kansas City.
Women's Intramurals
Deck tennis doubles: The schedule has been changed. Contestants may get the new schedule at the office. This afternoon: Gamma Phi Beta vs. Kappa Alpha Theta at 4:20, or Kappa Omega vs. Corbain hall at 5 o'clock.
Basketball! Finals were played last night. The I.W.W. team defeated the Kappa Kappa Gamma team, 20 to 7.
Intramural Managers Listed
The Kansan has been requested to run a list of the managers of intramural basketball teams so that any one wishing to contact the manager of a particular team may know whom to call.
Here is the list:
Indenendents
All-Stars—Richard White
Blanks—Chas. Wright, Jr.
Bulldogs—LaFaun Jacke
Jets—John O'Keeffe
Campus Raiders—C. Robinson
The Cottage-Chas. Blair
Cyclones-Phil Lee
Davies-Kennedy.
Gashouse Gang-Coord Spalding
Galloping Ghosts-Floyd Kelly
Hellhounds-Bob Sullivan
Hexagons I-Kenny Lewis
Hexagons J-Michael Glassen
Jaybirds-W.E. Paden
Ober's-Jack Pearce
Optimists-Wilbur Leonard.
Hexagons H-Charles Anderson II.
Rock Chalk-Bill House.
Rumold's Boys-Glen Richardson.
1200 Tennessee-Charles Anderson
Wrogan-Bob Peirce
Rock Ferdinand Bovilevac
Whitakers-Howard Trabant.
Fraternities
Acceia - Milton More.
Alpha Tau霉欧 - Roy Kirby.
Beta Theta P1 - Blain Hibbard.
Delta Chi新 - Hovetock
Delta Tau Deltas-Glenn Elmore.
Delta Upsilon-Glenm McConn.
Kappa Sigma—R. H. Ranen.
Phi Delta Theta—Len Hendrick
Phi Gamma Delta--Jim Morris.
Phi Kappa Pai-R.-C. Davidson.
Phi Kappa Alpha—Lane Davis.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon—John Zieg-
Sigma Chi—Lloyd Burton,
Sigma Nu—Glen Ashley,
S. P E—Gene Brandt.
Triangle Nip Williamson
Kappa Eka Cordit.
Kappa Eka Eka-Roy Hellern
Phi Chi—Merlin Naylor,
Phi Mu Alpha—Doug Turbet,
Theta Tan—Gaillot,
Theta马
Monday Night's Running Score KU KSC
**KU** **KSC**
2 2 Wesche 20 18 Burns
2 2 Schmidt 29 Florlare
3 3 Klimak 22 Harp
3 5 Burles Second Half
5 5 Burles 26 Harp
7 7 Wesche 22 Harp
7 8 Wesche 22 Reid
9 8 Golay 30 Pralle
10 10 Burns 32 Ebling
12 12 Clevel'nd 30 Wenke
11 11 Burles 32 Wenke
13 13 Pralle 35 Pralle
16 16 Clevel'nd 35 Burns
14 Pralle 31 Wesche
16 Pralle 33 Reid
18
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 91
Religious
Week To End
With Banquet
Re v. Poteat, Speaker
Of Week, To Be Guest
At Farewell Banquet
Tonight
A farewell banquet, which is open to the public, will clo- Religious Embassys Week tonight The Rev. Kevin Kaiser, maker of the week, will be the guest
Last night in Hoch auditorium the Rev. Pole Potet addressed a meeting, attended largely by townpeople and faculty members, on the subject of "Love and War." Confessing that he is an unqualified pacifist—and realizing that such people are pointed out to him, Pole Potet declared—Doctor Potet nevertheless declared that such a point of view is practical as well as inexpensive.
He cited an incident of a British soldier in China who prevented an international incident by refusing to attack an insulting crowd. He concluded his speech with an appeal to "have the courage to be a coward."
"Attempts to preserve national sovereignty by violence leads to self-destruction," he said. "Jesus told us to turn the other check. We don't do it, but it is the most successful way. In personal and in international relations, we shouldn't try to win a victory but to win a friend."
The Westmaster A Cappella choir, under the direction of Dean D. M. Swarthout, of the School of Fine Arts, sang two numbers: "Hall, Gladdening Light," by Wood, and a traditional folk song by Cokley
As the culmination of a series of meetings on the general topic of "The Place of the Church in Contemporary Confusion," Doctor Poste will comment on "Bedlam and Blue Glasses" at the dinner this evening in the Memorial Union cafeteria at 5:45 o'clock.
To Select Tennis Squac'
At 12:30 today a luncheon forum will be held in the cafeteria for all who desire to attend. Evelyn Bruin will discuss the discussion following the meal.
Varsity tennis practice will begin soon and all of those who are interested in trying out for the squad are urged to call James Kell, c39, or Newton Hovestock, c38, to check if they are ready turned in their names should make certain that their names are on the list.
April 19, Wichita at Lawrence.
April 30, Kansas State at Manhat tan.
Kell and Hoverstock are the only lettermen left from last year's championship team which brought the tennis honors of the Big Six to the University. This year's schedule so far includes:
May 20 to 21, Big Six meet at Lincoln
May 7. Nebraska at Lawrence.
May 11. Kansas State at Lawrence
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1938
May 11, Kansas State at Lawren
May 14, Nebraska at Lincoln.
--trifle least zeal considering the lon, period of the first open, then undercover operations between Japan and the British government, which certainly had somewhat of a demoralizing effect on the local personnel who are often more anxiously enmeshed in these operations than in espying the Americans and Russians than in spying directly on the Japanese themselves.
HAY by WIRE
We're sorry we even mentioned the weather yesterday. If the weather man is willing we'll sell out for 32 degrees. If it doesn't rain or snow around here we pretty soon, there is going to be a ball to pay.
Pome
Your gall's tall and handsome,
Your gal's stout and low,
Your gall's dressed in satin,
Mine in calico.
Your gall's kind of sporty,
Your gal's kind and good.
Would I trade my gal for yours?
You're doggie right I would.
To most persons the name "Communist" is new that is, it hasn't been used very frequently until the last few years. It is not a newly coined word, however. Away back in 1620 the "Corn Law Rhymester" of England ran the following definition in poetry:
What is a Communist?
For equal division of unequal earnings.
Idler or bungler, or both, he is willing
To fork out his copper, and pocket your shilling.
"Powers of concentration are Continued on page 2
Magazine Asserts That American Operatives Stole Japanese Plans
London, Feb. 9.—(UP)—The news magazine The Week asserted today that operatives of the United States intelligence service in Tokyo had stolen plans of Japan's new naval program.
It is alleged that when Capt. Royal E. Ingersoll, chief of the United States planning board, visited London recently, he brought along copies of the stolen plans, presumably to consult with British naval authorities. The plans were "stolen with great skill" by Navy officials and the United States intelligence service operating in Tokyo," the magazine asserted.
"The British intelligence people had had no luck—possibly with a
Dean's Choir To Sing
A Cappella Group Will
Give Concert Sunday
Night
The Westminster A Cappella choir of 70 voices will give its mid-winter concert Sunday at the First Presbyterian Church at 7:30 p.m.
The choir, under the direction of Dean D. M. Swarthout, is the largest in the several years that Dean Swarthout has directed it. The program will include some of the finest numbers in the choir's repertoire.
Most of the program will consist of unaccompanied chair numbers, but two anthems sung with organ accompaniment will also be given. A soprano solo will be sung by Alice Marie McNeill and the studio of Prof. Alice Moncrieff in the School of Fine Arts. There will also be a violin solo by Homer Dodge Caine, fa39, violin major and pupil of Prof. Waldemar Gelch; and a vocal duet by Virginia Varga, cunel, contrato, and Fa38, harpone from the studio of Prof. Joseph Wilkins.
The choir will appear in a number of concerts in the early spring in this section of the country.
Delta Sigma Pi
Delta Sigma I
To Tour Kansas City Next Week
Delta Sigma Pi, international fraternity of commerce, is sponsoring an industrial tour of Kansas City for next Thursday, Feb. 17.
Students in the School of Business are eligible for the trip.
The group will be accompanied by Edgar J. Dudley, assistant professor of economics, J. H. Taggart, associates with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Pattee, instructor in economics.
The following firms will be inspected: Armour's Packing Co; Sears Roebuck and Co.; Federal Reserve bank; Harris-Urpson Brokerage Co.; Chevrolet assembly plant; and the Sheffield Steel Co.
A second mural panel in the Memorial Union building has just been installed by a graduate of the University, Paul Mannen, of Lawrence, and an artist from Mount Oread," appears on the north wall of the men's lounge.
Plans for a third mural panel, a winter sunrise, are being worked on now by Mannen. It will be for the main lounge of the building.
A starry sky with a flaring meteorite light up the landscape outlines a young man standing on a hilltop. The background of this mural is a bank of white clouds coming up from the horizon.
Authorized Parties
K. U. Press Club, Holloway hall, 12 p.m.
Wesley Foundation, Ecke's hall. 11 p.m.
Delta Tau Delta, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Varsity, Memorial Union ballroom. 12 p.m.
Friday, February 1 Limited Date
Saturday, February 12
Kappa Alpha Theta, Memorial Union ballroom, 12 p.m.
Ricker hall, house, 12 p.m.
Westminster Foundation,
Westminster hall, 12 p.m.
Kappa Sigma, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Saturday, February 12
ELIZAZBETH MEGUIAR
"The Japanese didn't get their hands on the plans, a fact which had a very natural consequence of causing them from time to time to send repares suggesting that these particul-ries were being tested, it is beginning to get so excited, did not really exist after all. Then the Americans found and stole them!"
University To Be Host To Kansas Engineers
the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
The University will be host to the thirteenth annual meeting of the Society of Kansas Engineers Feb. 17 and 18. Marvin hall will serve as convention Election of officers Friday will close the two-day meeting.
ELIZABETH MISCHUR
Adviser to Women for the Joint Committee
University speakers on the program include Dean Ivan C. Crawford of the School of Engineering and Architecture, Chancellor E. H. Lindley Prof. D. Lyate, Dr. Lyte S. Powell and George A. Mills of the Kansas Electric Power company will represent Lawrence on the program.
The Kansas State High School Activities association will hold the second district extemporaneous speaking and debating contests at the University Saturday. Ten class A and class B high school forensic groups will represent the second division.
The finals, to be held Feb. 25 and 26 at the University, will be made up of the winners of each division. Should a second place team show favorably, the forensic committee may invite these teams also. The topic of unicameral legislature will be the subject of the debates.
To Debate Saturday
Six Class A and Four
Class B Schools Meet
At University
Class A schools registered include: Lawrence, Topeka High Ward High and Wyandotte High of Lawrence, Ashition, and Topeka Catholic High.
The four class B schools are: Garnett, Bonner Springs, Osawatomi and Paola.
All class A teams have entries in the extempterian speaking contest. In this group only two persons are allowed from each school. Only Paola and Ossawatome have entered extempterian speakers in the B
Feb. 19, the University will be host to five class C schools from the first district. Entries received are Marcia Bracken, Turner Eskridge, and Valley Falls.
There will be a student recital in Frank Strong auditorium this afternoon at 3:30 p.m.
Fine Arts Students Present Recital Today
A new addition to the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house, providing for a dining room and a kitchen on the first floor and a total of about ten sleeping rooms on the second and third floors will be started sometime this spring.
Phi Delts Plan To Build New Addition to House
The program includes: "Romance" (Schumann) and "Fantasy-Imprompt" (Chopin), piano solo by Na Griffith, fa'39; "Intermezope" Am 4. No. 6" (Schumann), piano solo by Na Griffith, fa'39; "Cavaliers" (Schindler), vocal solo by Jane Schleagle, fa'40; "Sonata in D" (Scarlott), piano solo by Jane Chesky, fa'unel; Scherzo and Allegro movements from "Concertino" (Deur de Greef) piano solo by Shirley Miller (Bloos), vocal solo by Shirley Miller (Bloos); Taurier); barp solo by Elizabeth Searle, c'39; and "Nocturne Op. 5. No. 1" (Seriabin) and "Idyll Op. 7. No. 1" (Medtner), piano solos by Ruth Rice, gt
The fraternity's request to build was approved by the city council Monday night. A technical review was conducted by the council's zoning committee.
The new addition will make posis sible the housing of a total of be tween fifty and sixty men.
To Show Educational Film Tonight
"The price of admission was $1 when I saw it," said Prof. Loren Eisley of the department of sociology. He was referring to the eight-telre talketing entitled "The Human Adventure," which University students will be able to see free tonight of charge.
First of Community Lecture Series This Semester To Be Given in Hoch Auditorium
The picture will be shown at 8:20 in Hoch auditorium as the first number of the second semester in the community lecture series.
Professor Eiseley recommends the picture very highly as being educational and well worth seeing.
Fourteen exploring expeditions were sent out by the institute and they visited Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Anatolia, Iraq and Iraq, all of which are traced in the picture by a picturesque air route. Eight of these expeditions may be seen in the access road, far-off lands, historic objects of great significance in the development and civilization of man.
"The Human Adventure" is based on ancient history, and was three years in the making. It is an interesting and fascinating subject in which man's significant past and his rise from savagery to civilization are colorfully depicted. The film has been produced as the result of research and explorations of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, under the supervision of Dr. James H. Breasted, noted archaeologist, historian, and director of the institute. Two separate trips were made from Chicago to the Near East to produce the extraordinary film. Approximately 32,000 feet of film were exposed and much of the picture was made from the air in more than 9,000 miles ofobyte film.
Doctor Breasted himself is seen and heard narrating the features and interesting work of the expeditions. A flight was made over the Persian mountains and also over Iraq in a severe sandstorm which almost incredibly reached the height of 15,000 feet. The stables of. Kiel Solomon and wheat from the times of Joseph are scenes of biblical significance which were revealed in the excavation and unearthing of 14 separate cities which were built one upon the other.
First Professional Pictures Shown
The first professional motion pictures on standard size film of Persepolis, the capital of the Persian Empire, are featured at the end of the picture. Persepolis was founded in 500 B.C. The curved film was produced by virtue of an infinite amount of work and heavy expense on the part of Doctor Breasted and his associates and, in addition to being an important historical record, it throws an educational and intriguing light on the activities of ancient man.
Two large sound projectors have been installed in the auditorium for the film, which is too expensive to be shown at commercial theaters.
Kansas, considerable cloudiness with rising temperatures Thursday; Friday unsettled and warmer.
WEATHER
"Don't complain on Thursday night that you can't get a seat for the Dramatics Club play," advised Don Dixon, business manager of the company. "If you can one see the play if they reserve 'heir tickets in plenty of time.'"
Starting today, activity tickets may be reserved at the ticket office in Green hall. Single admission tickets cost fifty cents. The production will be given Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of next week.
Past experience has proved that, it is more profitable to present productions four rather than five nights. "However, everyone can't go on the tour," he said. He asked this confusion by reserving their seats now." Dixon pointed out.
"Only so many people can see the play each night," Dixon added. "If the house is sold out I can't do a thing about it, but if the students will co-operate by reserving tickets on one of the first two nights if possible."
Must Get Seats Early For Play 'Spring Dance'
A man with boundless good humor, a mustache, and a consuming interest in music has been talking loudly to university students for the past two days.
The University Band of 92 pieces will leave tomorrow morning for a group of concerts in Kansas City. Four concerts will be played during the day, a broadcast over radio station KSYY, and an evening concert will complete the tour. The band is directed by Prof Russell L. Wiley.
Band To Give Four Concerts Ninety - Two Members Will Leave Tomorrow For Kansas City
"I've seen nearly everything," he said. "Things were happening all the time in China." He was there as a missionary and as a professor of philosophy at the University of Shanghai.
Two numbers by Haydon Wood, "Mannin Veen" and "Virginia" a Southern Rhapsody, are the featured numbers on the program. The overture to the third act of "Lohengrin" (Wagner) and "From Africa" (Bemer) will be used, as well as other stirring compositions for band.
Two 50-minute concerts will be presented at Wyandotte High School in the morning, and two 50-minute concerts at Argentine High School in the afternoon. The student bodies of these high schools are too large to meet in the auditorium, at one thus necessitating two concerts.
Tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock concert will be played at Shawnee Mission High School.
"I once attended a Communist rally where the foreigners were the
The Jayhawk Trumpeteers, Robert Boyle, *fau*;乳令 Masa Master, *fau*; and Leo Horacek, c'41; will play two cornet trios, "Valse Caprice" (Short) and "The Three Aces" (Clarke). The "Valse Caprice" was originally a trumpet solo, and was arranged for trio by Robert Boyle.
Rex Connor, fauncl, will play a tuba solo, "Sounds from the Hudson" (Clarker) and James Van Dyke (Roberts) in Lale. Lake (Roberts), a baritone solo.
Poteat, Minister, Musician Has Seen Nearly All the World
Other features of the concerts will be "fire-stick" twitching by Robert Hampel, e'40, and some magic acts by Jack Dalby, fa'40.
And he's been talking about religion and how it fits into this confused world of ours. Dr. Edwin McNiel Peatst, pastor of the Eueld Avenue Baptist Church in Clew�le, Missouri, has fuscd world of ours. He still says that idealism and "faith in faith" is the only hope for this world of ours
The band will leave at 7:30 a.m. by bus, and will return to Lawrence after the concert at Shawnee Mission.
Since the time he left Furman University in South Carolina with a working knowledge of philosophy and literature, he covered the prettiest thoroughly.
By Richard MacCann, c'40
Press Club To Hold Dinner-Dance
The K. U. Press Club, composed of all students and faculty members of the department of journalism, will hold its annual dinner-dance tomorrow night at Holloway's hall, Nine-teenth and Massachusetts, from 8 until 12 o'clock.
main object of attack. It was about the least comfortable situation I have ever been in. My wife thought I was going to be killed at any moment.
But he wasn't. Perhaps his extreme pacifica helped him—or perhaps that was where it started. Anyway, he is very carefree about it, and very willing to point the joke in his own direction. He speaks of having to relinquish his position in a baseball game with he John Hunt, Y.M.C.A secretary, and the Rev. Joseph King of the Congregational Church.
There are two daughters and a boy who is president of the freshman class at Oberlin College. Also "one wife". His brothers are respectively a professor of law and an electrical engineer.
When he is tired he goes to the piano and relaxes—compasses, plays, and knows enough about music generally to enjoy it.
Dr. Potteat has seen life—a lot of it—and he still thinks there's some point in living.
Parsons Leads Scoring Attack That Downs 'Boy Scats' 52-42 Before Capacity Crowd; Jimmy McNatt Held to Seven Points Leaving Pralle at Top Of Big Six Scoreers
Huskers Nip Sooners To Put Kansas in Lead
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 9. — (UP)—The University of Nebraska basketball team scored an upset tonight in defeating the Oklahoma Sooners 52 to 42 before a capacity crowd of more than 6,000.
The characteristics of ballet technique and movement and something about the training necessary to attain ballet skills were explained by Maxine Pendleton, c'uncl, at a meeting of Tau Sigma Tuesday night. Miss Pendleton did a couple of characteristic ballet dances fbr the group. She has had a great deal of training and has studied in New York under Fokine, original ballet master for the Monte Carlo company.
The Huskers led after the first five minutes of play and were ahead 34 to 14 at the half. Bob Parsons, veteran Nebraska guard, was easily the outstanding performer, pacing scoring honors with six field goals and a pair of free throws. Parsons also held the
Tau Sigma Studies Ballet
The program was planned on the origin and development of the ballet to give background for appreciation and understanding of the Monte Carlo Ballet Russe, which is comprised of University Monday night. Feb. 14.
Annette Lawrence, ed.uncle, gave a talk on the original Monte Carlo Ballet which was composed of members of the former imperial Russian ballet, later formed into a company by Sergei Diaghilev after the Russian revolution destroyed the imperial school.
Tuesday night, Feb. 15, was the date set for Tau Sigma t�yms. Plans were discussed for the state dance to be held at Manhattan on Feb. 26.
She described the growth and progress of this company—its disintegration with Dighile's death and the later revival of the group to carry on its tradition in the Monte Carlo Ballet.
KFKU Announcers TryOut Today
Three faculty members will judge the KFRU tryout for announcements at 4:30 this afternoon in the studio of the University radio station. Two of the contestants will be selected for permanent radio work.
The judges are Professors Allen Crafton and Robert Calderwood, of the department of speech and drama, at Columbia University. Alice Montgoriei (essor of voice).
The radio station prefers students who will be on the Hill for another year at least and two years if possible. The announcers choose should be available from 2 to 3 and 5 to 6:30 each afternoon. Ability to speak a foreign language would be an advantage.
All tryout tests will consist of
reading material involving straight
station announcements, pronunciation
and knowledge of musical terms.
Everett Mitchell, who selects and trains all NBC announcers from the Chicago studios, believes that the following are prerequisites for all those who are interested in becoming radio announcers: personality, excellent pronunciation, acting ability, knowledge of foreign languages, natural voice quality, and willingness to work.
Farm and Home Hour Honors State College
The National Farm and Home hour will present a special program from Manhattan Wednesday, Feb. 16, at 13:00 a.m. The broadcast from the college campus will honor the Diamond Jubilee of Kansas State College, portraying the growth of the institution since its founding 78 years ago and its contribution to the agricultural science and run life.
Dr. F, D. Ferrell, president of Kansas State College, will be heard during the broadcast in a brief message of greeting to alumni.
Dramatic sketches during the broadcast will depict the establishment of the college as a land grant school, the development of the extension service, the work of the college in improving wheat production in the great plains, achievements in highway construction, and other developments in connection with agriculture.
Oklahoma star sophomore forward, Jimmy McNatt, to three field goals.
The box score:
Mesch, Oklahoma forward,
high point man for the Sooners,
went out on persons.
Nebraska (52) fg ft pf
Amen, f 4 1 1
Kovanda, f 4 1 1
Ehaugh, c 5 1 1
Parson, g 6 2 2
Warner, g 1 2 0
Grimm, g 2 1 1
18 6 15
22 8 6
Oklahoma (42) fg 1 6
Ness, f 5 2 4
McNair, f 3 1 4
Nullen, c 5 0 1
Martin, g 0 1 2
Walker, g 0 1 2
Snodgrass, g 1 3 2
Snodgrass, g 1 3 2
Roop, g 0 0 2
Kerr, c 0 1 1
Barton, g 0 1 1
Grayson, g 1 0 0
Spegle, f 0 1 0
Officials: E. C. Quigley, St. Marys;
Ed Cochrane, Kansas City. Half-time
score: 34-14, Nebraska.
Standings of the Teams
Nebraska's victory into the Kansas Jayhawks into their accustomed team, who have won the first time this season, by the narrow margin of a half game. If the Soon-
W L. 1. Pct. 3P. OP 185
Kansas 5 1 133 230 185
Okahama 4 1 800 243 192
Nebraaska 2 4 300 143 156
Iowa State 2 4 333 168 222
Kansas State 2 4 136 185 237
it succeeds in beating Kansas State tonight, then Kansas and Oklahoma will be tied for first. If the Wildcats upset the Sooners, it will definitely give Kansas the inside track on the road to the conference crown.
The fact that McNatt was held to 7 points dropped him to fourth place in the individual scoring race and put Fred Praille, high-scoring Kansas guard, into first place, along with Blahnik, Iowa State guard. Both Praille and Blahnik have averaged 11.5 points for 6 games.
Martin, senior Oklahoma guard, was held to a single free throw to remove him from the tenth position among the highest scorers. His place was taken by Don Ebling, sophomore Jawhack forward.
The Nebraska victory gives the Jayhawks a chance for an undisputed title if Kansas can take her four remaining conference games, including the game with Oklahoma on the Norman court.
The victory moves Nebraska out of a tie with Missouri into undisputed possession of third place with 3 games and 3 lost for a percentage of .500
Three more Big Six games are scheduled for this week. Oklahoma moves on down to Manhattan tonight to face Kansas State, Saturday. Michigan faces Wisconsin at Manhattan and Nebraska takes on Missouri at Columbia.
Arctic Scientists Near Greenland
Moscow, Feb. 9. — (UP) — Radio communication was re-established tonight with the Soviet Union's four Arctic scientists, who reported that they had ridden through a lashing storm aboard their ice floe and were within sight of the east coast of Greenland.
The message, the first received from Dr. Ivan Papanin and his companions in 48 hours, was picked up by the Norwegian radio station on the island of Tosno and relayed to a route administration n Moscow.
The Greenland coast last reported about 50 miles away from them, was now clearly visible, they said.
Doctor Hall in Cleveland Clinic Dr. Marvin Hall of Topeka, alumni member of the athletic board, is in the Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, for observation and treatment.
PAGE TWO
لنرى ملفات الملفات المنظمة عند الاستدعاء
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1928
The Daily Kansan Wishes 'Bill' White A Happy Birthday
PETER SMITH
Editor's Note:
Seventy years ago today, William Allen White
tenured the position he never yet admitted to be a "vale of trueness."
The years passed by and he grew to be a man. Kansas and the world feel they have been made richer by that birth and growth for, though an idealist, he has mixed idealism with a lot of com- misery. He is a man and lived that love in concrete acts rather than the more mouthing it in flowery -hrases.
As a general practice of the profession, the Kansean has in its files for instant publication, the obituary which is read in lieu of which is Mr. White's. And now, quite in the spirit of his own kind humor—and possibly establishing a journalistic precedent—we think he may be interested to hear about his obituary, which we publish with the sincerest hope that the years will be many and the addition before ever again we shall have occasion to use it.
William Allen White, or just plain "Bill" White, as the home folks all knew him, possessed one pre-eminent passion—Kansas. He lived and died close to the hearts of the plain folk of his home town, where he achieved worldwide fame as a country editor and author.
And that was the way "Bill" wanted it. Years ago when he was first acclaimed a leading figure in American literary and political circles, he was bombarded with overtures from metropolitan editors and publishers who wanted his services. He declined them all.
White was born in Emporia, Feb. 10, 1868. His father was Dr. Allen White, pioneer physician-druggist and real estate dealer, a descendant of a Puritan family which settled in Massachusetts in 1639. His mother was a school teacher. White owed much to his mother. His earliest memory was of her reading to him. He wrote a masterful tribute to her when she died in 1824 at the age of 95.
When the family moved to El Dorado, Kan,
when White was a baby, she helped to start
the first city library. White's father, at the time
mayor of El Dorado, died when the boy was 14,
but the mother kept boarders and sent her son
to high school and to the University of Kansas.
White did his first newspaper work at 10, earning $1.50 weekly in the printing office of the Butler County Democrat at El Dorado. He learned later that his father paid the $1.50 at first. The youth had other newspaper jobs, mostly typesetting, during vacations and when Senator T. B. Murdock offered White the "stupendous" salary of $18 a week, he left the University six weeks before graduation to edit the El Dorado Republican. "I didn't wait to graduate," White said. "I made a straight line for El Dorado and took over the paper, doing the sort of work I have always enjoyed most."
At 24 White became an editorial writer on the Kansas City Star. He did not enjoy big city writing as much as small town editing. A year later, in 1893, he married Miss Sally Lindsay.
In 1895 White borrowed $3,000 and bought the Emporia Gazette, which he made nationally famous through the brilliant and homely philosophy of its editorial column. One of his early editorials, "What's the Matter with Kansas" attracted nation-wide attention and from then on his fame as a writer spread.
White announced his purchase of the Gazette in an editorial later reprinted in journalism textbooks as an ideal creed for a community newspaper editor.
A kindly and slightly stout figure, White ironed out an old local feud among Emporians and soon became the town confessor. His big red house, built by a wealthy man from Garden of the Gods sandstone, was open to the lowly as well as to Presidents Roosevelt, Taft and Hoover.
Metropolitan newspapers sought futility to lure White from Emporia and Kansas. His first book, a collection of short stories titled "The Real Issue," was published in 1896. He next wrote "The Court of Boyville" "Strategems and Spoils," and "In Our Town." In 1906, his novel, "A Certain Rich Man," appeared with a sale of 250 000 copies.
Some of his later books are: "In the Heart of a Fool," "God's Puppets," "The Old Order Changeth," "What It's All About," "Woodrow Wilson—The Man; His Times and His Task," and "Forty Years on Mainstreet," which was published in 1987.
During the World War he went to France as an observer for the American Red Cross and remained to cover the peace conference for American newspapers and also to attend the Russian
conference at Prinkipo. He described his experiences in a book entitled "Martial Adventures of Henry and Me." The Henry was Henry J. Allen, a bosom companion who later became governor of Kansas and United States senator.
Though usually in the Republican ranks, White sometimes broke with his party. In 1912, he resigned as Republican national committee-man to support Theodore Roosevelt and the Bull Moose Party.
In 1924, White again broke with his party to make his only race for office, an independent campaign for governor in protest against the Ku Klux Klan. Without organization or expenditure White conducted a campaign of ridicule. "They'd call it Klansas," he shouted and termed klansmen "shirt tail rangers." White was defeated but polled 150,000 votes and broke the grip of the klan on the state.
Among his prejudices White included prohibition, which was a reform peculiar to Kansas, cradle of temperance. He resigned his position as editor of Judge, humorous publication, which he had held for several years, when the owner decided to fight prohibition. "I am a confirmed prohibitionist," he said in explaining his resignation. "We agree about everything except light wines and beer. Now, these things are no more important to my happiness than stewed prunes and vinegar. So I obeyed the impulse and quit."
Placed upon the famous "black list" of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1928 by Mrs. Alfred J. Brosseau, president-general, White retreated "Mrs. Brosseau is a lovely lady with many beautiful qualities of heart and mind but in her enthusiasm she has allowed several lengths of Ku Klux nightie to show under her red, white and blue."
In 1924, he was elected head of the League of Nations Association for Kansas. In 1925, he attended the Institute of Pacific Relations at Honolulu. In 1927, he was judge in a $25,000 Woodrow Wilson essay contest. In 1930, he was a member of a five-man commission sent by President Herbert Hoover to investigate unrest in Haiti. The following year he was a member of the President's unemployment committee.
For 16 years he has been a member of the board of directors on the Rockefeller Foundation. He was one of the founders of the Roosevelt Memorial association and also of the Woolrow Wilson foundation. He was member of the Author's League and of the National Institute of Arts and Letters; a director of the National Association for the Protection of Colored People and of the Walter Edge foundation; and with Elihu Root, former President Taft, and Charles Evans Hughes was founder and director of the National Short Ballot association.
The Whites' only son, William L. White, went to work on the Gazette after graduation from Harvard in 1924 at the age of 24. A daughter, Mary, died in 1921. Five years later the parents gave Emporia a 50-acre park as a memorial with the stipulation that the name of White never be used in its connection. It was named Peter Pan Park.
In 1922, White won the Pulitzer editorial prize on "To an Anxious Friend." This editorial was addressed to Govenor Allen, and was a monumental defense of "free speech."
In 1934, he was awarded the Theodore Rosevelt Memorial Association medal on which was inscribed on one side, "For Distinguished Service," and on the other side, "If I Must Choose Between Righteousness and Peace, I Choose Righteousness."
Official University Bulletin
Vol. 35 Thursday, February 10, 1928 No. 91
COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: The Cosmopolitan Club will meet Friday evening, Feb. 11, at 8 o'clock in the Unitarian Church. Isumi Tashima will have charge of the program.-Louise Yeamans. Secretary.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITTMENT to the freshman students wishing to become candidates for Freshman Stock. Students should send in applications to the K-U athletic office on or before Feb. 12, 1958, in care of James Gillispie, Esq.
MATHEMATICS CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Mathematics Club. There will be 30 members in Administration building. P. U. G. Mitchell will speak on "Mathematics for the Millions." Refreshment rooms. Visitors are welcome.-Charles E. Rickert, President
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economies Club will have initiation services and a wafer supper at 4:15 this afternoon at the Home Management house. —Dorothy Hoak, Secretary.
MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: Because of the Bail-Ruse the meeting will be held at a $t$ clock Monday evening, Feb. 14, in the Pine room—Moe Ettenson, Secretary.
IMPROVEMENT OF READING: Students interacted in the improvement of reading program a few weeks earlier.
KFKU ANNOUNCER TRYOUS: Announce tryouts will be held at the studio at 4:30. All interested should leave their names and addresses at Mr. Ingham, Program Director, in advance. H-G. Ingham, Program Director
NEW ADDRESSES FOR DIRECTORY SUPPLIE-
MENT. Students who changed addresses between se-
mesters must report the new address to its istrar's office at once so that the corrections may appear in the directory supplement—G. Oster, F. Oyster.
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Phil Delta Kappa will meet with the College of Education Training School, Lee H. Lee students will discuss the program at Antioch College. The meeting will adjourn in time for the Lecture Course number in Hochschule.
STUDENT FORUM BOARD: There will be a meeting of the Student Forum Board in the Pine room at 3:30 this afternoon—Dean Moorhead, Chairman.
Scientist Sees Something Superbin Study of Salamanders
By Bob Beeler, c'40 What's a salamander?
W. S.G.A.: There will be a meeting at 7 o'clock this evening—Borst Stockwell, President.
Students who can remember when they played in the mud—if they really played in the mud conscientiously—are able to remember those harmless little yellow-gray-sploched mud-puppies or water dogs they used to find around ponds and creeks. Ouer creatures—they combine the soft coolness of a frog with the shape of a lizard. Later on the high school biology teacher said that they were sandalmakers.
Dr. E H. Taylor, professor of zoology, has been collecting and studying salamanders for years. Not just plain salamanders, but Mexican salamanders—and Mexican salamanders are unusual. With the exception of last summer Doctor Taylor has made a trip to Mexico every year since 1952. Now he is investigating one thousand specimens in his collection, and 40 species. Next summer he will again go after salamanders.
Taylor To Name Harvard Collection
He has found most of his specimens in mountainous regions where the elevation is from eight to fifteen thousand feet. In Mexico, which has a monopoly on producing unusual varieties of salamanders, there are four of these high regions. Doctor Taylor will try to gather some from all of them. He travels as far as he is able in an automobile and finishes by horse and on foot.
Harvard has recently sent Doctor Taylor its collection of Mexican salamanders. In the collection is the largest species known, slightly less than one foot long. It has never been named. Doctor Taylor will describe and name it, together with two other species that live in the smallest of the salamanders is about two inches from its nose to the end of its tail.
Unlike the drab little creatures which live in the Kaw valley, most of the Mexican species have brilliant colors usually orange or red, on their backs.
Some salamanders which live entirely on land have fully webbed feet, and other kinds living solely in the water have no webs at all between their toes.
Only Adult Axolotl Found
Most noted of Mexican salamanders is the axolotl. Scientists have long been interested in it because when left to itself it never grows up. When taken to a laboratory it develops like any normal salamander should, but in Mexico eggs are laid and the creatures die without ever having reached adult salamander. In its larval stage, which corresponds to the tadpole stage of the adult snail, they live like an adult fish with large fins. During his last summer in Mexico Doctor Taylor found the only adult Mexican axolotl ever discovered in its natural habitat.
Another species looks like a fat earthworm, with tiny legs. Still another has no legs at all, and a tail only half as long as the body is thick. Many are stratified according to varieties, and each seems to prefer its own individual altitude. Some may be plentiful at 8,000 to 10,000 feet, which are never found higher, while another kind may prefer to be found in a higher class, never coming below 10,000 feet.
Some of the animals live only in bromeliads, plants of a cabbage-like appearance, which in turn live in trees.
Occasionally Doctor Taylor has the Indians help him collect, but cannot depend on them and takes most of his trips by himself. "People travel faster when they are alone," he observes.
The finance committee of the YW, C.A. is starting a finance drive. The chairman, Ruth Olive Brown, c'40, has divided 30 women into three teams for the drive. There will be competition among the women as well as the teams, to see who brings in the most money. The drive will be conducted among students and townpeople.
Y. W.C.A. Committee Starts Drive
Mitchell To Speak in Nebraska
Mitchell To Speak in Nebraska
Prof. U. G. Mitchell has accepted an invitation to speak at the Nebraska section of the Mathematical Association of America which convenes at Hastings College, Hastings, Neb. May 2.
Haywire-greater in a girls' school. The girls lose nothing by not rubbing shoulders with men. They work when they work and play when they play," says Mrs. Vivienne B. Breckman, a student at Biola College for girls. She is a contends that private schools for girls prepare them better for mat-
Continued from page 1
rimyton than do coed institutions,
We watched a jeweler polaugh across
diamond one time, and the more
he rubbed the shoulders the tall works and
no one to play with makes jill a dull girl, w'd say.
For the benefit of those poor individuals who are now in the process of seeing figures and Ns, Ys, Ks we offer the following algebra we offer this little prayer:
My algebra 'tis of thee,
Short cut to lunacy.
Of these we rave.
Another month or so
Oh. Will I know?
Will send me straight below
Oh, Algebra.
Student Life.
VARSITY DANCE
With the---
NEWEST
SWINGIEST
SWEETEST
K.U. DANCE-BAND AGGREGATION
Clyde Bysom
FEATURING:
Barbara Edmonds, Songstress
Lee Hacker, Directing
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
FRIDAY NITE
Admission - 75c
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The University Daily Kansan
DAILY PAPER
"BY UNITED PRESS"
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1988
PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Here on the Hill
an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETTIERON, c'aj0, Society Editor
Before I am, KU 3; after I am, KU 29-K
~
Sigma Alpha Mu announces the pledging of Nathan Brown, c38, and Morris D. Kaplan, e38.
The Gamma Phi Beta alumne association will entertain with a tet in honor of the sorority's pledges to serve the community at the home of Mrs. W, W. Hutson, J.
Mrs. Richard R. Rutledge of Tulsa, Okla., president of the southwestern province of Alpha Chi Omega, is visiting the local chapter.
Sigma Nu will entertain with a buffet supper this evening.
The Rev. Joseph F. King, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, was a dinner guest last night for Alpha Gamma Doria sorority host.
Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity entertained guests and members of the department of electrical engineering at its annual spring smoker Tuesday night.
Guests present were:
S. A. Solentale, Topkaka
B. M. Bishop, Lawrence
Dean Ivan C. Crawford
Prof. R. W. Warmer
Prof. R. M. Pringham
Wayne Bruntin, c40
John Bilderack, c41
George B. Luper, c41
Weekend guests at the Alphar
Gamma Delta house were:
Margarete Weber, Kansas City, Kan.
Franceshn Hamilton, Kansas City, Kan.
O. M. Irush, Kansas City, Kan.
Margaret Callahman, Kansas City, Kan.
Margaret Callahman, Kansas City, Kan.
Prof. R. H. Wheeler was a dinner guest of the Delta Tau Declaration Tuesday night. Following the dinner he spoke to the members on "The Correct Status of Religion and Allied Topics."
WREN To Broadcast Town Meeting of the Air
"Wages, Prices and Recovery" will be the subject of America's Town Meeting of the Air, to be broadcast on Sunday, Feb. 17, from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m.
O. M. W. Sprague, professor of banking and finance at Harvard University, will speak from the conservative point of view; and Paul Ullman, professor of economics at the University of Chicago, will discuss the liberal point of view.
WREN Broadcasts From Dances
Schwegler To Speak
Station WREN, Lawrence, is broadcasting the music of Hill orchestra from fraternity parties and varuity dances. Broadcasts Friday through IHI pan., and the Saturday night programs are heard at 11:30 o'clock.
Women Hold Tea
Dean R. A. Schlegel, of the School of Education, will broadcast over station KFKU at 6 o'clock this evening.
W. S.G.A. and Y.W.C.A. held a tea yesterday afternoon in the louge of Frank强华 hall, honoree young students of the University.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER.
DAVID E. PARTRIDGI
MEMBER
1 KANSASD
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-IN-CHEF ...TOM A. ELLIS
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MARTIN BENTSON AND
DON W. AUCHNER
FIGURE EDITOR KENNY LEWY
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOEBEL
CAMPUS EDITORS BILT YEHLE, GIO CLAREN
NEW'S EDITORS JOHN WATSON
DOROTHY NEHEJERON
SHOWS EDITOR ELON TORNEIS
MAKEUP EDITOR MARY JAMES AND
REWRITE EDITOR DICK MARTIN
TELLEGRAPH EDITOR HARRY HILL
SUNDAY EDITOR JANE FLOOD
1937 Member 1938
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Entered as second-class matter, Sept. 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Following the dinner of the Zoology Club Tuesday. 20 new members were initiated. They are:
Twenty New Members Initiated Into Zoology Club
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc.
Anna Kiehl, c: 29; Ruth Olive Brown, c: 41; Edna Moe McConnell, c: 39; Elizabeth Newland, c: 41; Nancy Wahl, c: 40; Nancy Fleming, c: 41; Mable Savage, c: 40; Glemsy Fichl, c: 41; Thomas W. Crichfield, c: 41; Chester E. Moore, c: 41; Leroy Curler, c: 41; Joe Then, c: 40; John Arthur, c: 41; Henry Noller, c: 41; William Hammons, c: 41; William Mize, c: 18; Hugh Black, Conrad Coulm, c: 41; Clifford Banks, c: 40.
House Adopts Report On Crop Control Bill
Washington, Feb. 9—(UOP)—Acting under a "gag" rule which limited debate and squelched the opposition, the house tonight adopted the conference report on President Roosevelt's all-weather crop control bill and sent it to the senate for final action. The vote was 263 to 125.
Approved endured a bitter floor fight in which Western blocs and Republics chased they were not allowed sufficient discussion on the measure
Breakdown of the vote disclosed 243 Democrats, 14 Republicans, 5 Farm-Laborists and 1 Progressive voted for the conference report, while 5 Democrat, 7 Republicans and 7 Progressives opposed it.
Mt. Wilson Observatory Will Photograph Sky
San Jose, Calif., Feb. 9. —(UAP)
A photographic mapping of the entire sky, which will take 50 years to complete, soon will be undertaken at the Jack Observatory on Mount Wilson.
The observatory, assistant director, has revealed.
The project has been made possible by the donation of $85,000, which will be used in the construction of the camera. The instrument will have a 20-inch lens.
The carrying out of the 50-year program will make possible the measurement of the rotation of the entire stellar universe.
Former Student Wins Newspaper Aviation Trophy
Deven Francis, '24, national aviation editor of the Associated Press, has been selected winner of the annual newspaper aviation trophy of Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc. The large silver trophy will be presented to him today in Washington, D.C., as an assistant secretary of commerce. With the trophy a cash award of $250 was given.
The trophy is awarded "to the American newspaperman who consistently develops the best informed writing in the dissemination of information concerning air transportation, its development and progress."
Francis was a journalism student when at the University and worked for three years as secretary in the K. U. News Bureau. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Nationalism fraternity, and Pi Siigma Alpha, national political science fraternity.
Graduate Accepts Position
Burle Wobker, a graduate in chemical engineering last semester, has accepted a position with the Phillips Petroleum company, Kansas City, John Shaw, who also was a graduate in chemical engineering last semester, has received an offer from the same company but has not yet en-
Civil Service Announces Positions Newly Opened
The United States Civil Servic Commission has announced ope competitive examinations for the following positions:
Physiotherapy side, $1,800 a year U.S. Public Health Service, and Veterans' Administration.
Senior scientist aid (preparator in pathology). $2,000 a year. Army Medical Museum
Printer-proofreader, $1.32 an hour (40-hour week). Government Printing Office.
Full information may,be obtained at the Lawrence post office.
Belfast, Northern Ireland, Feb. 9.—(UP)-Rip between Nationalists, Laborites, and Republicans broke out tonight when the polls closed after an election in which pro-British adherents appeared to have won a victory over the Eamon de Valera appeal for a merger of Northern Ireland and Fire, the former Free Slate.
Riots Break Out at Polls After Election in Ireland
"Spring Swing," Sigma Delta Chi-sponsored musical revue to be presented April 5 and 6 in Fraser theater, starred rehearsals on the opening chorus last evening in the Memorial University ballroom amidst kick-off music. The event featured music, and ceremony's flashing flashback.
Lynch Hacker, fa'uncl, musical director, played the snappy tunes written by Bill Miesner, c38, Lewis Copeland, fa 40, and Douglas Tarbet, fa 40, as the chorus girls tried the first steps.
Jayne Coats, c39, who, with Elizabeth Dunbel, is co-director of dancing in the revue, put her dance chorus through its first places in learning the tricky steps which have been devised, while interested faces peered from the windows of the 'line room.
In "Spring Swing" the opening chorus paves the way for the numbers which follow. The girls, selected after tryouts, sing and dance the chorus. The words carry the listener through a little narrative which tells that Mendelsohn wrote a song to spring, but it doesn't swing and in spring, swings' the thing, so you wake up and start to sing. And we'll (the girls) show how you to swing in the spring.
Musical Revue Features Co-eds In 'Spring Swing
Regular rehearsals will be held until the time comes for more intensive practice a few days before the show.
Philadelphia—(UP) —The piggy hipopotamus and the giraffe-necked, zebra-striped okapi will be the next objects of an African safari, according to Mrs. Our Johnson, and a widow of Martin Johnson.
Mrs. Johnson to Africa In Search of Tiny Hippo
"Among the as yet unphotographed animals in Africa are the hippo and the okapi, and when I go back to Africa next year on another movie trip, I'm going to get them — on cellulid," said Mrs. Johnson when she came here for a lecture recently.
Graduate Visits Campus
Cecil Miller, a graduate of the University in 1930, recently visited the Campus. Mr. Miller is completeness. Dr. D. at the University of California.
HE SEES WHO BUYS WHAT TOBACCO
WILLIAM D. (BILL) WHITLEY sold over 15 million pounds of tobacco last year. It's easy to see that he's an expert who knows tobacco.
Like so many other independent experts, Bill Whitley, Tobacco Auctioneer of Henderson,N.C., smokes Luckies
So it's important to you when he says..."At 14 different markets in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky, I've seen Luckies buy the best tobacco. I figure it's good tobacco that makes a good smoke. So my own cigarette is Lucky Strike!
14 So see good own "I not co smoke sh pe sive toge tobac
Mr. Whitley is correct. For sworn records show that, among independent tobacco experts, Luckies have twice as many exclusive smokers as have all other cigarettes put together. Remember: The men who know tobacco best smoke Luckies 2 to 1.
"I've noticed, too, that independent buyers, not connected with any cigarette manufacturer, smoke Luckies more than any other brand."
LUCKY
STRIKE
HAVE YOU HEARD "THE CHANT OF THE TOBACCO AUCTIONER" ON THE RADIO?
LUCKY STRIKE Sworn Records Show That... WITH MEN WHO KNOW TOBACCO BEST-IT'S LUCKIES 2 TO1
When you use do, remember that luckies use the finest tobacco. And also that the "Floating" process removes certain germs. But luckies are kind to you throat.
?
'International Trade' Is Subject for Broadcast
The current issue of Editor and Publisher reports the change as follows:
Yesterday was Kansas Day, according to the Editor and Publisher magazine. Gov. Charles Robinson, the first Governor of Kansas, was defeated by Democrat John Kasich, although Kansas officially became a state by act of legislature on Jan. 29.
Kansas Day Celebrated Too Early. Savs Magazine
Graduates Secure Positions
Don Putney and Lawrence C. Milla finished the work for the degree of bachelor of science in business. Mr. Putney is now employed at Black, Sivals and Bryson Tank company. Mr. Milla is employed at the ticket office of the Union Park and Greyhound lines in Lawrence.
"In International Trade a Path for Our Prosperity?" will be the question under discussion during the Paths to Prosperity broadcast over station WREN at 6 p.m. Sunday. Nationally-known business leaders will participate in the discussion, which will be presented in co-operation with the Economic Policy Committee. Edward Tomlinson, authority on international affairs, will direct the
"His newspaper campaign for a change at that time came to naught, but recently the Kansas Day society officially changed the date and it will be celebrated Feb. 9 for the first time this year."
"Forty years ago David D. Leahy, then managing editor of the Wichita Eagle, declared that 'Kansas Day' was being celebrated on the wrong day, contending it should be Feb. 9, anniversary of the first inauguration of a Kansas Governor (Charles Robinson), rather than Jan. 29.
FOR BREAKFAST
2 Eggs with Toast, Jelly and Coffee...
20c
1 Egg with Bacon or Smoked Ham, Toast, Jelly and Coffee--and Bandits Singing Their Way to Glory!
Nino Martini - Leo Carillo
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-basement Memorial Union
Choice Seats' Now!
HOCH
AUD.
MON.EVE.
Feb. 14
at 8:20
S. HUROK presents Col. W. DeBasil's
Col. W. DeBash's
BALLET
RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
Weakened Ranks Rumored in China
Ballet
SE
Carlo
VARSITY
Home of the Jayhawk
and
Shanghai, Feb. 10 (Thursday)—UP—Chinese and Japanese troop fought on three central and northern fronts while behind the line there were rumors that dissection was going to begin. That a break had developed between the Chinese Communists and the Kuomintang party and that the Chi-
Presented by
Till 10c Then 7 15c
SONJA HENIE "One in a Million"
Queen of the ice---
Queen of the screen--and Bandits Singing Their Way to Glory!
Nino Martini - Leo Carillo
Ritz Brothers - Don Ameche
THE WORLD'S
Frightened Men'
DANCE ENSEMBLE!
Walter Connelly - Lional Stander
GREATEST, LARGEST.
"County Fair"
MOST ENTRANCING
Tomorrow - Saturday
NERO WOLFF
Unleashes a Tornado of
Terror and Thrills
'League of
"Gay Desperado"
SUNDAY
Continuous from 2
DON AMECHE
ANN SOTHERN
New Ballet Creation which had World Premiere at London Coronation Season last summer
Program----
"THE HUNDRED KISSES"
"GODS GO A-BEGGING"
"50 Roads to Town"
`ALL AMERICAN SWEETHEART`
AUSPICES UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE
Tickets:
"AURORA'S WEDDING"
These These Great Bollets will not be duplicated in programs given elsewhere in this territory.
Seats Now at:
Seats Now at:
Fine Arts Office
Bell's Music Store
Round Corner Drug Store
$2.00, $1.50, $1.00,
75c and 50c
Gangsters Subsidize College Athletes'
Lawrence's Only Modern Theatre
GRANADA
Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 25c 'til 7
TODAY ENDS SATURDAY
A Gay Volcanic Romance With a Laugh for Every Heart Kick
This Girl knew All the Old Ways and invented a Few New Ways of Her Own.
SUNDAY
Radio City Inspired It! It Sets the Pace for Rhythm Shows of 1938!
HOLD EVERYTHING For the Big Show!
MIRIAM HOPKINS
RAY MILLAND
IN
WISE GIRL
WITH WALTER ABEL
HENRY STEPHenson
BOB BURNS
JACK OAKIE
KENNY BAKER
Women Have a Way of Getting What They Want!
nese government was seeking mediation by Britain.
The peace rumors followed a visit of the three Söder sisters, finance minister H. H. Kung and former finance minister T. V. Soong, to the house where Kung Tuesday night dined with Governor C. A. S. Northeast.
Tokyo already has announced that under Chiang Kai-shek the question of mediation does not arise.
PATEE
Week 10c Til 7
Days Then 15c
NOW!
ENDS
SATURDAY
Use Kansan Classified Ads.
GENE AUTRY
With the
'NEW FACES OF 1937'
AND
OUR BIGGEST TREAT
From the Heart of the West Into the Heart of the World!
With the "HILLBILLY BAND"
"OLD BARN DANCE"
The Biggest Novelty Attraction Ever Shown on the Silver Screen NEW EAGLES OF 1927
JOE PENNER
PARKYAKARKUS
Zorro Rides Again
Porky Cartoon
DICKINSON
The Students Choice
Shows 3-7-9
25c 'til 7
TODAY
ENDS
SATURDAY
Artelph Zucker presents
MAE WEST
for "EVERY DAY'S
A HOLIDAY"
A Paramount Picture
EDMUND LOWE
CHARLES
BUTTERWORTH • WINNINGER
WAITER CATLETT • LLOYD NOLAN
HERMAN BING • CHESTER CONKLIN
and LOUIS ARMSTRONG
SUNDAY!
It's Stupendous! It's Gigantic!
It's Tremendous! It's Titonic!
Addison Lake presents W.C. Fields
The BIG
BROADCAST
OF 1938*
A Paramount Films
Dorothy Lamour - Martha Raye
Ben Blue - Shep Fields and his
Rippling Rhythm
PAGE FOUR
.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1938
2
First Swim Meet Will Be Saturday
Huskers To Bring Team Of Seven To Compete Against Jaghawk Tank Performers
Richard Hagelin, Nebraska swim
mind coach, will bring a squad o
seven here Saturday for the first
swimming meet of the season, to
be held at 2.30 p.m. in the Robinson
gymnasium pool.
Herbert Allphin, coach of the Kansas team, has about decided upon his entries for the various events, but may make a change or two before the meet. Following is the probable entry list:
300-yard medley-Kansas: Harry Brown, Beeler, and Ray Richardson. Nebraska: Davidson, Smith and Leask.
220-yard freestyle—Kansas: Feaster and Nowosinke; Nebraska: Spicer and Furr.
50-yard freestyle—Kansas: Jones and Ritchie; Nebraska: Younger.
and Navy, Nebraska, Younger.
Diving—Kansas: White and Stipp
Nebraska: Leask and Younger.
100-yard freestyle—Kansas: Fisher and Mitchell; Nebraska; Spicey.
150 - yard backstroke — Kansas Ritchie and Newosinske; Nebraska Lake and Davidson.
200-yard breast stroke — Kansas Brown and Beeler; Nebraska; Smith.
440-yard freestyle—Kansas: Fisher and Feaster or Campbell; Nebraska Furr.
400-yard freestyle relay—Kansas Ritchie, Horton, Jones and Mitchell Nebraska: Leak, Spicer, Younger and Lake.
To Stop Unexcused Cuts
Pittsburg Teachers
Pittsburg, Feb. 9. - A new method of dealing with unexplained absences of students will be put into effect at K.S.T.C. here this semester, Dean G.W. Trout has announced. The new teacher will receive a fee of students and faculty members
In the future, if a student acquires unexcused absences in a course exceeding the number of credit hours for that course, he automatically becomes subject to discipline by the board of deans and, after a hearing, may be dropped from the course with a grade of "F."
Sigley To Speak at Colloquium
Prof. D. T. Sigley of the University of Kansas City will speak on "Enumeration of Groups Whose Orders Are the Product of Distinct Prime Factors". at a meeting of the Mathematics Colloquium Thursday, Feb. 17, at 4:30 p.m., in room 203, Frank强 hall.
Initiates New Members
Several new members will be initiated into the Home Economics Club at 4:15 today in the Home Management will be given in their honor.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
The 1200 Tenn. cage club easily conquered the Rumold five to 38 in the iner of last night's intramural basketball program. In another game scheduled for last month, the Bulldogs forfeited to the Blanks.
--g ft
WFryy, f 1
RVfd, f 2
RVfd'v, f 3
Mosser, g 4
McCabe, g 5
Baker ... 0
In late games Tuesday night the Jaybirds outclassed the K.E.K. hoopmen 31 to 18, Westmisters nosed out the Tauta Tret 24 to 18, Delts squeezed over a 25-23 victory over the D.T.D. men.
Yellowball
The Phi Delt volleyball team hung a 2 to 0 deficit on the A.T.O.'s, and Delt Chi had little trouble in turn- batting the Holl Bounds 2 to 0 last mug.
Sigma Chi trounced D.T.D. in two straight games and the D.U. team duplicated the foot by trimming the feets two straight Tuesday evening.
Wednesday night's game:
1200 Tenn. (38) Rumolds (23)
Allen, f gtt 1
Allen, f ... 0 10
Maier, f 2 2 30
Wastirc h, c 2 4 30
Petersen, g 3 2 10
Peter's, g 3 2 10
Raup, g 3 2 10
11 1 11
Tuesday night's games:
Javids (32) K.E.K. (19)
Hansell, f 11
Kimney, f 2
Lindsey, c 111
Naf, g 10
Pai, n 6
Cook, 0 00
Sutton, 0 00
Kitten, 0 00
g ft
R.Gr'b' f r 0
Mekale f 3 01
Crouch, c 1 01
Clarke, g 1 12
Horrell g 1 22
W'stminst'r. (24)
w Storms g f 1t
Close, f 2 1
Reeke, k 2 1
h nthng m 2 1
m rn! re g 1 3
Zamming 0 0 0
Theta Tau (18)
Official: Greene PhiD.T. (25)
g f 11
Sifers, f .. 0 t 1
Ch'mbrs, f 2 10
Bunsen, c 2 41
Trotter, g 4 01
VnClev, u 0 00
Cluster, f 4 0 1
Brooke, f 2 0 3
M'M'rennc n.1 2
Louden, g 2 0 0
Blackg, g 1 0 1
1053
Official: Thompson.
11 1 6
The Sun Still Sets
In Onvet
Detroit, Feb. 9. - (UP) The day's news from Olivet at报业 by the United Press "string" correspondent:
"Olivet, Mich., Feb. 9—In keeping with the tradition and the present liveliness of the village, another day in the routine of the villagers and Olivet college has come with merely the rising and setting of the sun."
Rev. Jones To Sneak
The Rev. H. Lee Jones will discuss the educational program of Antioch College at the Phi Delta Kappa meeting in the study hall at Oread Training School at 7 o'clock th is evening. The meeting will adjourn in time for the lecture course number in Hoch auditorium.
One of the greatest collections of freshman track talent in the history of the University will boost the Jay-hawker chances for another Big Six sider title within the next year or two. A great array of state high school and junior college champions are turning out for the spring track session.
Jack Buckman, high former Argentine High School high-jumping ace and state record holder of 6 feet, $5/\text{lb}$ for the jump. Pick the list of outstanding freshmen.
Glem Fey, brother of Lloyd Foy
a former Kansas sprinter; Dick Dricall,
Darrel Mathis, Herb Williams
and Bill Green are a few more
impressive first-year sprinterers reporting
to Coach Hargiss.
Leading a fast group of 440-yard dash men is Chet Cox, state junior college record holder in the event. Dick Ash, second-place winner in the state high school meet, and Chris Hogan also look impressive in the marathon.
Chet Cox Leads 440-Yard Dash
Julio Bond, state junior college record-holder in the 890-yard run, and Don Thompson appear to be the class of the yearlings in the half-
In the mile run Ray Harris, Missouri junior college champ, and Bob Einarson, New Jersey interscholastic star, offer great potential.
Frosh Track Material Is Exceptional
4iller Also Stars on Track
Ralph Miller of basketball fame ranks high in the hurdle races. He established a new Kansas interscholastic record in the 220-yard low hurdles. Miller also placed second in the pole vault in the state meet. Bill Bein, a former Wichita High School player, begins to be a promising nole vaulter.
Phone K.U. 66
William Bunse, a husky young fellow from Shawnee Mission, captured first in the shot and the discus at the state meet. Ted Kiney, a man of equal ability in the weights, was runner-up to Bunsen in both events. William Jack and John Burge also show considerable promise with the shot. These men will bolster the ranks of the field men. Herbert Hartman and Ronald Shaake look strong in the discus and Kenneth Wilson rates high in the broad jump. Wilson is also a former state champion, winning the broad jump a year ago last spring.
State High School and
Junior College T r a c k
Record Holders H e a d
Yearling Squad
Roosevelt To Ask Relief Aid
CLASSIFIED ADS
Washington, Feb. 9.—(UF)–President Roosevelt will ask congress tomorrow for an additional 250 million dollars to finance relief costs, swollen by the business recession, to finance the new fiscal year beginning July 1, administration leaders reported tonight.
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
with an f4.5 uses motion picture film
HIXON STUDIO Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
THE ARGUS
$12.50
WANTED: Used (30-40) Krag rifles,
model 1838. Action and stock in good
shape, barbed condition immaculata. Abu S.
Sha'b' model Model 75. Call Ppil phone
1414.
BOYS: Two quiet, studious roommates wanted. Double rooms, one twin beds. $8.10 and $8.00, Campus House. 1243 Oread. -32
FOUND: Small "Tucktite" handbag mean Fraser hall. Call at Kanan Office and identify.
-92
"Candid Camerooning . . It's the roge."
Phone K.U. 66
New Rackets, Balls
Soft Bats, Bats
RUTTER'S SHOP
TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG
Collects Bottle Cans
Billy has at least a thousand varieties of caps in his unusual collection, classified in some 1,500 boxes.
3 garments for $1.25
GRAND CLEANERS
Candid Camera-Ily Speaking
RELIABLE CLEANING
FOUND: New pair of ladier knit wool mittens in Snow hall. Identify and pay for ad at Kansas Office. -91
Charles City, Iowa.—(UPI)—Fourteen-year-old Billy Smith's collection of 150,000 bottle caps is so large that his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Smith, have had to turn over their double garage to him.
GIFTS FOR YOUR VALENTINE
SHAMPOO and 25e WAVE, Dried Oil - Driff - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried, 50c End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass. Phone 2353
I V A S
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanence $1.50 up
Phone 533 941½ Mass. St.
Guaranteed
LOST: "Rainfair" brown gibbardine cost
return for return. Call Ralph Elson
1247. Ohio, phone 3125. -9;
Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliver
Bottle caps from virtually every state in the union are included in the collection. There also are specimens from Canada, Canada, Bermuda and Ireland.
In his six years at Princeton, Crisler's football teams won 35 games, lost 19 and tied 5. He turned two undefeated elevenes in-1933 and in 1935. He also was head basketball coach from 1932 to 1934.
FOR RENT: Apartment; also sleepin
room. Clean, comfortable, well furnished
large cloesth room. Plenty of hot water
Kiara closet. Roommate. Phone 2867
1340 Vermont
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
@20 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
Frank Lamm, b38, who is in charge of the tournament, says that there should be some good matches today, since Malcolm Black, c'unel, was intramural champion at Stanford University, and Clint Wood, b'unel, was the ping pong champion at the New Mexico Military Institute. Two men will be chosen from the players in the tournament to fill vacancies left in the Kansas ping team.
It is reported that three new ping pong paddles have been purchased for the recreation room out of the entrance fees from the contestants.
DUNAKIN CLUB
IVA'S
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50
6 Breakfasts, 50c
Princeton Feb. 8—(IP)–Fritz Crissler, head football coach at Princeton University tonight confirmed reports he had resigned his position here to take the coaching job at the University of Michigan left vacant by resignation of Harry Kinke.
Crisler, a graduate of the University of Chicago, came to Princeton after two years as head coach at the University of Minnesota. In 1935, his contract was renewed for a five-year term and still had two seasons to go.
When Crisler was graduated in 1922, he was named assistant to Alonzo Stagg, who was director of athletics and head football coach at Chicago. He resigned to become Minnesota's athletic director and go into the head coaching business for himself.
Peggy Lynch, 'c39, who recently underwent an appendix operation, was released from the hospital yesterday.
Suits Taxes Dresses Hats 50c
1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas
The semi-finals will be played this afternoon and it is hoped that the finals can be played tonight, but since some of the contestants arrived late afternoon, it is possible that the finals will be held over until Friday.
Name Fritz Crisler Coach at Michigan U.
Hospital Releases Student
Fishback--One to a Customer. $2.50
Teasdale--Love Songs. $1.75
Frost--A Further Range. $2.50, 1st. ed.
Gibran--The Prophet. $2.50
Dowman--Pound Drink. $9c
Robert Browning--Poems and Prose. $1.25
Complete Works of Lewis Carroll. $1.25
Milley--Poems Selected for Young People. $2.50
Oxford Books of Verse: French, German, Spanish and
English. $3.99
Buck—This Proud Heart. $2.50
Crinon—The Citadel. $2.50
Wilkins—And So, Victoria. $2.50
Sinclair Lewis—Prodigal Parents. $2.50
Roberts—Northwest Passage. $2.75
Woolcott's Second Reader. $3.00
The first match in the first round of the annual winter ping pong tournament was played yesterday afternoon in the recreation room on the Memorial Union building. C. B. Gillingham, e uncle, and Jack Knight b'38, participated in the match. Gillingham won two out of three games during the match. The first and 21-14 in the third. Knight won the second game by the count of 21-19. More of the first-round results will be obtainable today.
VALENTINE Suggestions
This Proud Heart $2.50
Fishback—One to a Customer. $2.50
Burns Mantle—Best Plays $3.00
Crowd —400 Million Customers $3.00
Isc—Sod and Stubble $1.48
DEEFRANDM $1.00
Gillingham Wins Ping Pong Opener
FEBRUARY 14
Come in and see them. We already wrap for Mailing.
THE BOOK NOOK
Filming The Human Adventure
Qusayr ibn Salih
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
TURN BACK THE LOST PAGES OF CIVILIZATION
Dr. James H. Breasted, Director of the Oriental Institute, under whose scientific supervision "The Human Adventure" was produced.
TONIGHT!
The HUMAN ADVENTURE
Eight superb reols of talking pictures reveal the glories of ancient Man. Visit by airplane eight of the permanent expeditions of the Oriental Institute. See archeologists discovering and re-creating the Past.
See the Beauties of Persipolis. ancient capital of the Persian Empire, built by Darius the Great. Remember, there has never been a picture like this. It is authentic, scientific, educational and thrillingly entertaining.
HOCH AUDITORIUM
8:30 p.m.
Identification Cards Admit
Others 25c plus tax
--athletes may, in off-season, dress for gym workouts.
Frosh Basketball Dressing Room Nears Completion
The freshman basketball dressing room, authorized by the athletic board at one of its December meetings, is nearing completion. The room is located in the basement of the gymnasium where the handball courts used to be. Work was started during the Christmas holidays, but application of the final touches has been delayed.
One room, as large as a handball court, will be the dressing room for the team members, and the rest of the space has been divided into a store room, and a smaller entry room in which football men and other
Freshman football and track teams have for some time had their quarters in the stadium, but the varsity basketball room in the gym was too crowded. Also, they were forced to dress in the general dressing room.
Becomes Art Instructor
Olive Krebbel, 37, has been appointed to replace Dorothy Wilson, 36, as an art instructor in the fifth grade at the New York Grade School n Lawrence.
Miss Kribbel has been working as substitute teacher in Wichita. Miss Wilson is now an art instructor in Des Moines.
YES SIR!
Just what you
have
have been waiting for.
Final Prices on All Fall and Winter Clothes
145
89
Hart Schaffner & Marx and Varsity Town Suits. Fine Worsteds, Drape and Sport Models. Many of these suits can be worn during summer. Selling at a discount…
33 1-3%
Exceptional Value
Sizes 35 to 42 Real Values
Wool Suits selected from our regular stock.
50l. Plain and sport models.
Your shoes=...
Topcoats - Overcoat
Values $30 to $45
$2335
The finest of coats for your choice
$16^{65}
the finest of coats for your choosing
Harris Tweeds, Coverts, Luxoros - Fleeces
54
Topcoats - Overcoats
Belt Backs, Belt Around,
Balmacan Styles
$15^95
$25. $28.50. $30 values. Real Coats.
AND
AND
40 Wool Sweaters, button and slipover
67 Neckband Shirts, values to $2.50, now $1.65
87 Collar Attached Shirts, values to $2.50, $1.65
185 Collar Attached Shirts, values to $2, $1.35
14 Flannel Shirts, $5 & $6 values, now $3.65
10 Hooded Sweat Shirts, $1.50 values, $1.15
Pr. Dress Gloves, values to $3, now $1.85
88 Wool Muffiers, $1 values, 55c, 2 for $1.00
125 Silk Neckties, $1 values, 55c, 2 for $1.00
12 Leather Jackets, $8.95 values $5.95
25% discount
183 Pr. Wool Pants and Slacks 25% discount
25% discount
26 Leather Coats and Jackets 25% discount
20 Flannel & Silk Lounging Robes, 25% discount
210 Pr. Paiamas, Manhattan and Glover
25% discount
25% discount
33 All Wool Mackinaws (real values)
33 1/3 % discount
Above Prices Good As Long As We Have the Merchandise.
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHES
STOP!
(This Means You)
警報
Are you taking unnecessary chances by studying under poor light?
I-E-S Student Lamps are:
Glareless
Shadowless
Easy on the Eyes
Have even distribution of Light
Start the New Term Right . Study with an I-E-S Lamp—
Kar
DVUX NIA F
The Kansas Electric Power Company
NEW YORK CITY POST OFFICE
5
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Dean Talks On Teaching Vocation
No Place For Persons
Unable To Succeed in
Other Fields; Requires
Special Training
"Teaching is definitely not a field for people who cannot succeed in any other position," stated Dean R. A. Schwegler, head of the school of Education, in his broadcast over KFKU at 6 c'clock yesterday. He spoke on the subject "Teaching in Secondary Schools and Colleges." This was the fifth of the "Choose Your Vocation" speeches.
"Secondary schools," as defined by Dean Schwegler, "consist of the 7th to the 14th grades. Years ago people thought of a secondary school as preparatory for college work. To know University thinks of a Junior College, school giving specialized training to be continued in a higher school."
"A bachelor degree is almost a necessity," advised the School of Education head, "for a position in the grade schools, while nothing less than a masters will do if one intends to teach in a high school. Only the degree of Doctor of Philosophy is adequate for teaching in a university. Professional training as well as material of some specific study is required. A master's degree is a requirement of knowing and understanding the pupil is desirable. Usually a record of successful and productive service is needed."
There are several main requirements for a teacher, Dean Schwegeler believes, outside of training in a special field of study. A pleasing personality, robust health, no physical handicaps, and clear speech with a mastery of the English language are among the most important.
Along the financial side, revealed Dean Schlegel, the pay for a high school teacher ranges from $1,200 to $3,000 a year. A college instructor receives from $1,000 to $1,500 depending on the location of the school. Assistant professors, associate professors, and full professors are paid from $1,500 to $5,000 a年. If the school is in a rich community the salary is usually higher, but it must be remembered that living expenses will also be on a higher level.
"Teaching definitely implies responsibilities," reminded the Dean, "which every prospective teacher must possess to prepare for this sort of work."
WIRE
HAY by WIRE
--weather report: China, fair and bomby; Spain, a lot of the same; California, dew strong enough to wash out bridges; Hail, Columbia (District of); Kansas, whatever is left.
Occurrence:
Symbol: Woe.
An ambitious chemistry student down at the University of Texas has finally placed woman in the proper niche in the list of elements of this world. He submits the following findings:
Atomic weight: 120 (approximately).
2. Seldom occurs in free or natural state.
1. Can be found wherever man exists.
Physical properties:
1. All colors and sizes
2. Always appears in disguised conditions.
3. Boils at nothing and may freeze at any point.
4. Melts when properly heated.
5. Very bitter if not used correctly.
Chemical properties:
2. Great affinity for gold, silver, platinum and precious stones of any sort.
3. Able to absorb expensive food at any time.
4. Undissolved by liquids, but activity is greatly increased when saturated with spirit solution.
saturated with spirit solution.
5. Sometimes yields to pressure.
6. Turns green when placed next to a better specimen.
7. Ages rapidly. The fresh variety has greater attractions.
8. Highly dangerous and explosive in inexperienced hands.
city has greater attractions. 8. Highly dangerous and explo-
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938
We sat down last night and tried our hand at putting one of those countless Little Audrey jokes into
Continued on page 2
Malcolm Black Wins Ping Pong Tournament
Malcolm Black last night won the all-University pingpong tournament by defeating Bill Fowler, 21-8, 21-12, 21-11.
In the consolation match, Norman Coley captured third place in the tournament in winning over Frank straight games, 12-16, 21-15, 21-17.
Black gained his place in the final round by a semifinal victory over Cooley, 21-17, 21-7, 19-21, 21-7. Fowler had previously won his semifinal match with Lamm, 21-10, 14-21, 23-21, 21-19.
A field of 26 started play in the tourney which was run off yesterday and Wednesday in the Memorial Union recreation room. Two vacancies on the University pingpong team will be filled, probably from the semifinalists in the tournament. Black and Lamm, two of the top four, are the present members of the team.
'Poco' Frazier Will Lecture
First Speech in Fourth Group of Art Lectures Is Next Tuesday
Bernard "Poco" Frazier, sculptor will open the fourth annual series of art lectures at 7:30 Tue evening in Spooner-Thayer museum. His subject will be "Sculpture-a Discussion of Styles."
A new lecture will be given each Tuesday evening for a period of eight weeks, and the public is invited to attend them without charge. This series is especially for students who do not have time to enroll in classes but who wish to become acquainted with various phases of art.
Chancellor E. H. Lindley; Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women; and Norman Plummer of the department of design are new speakers on this year's course. The schedule for the lectures is as follows:
Feb. 15—Bernard Frazier,
15—Bernard Frazier,
"Sculpture—a Discussion of
Styles."
NUMBER 92
Feb. 22—Chancellor Lindley subject to be announced.
1. I - Ray m o n d Eastwood.
"What is the Difference?—
Media in Painting."
Mar. 8-J. M. Kellogg, "Art in the Open."
Mar. 15—Elizabeth Meguiar, "Furniture."
Mar. 22 - Norman Plummer,
"What Makes Pottery."
Mar. 29—George Beal, "Organic Architecture."
Apr. 5—Rosemary Ketcham, subject to be announced.
The lectures are given through the co-operation of University faculty members and the adult education department of the Lawrence 4 schools
Play Tickets Are Selling Fast
With the center section of Fraser theater sold out for Wednesday and Thursday's presentation of "Spring Dance," Dramatic Club production, Gerhart Tonn, ticket manager, yesterday predicted a record crowd for all four performances.
The ticket line began forming yesterday in the n o r t h basement of Green hall, where students may exchance activity tickets for reserved seats. Tonn and his assistant will the ticket office each day next week.
"Spring Dance" will be presented four days beginning Tuesday, Feb 15 through Friday.
Delta Tau Delta, chapter house, 12 p.m.
The production is under the direction of Rolla Nuckles.
Authorized Parties
Wesley Foundation, Ecke's hall, 11 p.m.
K. U. Press Club, Holloway hall, 12 p.m.
Friday, February 11 Limited Date
Varsity, Memorial Union ballroom, 12 p.m.
Rumors In Germany Stir Europe
Kappa Sigma, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Saturday, February 12
Rucker hall, house, 12 p.m.
Westminster Foundation,
Westminster hall, 12 p.m.
Kappa Alpha Theta, Memorial Union ballroom, 12 p.m.
ELIZAZBETH MEGUIAR,
Adviser to Women for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
London, Feb. 10.—(UP) - Europe was gripped early today by a flood of rumors which became more sensational by the hour, of a military "revolt" in Germany, the closing of the Reich's frontiers and a breakdown in Fuehrer Adolph Hitler's health.
Stories Tell of Military Revolt, Closing of Reich Frontiers, and Break In Hitler's Health
These reports were answered by a German retort of "pure nonsense." Many of them, particularly those dealing with the closing of the Belgium, Austrian and Luxemburg, frontiers, appeared to be without contact on the basis of inquiries by United Press bureau throughout Europe.
It was announced in Berlin at midnight that they were spun from thin air and that all were without confirmation.
United Press correspondents reported observing normal movements back and forth across the border.
Rumors of an uprising of German troops in Pomerania and East Prussia, most of which appeared to have been suppressed, continued to pile up, however.
The reported closing of the Belgian and Austrian frontiers was officially denied in Vienna and Brussels.
In addition to the official denials, the United Press bureau in Berlin reported that "well informed persons depreciate the rumors of garrison arrests of army officers across the frontiers, and closing of various borders."
Eight Graduates Pass Bar Exam
Eight graduates of the University successfully passed the annual midwinter bar examinations this week. Please forward to me before the supreme court Wednesday.
They are: Virgil M. McElroy
Greenburg; Darrel H. Viney, How-
ard; Donald A. Hansen; Caney; J
B. Salathiel, Independence; Charlie
D. Stough, Jr., Lawrence; E. C.Je-
ferson; and Clinton C. Oyler,
Hutchinson.
All graduates who have taken the examination in the past three and one half years have passed. There are no restrictions on who can take the examination each year.
Maxine Board Virtue, wife of John B. Virtue, assistant professor of English, was among those who passed the examination.
Richard F. Mullins, Lawrence, who took his A.B., degree at the University and law work at the University in Chicago, also passed the examination.
Kansas: Cold and partly cloudy Friday and Saturday; somewhat warmer east portion Friday.
WEATHER
The University debate team will go to Ames, Feb. 16, to debate Iowa State on the question, "Resolved: That congress should provide for a program of crop control." The Kansas debaters, John Stewart, 140, and Omer Voss, 139, will take the negative side.
Several of the debates will be held before the Agricultural Economics Club and farm bureau organizations.
By Muriel Mykland, c.39
Not more desire to indulge in intellectual cryptograms, but a sincere feeling, underlies the best poetry. So believes William Rose Benet, contemporary American poet who lectures in Fraser theater this afternoon at 3.30.
Kansas Debaters Go to Ames Next Week
Mr. Benet has for years been associated with the Saturday Review of Literature, to which he has contributed not only book reviews and essays, but a regular weekly column, dealing to a large extent with contemporary poetry. In the renascence of American poetry, just before the World War, he played a considerable part.
Patriarch Miron Christae, president of the holy syndom of the national orthodox church of Rumania accepted Carol's commission to form a new government, and announced that he had consented to join his government.
Benet Believes Poetry Must Have Sincere Feeling
Bucharest, Feb. 10.—(UP) The government of Premier Octavian Goga, whose 44 days in power spread terror among Rumania's 780,000 Jews tonight collapsed and the patriarch of the Greek orthodox church was empowered by King Carol to form a new cabinet.
The unusual procedure of going to the church hierarchy for a leader to solve a governmental crisis was resorted to by King Carol because of the bitter eunities precipitated by Goga's brief reign.
Bucharest, Feb. 11 (Friday)—(UP)—King Carol Caro indicated today that Rumania's constitution and adjusted to fit new needs.
Cabinet Falls In Roumania
The Summerfield scholars will have their fourth colloquium of the night tonight at the Colonial tea room. Charles Ward, 140, will talk on "The Reasonable Man," while John McDonnell, m'41 and c'38, will give a paper on "The Survival of the Unfittest." Prof. Olin Templein, secretary of the Endowment Association, will preside.
Carol Names Pattiarch
Christea To Form New
Cabinet
Carol accepted Goga's resignation and those of his cabinet late today and the fallen premier announced they would have no role in the government.
A new contest in extemporaneous speaking will be instituted by the department of speech and dramatic arts this spring. Martin Maloney, 37, former winner of the Missouri Valley tournament and many other forensic events, and now assistant instructor of English, is offering a prize of $10 to the best extemporaneous speaker.
A committee will meet him when he arrives on the train at 9 o'clock this morning. Miss Margaret Lynn, professor of English, will entertain him at lunch and introduce him at the lecture in the afternoon. Miss Lynn, who is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, which is sponsoring the lecture, knew Mr. Benet through the Edward McDowell colony in Maine, for creative writers, artists, and musicians.
The late Amy Lowell, Sara Teresa Dale, Vachel Lindsay, and Edwin Wilson were raised as a tutored friend. Loubis Untermeyer, chief anthologist and commentator
He will leave tonight on an 8.15 train for Denver, where he is sched_ uled to speak tomorrow.
The contest will be held Feb. 24 American politics will be the genera subject. Contestants will draw three sub-titles and be given 30 minute to prepare a seven-minute speech on one of the chosen tonics.
Speech Contest Will Be Inaugurated
Summerfields Meet for Colloquium
By Muriel Mykland, c'39
Mr. Benet's second wife, Elinor Wylie, established herself as one of the leading poets in the United States.
A province that William Rose Benet has made peculiarly his own is that of narrative poetry, exemplified by his many adaptations of the ballad, ransacking the history of the world for his material, from that of ancient Egypt and the Italian Renaissance down to fantasies of that early American outlaw, and cowboy of the old West, Jesse James.
upon American poetry—as well as being a fine poet himself—is a friend of long standing.
William Rose Benet is the elder of two brothers, his younger brother, Stephen Vincent Benet, being widely known as the author of that celebrated American epic, "John Brown's Body." Both William Rose Benet and his brother went through college at the University of Georgia graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School and the younger from Yale College.
On his father's side he comes of a family long associated with the American army. In spite of his military and scientific background, he early turned to literature. His opinion that writers tend to accumulate writers in their immediate families, seems well born out in his case, for his brother, sister, and wife are all writers in their own field.
Forum Board Sponsors Russian Film
Cameraman For March Of Time Beings 'Stalin's Russia' to Additorium Sunday Evening
Julien Bryan, March of Time rower camerman in the Far East, will present his new documentary motion picture, "Stalin's Russia," in Hoch auditorium Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
The cameraman, whose appearance is sponsored by the Student Forum board, will describe the picture personally. A version is available with sound effects and a commentator, but because of the lack of theater facilities at the University, Bear may appear in person.
Byran, who recently returned from bish six annual expedition through the Soviet Union, brought him with also the news films "Inside Nazi Germany," which created sensations throughout the country when featured in the February March of Time.
Besides the "inside" photot of Hitler's Black Shirt rule, Bryan has made three feature series for Time: the two albums and one on Japan and Manchukuo.
Shows Recent Changes
"Stalin's Russia." is a film depicting the new developments in the U.S.S.R. since Stalin became its leader. Bryan, in this picture, deals principally with industrial and sociological changes.
Recent progress in Russian industry, with shots of the plants turning out artificial rubber, electrical machinery, cameras, textiles automobiles, and ice cream, are shown. Bryan will tell of the Stakhanov movement and its effect on the workers.
He makes a complete tour in this film of what he calls "Reborn Russia." He takes the audience to the villages in the far north, to Baku with its famous oil fields, and to Batau, where the Soviet Union, ever self sufficient, is now raising that essential of Russian life, tea.
Film Makes Tour of Country
No small space is devoted to Moscow. There are photographs of the official government buildings, of the latest hits at theaters and ballets, new Moscow amusement parks and the recent fashion shows.
Bryan, upon his return from Europe, was invited by President Roosevelt to present his films and lecture at the White House. After hearing and seeing "Stalin's Russia," the President invited the camaman to return the next night to show "New Japan." Bryan returned a third consecutive night to present the picture he made in Poland .
W.S.G.A. Votes Appropriations
A pledge of $35 was made to the Russell Kelly reward fund at the regular meeting of the W.S.G.A. at the Pine room of the Memorial Hospital. This appropriation makes a total of $100 in the reward fund.
A resolution was passed to approve the recommendation of the central committee on the student activity ticket to the effect that the $275 should be received at the university to be held Feb. 25 in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building.
The point-system manager, Jeannette January, c'40, reported that as a result of a recent investigation many junior and senior women were found to have more than the specified number of activity points. The maximum number for a senior is 60; for a junior, 50. Those women having too many activities will be billed and requested to drop the amount by which they exceed the limits set up by the point system. The point system is designed to distribute honors among University women.
It was announced that Red Blackburn's orchestra had been engaged to play for the dance of the W.S.G.A. carnival, to be held Feb. 25.
Feb. 15 is the deadline for all plans for the booths for the carnival. At least 14 organizations have handed in plans for booths.
Notice to All Students
Please report all thefts to Henry Werner, Men's Student Adviser.
Keep all valuables locked up.
Report all suspicious characters to the Chief of Police.
Signed,
Henry Werner,
Men's Student Adviser
Newman Club Sponsors Dance Tomorrow Night
The Newman club will sponsor a valentine dance to be held tomorrow at 9 p.m. at the I.O.F. hall. This is the first social event of the semester to be sponsored by the Newman club.
Ed. Riley's orchestra will play, and punch will be served to all guests.
Jim Hail, president, invites everyone "to come and get acquainted."
Wiley's Band Leaves Today Concerts Scheduled a Three High Schools and Over WHB
The 92-piece University band left his morning by bus on a trip to three Kansas City, Kan. high schools where it will give concerts and broadcast over station WHB from the auditorium of the Jenkins Music Center, Mia, Mo., from 4:30 to 5 p.m. Prof. Russell L. Wiley is director of the band.
Two concerts will be given in the morning at Wyandotte High School, one at 9 and one at 10 o'clock, and one at the Argentine High School on Friday. The concert will be played at Shawnee Mission High school at 8 o'clock in the evening.
The programs will include "Introduction to Act III" from "Lohengrin" (Wagner); "Three Aces," trio for cornets (Clark), played by Robert Boyle, *Leo Horacek*, Lewis Wiser, fatuel, and *Leo Horacek*, c'41 (Curtaz), *A Glya* (Curzon), played by Richard Gage, c'30, and Bob Pine, *flai*; also a group of marches and other compositions.
Robert Hampel, e'40, d field rum major, will give a demonstration with his fire baton and Jack Dulby, to appersonate Gusto, the Magician.
Professor Wiley will leave Kansas City with his band about 10 p.m., arriving back in Lawrence at 11 o'clock.
The band plans to make another concert trip Feb. 28 to Topeka and will probably make a two-day trip time in March, Director Wiley said.
Sophomore Debate Team Enters Winfield Tourney
Four students of the University sophomore debate team will participate in the sixth annual invitational tournament at Winfield, Feb. 18 and 19. They will take both sides of the debate. That the national relation board could be empowered to enforce arbitration born in labor disputes."
Any student with more than 60 credit hours is barred. Entries in the round robin tournise include junior doctoral students fromouri, Kansas and Oklahoma district.
Bob McKay, c'40. Leo Rhodes, c'40.
Robert Sullivan, c'1uml, and Robert
Hedges, c'40. will make the trip.
Film Portrays
Ancient History
Of Man's Advance
From the rough flint "hat hatet," first tool to be manufactured by man, to the now faded glories of the palace of Darius the Great, the works of primitive and ancient man were unrolled last night before a large crowd in Hoch auditorium, in the showing of "The Human Adventure" picture prepared by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
The picture, shown as the first number in this semester's lecture course series, depicted the ancient ruins which the Oriental Institute is unearthing in the ancient capitals of Egypt. Palestine, Aesyria and Persia.
Chief Justice Speaks Tonight
John S. Dawson, chief justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, will speak at Liberty Memorial High School tonight at 7:45, in connection with the celebration of the founding of the constitution of the United States.
Members of the Douglas County Bar Association are anxious that all University students attend the speech.
The sesquicentennial celebration covers three years: the constitutional convention in 1787; ratification by the ninth state in 1788; and the inauguration of the first President in 1789.
Special numbers will include solos by Evelyn Mercer and Phyllis Burger, and music by the high school German band.
Sooners Down Kansas State 44-35
Oklahoma to Back to Form
In Taking Rough Game:
'Boy Scats' Into First
Place Tie With Kansas
Standings of the Teams
McNatt, Oklahoma forward, was high-point man with 13 points.
Manhattan, Feb. 10.—(UP) OK-
klahoma went into a tie for first place in the Big Six basketball race, here tonight, by taking a rough 44-35 game from Kansas State before 1,900 fans.
The box score:
Cleveland led the Wildcats with 10. Three Kansas Staters and one Sooner went out with four personal fouls.
W L W. Pct. TP OP
Kansas 5 1 833 398 185
Oklaahoma 5 1 833 387 227
Oklahoma 5 3 400 287 227
Michigan 3 5 400 165 156
Iowa State 2 4 333 188 222
Kansas State 2 4 133 180 281
Totals ...14 16 14
Kansas State (35) g ft pf
Burns, f 2 3
Klimek, f 2 1
Neid, f-c 1 4
Wesche, c 3 3
Poppesause, c 0 4
Kramer, g 2 4
Cleveland, g 4 2
Drier, g 0 0
Totals 17 9 18
Okhlaoma (44) g tf pt
McNatt, f 3 3 4
Waker, f 3 3 4
Snoograd, f 0 3 2
Mullen, c 4 2 0
Kerr, c 0 0 0
Martin, g 2 4 3
Mesch, g 2 3 2
10. Oklahoma, 6.
Half time score: Oklahoma 20,
Kansas State 14.
Free throws missed—Kansas State,
10: Oklahoma, 6.
Half time score: Oklahoma 20.
Referees: E.C. Quigley and Parke Carroll.
Anderson's
One Hundredth
Recital Sunday
One hundred vesper organ recitals in ten years.
That is the record that Prof. Laurel E. Anderson, University organist, will complete when he presents an organ recital Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium at 4 o'clock.
The vesper organ recitals were begun by Professor Anderson in January, 1928 directly after the four death of his teacher, Stalley stalled in Hoch auditorium. Professor Anderson was then a new member of the faculty.
Came Here From Paris
At that time he had just returned from three years study in Paris under Vierre and Bonnet, where he was the American Church for two years.
Professor Anderson received his bachelor of music and master's degrees from Oberlin College, and d Bachelor of Arts from Grinnell College for two years.
Each year about ten organ recitals are presented under the direction of Anderson. He was assisted in former years by Prof. Charles Sanford Skilton, now on leave, and G. Criss Simpson, instructor of theory and organ. He has been assisted this year by Frank Cunkle.
Picture Final Judgement Day
The program Sunday will include:
II
Milford—Sea Prelude.
Honegger—Choral.
Simonds—Dorian Prelude on the Dies Irae.
Guilmant—Prayer and Cradle Song.
Vierne—Carillion.
The arrangement of the Dies Irae, a thirteenth century hymn, that Professor Anderson will play, was made by Bruce Simonds, a contemporary American writer. The first arrangement of the number is attributed to Thomas and it is the work of the English Mass in the Catholic Church. It pictures the terrors of the day of final judgement.
Congress Expects To Pass Requested Relief Measures
Washington, Feb. 10. — (UIP) Alarmed over a White House warning that three million were made jobless during the past 90 days and that WPA rolls face sharp reductions in the "near future," congressional leaders tonight forecast early approval of President Roosevelt's request for an additional 250 million dollars to meet the relief crisis.
PAGE TWO
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938
≈
Comment
You Pay Mine--
I'll Pay My Own
In the belief that the sales tax was intended, primarily, for social welfare purposes—mostly education and old-age pensions—Kansas voters passed it a year ago last fall.
There was a certain amount of dolorous grooming when the law went into effect, putting pennies and tokens into demand as essentials of exchange; but the brightening thought persisted that it was for a good purpose.
Do you know for what purpose the tax is to be used by the law? If you believe it is for social welfare—schools and old-age pensions—you are mistaken. A joker, more real than proverbial is to be found in the deck.
Section 22 declares that every tax unit in the state, receiving allotments, must reduce property taxes 75 per cent of the amount received. Whereby we perceive that property tax is cleverly shifted onto the shoulders of the lower class. In other words, with every loaf of bread—every necessity or luxury we buy, we help to pay the burden of taxes upon property we do not own.
Let's pat ourselves on the backs, Kansans,
we are certainly doing our bit for " society."
The British?
No! It Isn't Possible
A London magazine, The Week, lauds the cleverness and skill by which U.S. secret service operatives in Tokyo have allegedly stolen plans of Jaoan's new naval program.
"The British intelligence had no luck—" the magazine reports, pointing out the skill of the Americans, and making us here in this country, feel very, very good.
Very . . . until a second thought occurs to us: "Could it be—" no, of course it couldn't—" still the thought persists "perhaps the British are using a subtle method of arousing more sentiment against the Americans in Japan." It is easy to imagine how the Japanese might feel about the matter. It is easy to think that Britain's doing America's crowing could accentuate that feeling.
But, no—Britain wouldn't do that.
Would they?
We See
In the Paper
Following are some of this week's press reports from the war zones:
Japanese airplanes and warships threw such a stream of shells and bombs into Heungchow that the city, with an estimated population of 10,000, was turned into a mound of ashes and dust.
Since the war (Sino-Japanese) started seven months ago, observers agree that the dead and wounded total more than 1,000 - 000.
Refugees pouring into Macao from Heungchow by the hundreds said an untold number of their fellow townspeople had been killed or wounded.
Completing a summary of the first 48 hours of General Franco's latest push in the Teruel area, more than two thousand Loyalists have been reported killed.
We still ask: Who says war isn't a glorious affair?
Meaningless Words Cause Present Confusion
It is almost alarming to note how many meaningless words we have in the English language—words which serve only as labels for indefinite somethings for which no two people have the same conception.
If we try to define "liberalism," "power," "economic royalist," "loyalty," etc., we reach an impasse; and if we compare our impressions of these words with those of another person, we may often learn that no one knew what the other meant.
Yet politicians, candidates for office, propagandists, use these words in attempting to influence public opinion. And it is to these very words that Stuart Chase in his new book, "Tyranny of Words," attributes much of the confusion in the world today.
Semantics is not a new science but it is gaining a rapid popularity, due in no small measure, to the added impetus such writings give it. It is believed by many that the public can be made word-conscious; can learn to perceive some of the meaninglessness of phrases; can even learn to use more definite word symbols and statements through a study of this science.
He would apply semantics—the science of language—to clear up this confusion. "Seek for the referent" is his advice, the referent being an objective picture of what the word implies
Was It Subconscious Or Just 'Ghost Writing'?
Cecil Beaton, artist, has lost his job with Vogue magazine. Walter Winchell has live up to his reputation as chief New York uprover of facts and Conde Nast, publisher of Vogue, is sputtering apologies to his Jewish friends and relatives. All this is happening be cause Mr. Beaton took advantage of a skette he was doing for Vogue to express a few idea of his own. Examination of the tiny microscop lettering in the simulated newspaper pages on the drawing revealed this: "Mr. Andrew's ba at the El Morocco brought out all the dirt Kikes in town." "What..." is Mrs. Selnik suic a social wow?" "Why is Mrs. Goldwyn sue a wow?"
Apparently Cecil Beaton is at a loss to explain. He said he didn't know how it happened. "I am quite unable to explain to myself why I draw a line one way and not another . . . I am merely an artist. I can draw, perhaps, but I cannot explain." He professes ignorance as to the meaning of Kike and proclaims himself definitely not anti-Semitic. He believes he inserted the slur against Jews subconciously.
But Walter Winchell disagrees. Time magazine reports Winchell as saying "Beaton's subconscious had nothing to do with it . . . So delighted was he with his little trick that he spread the news . . . gloating. Naturally that is how we heard about it."
Whether or not Mr. Beaton is subconsciously or deliberately anti-Semitic is a matter for the psychologists, physiologists, or anti-Semitic element to decide. Right now it is also a case for the employment bureau because Beaton, once Vogue's highest-priced artist and photographer, is reported to have been turned down by two other magazines.
Incidentally, and regretfully, the February issue of Vogue in Watson Library is among those 150,000 undistributed copies from which Mr. Nast managed to delete the offensive words.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Cancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceeding regular publication days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Vol. 35 Friday, February 11, 1938 No. 92
COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: The Cosmopolitan Club will meet at 8 o'clock this evening at the Uitianarian Church. Isami Tashima will have charge of the program.-Louise Yeamans, Secretary.
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION. The Creative Leisure Commission will meet Sunday, Feb. 13 at 2:30 in the Pine room of the Union building. Plans will be started at this meeting for our original movie. Mr. H. Lee Jones will assist in the planning. Anyone interested is invited—Rhona Fongel, Charles Yeomans.
FRESHMAN VACANCY ON RELAYS COMMITTE-
dates for the Freshman Student Relay Committe-
should send in applications to the K.U. athletic office
care of the care of James Gillispie
senior manager. *James Gillispie*
MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL; Because of the Ballet Russe the meeting will be held at 7 o'clock Monday evening, Feb. 14, in the Pine room.-Moe Ettenson, Secretary.
NEW ADDRESSES FOR DIRECTORY SUPPLEMENT. Students who changed addresses between their schools may be registered at Registra's office at once so that the corrections may appear in the directory supplement—George O. Foster,
"OLOGY" COMMISSION: The "Ology" Commission will meet at 4:30 today at Henley house. The Rev, Joseph King will speak—Evelyn Brubaker, Chairman.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOREEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILLI TYLER and GEOGE CLAYEN
NEW BOOK EDITOR BILLI TYLER
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERTON
SPORT EDITOR FLOW TORRENCE
MARCO PATRONIAS JEAN THOMAS AND
REWITE EDITOR DUCK MARTIN
TELLEGRAPH EDITOR HANNIE HILL
FOREWORD EDITOR JESSICA KOOP
DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
EDITOR-IN-CHEF
ATTORNEY EDITORS MARYN BENTTON AND DAVID W. ANGIEVEN
ADMINISTRATOR
Kantan Board Members
ALICE HOLDMAN-JULIUS
J. HOWARD RICO
DAVID E. PATRIDGE
NATHAN FLEE
GRAVESTONE VALENTINE
JOCE COCIBRANE
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZIGBELD
DREW MELAGILHIN
TOMY MILLER
EDWARD BRANNEY
MARTIN ENBRONT
MARVIN GUEREL
MARCHEL MONTECORN
MORRIES THOMPON
CLAUDE DOREY
ELTON E. CAVER
ALAN ASHER
CHARLES ALEXANDER
Editorial Staff
News Staff
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College Publishers Representative
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Will Award Thirty Dollars In Cash Prizes to Orators
The eight annual junior-senior oratory contest will be held Feb. 22, E. C. Bucher, professor of speech and dramatic arts, announced today. Thirty dollars in cash prizes will be awarded.
The contest is open to all juniors and seniors. Any subject may be discussed, but no speech should be more than 1200 words. All those wishing to enter should notify Prof Buehler to Tuesday.
Peter B. Biggins Lectures
Peter B. Biggins, C. S. B., of Seattle, Wash., will deliver a free lecture on Christian Science, Sunday, at Frank's auditorium of Frank Stuart Hall.
Mr. Biggins is a member of the board of lectureship of the mother church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston. The address is sponsored by the Christian Science organization at the University.
rhyme. Our meter was going well until the radio struck up "Jungle Fever" and the rest of the ditty just swings along from branch to branch.
Haywire--
Continued from page 1
Our Little Audrey and her mother Were exceptionally fond of each other.
In the foamy blue path
Of a "Goliath" of the sea.
Twas a sad day indeed,
This moment of need.
But it sweetly Little Aurrey burst into
glee.
And pals of gay laughter
Came tumbling from her lips.
For she knew that her mother
Was used to hardships.
By some strange chance they hap'd to be.
We'll go boating today on the billowy Mare.
Mare.
As they joyfully sailed the gull-in-
Said precious Little Audrey To her mother so dear
Professor Buehler was asking members of his speech class yesterday day where they lived. Finally he came to a fellow who said that he lived in Amarillo, Texas, and the following conversation took place:
Buehler: "How far is that from Amarillo?"
Buehler: "Yes, I know Amarillo is 750 miles from here, but do you live 750 miles from Amarillo?"
Student; "750 miles."
Student: "Amarillo is in the middle of the Panhandle."
Buehler: "Well, I guess Texas is a big place."
The point of the conversation was that both were talking about different things. It was good for a laugh.
Z
Complete Assortments
Sasieni
Kaywoodie
Yellow Bole
Medico
PIPES
VALENTINE
FLOWERS
Just a reminder, fellows, that Monday, Feb. 14,
is the day when your thoughtfulness is put to
test . . . so don't let her down.
All Phone Orders
Promptly Delivered 363
RUMSEY
Flower Shops
ALLISON
927 Mass.
FARMSEY
Hower
Shops
ALLISON
927 Mass.
A Special Valentine Heart Box
FOR YOUR VALENTINE
Johnston's
GIVE SWEETS TO THE SWEETEST GIRL YOU KNOW
Johnston's
and Whitman's
CANDIES
50c Tek Tooth Brushes Two for 51c
A Special
50c to $5.00
Rankin's Drug Store
For Her!
1101 Mass.
60c Calox
Dental Powd.
50c Dr. West's
Brush
Both 59c
FOR BARGAINS
Visit Our
Big Birthday
SALE
"Handy for Students"
Laundry Bags
$1.19
Phone 678
for VALENTINE'S Joan Manning CHOCOLATES 50e pound
Kills Germs
pt 30c
KLENZo Antiseptic
Mouth Wash
30c Tube
Klenzo Dental Paste
Both 59c
H. W. STOWITS
Phone 238
Free Delivery
Corner 9th & Mass.
"SAVE with SAFETY"
at your Rexall DRUG STORE
VALENTINE Heart Boxes 25c to $3.00
SPECIAL!
Quality
Stationery
65c
Monogramed
Free
Puretest Halibut Liver Oil 50-Caps 63c
Colgate Dental Powder
Reg. 35c
Two for 36c
Listerine
Shaving Cream
35c Tube
Two for 36c
---
$
Values Like These Laugh At Locksmiths
We don't care how closely you are guarding every February dollar or how set you are against buying clothing right now.
You are going to reach for your checkbook AND ASK US IF WE HAVE A PEN AND INK.
When you see, thru' shrewd money-saving eyes, the bargains you can pick up in suits, overcoats and topcoats and when you realize that it's fine clothing you are looking at, you are going to act just the same as other men . . .
FEBRUARY PRICES on Suits, Topcoats, Overcoats
Ocer's
HEAD TO SCOUT OUTFATTERS
PLANNED BY
Elizabeth Arden FOR
YOUR VALENTINE
10
Elizabeth Arden has prepared the most delightful and elegant trifles to bestow upon the lady of your heart. Blue Grass perfume is a gift that never fails to give pleasure. If you are particularly anxious to give a good impression, one of Miss Arden's exquisite compacts or vanity cases is an excellent suggestion. Or for something unusual, the looking glass lipstick. Here are a mirror and lipstick planned as one . . . a tiny mirror that flies open as you pull out the stick.
Blue Grass Perfume ... $2.00
Vanity Case ... $5.00
Looking Glass Lipstick, single, gold-plated ... $2.00
Gift Wrapping Service
Free red Cellophane wrapping of Valentine Gift purchases of $1.00 or more.
WEAVER'S
Phone 636
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
2
120
Here on the Hill
-an account of Mt. Oread Society
an account of Mt. Oreaa
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m. call K.U.121; after 5, call 2702-K
--improvement over conventional reg. ulators in that it has no moving parts.
Guest Editor: Harry Hill, c'40
.
Rolla Nuckles, Lawrence, and Eugene Sunnen, Grafen, were dinner guests of Sigma Alpha Epsilon last night.
Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained with a buffer supper last night. The following were guests:
Frank Harwi, c'38
Rick Bakst, k'40
Jack Minor, Kansas City, Mo
Nick Wilson, j'41
John Wilson, i'49
Allen Downey, c'88
Charlie Lovlow, c'87
Harry Troy, k'59
Proctor Ribert, c'91
Lawrence Barben, c'91
Donniel Dunlap, j'69
John Peck, cunel
Willard Winters, b'19
Graville Wilhelm, b'19
Carl Johnson, c'99
Jack Richardson, c'89
Paul Mason, e'98
Stephen Sturgeon, c'8
Thomas Graybill, b'18
Fredric McCoy, j'8
Wilhua Spinger, j'40
Charles Baker, c'48
William Hues, j'40
Hampton Hues, j'40
Donald Claer, ph
Daniel Marshall, c'8
Charles Lueck, c'8
Charles Gorman, c'8
William Ralfs, c'40
Ralph Meyers, c'8
Jim Lewis, j'69
Howard Immond, I'38
Howard Engleman, c'41
O. J. Connell, 1789
Robert Cloaghe, 'eunel
Robert Heller, 'eunel
Frank Bangs, c:40
James C. Pettez
Miss Marion Hiley, Columbus, Ohio
The following were dinner guest of Alpha Teu Omega last night;
Janet Wilkinson, cuncl
DeArline Shull, ed 41
Betty Polon, Lawrence
Virginia Gray, 641
John Jones, James 641
Patricia Owens, b'19
Luis Hoggins, ph
The following were guests of the Sigma Nu fraternity at an hour dance
last night:
Marcia Norris, c'40
Betty Patton, cm'11
Donna Hughes, f'41
Helen Heard, cm'11
Virginia Lee Williams, c'41
Patty Payne, c'41
Indahle Bash, cm'11
Mary Lou Borders, f'19
Dorothy Flyn, cp'19
Gendola Englertl, f'19
Bette Burrows, cp'19
Margaretey Myers, f'8
Triangle fraternity entertained the following guests at an hour dance last night:
Donis McDermond, ed'39
Shirley Jean Smith, c'uncl
Bettie Kay Heimtman, c'unel
Nall Kimhumbly, c'19
Marcella Bocchel, c'40
Mike Kelsey, c'unel
Jane Scherli
Grace Player, c'18
Leona Macy, c'18
Lola May Barthill, c'41
Marguerite Jones, c'14
Mary Lou Ekstrom, b'unel
Mrs. and Mrs. John Frooke, TC
∞
Mrs. Harry Johntz Parsons, we a house guest of Chi Omega late night.
^
Beth Atkins, c'uml, was a luncheon guest of Chi Omega Wednesday.
--improvement over conventional reg. ulators in that it has no moving parts.
∞
Camilla Scott, c41, was a guest of Chi Omega at luncheon yesterday.
Dinner guests for Phi Gamma Delta last night were: June Sanford, c'40; Marjorie Harbaugh, c'38; and Luciella Springer, c'38.
The following pledges were elected at the weekly meeting of the Jay Jones: Margaret Stratton, c'40; Lucile Gaynor, c'28; and Betty J. Blackburn, ph. Fledging services will be held Feb. 23.
∞
Miss Veta Lear, Lawrence, was a dinner guest at the Phi Delta Theta house last night.
David H. Redinger, fa, is the resident engineer in charge of the "Big Creek-San Joaquin River" project. This project is in connection with water power development of the Southern California Edison company.
Engineering Graduate Directs River Project
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
FEDERATION
Christian Church
The Foster University Class will take up Sunday morning at 10 following the opening adult worship period.
At 5:30 the Forton group will have the usual social hour, and at 6:30, Dean Paul II, Lawson will speak to the group. This program will be over in time for the young people to attend Bryan's motion picture lecture on "Stillly's 'Bussia." First, Bracket, Counche
Roger Williams Foundation
Tought at 8 there will be a party for all Baptist young people of the University and Lawrence. It will be held in the First Baptist Church
At 9:45 a.m. Sunday morning the University Class will discuss the question, "What is Man?" The orchestra led by Lynn Hooker will play, 11 a.m. the worship service will be in recognition of Youth Sunday. Arthur Fielder, cellist, will be the guest soloist.
6 pm. there will be the social half-hour followed at 6:30 by the Young People's meeting. Professor Baldwin said on "The Meeting of Religion."
Westminster Foundation
A group of hikers will leave West-
minster ball tonight at 5 o'clock.
Anyone interested is invited to
participate at a cost of 15 cents.
Saturday night at 8:30, Westminster is having a Valentine Party.
There will be a 15 cent charge per person.
Westminster A Cappella Choir is giving its concert Sunday night at 7:30 at the Presbyterian church, Ninth and Vermont.
Next Tuesday, the "Second Miller" will meet at 7:30 in Westminster Hall under the direction of Sam Mier.
The two student classes led by Dr. Forrest C. Allen and Rev. Edwin F. Price, which opened their second semester's discussion last Sunday, will meet at 9:45 a.m. Sunday. A special committee with Elizabeth Poyton and Henry Vigour as co-conference members announce concerning future plans for the discussions to be conducted in Rev. Price's class.
At the Wesley Foundation League hour, 6 p.m. Sunday, the discussion on "The Function of the Church and
First M. E. Church and Wesley Foundation
Poland R. Miner, '30, described for the Wichita section of the Ameri- iean Institute of Electrical Engineers last Thursday, a new type of current regulator he has developed for stop-lights. The regulator is an
"Two Immortals," Lincoln and Lee" is the sermon subject of Rev. Robert A. Hunt for the Sunday morning worship service at 10:30. The Wesleyan Chorus Chorus director by Dorothy Enlow Miller will sing. This service will be held in the Granada theater.
No matter how badly your shoes are worn, we'll repair them to give months more of wear!
All Work Guaranteed
Miner graduated with the degree of B.S. in electrical engineering and is now distribution engineer for the Kansas Gas and Electric company.
PHONE K.U. 66
Stop Light Device Described for Engineers
The annual Wesley Foundation Valentine will be held in the social rooms of First M.E. Church this evening at 8 p.m. Alice Paden and Good, co-chairman of the social committee, promise a real occasion.
Shoes Last Longer When Repaired the Modern Way!
ELECTRIC
SHOE SHOP
W.E. WESTHORN PRO
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
LOST: "Rainfair" brown gahardine coat
Return for return. Call Ralph Elson
1247 Ohio, phone 3125. -92
1017 Mass. Phone 686
FOUND. Small "Tucktite" handbag near Fraser hall. Call at Kansan Office and identify. -92
IVA'S
BOYS: Two quiet, studious roommates wanted. Double rooms, one twin beds. $8.50 and $8.00. Campus House. 1245 Oreday. -32
Our Relationship to I* will be continued under the leadership of Alberta Waid.
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanents $1.50 up
Phone 333 941½ Mass. St.
RELIABLE CLEANING
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920-22 Mass.
Phone
12
PHONE K.U.66
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
Guaranteed
Suits
Tuxes
Dresses
Hats
Coats
50c
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripads, filters and accessories.
Union Pacific
DENVER LIMITED
will depart at
11:10 p.m.
Notice
Effective Sunday
Feb. 13
3 garments for $1.25
GRAND CLEANERS
Call #16 Free Pickup and Deliv
UNION PACIFIC
SYSTEM
OCEAN ISLAND
AGAIN CLUB
1319 Tennessee Street
Lawrence, Kansas
DUNAKIN CLUB
732 % Mass. Phone 2533
TENNIS RACKETS
RESTRUNG
New Rackets, Balls
Soft Bats, Bats
RUTTER'S SHOP
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
Permanents and End Curls
$1.00 complete
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
729% Mass. Phyllis 2533
For particulars Phone 76
J. H. Robinson, Agent
Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 50
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.
6 Breakfasts, 50c
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Dried Pixel Shoe Samoo and Wave, dried, 50c End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass. Phone 2333
ROOM: Single or double room for man employed, or students. Between K.U., town and high school, 124 W. 13th. Phone 31051
Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 75%
Candid Camera-ly Speaking
THE ARGUS
$12.50
with an f4.5
ses motion picture film
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the rage."
announces a
Entitled:
Christian Science Organization at K. U.
Free Lecture on Christian Science
For complete information about travel anywhere, consult your local Union Pacific Agent.
Christian Science: The Science of Divine Power
By Peter B. Biggins. C.S.B.
of Seattle, Washington
Member of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
Administration Building Auditorium
You and your friends are cordially invited to attend
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
Sunday, February 13, at 3:00 p.m.
Go By Train
UNION PACIFIC
- deep-cushioned. reclining coach assis
*满ful Pulpman with every travel
convenience . . . delicious "meals that
appeel" . . . a courteous, attentive per-
sonnel—all make riding the train a real
pleasure.
FOR SAFETY
COMFORT
- Consider the many advantages of train travel check the low fares. You'll see why thirty travelers resolve to go by Union Pacific in 19381
- this year, you take chances with b+d weather and highway hazards Ride in comfortable Union Pacific trains - relax while you speed to your destination —safety— swiftly.
Pablo Picasso
ECONOMY
Tune in "Strange As It Seems"—presented by Union Pacific every Sunday at 12:15 p. m. over KMBC, Kansas City.
- This year, don't take chances with bad
UNION PACIFIC
OVERLAND
- ··
THE PROGRESSIVE
SEE ME HERE! TUNING
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
SEE! HEAR'S TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
Choice Seats Now!
HOCH MON. EVE.
AUD. Feb.14
ct 8:20
EI
E
-1q
S. HUROK presolei c.il W. DeBasil's
Col. W. DeBashy
BALLET
RUSSE
de Monte Carlo
Presented by
THE WORLD'S
GREATEST, LARGEST,
MOST ENTRANCING
DANCE ENSEMBLE!
Program---
"THE HUNDRED KISSES"
"AURORA'S WEDDING"
AUSPICES UNIVERSITY
CONCERT COURSE
New Belle Creation which has World Premiere at London Coronation Season last summer
W
"GODS GO A-BEGGING"
These Three Great Ballots will not be duplicated in programs given elsewhere in this book.
Seats Now at:
Fine Arts Office
Bell's Music Store
Round Corner Drug Store
Tickets:
$2.00, $1.50, $1.00,
75c and 50c
W
WATENA DOIN, BUTCH -
TRAININ' FOR YOUR
NEXT BOUT ?
M
?
---
NAW, I'M JUST PRACTICIN' TO WATCH THE FORDS GO BY
A man with a rainy face.
The Gibbs Clothing Co. WHERE CASH BUYS MORE 811 Mass. St.
ce
STORE WIDE Clearance SAVINGS YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO OVERLOOK!
Choice of Large Group of
OVERCOATS $1195
Fine all wool topcoats and overcats in the new 1938 styles. All sizes.
Choice of the House Values to $24.50
$15^{00}
Don't overlook this special value in fine quality all wool overcoats and topcovers. There are all styles and a good selection of colors and patterns.
I am going to be a man of strength and kindness. I will do whatever is necessary to protect the integrity of our country. I will work tirelessly for the betterment of my community. I will serve as a mentor and guide to others. I will contribute to the progress of our nation. I will be a strong and reliable leader. I will uphold the values of virtue and justice. I will be a true friend to everyone. I will be a leader in the fight against injustice. I will be a champion for freedom and liberty. I will be a protector of our shared destiny. I will be a champion for justice and equality. I will be a guardian of our future. I will be a role model for others. I will be a hero for all who believe in the power of good. I will be a great friend to those who are weary of life. I will be a great supporter of those who are fighting for their dreams. I will be a great leader for those who are working for a better world. I will be a great protector of our communities. I will be a great advocate for social justice. I will be a great protector of our future. I will be a great supporter of those who are fighting for their dreams
PAGE FOUR
---
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938
.
3
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tracksters Meet Huskers Tomorrow
Hargiss Takes T e a r
To Lincoln for I niti
Appearance of Indoo
Track Season
Making its first appearance this season, the Jayhawk indoor track and field team will encounter another powerful Nebraska outfit in a dual meet at Lincoln tomorrow afternoon.
Although far from being a title contender at this stage of the game, the Kansans are assembling a strong aggregation and will offer the Cornhoppers plenty of opposition. Coach Willson has also fortified with capable field men.
In the running events the Mt. Oread men have not reached their peak, but workouts with the watch this week show marked improvement. The Nebraska traketers are scheduled to have a full day's work out for them, as observers put more a even battle than last year.
Lyle Foy, J. D. Richardson, and Paul Masonner will carry the brunt of the attack in the spirits. These men are rounding into top form and are expected to produce points in their events.
In the 60-yard low hurdles Kenthick Harry Wiles, lettermen from last year and Jack Knight will carry the Kansas colors.
Ernest Klamn, diminutive Jay-hawkener dog, dominates the list of local distance men. Klamn has a excellent time in practice workouts.
Gordon Chuces, second place winner in the broad jump at the Big Six outdoor carnival, is a sure bet to finish in the money tomorrow. Don Bird, conference outdoor co-champion in the pole vault last year should have little difficulty in winning his event.
Chester Friedland looks strong in the shot. Bird and Cox will double in the high jump. The men to make the relay have not been determined yet.
Listed below are the entrants and their probable events:
60-yard dash: Foy, Richardson, Masoner, Cox, and Clucas.
440-yard dash: H. Wiles, Masoner,
Heckendorn, Replogle, and Williams.
880-yard run: Kahl, Huckendorn,
Williams, E. Wiles, and Sells.
Williams, Klaus, Huckendron, To
Mile run: Klann, Heckendorn, Toberen.
and Ryan.
60-yard low hurdles: Clark
Knight and H. Wiles.
Two-mile run: Toberen, Hepner and Ryan.
Knight, and 14. Winds
60-yard high hurdles: Clark
Knight, and Cox
Broad jump: Clucas, Replogle Richardson, and Billips.
rugn jump: Cox and Bird.
Pole vault: Bird and Lawrence.
Shot: Friedland and Turner.
Board, jump: Clausen, Reinhold
Mile relay: Foy, Masoner, H. Wiles,
Cox, Replogle, Heckendorn,
Williams, and Clucas.
Hold Debates Here Tomorrow
The second district extemporean speaking and debating contests for class A and B high schools will be held at the University tomorrow. Ten high schools have entered the contests, sponsored by the Kansas State High School Activities association.
The winners of the second, and the other 11 district contests held over the state, will compete in the finals, to be held at the University Feb. 25 and 26. The forensic committee may invite also any second place team that shows up outstandingly.
The subject for debate will be "Resolved: That the several states should adopt a unicameral system of legislation."
Ten high schools will send teams to the contest. Class A schools registered are: Lawrence, Topeka High, Ward High and Wyandotte High of Kansas City, Atchison, and Topeka Catholic High.
Topics in education
Class B schools are: Garnett, Bonner Springs, Osawatomie, and Paola.
Two persons in each school are allowed in the extemporaneous speaking contests. All six of the registered class A high schools have entered this contest. Peola and Oasawatome have entered in the class B.
Five class "C" high schools have registered for the first district contest to be held Feb. 19 on the Hill These are Fairview, Meriden, Turner, Eskridge, and Valley Falls.
Guy Lambert, University of Minnesota sophomore, found a pearl in a clam that was working on it in a zoology laboratory experiment.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
the "K" men's room on the second floor of Robinson gymnasium has been developed into an interesting lounging room for the athletes of the University. The room fairly exudes a Jayhawk "atmosphere." The floor is covered with Kansas's blue in color, with crimson trimming. Lining the walls are pictures of the former greats who have captured Jayhawker teams. The pictures of football captains are complete from that of John Kinzie, who captained the Kansas eleven in 1891, the second year the gird sport was played here, to that of Joseph McCain, captain of the 1936 team. A picture of George Stapleton, captain of 1ast fall's eleven, has not yet been placed with the rest.
While the gallery of leaders in other sports is not as complete as in football, still there are photographs of many of the past captains of basketball, baseball, and track teams. Some of the Kansas immortals who look down from the walls on the present-day crop of athletes are Tommy Johnson, Glenn Cummings, Jim Bautsch, John Riley, and an inspiring place for "K" men to pass away their leisure moments.
Other sports have taken the stage away from basketball here for the moment. Tomorrow Kansas swimming teams will meet Nebraska here in the water and at Lincoln on the cinder. Members of the team must take a well earned rest until they go to Norman to meet the Sooners on Feb. 18.
With the Cornbushers defeating the "boy scats," Kansas is sure of a tie for first place in the conference until that game at Wichita. The field house at that game, for it will practically decide the championship race.
Don't be surprised if Iowa State takes an up-turn in its troop progress this year. They have a new coach, George R. "Pop" Breitnall, who up until this year was track coach and friend of every student at Baker University. "Pop" as he is affectionately known, for we used on the back know, for we used to college at Baker, and we have seen Breitnall take only mediocre material and develop it into what were excellent performers for the Kansas conferences. With no better material matriculating at Baker than the other conference schools, "Pop" turned out 8 championship teams in 10 years. Breitnall is the most successful, that knows not only his sports, but also knows him and invariably gets them to regard him as their friend, to like and respect him greatly.
Of course the Big Six competition is a long step from that of the Kang ft
G soul, f _0
C soul, f _2
Harris, c _2
I Holmes, f _1
Twenig, w _0
B Brass, -0
O Brass, -0
H Townt, l _0
ROLLINS
Knee Lengths,
Chiffons
New Spring Colors
79c
2 pr. $1.55
Also full length
lace top chiffons.
$100
THE SPOT CASH
SHOE STORE
THE SPOT CASH
SHOE STORE
819 Mass. St.
Haynes & Keene
In a game decided by free throws, the Gashouse Gang had trouble in getting to the basket at 21 to 19 in an intamural basketball game. Whitakers caged 8 for the Gashouse Gang but the latter dislaced the foe at the free-throw line.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorf
The box score:
Gashle Gang (21) Whitakers (19)
--g ft
G soul, f _0
C soul, f _2
Harris, c _2
I Holmes, f _1
Twenig, w _0
B Brass, -0
O Brass, -0
H Townt, l _0
7 7 7
Ninjaption
Official: Niswonger. Volley Ball
the Beta volley ball team was pushed all the way to take the measure, and the team needed power to crush the Triangle volley ballers two straight.sigma Nu for improvement. The Alpha were matched for last night, but both teams failed to appear.
Six students, Edwin Browne, c'38; Leighton Fosey, c'38; Harold Mulligan, c'unc1; Burt Kupmanbil, c'39; Bill Shipley, fa'40; and Bob Sullivan, can'c1, were IUCKFU announce trouts to enter the final trouts.
Select Students To Enter Final Announcer Tryouts
sas conference but knowing Bretnall as we do, we say watch out for Iowa State on Big Six tracks, if not this year, at least next year or the year after. We are inclined to be careful, for we noticed where the Cyclones beat Minnesota in their first indoor meet this year.
The final will be held in the near future. Those selected in the preliminaries are requested to call Miss Seaman, assistant program director of KFKU, at 180R, to arrange for the final tryout.
8 3 9
Swimming Coach Herbert G. Alliphn has built his team this year around Ritchie, Newosinske, Proctor Vitec and Morton Jones, all lettermen, and Fisher, Stipp, and other returning squad members. Several promising freshmen will also see service against the Cornhusker swimmers to give Coach Alliphn a chance to test his squad.
Swim Team In Dual Meet
Members of the squad are: Robert Beeler, Topeka, breast stroke; Harry Brown, Wichita, breast and back strokes; Wallis Campbell, Salina, distance; Ray Davidson, Hutchinson, dashes; Gene Foster,焊field, distance; Paul Fisher,焊dashes; dashes; Danny Dyer, middle distance; Morton Jones, Kansas City, Mo; dashes; Alex Mitchell, Lawrence, dashes; Vote Nowaisuke, Kansas City, distance; Proctor Ritchie, Wichita, back stroke; dashes; Charles Stipp, Kansas City, Mo; diving.
—TONITE—
FOR BREAKFAST
2 Eggs with Toast, Jelly
and Coffee----
20c
The University tank team will open its season tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 in the Robinson gym pool against Nebraska in a dual meet. The student activity book and identification card will be required of student spectators, and others will be charged 25 cents.
1 Egg with Bacon or Smoked Ham, Toast, Jelly and Coffee-- 750
UNION FOUNTAIN
Or...
Sub-basement Memorial Union
VARSITY DANCE
With the---
Kansas Host to Huskers
In First Test of Season
In Robinson Gym
NEWEST SWINGIEST SWEETEST
K. U. DANCE-BAND AGGREGATION
Clyde Bysom
AND HIS ORCHESTRA
FEATURING:
Barbara Edmonds, Songstress
Lee Hackler, Directing
TONITE
Admission----75c
Old-Fashioned Colonial Bouquet Beautifully arranged of lovely selected flowers. A sure-to-please gift.
Let flowers tell the one in your heart that she's your Valentine!
Valentine ORCHID Corsages
Lovely corsages of Gardenia, Roses, Sweet Peas,
Violet or Orchids.
February 14th
Flowers Say It Best
WARD'S Flower Shop Telegraph and Delivery Service PHONE 820
Paul White, Garden City, diving. The present schedule of other swimming meets for the season is as follows:
Feb. 19—Kansas State, here.
Feb. 22—Washington U. of St
Louis, here.
Feb. 28-Kansas State, there.
March 4 and 5-Big Six meet at Norman, Okla.
Regular events in Saturday's dual meet will be scored with five points for a first, three for second, and one for third. In the medley relay, there will be five points for the first team and none for the second, while the 400-meter relay will give five points for the second. Jim Rapp尔 will serve as referee and starter for Saturday, and Gilmes Elmore as clerk of the course.
PATEE
Week 10c Tit 7
Days Then 15c
TODAY AND
TOMORROW
Big Double Show
Crashing Into New Rangeland Adventures
GENE AUTRY
"OLD BARN DANCE"
With the
"HILLBILLY BAND"
AND
Look 'Til You're Doxxled
Laugh 'Til Your' Limp
'NEW FACES OF 1937'
JOE PENNER
PARKYAKARKUS
ZORRO - CARTOON
NOTICE!
Our Admission Rate
Beginning Next Sunday
Adults 15c Children 10c
Every Nite Is Varsity. Nite
ARSITY
Home of the Jyhawks
TONITE
Note This Outstanding Program
— No. 1 —
The golden voice of Nino Martini thrills you again in
"Gay Desperado"
Ida Lupino - Leo Carillo
— No. 2 —
'League of Frightened Men'
Walter Cannonly - Lincoln Stander
SUNDAY Continuous from 2:00
You Can't Afraid to Miss This!
PRACTICALLY STRANGERS
AND SNOWED IN FOR
THE WINTER!
laugh-tipped romance...
pungent with danger!
ANN
EDDY
DON ANN
AMECHE and SOTHERN
FIFTY ROADS TO TOWN'
And What a Cast!
Slim Summerville
Jane Darwell.
Stepin Fetchit
— And —
Gangster Guns Mix with
College Athletics
"All-American
All
Sweetheart"
Patricia Scott Gene
FARR COLTON MORGAN
Women's Intramurals
— Coming —
'History Is Made at Night'
'Three Smart Girls'
Deck tennis: The schedule for deck tennis doubles has been revised. Fol-
Jowing is the new schedule:
Today: 4:30, I.W.W. vs. T.N.T.; 5 p.
m. E.T.C. vs. I.N.D.
Monday, Feb. 14: 4:30, Watkins hall vs. Pi Beta Phi; 5 p.m., Miller hall vs. Alpha Delta Pi.
Week In and Week Out Dickinson Has the Hits!
NOW! DICKINSON
Ends Tomorrow Shows 3-7-9 25c 'til 7
Blonde or Brunette Gentlemen Prefer Mac as the Gal Who Made the Nineties Gay!
Mae West
Continuous Shows SUNDAY
'EVERY DAY'S A HOLIDAY'
Edmund Lowe, Charles Butterworth, Lloyd Nolan Plus the Best of Selected Short Subjects
The Super-Colossal "Big Broadcast" of Them All!
BIG IN LAUGHS!
BIG IN RHYTHM!
GIGANTIC
BUFFAWS!
KENNETH JOHN presents
W.C. FIELDS
The
BIG BROADCAST
OF 1938
Ben Blue - Shirt
TREMENDOUS
TUNES!
MARTHA RAYE
DOROTHY LAMOUR
Plus so many songs and stories it takes a whole ocean to pull on the extravagant **DREAMED** by **MICHAEL LENNON**
1
Ben Blue - Shirley Ross - Rufe Davis
Watch for "CHARLIE McCARTHY" in "THE GOLDWYN FOLLIES"
Just One More Day AND TODAY SATURDAY GRANADA Shows 2:30-7-9 25c it.7 Women Have a Way of Getting What They Want!
ALSO
Musical Revue
'Deviled Hams'
Latest News
LAURENCE JOHNSON
WISE GIRL!--She knew how to fight—but had to learn how to love!... See her in the arms of Hollywood's new romantic threat to your heart!
MINIAM HOPKINS RAY MILLAND IN WISE Girl WALTER ABEL HENRY STEPMENSION RKO BASCO BOSCHER
AND
JIMMY FIDDLER'S Personality Parade
SUNDAY
Here Comes the Big Show for the Time of Your Life!
BOB BURNS JACK OAKIE KENNY BAKER ANN MILLER
BOB BURNS
JACK OAKIE
KENNY BAKER
ANN MILLER
in a rousing laugh
and rhythm show...
RADIO CITY
REVELS
With
VICTOR MOORE
MILTON BERLE
HELEN BRODERICK
JANE FROMAN
BUSTER WEST
MELISSA MASON
and HAL KEMP
and His Orchestra
Hollywood Shoots the Works — Seven Sons — Seven Songs
700 Laughs by Actual Count!
ADVII X VN' ΓV
心
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2
VOLUME XXXV
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
Nebraskans Swamp Kansas Trackmen
Cornhuskers Take First
In 9 of 12 Events; Bird,
Kla n. n., and Tobereen
Win Korns First
Lincoln, Neb. Feb. 12—(UP) Coach Henry Schultze's Nebraska track squad swept past the University of Kansas team 81 to 23 in the opening dual meet of the indoor season to fly.
Ray Baxter, Nebraka high jumper from Fort Scott, Kans., broke the stadium record with a leap of 6 feet. $3\%$ inches. Jack Dodd, climax runner of the Cornhusker football eleven last fall, equalled the stadium mark of 6.2 seconds in the 60-vard dash.
The Huskers, lacking Lloyd Cardwell and Sam Francis of last year's squad, surprised their coach by placing in all 12 events. They collected nine first places and swept the final three, tiles, slot put, and 440-yard dash.
First place winners for Kansas were Don Bird in the pole vault. Klann in the 880-yard run, and Toberen in the two-mile run. Bird Big Six pole vault champion, failed in an attempt to clear 13 feet, 5. For a new stadium record. He vaulted 13 feet in winning the event.
The summar.
The summary:
Mile run—W by Andrews and
Kuper, Nebra; third, Klann
Kanegt Time 4:34.2
60-yard dash—Won by Jack Dodd
Nebraska; second, Simmons, Nebraska;
third, Masoner, Kansas
Time, 6.2 seconds.
440-yard run—Won by Simmons Nebraska; second, Pankonin, Nebraska; third, Kreji, Nebraska Time. 52.9 seconds
Shot put—Won by Mills, Nebraska; second, Pfeiff, Nebraska third, Brock, Nebraska. Distance, 4 feet, 1% inches
60-yard low hurdles—Won by Gish, Nebraska; second, Frank, Nebraska; third, 42nd, Nebraska. Time 7 seconds.
1. 14 hours
Two-mile run — Won by Toben
Kansas; second, Gatch, Nebraska
third, Ryan, Kansas. Time, 10:45. 0
High jump—Won by Baxter, Nebraska; second, Cox, Kansas; tied for third, Maxey and Chapin, Nebraska Heigh, 6 feet $3 \frac{1}{2} \text{ inches}.$
H: 880-yard run-Won by Klann
880-yard run-Won by Klann
Kansas; second, Owen, Nebraska
third, West, Nebraska. Time, 2:02.0
**role vault**—Won by Bird, Kansas second, Neumann, Nebraska; third Athet Abreva, Kafka. Height, 13 feet.
Broad jump—Won by Dawson, Nebraska, 2 feet, 3/8" inches; second, Neumann, Nebraska, 21 feet, 2 inches; third, Clucas, Kansas, 21 feet
Mile relay-Won by Nebraska (Krejci, Simmons, Pankoni and Kuper); second, Kansas (Fox, Heckcahn, Williams and Cox).
Cunningham Wins Again
NUMBER 93
Allan Tomlich Equals World's Indoor Hurdle Record
Boston, Feb. 12, — UF) — Glenn Cunningham, caveman Kansas miler, won the Hunter mile for the second consecutive season tonight, defeating the 1936 winner, Gene Venkze of the New York Athletic Club, by 10 yards in the forty-ninth minute and won games before game 10,000 persons. Cunningham broke the tape in 4:10, the fastest indoor mile ever run in Boston.
Allan Tornilich of Wayne University equalled the world's indoor record of 5.7 seconds as he defeated the defending champion by a foot in the 45-yard high hurdles.
Free Lecture This Afternoon On Christian Science
The Christian Science organization of the University presents Peter B. Biggins, C.S.B. of Seattle, Wash., who will lecture this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall on "Christian Science—The Science of Divine Power."
POWER
Biggins is a member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Boston. Mass. The meeting is open to the public.
Grubb To Leave Hospital
Bob Grubb, c'40, who has been confined to Watkins Memorial hospital following an operation, plans to leave for his home today.
Miss Smelser Is in Hospital
LAWRENCE KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1938
Mas Maud Smelser, accession librarian, is in the Lawrence Memorial hospital where she is recovering from a recent illness.
PAN-HEL MEETING
A meeting of the Women's Pan-Hellenic council will be held in the Pine Room of the Memorial Union building today at 12 o'clock. Mrs. J. B. Hubbard, director of Alpha Delta Pi, will speak.
Katherine Hurd, President.
To Show Russian Film
March of Time Picture
Will Be Accompanied
By Commentator
A personal description by the cameraman who shot the scenes will add interest to the showing of "Stalin's Russia," the motion picture which will be presented tonight at 7:30 in Hoch auditorium.
Julien Bryan, roving cameraman or the March of Time, will act as commemorator for his film, which deletes the industrial and sociological changes in Russia during the regime of Stalin. Bryan's appearance is sponsored by the Student Forum board.
He recently returned from his seventh annual expedition through the Soviet Union, bringing with him also he news films, "Inside Nazi Germany," released in February and Febu-
ber 1943 of Time and we have hown in Lawrence last week.
The picture includes shots of the famous oil fields of Baku, and of Batum where the Soviet Union is now directing the cultivation of tea.
French Club Hears Speeches On Foreign Countries
Bryan will tell of the Stakonov movement and its effect on the workers of the Soviet Union. He has presented his film and lecture at the White House before President Josephovevel.
Helen Cooper, c38, spoke on "The Philippine Islands" and d vernon French, gr., talked on "Quebe" at a meeting of the French club last week. Group singing followed the speeches, which were in French.
Other members of the club will speak on the subject" Chateaus in France" at the next regular meeting.
"Sculpture — A Discussion of Styles" will be the subject of Bernard "Poco" Frazier who he opens the fourth annual series of art lectures in Spooner-Thayer museum Tuesday evening at 7.30.
Frazier was appointed recently to the creative art staff of the University for the calendar year beginning Sept. 1. For the past two years he
has been working on a series of dioramas that are to be a part of Dyche museum when it is restored.
The University faculty members and the adult education department of the Lawrence schools co-operate in presenting the series of eight weekly art lectures. Chancellor E. H. Lindley, Miss Elizabeth Meigur, adviser to women, and Norman Plummer of the department of design, are new speakers on this year's program.
Liberty Memorial High School of Lawrence and Paola High School were the winners in the second district debate contests held in Fraser theater yesterday under the auspices of the Kansas State High School Activities Association.
Lawrence received nine decisions out of ten debates to lead class A entrants. Paola was the class B winner.
Lawrence
Wins Debate
Tourney
In class A, Topeca High School ranked second and Wyandotte High of Kansas took third place.
A tall, very dignified man, the he speaker nevertheless showed flashes of humor that were as sharp as they were unexpected—a man obviously completely at ease with his audience and familiar with his subject. It was a great surprise to major: "It was one of the best things I've heard on the Hill."
Tie in Extemporaneous
Contests were held in 12 districts throughout the state in preparation for the state finals here Feb. 24 and 26. H. G. Ingham, director of the University extension division, directed the tournament here.
Bonner Springs was third in class B. With Garnett dropping out because of one member's illness, only Osa-watimie and Paola competed in class B extemporaneous speech. The two schools tied, each winning three out of four games. Four individual speakers, Paola led, 16 to 18, the lower score winning.
Benet Is Alternately Serious And Humorous Before Hill Crowd
"Poetry is not a mystery." Mr. Benet pointed out. "We should think of it as a craft. It is condensed more than prose, and depends on exactitude of word and phrase. Every word counts. The would-be writer must learn the craft; then later he can break the rules, as most good poets have done." Yet he went on to explain that
Class A Contest Postponed
The class A teams which competed in the tournament were: Lawrence; Ward and Wyandotte of Kansas City; Edwin and Topeka of Tepela Castle; and Atchison.
Yet he went on to explain that poetry depends chiefly not upon
Postponement of the class A extemporaneous contest until next Saturday at 9:30 was announced at the tournament. Each of the six schools which competed yesterday will enter two students.
Keith Martin of Paola won the class B exptemporaneous speech contest. Marguerite Skeema of Osa-watomie was second.
rine Lawrence High School debaters were: Wade 'Tormulder', Albert Decker vid Whitney. The persona vid Whitney. The persona Paula team was: Eta Mae Hollings J. Hunt, Keith Martin and Helen Martin.
Vienna, Feb. 12 – (UP) -Austria, fearful of a new outbreak of Nazi terrorism, has bought “peace” from Germany at the price of Austrian Nazi participation in the government, well-informed quarters believed tonight as they surveyed results of a surprise conference between Adolph Hitler and Chancellor Kurt Schuschnick.
Austria Bargains With Germany
By Richard MacCann c'40
(Copyright, 1938, by United Press)
At the conclusion of a 36-hour visit with Hitler in Bavaria, Chancellor Schuchsnig returned to Austria tonight and was hailed by his fatherland for his independence, but observers assumed he paid a price.
It was believed certain in informed quarters that the Austrian cabinet soon may be reconstructed, but that one or more moderate Austrian Nazies may be admitted to it and that Austrian Nazies who have "Schuschnigg's approval" may be appointed to positions.
There was no doubt that such cabin enlargements and such change in administration would not mean a change in the Austrian "internal polity" of Austria, as a party, and maintaining a fableback party as the only legal party.
At another period, he said, the apathy toward poetry made it publishable only as filler. "When the story was ending and couldn't quite make it to the end of the page, a wall of broken ornament to fill the space."
metre but upon the vivid vision of the poet. "Poetry," he said, "is art at its most intense. It occurs every time a poem is written and has intensity of vision to see it."
In conclusion, Mr. Ben读 some of his own work, including a "noisy poem" about Jesse James; a tribute to his late late wife, Eleanor Woodcock Wife; and the well-known "Merchants from Cathay."
The speaker th en gave a swift survey of some of the high spots in American poetry. Here his humor often appeared, as when he spoke of his youthful conception of the war, which he "a sort of Panteon of beards."
Kansas Team To Debate Brigham Young Squad
The Brigham Young squad has been on an extensive debate trip and is coming here directly from Drake University.
The University of Kansas debate team will meet the debaters of Brigham Young University tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in the Little theater in Green hall. They will debate on the Phi Kappa Delta question, "Resolved: The National Labor Relations Board should have power to enforce arbitration in labor disputes." John Lintner, c39, and Elden Smith, c39, will uphold the affirmative side for Kansas.
Betty Butcher, c.41, a member of the cast of "Sponge Dance," seriously injured her back during a rehearsal Thursday evening. Her role will be taken by Bettie Smith, c.39, when the curtain goes up on the Dramatic Club's first performance of the Philip Barry comedy Tuesday night.
Injures Back In Rehearsal
]
Betty Smith Replace.
Betty Butcher in Cast:
Opening Tuesday Night
As she rolled from the bed, she struck her back on the end board which had not been in position on the bed at previous rehearsals.
But Miss Butcher injured her spinal cord when she hit her back while turning a summersault off the end of a bed in the imaginative bed
out of a porchory house. The child for a roll from the bed and performance of some nightly exercises on the floor.
Is in Hospital
Miss Butcher is in Watkins Memorial hospital. It is not known whether she will be able to be in the play, or the four of the eight play.
Her role was given to Betty Smith, who is being coached in private rehearsal by Prof. Allen Cafton, who is directing the play and by other members of the cast. She has the responsibility of learning a play in three days.
Tickets have been on sale since Thursday at the dramatic ticket office in the basement of Green Hall. The office will be open every day of week to attend ticketing of ticket sales, reports that the turnover is brisk and urges students to exchange their activity tickets for reserved seats as early as possible.
Rehearsals Saturday, Sunday and Monday should put the cast in shape for opening night, the director believes.
Should Reserve Seats Early
The program will be devoted to an observation of the World Student Christian Federation day of prayer. Alice Russell, vice-president of Y.W.C.A., will lead the litany. Student Christian associations all over following a service prayer similar to this during the next week.
Y.W.C.A. To Hold First Assembly
The first all-association meeting of the Y.W.C.A. this semester will be held in the auditorium of Franking hall hall 9409 afternoon at 4:30.
All members of the Y.W.C.A. are urged to attend this assembly, but it is open to any University woman to join us, and especially to new students.
Members of the nominating committee will be elected from the membership at large during the business session. They will serve with Eleanor Slaten, president; Miss Ellen Payne, general secretary; Miss Rosemary Ketcham, chairman of the advisory board, and two members appointed from the cabinet in selecting a slate of officers for the XWCA, for the year 2015. Our Company from the membership at large will be chosen to be on the nominating committee for new members of the advisory board.
Election of officers will be held Marche 1 in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall.
the freshman commission will attend the assembly instead of the regular Monday meeting, according to the dept. December, 41, program chairman.
Mrs. A. H. Turney To Address Pi Lambda Theta Thursday
Mrs. A. H. Turney, state nursery school supervisor, will speak on some phase of social welfare work in Kansas at the annual open meeting of Pi Lambda Theta to be held in the men's lounge of the Memorial
Union building at 3:30 Thursday.
Ballet Ticket Sale Heavy
The largest Russian ballet company, numbering many of the great ballet dancers of the world, will arrive in Lawrence early tomorrow afternow, coming directly from a performance in Salt Lake City. The Carlo will perform in Hoch Audio tomorrow night at 8:20 o'clock.
The program will include three 30-minute presentations: "A Hundred Kisses"; "Aurora's Wedding;" and "The Gods Go A Begging."
Monte Carlo Company
Is Scheduled To Play
Before Large Audience
Tomorrow in Hoch
The sale of seats to people all over this section of the state has been heavy. Good seats remain, however, at all prices. It is requested that seats be given on Monday to avoid congestion at the box office in the evening.
The ballet is an extra attraction on the University concert course and is not included or activity tickets.
I. Une Cent Baisers (A Hundred
isses)
The program follows:
II. Le Mariage D' Aurore (Aurra's Wedding)
1. Prelude
2. Polonaise
3. Dance of the Seven Ladies of Honour and Their Partners
tounb and their Partners
4. Screne and Dance of the Duchasses
6. Paranormal
7. Florestan and His Sisters
7. Little Red Riding Hood
5. Farandole
9. The Porcelain Princess
9. The Forecain Time
10. The Three Ivans
11. Pas de Deux of Princess Aurora and Prince Charming
III. Les Dieux Mendicants (The Geds Go A'Begging).
Hundredth Organ Recital Today
Prof. Laurel Everette Anderson will present the one hundredth vester organ recital of the School of Music at this afternoon, 'n Hoo auditorium.
These recitals were inaugurated by Professor Anderson several years ago. They are given at intervals in the fall, every months from November until April.
Professor Anderson will play the following selections:
Sea-Prelude (Milford). Choral (Honegger)
Dorian Prelude on the Dies Irae (Simonds).
(SIMMONS.)
Prayer and Cradle Song (Guilfrey)
A meeting for those interested in the Kansas Engineer, a magazine published by the School of Engineering and Architecture, will be held tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in room 116, Marvin hall.
Meet Tomorrow in Marvin Hall To Plan for Kansas Engineer
Carillon (Vierne).
SEMESTER FEES
Approximately 400 students have not as yet paid their second semester fees. Failure to pay them by Tuesday will bring about a cancellation of enrollment.
Dean's Choir Sings Tonight
Despite the number paid, the total number of students who have paid exceeds that for the same date last year.
A Cappella Group Will Present Annual M i d - Winter Concert
petals and a romantic looking green
A Cappella anthems:
Organ prelude—Maestoso... Dubois
Organ Offertory—Album Leaf...
Hail, Gladdening Light (8 part)
...Wooo
Lord, For thy Tender Merciessake...Farrant
O Lord, Be Merciful...Bartlett
Alice Marie Meyn
Sake Farrant Ballade of the Trees and the Mas-
The Westminster A Cappella choir, directed by Dean D. M. Swartwhort, will be presented this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the First Presbyterian Church in its annual mid-winter concert. An elaborate program of unaccompanied and accompanied choir numbers as well as both vocal and instrumental solo numbers will make up the following program:
Ballade of the Trees and the Master
Van Denman Thompson
Sorran Soly
Missives Yellow With Age
Three Russian anthems (a cappella)
Agnus Dei... Kalimnikoff
Credo... Gretchainoff
(Solo by Jean Fischer)
The Earth is the Lord's. Nikolsky
Violin solo :
Holding central position in the collection is an elaborate print in gay colors published by B. F. Lloyd and company of Edinburgh. Roses, bluebells, and ferns embellish the edges. Sings singing and playing on the piano.
Homer Dodge Caine
lagio (from Concerto in G Minor) ...Bruch
The missives are yellow with age. A number of them are profuse with the laborious scroll work, now browned and faded, of ardent lovers. Several bear enticing folds of paper which, when opened, thrilled the recipients with tender messages. One type has a tiny mirror with the inscription "Forget Me Not" boldly inscribed above it.
Homer Dodge Caine
Accompanied at piano by
D. M. Swarthout
Embossed paper, intricate, lacy edges, extravagant floral designs, and tender sentiments mark the 36 such valentines for the Museum at Spooner-Thayer Museum is now displaying on the main floor of the museum.
Higher Education
Charles Neiswender-barronte
Two anthems (accompanied)
Softball and Tennis
O Be Thou Exalted, Lord - Huhr
Solo parts by:
ftly and Tenderly ... Thompson
Solo parts by:
Helen Camph
Helen Campoen
Charles Neiewonde
Praise the Lord...Cesar Francl
Semi-horus:
Minster March (from Lohengrin)
Warner
Aley Boyer, soprano; Dorothy Hawce, soprano; Loren Mccormack, tenor; Edwin Hytan; tenor; Charles Neiswender; baritone; and Earl Padden; baritone.
At the morning service the choir will sing two new anthems for the first time. The "Gloria Patri," by Palestrina, a number written for two distinct choirs, will be presented, and "Ave Maria," an eight-part number for humming choir, will be sung for the offerty service.
Organ Postlude:
Valentines As Grandfather Knew Them 100 Years Ago
"And when at noon the breath of love
O'er flower and stream is wander free.
Student Injured Chopping Wood
And sent in music from the grove.
I think of thee. I think of thee.
Such were the ditties which blushing damsels of 75 or 100 years also received each February 14.
Ben Mandeville, c'38, received a large cut above his right eye recently when a stick of wood struck him while he was chopping wood at a table.
him while he was chopping wood in his home at 1542 Tennessee.
grasshopper bearing a torch mal the detail of special interest. 'Bid Her Come Forth'
The sentiment "With an Early Rose" reads:
"Go lovely rose!
That now she knows,
When I resemble her to the
Tell her that wastes her time on me.
That now she knows,
When I resemble her to thee,
How sweet and fair she seems to be.
"Tell her that's young
And shuns to have her graces snied.
That hadd thou sprume†
In deserts where no men abide.
Thou must have uncommended
died.
Bid her come tortu,
Suffer herself to be desired,
"Small is the worth
'Small is the worth Of beauty from the light retired; Bid her come forth,
Surfer herself to be desired. And not blush so to be admired.
Overwhelming to Man Today
Tet though thud hide.
From thy dead leaves let fragrance rise;
That goodness time's rude hand defies.
denies.
That virtue lives when beauty dies."
Continued on page 2
One lacy bit is set upon satin and emphasized with a highly colored picture, oval, in the center. Mermaids support a huge shell which
Huskers Are Beaten By Missouri
Tigers Claw Nebraska
38 to 30 To Repeat
Earlier Victory Over
Big Red Team
Columbia, Feb. 12 — (UPI) — The University of Minnesota turned on a last-half basket hitting offensive to defeat the University of Nebraska at 30 to 10 tonight and move into three place in the Big Six basketball race.
Standings of the Teams
The first half was close all the way with Nebraska holding a 15-14 advantage at half time. The lead changed hands seven times in the
W L i Pct. Pts. O.P.
Kansas 5 1 833 205 185
Oklahoma 5 1 833 205 185
Missouri 3 4 500 202 186
Mountain 3 4 428 202 186
Iowa State 2 5 285 217 273
Kansas State 2 5 285 217 273
Harvey, Missouri forward, was a high point man with 6 field goals and 3 free throws, for 15 points. Nebraska guard, had 8 points.
opening period and neither team was more than 2 points ahead at any time. Three minutes after the start of the last half, Missouri took a good lead and stayed in front thereafter. The Huskers trailed by 6 or more points throughout the greater part of the final half. It was the second victory of the season for the Tigers over Nebraska.
Kansas State Gets Hot To Upset Cyclones 51-29
Manhattan, Feb. 12 — (UP)—Kansas State won its second Big Six game of the season here tonight in defeating a young Iowa State team, 51 to 29. The Wildcats led at the half 28 to 18. Kansas State won the seconds after the opening whistle and was never behind.
Wesche gained the tipoff and sank the first basket before the Cyclones had control of the ball. Wesche bombed the goal consistently, and with help from Howard Cleveland and Ed Kilman, ran the score to 12 to 3 midway in the first half. In the second half, Allen Burns began and one time the K-Staters were out in front 45 to 20. At that point, Coach Frank Root started a stream of Wildcat subs into the game.
Wesche was high-point man with 8 field goals and 2 free throws for 18 points. Burns was second high for 6 points and 12 points, scored on 6 field goals.
Blahnik was high for Iowa State with 3 field goals and 7 free throws for 13 points.
Songs for Revue Are Selected
Original songs to be used in "Spring Swing," musical revue to be presented in April under the sponsorship of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, were announced yesterday.
A number of original compositions were heard by the production staff of the revue, and selection of the theme was made. The theme of the show was made.
The opening chorus and theme of the show is "Spring Swing," written by Bill Miesner, c. 328, Leigh Copeland, fa' 40; and Douglas Tarbert,
The largest number of compositions contributed to the revue are those of Missler. They are "Lazy Eyes," Someone Like You, "Illusion," *Halfway to Heaven*, "Once in a Dream," and "Awake in a Dream."
"You Are You," by Carroll Nickels, fa'38; "Phantom Rhapsody" by Copeland; "I Love You So" by Anna Marie Maplemans, 37; and "Swingin' in Minor" by Tarbet are the rest of the numbers selected for the revue.
Y.W.C.A. Finance Drive Starts This Week
Final plans for the Y.W.C.A. finance drive this week were announced Friday night by Ruth Olive Brown, e.g., 40 chairman of the Y.W.C.A. finance committee. Thirty University women will work to raise the necessary $450 to complete their contributions in the Y.W.C.A. budget.
Three team captains, Betty Jane Boldington, c'41, Pauline Snyder, c'41, and Edna Mae Parks, c'41, will be assigned team members at a "knapsack" which will be given for all Y.W.CA. workers in the Union cafeteria Tuesday noon at 12:30.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1938
~
Comment
Latest War News From Syphilis Front
Syphilis claims another victim! Al Capone, for years gangland's No. 1 man in Chicago, now serving a term in Alcatraz prison, has log his mind; the victim, it is believed, of peresis.
Paresis is a malignant degeneration of the brain which results from syllips. It can be checked and the mind returned to what we may term normal, but cephalic tissue once destroyed can never be replaced.
Thus, in an ironic fashion, one enemy of society has been destroyed to all intents, by another and a more deadly enemy of society.
Students of the University of Texas voted Friday—3,371 to 0—in favor of a voluntary Wassermann test at the University. The election came as the result of a campus campaign which has been waged against venereal disease.
Says one paper in commenting upon this:
New York University is being editorially patted on the back by eastern college papers for its recent adoption of the voluntary Wassermann test.
A prominent medical authority once expressed the opinion that if people were as scrupulous in avoiding the sources of venereal diseases as they were in avoiding the mention of them they would have been virtually under control long ago.
The policy of New York University is to be commended and recommended to every university and every other institution which purports to foster the progress of society.
It isn't enough merely to brag that our University was one of the first in the country to have the voluntary Wassermann test. The point is:
Have you had your Wassermann test?
Not All Die
In Bed Either
We usually think of h-o-m-e as a place of safety and security from all danger, but the death of Judge Bird this week, reminds us that this is not always true.
Pertinent to this is a report by the National Safety council which states that the total deaths from accident in the home last year were 32,000 as compared to 19,000 occupational deaths and 39,700 traffic deaths.
Thus the home, which should be the happiest, safest place in the world, produces more accidents than does industry or any other accident producing unit except traffic.
According to data compiled by the United States department of commerce, the main causes for accidents in the home are falls, burns, cuts and infections, electrocection, poison, asphyxiation, and spontaneous combustion.
We may well adopt a policy of accident prevention in our homes—be continually alert to find the causes for accidents and eliminate as many as possible. We should keep in mind that the things we use and the houses we live in are imperfect things, and can all be improved, made safer and more useful.
Since the lives and welfare of all of us are at stake, the subject of home safety is worthy of our most careful thought.
=
Is Courtship Lost--
Or Has It Strayed?
In defense of the woman, Kalish blames her aggressiveness on the recent trend to shyness among men, pointing out the girl who has known nothing but coyness and coquetry all her life; who has patiently waited for some young Lochinvar to get up enough nerve to propose and as a result has lost.
"Is Courtship a Lost Art?" is the subject of a debate between Margaret Daniels and Harvey Kalish in the current issue of Forum Magazine.
Miss Daniels believes the advent of aggressiveness on the part of woman in courtship is destroying the art and robbing man of the one thing most essential—his role as pursuer and not the pursued. If the art is to remain woman must retain her femininity. To quote Miss Daniels, "Call femininity what you may—coyness or coquetry—but it is, in the final analysis, behavior that spurs on the male to pursue."
Each writer is partly correct; one from the point of the man who loves the chase, and the other from the point of the girl who will lose if she fails to break down her suitor's shyness.
Both have failed, however, to consider the rise of other considerations in courtship. Women have entered into the field of occupations
with men; have gained a taste of economic independence and are unwilling to marry on small incomes; unemployment; the urban trends of population; changing sex-mores arising out of these factors—all have had their effect upon courtship and marriage.
Courtship is not a lost art, but influenced by a host of new conditioning factors, it has become more diversified and different from what it was.
"The cheapest thing this country can do would be to spend a few billion dollars on national defense to preserve the civilization, humanity, and morality of the world." So says Senator Key Pitman of Nevada, chairman of the foreign relations committee, speaking in the Senate last Monday.
We, however, opine a good 5-cent cigar for each of us would be cheaper and do a great deal more for "civilization, humanity, and morality."
The Daily Cardinal of the University of Wisconsin says that men students prefer studying without a conversational dressing, and girl students prefer theirs with.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 1 p.m., greeting
members of the faculty and staff, no later than
a.m.
Saturday for Sunday lessons.
Vol. 35 Sunday, February 13, 1938 No. 93
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular weekly meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon in room C, Myers hall. All students and faculty members interested are invited to attend -Keith Davis,
COLLEGE FACULTY. The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, Feb. 15, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the administration building—E. H. Lindley, Presi-
DOEV. The Dove staff will meet Monday at 4:30 in the Pine Room. Anyone interested in serving on the editorial board or contributing to this issue will receive a certificate of recognition—Mary Katherine Robb, for the Editorial Board.
ELECTION OF HOB-NAIL HOP QUEEN. The election for the Hob-Nail Hop be but he is the winner of the engineering building. Pictures of the nominees will be posted on the bulletin board in the engineering build-
FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office this week, according to the following schedule of courses:
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday and
Saturday
A to G inclusive
H to M inclusive
N to S inclusive
T to Z inclusive
Those at the scheduled time
George O. Fester, Registra
"ISMS" COMMISSION: The "Iism" Commission of the W.C.A. will meet Tuesday, Feb. 15, at Henley Dr. W. Dr. T. Paulin will speak on "The Museum of Society in University women are invited—Jennie Youngman."
MENS STUDENT COUNCIL: Because of the Ballet Ruse the meeting will be held at 7 o'clock Monday evening. Feb. 14, in the Pine room—Moe Ettenson, Secretary.
W. S.G.A.: W.S.G.A. will meet Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock in the room - Drizzle Stockwell, President.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Payer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER
MEMBER
KANSSO
PRESS ASSOCIATION
LONGE COURT
EDITOR-IN-CHEF
MARTIN BENTON AND DAVID A. WANGVIEZ
EDITOR-FILM EDITOR
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR
CAMPUS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SOCIETY EDITOR
SNORTS EDITOR
MAKEUP EDITOR
RWATER EDITOR
TELEGRAPH EDITOR
SUNDAY EDITOR
1987 Aug
MARVIN GOWELER
BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CLASEN
BILL FITZGARDON
DOROTHY NEATHERTON
ELOW TORNIESE
JEAN THOMAS AND JIM MARTIN
DICK MARTIN
HARRY HELL
JANE FLOOD
ALICE HADIMAN-JULIUS
J. HOWARD KEMP
DAVID E. PATRIDGE
KENNETH MORRIE
MORELL VALLEY WILSON
JOE COCHIBANA
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZGERald
DREW MLAUGHLIN
TOM ALEXANDER
EDWARD BARNETTE
J. HOWARD BENTTON
MARVIN GOEBEL
JANE FLOOE
MORELL VALLEY WILSON
CLAUDE DORNEY
ELTON E. CARTER
ALAN ASHEN
CHARLES Alexander
News Staff
Kansan Board Members
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of
Collegiate Digest
BUSINESS MANAGER. F. QUENTIN BROWN
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publications Reporter
A20 NEW HAMPSHIRE N.Y.
CHICAGO BOSTON BAN FRANCISCO
49 LANGLER PORTLAND BEATLE
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Valentines-dressed to "Miss Cornelius Smith,
sir of Miss Boney, 225 Chestnut
street, Philadelphia."
Even the envelopes were made worthy to bear their contents. One embossed elaborately about the edges with roses and doves, in addressed to "Miss Cornelius Smith,
sir of Miss Boney, 225 Chestnut
street, Philadelphia."
Continued from page 1
is the comfortable nest of two affectionate lovers, reminding one of the lovers in Holmes who are now keeping "an oyster shop for mermaids down below."
And on and, on until the college man of 1038 would be overwhelmed by trying to decide which to purchase.
The collection was made by Sally C. Thayer, wife of W. B. Thayer in whose honor the Thayer collection of art exhibits.
What's Happening This Week
GRANADA—Sunday through Thursday; Bob Burns, Jack Oakie and Ann Miller in "Radio City Revels," with Victor Moore, Milton Berle, Helen Broderick, Buster West and Hal Kemp and his orchestra.
* Friday and Saturday: "Love Is a Headache," with Franchi Tone
DICKINSON—Starting Sunday: "Big Broadcast of 1938," staring W. C. Fields, Dorrory Louram, MaRay Bate, Blue Shire, Rosie Bop, Lynne Overman, Rufe Davis, and Shep Fields and his Hippipping Rhythm orchestra. No show is announced for the week-
At the Theaters:
VARSITY - Sunday through Tuesday: "Fifty Roads to Town" with Don Ameche, Anth Sothern, "Slim" Summer and Stepin Fetchit, and "All-American Sweetheart." * Wednesday and Thursday, Sninclair Lewis "Dodsworth" with Ruth Chatterton, Walter Huston and Mary Astor, and * I Cover the War.* * Friday and Saturday: "The Westland case" with Presfron Pastor, Weir Buck-ten, John Bailly, and Stephen Bullley.
PATTE~ Loy in through Wednesday; William Powell, Clark Gable and Myra Lay in "Manhattan Melodrama," and "Danger Patron" with Sally Elers and John Beal. • Thursday through Saturday: Jack Ookie and Annie Southern in "Sea Stout," and "Purple Vigilantes."
On the Campus:
On the Campus.
MONDAY. Bullet Ruise. Hoch auditorium. 8:20 p.m.
TIMEMAN
TUNDAY—“Spring Dance,” pla, Frozen theater, 8:20 p.m. «Art literature opens at 10 a.m. in Spoonter-Taylor with Bernard Hawkins and David Hammond»
WEDNESDAY—"Spring Dance," play, Fraser theater, 8.20 p.m. • Mid-
week dance, Memorial Union building, 7 to 8.
**Friday**—Hob Nail Hosp. Memorial Union building. **B** basketball.
Kansas-Oklaima at Norman. **“Spring Dance,” play.**
Christian Science Organization at K. U.
announcement Memorial Union
Free Lecture on Christian Science
Entitled:
Department of Speech and Dramatic Art
You and your friends are cordially invited to attend
Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday,Friday
By Peter B. Biggins. C.S.B.
of Seattle. Washington
Christian Science: The Science of Divine Power
Administration Building Auditorium
Sunday, February 13, at 3:00 p.m.
Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church
The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Activity or Season Tickets Admit
Single Admission 50 cents
HOCH Monday Eve.,
AUDITORIUM FEB.14
8:20 p.m.
S. HUROK presents Col. W. de Basil's
SPRING DANCE
A Thrilling, Glamorous Stage Spectacle
The Dramatic Club
de Monte Carlo
SEVENTEEN PRODUCTIONS
NEW BALLETS
BALLET RUSSE
Ticket Office Open Daily 9-4
Green Hall KU-174
Presents - - attached to your radio you may have all the music you want . . .
What you want,
When you want it.
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
COMPANY OF 125
THE WORLD'S GREATEST, LARGEST, MOST ENCHANTING DANCE ENSEMBLE
Presenting a Program of Three Great Ballets:
THE BOX-OFFICE SENSATION OF EUROPE AND AMERICA. DIRECT FROM NEW YORK'S METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE
"THE HUNDRED KISSES"
"AURORA'S WEDDING" (The Sleeping Beauty)
GOD'S GO A-BEGGING
Seats NOW at Fine Arts Office; Bell's Music Store;
and Round Corner Drug Store
BEAUTIFUL MUSIC—COLORFUL COSTUMES—
FAMOUS DECOR—DANCE—DRAMA.
COMEDY—GLAMOR
GOD'S GO A-BEEDGING
The New Ballet Which Had Its World Premiere at London Coronation Season at Covent Garden and which was Given Command Performance Before the King and Queen.
FIRST TIME IN LAWRENCE
NOTE: These three ballets will not be duplicated in the Repertoire which the Ballet Russe will present elsewhere in this Territory.
Tickets: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 75c and 50c
Auspices: University Concert Course
Smart Young Men Like Our Cleaning
DANCE
Then too - - attached to your radio you may have all the music you want . . .
What you want,
When you want it.
More Students and Faculty Folks Are Learning That Our VALETERIA Pressing Really Keeps the New Shape in Their Clothes.
Just Phone 383
LAWRENCE Steam Laundry
For this special service. It costs no more than the others.
10th and New Hampshire "We Clean Everything You Wear But Your Shoes"
RECORDS are coming back
With a Victor Record Player for $19^{95}
Bell's Music Store
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1989
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
an associate of Mr. Greene
DOROTHY NETHETHER, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m.; call K.U.25; after 5; call 2702-K3
2
The Phi Chi Delta sorority of the Presbyterian Church will hold a for-ormal initiation banquet Tuesday afternoon at 5:30 at Eaww's Heart.
∞
Helen Ruth Focht, Newton, is a weekend geust at the Alpha Gamma Delta house.
The active chapter of Sigma Kappa will entertain the pledged with a Valentine party this evening.
24
Miss Maude Elliott, of the University faculty, was a dinner guest at the Phi Gamma Delta house Friday night.
O
--in a lavish laugh and rhythm eye and ear full. Get gay! The lid is off!
Jean Lindgrin, Wichita, and Dorothy Kennedy, Kansas City, Mo., are weekend guests at the Chi Omega house.
Dr. R. Q. Summers and Mr. and Mrs. John Summers were dinner guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house.
~
Violette Gressard, ed'unl, Betty Blake, e'unl, were dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Thetet
house Thursday evening.
Alumnae and guests who are spending the weekend at the Alpha Omicron Pi society house are:
Mrs. Margot Raimsen, Fremont, Nebraska; Dr. Thomas H. McLean, New York; and
Mrs. Otto B. Pecha, '19, Kansas City
Mrs. Otto B. Pecha, '19, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Joe Soles, 28, Oakland,
Mrs. James J. Bruce, '21, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Waldo Faveau, '29, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Charles Stone, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Phares McFerrin, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Washington Brown, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. E. V. Hill, '25, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. Howard A. Stalli, '29, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. J. G. Oyer, '35, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Maurice Bruecking, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Janie Miller, '22, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Francis Brown, '24, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Hewey Does, '37, Lawrence
Olga Wallace, Topeka
Josanna Jackson, '35, Kansas City, Mo.
Harlie Hedges, '32, Kansas City, Mo.
Jenet Turner, Kansas City, Mo.
Ruth Plley, '35, Kansas City, Mo.
V
Delta Tau Delta fraternity announces the pledging of Bill Reece, c'41. Scandia.
Mary Jane Sawtell, Lyons, was an uncheon guest at the Chi Omega house yesterday.
Glenda Speakman, Kansas City,
Mo., is a weekend guest at the
Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
∞
A meeting of the Scarab Society will be held with a supper tonight at
6:30 in the Memorial Union building, at which Dean Ivan C. Crowford of the School of Engineering will be a guest.
Preceding the supper, pledge services will be held in Marvin hall for the following men Richard Tippin, John K. Elliott, a¢40; and Leister Dianorme, a¢48.
The Home Economics Club held its annual waffle supper and spring initiation Thursday night. About fifty members and three faculty members were present. The following were 'nitted':
initiated
Martha Study, c199
Clara Margareta Gallie, c40
Bernice Halkenkapler, c40
Ether Frayer, c41
Addie Savory, c199
Caryle Crawford, c199
Arnolda Braun, c199
.
The Delta Tan Delta fraternity entertained with its Valentine party Friday night at the chapter house. The fraternity plowed. The following were muscled.
Jeanne Wilkins, f4'1
Jane Irewin, c'um
Helen Johnson, c'41
Helen Johnshol, c'41
Bernice Jenkins, c'41
Bilie Ball, c'um
Dorie Wood, c'um
Dorie Wood, c'um
Allee Ann Jones, c'41
Helene Payne, c'41
Helene Bulle, c'um
Ploebe Woodbury, c'89
Artie Payne, c'41
Bradine Hill, c'41
Faye Sweedlund, c'18
Julie Hembrook, c'18
Verda Ames, c'93
Annette Lawrence, ed'unc1
Joan Talbot, c'unc1
Virginia Anderson, ed'unc1
Helen Jane Edward, c'88
Rebecca Corbett, c'41
Reba Corbett, c'41
GRANADA
Continuous from 2:30
TODAY
5 Grand Days
Since the Biggest Thing in Radio is a Guy with a Wooden Head (Charlie McCarthy) and the Biggest Thing in Screen History is a Full Length Feature Cartoon "Snow White". It's plenty tough to Sell You on the Idea that Here Is One of the Swetest Pictures Ever Made!
BOB BURNS JACK OAKIE KENNY BAKER ANN MILLER
1
7 GREAT SONGS TO SING AND SWING TO!
RADIO CITY
REVELS
VICTOR MOORE · MILTON BERLE
HELEN BRODERICK · JANE FROMAN
BUSTER WEST · MELISSA MASON and
HAL KEMP and His Orchestra. RKO-RADIO PICTURE
Hollywood Shoots the Works!
MARRIS BROWN AND SIR EDWARD RICHARDSON
JOSÉ MARÍA DEL REY
700 Laughs by Actual Count!
JIM WALKER
And What a Story--
From Van Buren, Arkansas, with Bob
(Baskoe) Burns and His Hillbilly Bond
and a Show boat at Robins Nest on the
River to the World's Most Famous
Amusement Center, Radio City!
ALSO
Mickey Mouse the Goof and Donald in "LONESOME GHOSTS" in color PHIL HARRIS MUSICAL COMEDY REVUE World's Latest News Events
Jean Robertson, c41
Mary Ann Higgerton, c39
Ruth Brown, c40
Ruth Miller, c41
Halidh Krug, c37
Faith Solley, c40
Ruth Burger, c41
Ruth Burger, c40
Florizah Dombing, c1anel
Alice Nail, c39
Allen Kirler, f58
Marie Ramsell, c40
Martin Harnel, c1anel
Alice Margo Map, f40
Jennifer Marie Downey, Kansas City, Mo
Harriet Doomlyn, Kansas City, Mo
Lynne Lawrence, Lawrence
Nadav Schapke, c41
Mr. and Mrs. John Blacker, Lawrence
C. H. Bowen, Euvurance
Mrs. and Mrs. C. Blacker, Carl Helmou, Kansas City, Mo.
Bill Crabbison, 2s
Champions were:
Mrs. Ivy Oaken
Mrs. J. Quadeado
Mrs. J. Terry
Mrs. C. H. Landes
Korea Alpha Theta held its winter formal last night in the Memorial Union ballroom, which was decorated as a penthouse. "Bird" Blackburn and his orchestra played from nine to 12 o'clock.
The chaperons were:
Mrs. P. H. Klickenberg
Mrs. C. Clarke
Ms. Margaret Parkin
Ms. Nell S. Burger
Dinner guests at the Delta Upsilon house Thursday evening were:
Nancy Newlin, c#45
Burberry Burchard, c#44
Hortense Horne, c#41
Lafleur Nath
Durbridge Durbridge, c#41
Derby Noble, c#41
Lawrence's Largest Theatre
Dinner guests at the Delta Upsilon
ARSITY
Home of the Jbhawks
1
SUNDAY
Running in Opposite Directions—
"It's Soon Crash When They Come Together!"
Continuous from 2:00
DON AMECHE
ANN SOTHERN
"50 ROADS TO TOWN"
SLIM SUMMERVILLE
STEPIN FETCHIT
"All-American
Betty Burch, 12'41
Virginia Anderson, e'unel
Kathryn Turner, c'18
George Hamilton, Port Arthur, Texas
∞
The Music Club will entertain with its annual guest party Tuesday evening at 8:30, at the Colonial tea room. An original entertainment in costume will be given under the direction of Mrs. Henry Werner. Twelve members will take part in the musical program.
"All-American Sweetheart"
Patricia Scott Gene
FARR COLTON MORGAN
The Alpha Delta Pi sorority will entertain with a dinner this evening t 6 o'clock in honor of Mrs. Joseph Tubborh of Boston, grand president if the sorority. The guests will in attendance at the突露ness and a number of alumnae.
Wednesday 10c 'Til 7 Then 15c
~
At the tea table, Mrs. Robert Mc-
A great novel, a sensational play that run for two years on Broadway—now a superb motion picture.
The alumnae and patronesses of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority entertained with a tea Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. W. Hutton, Jr., for the pledges, the executive council of the active chapter and the housemother, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin. A gift for the house was presented from the alumnae and patronesses to the president, Marjorie Harbaugh, c'38. Miss Helen Kinney, 33, made the presentation.
Folks Here Today?
Show Them Your Retreat
SAMUEL COLDWYN
has the *
— No. 1 —
--are worth looking at.
SINCLAIR
DODSWORTH
with
WALTER HUSTON
RUTH CHATTERTON
PAUL LUKAS • MARY ASTOR
Screen Play by SIDNEY HOWARD
Directed by William Wyler
Released upon UNITED ARTISTS
OODSWORTH
UNION FOUNTAIN
I
Cover
the War
WARN W. O. WARNE HISTORY
JOHN WAYNE
No. 2
104. 2
A Newspaper Comaramon Finds Himself in...
THE IRON CARD OF ADVENTURE!
THE IRON GRIP OF ADVENTURE!
Sub-basement Memorial Union
Friday - Something New
Hold your breath while
Preston Foster solves---
'The Westland Case'
A Shivling New Murder Mystery
AND
SMITH BALLEW'S
'Hawaiian Buckaroo'
Pot O'Brien Evelyn Knopp
Every Nite pJ Audible Borgain
Nair Davis poured. Mary Tudor Hanna and Sarah Ann Underwood assisted in the dining room.
The hostesses, Mrs. Hutton, Mrs. C. B. Holmes and Miss Kinney, were assisted by Mrs. Fred Ellsworth and Mary Ruth Watermiluer, 36.
The Southern Cal Trojan suggests "Sorcerry Sam" as the name for a burglar who terrorized the Theta house there (for $28) and reports he is now expected to enroll in the college.
PATEE
Continuous From 2 p.m.
Any Scot 15c Any Time
Big Double Show Returned by Popular Demand
MYRNA LOY
CLARK GABLE
WILLIAM POWELL
AND
"Manhattan Melodrama"
Nitro-Glycerine Love
HARRY CAREY
SALLY EILERS
JOHN BEAL
"Danger Patrol"
NEWS - OUR GANG
HORSE BEEF
THE NEW
ARRIVALS IN
SPRING
WEARING
APPAREL
Hickey Freeman and Griffon Suits,
Dobbs Hats,
Bostonian Shoes,
Arrow Shirts,
Ties and Underwear.
Come Soon
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
Week in and Week out the Dickinson Has the East in Entertainment!
Sunday Pricos: 10-35c — Week Days 25c 'til 7
At 1-3-5-7-9
TODAY DICKINSON Sunday Prices: 10.35c — Week Days 25c 'til 7
WASHINGTON
J
CELEBRATING THE RIP-SNORTING RETURN TO THE SCREEN OF THAT RAMBUNCTIOUS REVELER . . . W. C. FIELDS!
With DOROTHY (Hurricane) LAMOUR!
MY LITTLE CHICKADEES,
IT'S COLOSSAL.
MY LITTLE CHICKADEES, 12 Sensational Stars of Screen and Radio in the biggest "BIG,BROADCAST" of them all.
BROADCAST OF 1938
Starring W.C. FIELDS
MARTHA RAYE • DOROTHY LAMOUR
SHIRLEY ROSS • BEN BLUE • BOB HOPE
LYNNE OVERMAN • RUFE DAVIS • LEIF
ERIKSON • GRACE BRADLEY • TITO GUIZAR
And in addition to all this stupendousness, my friends, two supreme specialities by KIRSTEN FLAGSTAD (opera star) and SHEP, FIELDS and his Rippling Rhythm Orchestra...Ah, it's the extravaganza of extravaganzas.
A Paramount Picture • Directed_by Mitchell Leisen
6
New Volta!
aka Nigiri
aka Angela
aka Haiga
te a Roi
PLUS! Color Classic Cartoon - Late Fox News
Soon! The Aristocrat of Fun Shows — "THE GOLDWYN FOLLIES" in Technicolor!
1.
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1938
2
Nebraska Ducks Kansas In Dual Meet
Doubling the score, the University of Nebraska swimmers yesterday afternoon downed the Jayhawker tank军门,56 to 28,在Robinson gym pool。一Pool one record was broken when Spicer, of Nebraska swam the 220-yard free style with a new time of 2.264 to replace the time of 2.296 by Keough of Texas.
Cornbusher Swim Team
Doubles Jaghawk Score
To Win First Contest
Of Season
Spier, Nebraska swimming star was high point man for the afternoon by virtue of firsts in the 220-yard freestyle and the 100-yard free style, and a share in the Nebraska first in the 400-yard freestyle relay. Ritchie of Kansas was first for the Jayhawkers as he took the 50-yard freestyle and a second in the back-stroke.
Although the Kansans were unable to garner more than two firsts out of the nine events, several of the best from Nebraska by only a small margin.
The summary:
500-yard medley—Won by Nebraska (Davidson, Smith, Leaake) second, Kansas (Brown, Beeler, Davidson). Time: 3.32.8.
229-yard freestyle = Won by Spi18.
Nebc, second. Furr, Nebc; third.
Nowosikusie, Kan. Time: 2.26.4. (New
1936 by Kcouch, Texas; 2.26.5.)
1936 by Kcouch, Texas; 2.26.5.)
50-yard freetyle—Won by Ritchie, Kan.; second, Redick, Neb; third, Younger, Neb. Time, 25.6. Diving—By Leask, Neb.; see
Diving-Won by Leask, Neb; second, White, Kan; third, Younger, Neb.
100-yard freestyle—Won by Spicer, Neb.; second, Redick, Neb.; third, Mitchell, Kan. Time 350.
150-yard backstroke.-Won by Davidson, Neb.; second, Ritchie, Kan; third, Newtowska, Kan. Time: 1:55.2
200-yard breaststroke-Won by Brown, Kan; second, Neb; third, Beeler, Kan. Time 2:47.7
440-yard freestyle—Won by Furr.
AT THE VARSITY
ROBERT B. HOWARD AND EMILY TURNER
What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools
Don Ameche and Ann Sother coat in "Fifty Roads to Town," now playing at the Varsity Theatre.
By Newt Hoverstock
Purdue's Boilermakers gave 8,500 bowling spectators a birtle, and at the same time avenged an earlier defeat in Illinois as they stalled for 14 minutes of the last half, after gaining a 20-11 lead in the first period. They allowed only five points to be scored in the last half as they tussled the ball back and forth at the center of the court, set down on the floor, and did everything but read magazines on the court. At one point in the 14-minute stall, Purdue's star guard even lay down on the floor and pretended to catch a map. The super, force turf player was hit from behind and got in the game themselves to get things moving. The Purdue Expendant headline "Boilermaker Netters Sit One Out."
Although this is generally accepted as basketball season, the University of Wisconsin has already opened indoor drill for spring football with 75 reporting and m o r e than 25 others expected in the next few days. The idea is to allow only sophomores of next year and new men to report to get in shape before the first round. Other tee sessions are being held in the stock pavilion, which seems a fitting place for the Wisconsin beefteer to work out. Texas also has begun the spring practice season.
Neb; second, Lake, Neb; third, Fisher, Kan. Time, 5:31.0.
400-yard freestyle relay—Wen by Snipper (Sneaker, Lease, Younger Redick); second, Kinnus (Davidson) and John Horton, and Mitchell), 4:02.2.
With no more home game scheduled until March 3, when Missouri ends the season for the Jayhawkers, fans interested in seeing some excellent basketball might go to the Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kan., to watch the Kansas City Healeys attempt to keep their Michigan UL team healthy and intact in a game with the Phillips "66" team of Bartlesville. Two former Kansas teams will be opposing each other, Ray Noble, Healeys, and Ray Ebling, Phillips. Each is a star car in his respective machine. Several all-Americans will see action including Ebling, Ray Flower, Francis Johnson, Jay Walz-Thompson, Joel Drews, and others. The main attraction is at 3 p.m., with a preliminary game at 2 o'clock.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
AT THE DICKINSON
AT THE GRANADA
While we are on the subject of sport's attractions at our nearby metropolis we might mention for the benefit of you hockey fans that the Kansas City Grayhounds will play their next home match on this coming Friday. The Grayhounds have been on the up-grade lately and are now in second place in the American Hockey Association standings, only two games behind the league leading St. Louis Flyers.
W. C. Fields and lovely Lilyshire Ross, who head the cast of Paramount's girl-and-s歌曲-filled comedy romance, "The Big Broadcast of 1938," now at the Dickinson Theatre. Prominently featured in the all-star cast are also Martha Raye and Dorothy Lammour, and specialities are contributed by Mme. Kristen Flastagel of the Metropolitan Opera and Shep Fields and his Ripking Rhythm Orchestra.
PETER WAYNE AND HARLEN MCCOLLINS
THE LEGENDARY ALEXIS WILSON
The whirlwind dancing of alluring Ann Miller, whose gleefit feet performed in "New Faces of 1937" and "Stage Door," contributes to the grand entertainment in KRO Radial's new musical extravaganza, "Radio City Revels," now playing at the Granada for 5 days. Miss Miller in the romantic lead is co-starred aspen Kenny Baker with Bob Burns and Jack O'Keele, Victor Moore, Milton Berle, Helen Broderick, Jane Froman, Buster West, Melissa Mason and Hal Kemp and his orchestra are also seen.
Nebraska treated Kansas rather roughly yesterday. If the Corn-huskers were true sportsmen, they might at least have let the Jay-hawkers come out on top in one of the two meetings, either the swimming match or the track meet. But serenity seems to the huskers to do better against the Huskers on the track. For instance we sort of thought Friedland might win the
Still we aren't worrying about Kansas' track latens when it comes time to move outdoors. The stadium offers a very poor place for the training of a track squad, and is nothing short of miraculous the way "Bill" Hargis always brings his players to the field of the outdoor season. Yet we thought Kansas was going to do just a little bit better intends this year.
shot put, so it was very disappointing to see that he didn't even place. The shutout in the low hurdles was also disappointing.
That time of 6.2 seconds by Dodd in the 60-yard dash was exceptionally good. If you follow track you will remember that up until the Milwaukee's games a week ago, the world's record for the 60-year event was 6.2 and that Ben Johnson, Columbia's Negro flash, lowered it to 6 seconds flat. But the old record had stood for some 15 years and to equal it is plenty fast running. Last year in the K.U.-NU. dual indoors, the time for the dash was 6.5 seconds.
Women's Intramurals
--practice Tuesday night.
Swimming-All entry blanks for the swimming meet must be in by tomorrow morning.
Basketball-All class teams will practice Tuesday night.
otherwinter morning.
Deck tennis--1.W.W. defeated T.N.
T, 2 to 1, in their match Thursday
afternoon.
Electrical Engineers Will Hold Joint Meeting
The student branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers will hold a joint meeting with the electrical department at the University on Tuesday.
Mr. A. D. Pettee, district engineer of the General Cable Corporation of
B RICK'S
"ON THE HILL"
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Take home a half-pint
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Chicago, will give an illustrated talk on "A Decade of Developments in Electrical Wires and Cables." Contributions to the program by students of the University will consist of a paper and demonstration by Herbert Krauss, c$9, and Richard A. Mendel, c$9. All of their papers is "Unusual Apparatus" for the Cathode Ray Tube. This will deal with the cathode ray oscillograph, used to trace bysteresis loops in iron samples.
STOCKHOLDERS MEETING
TREASURED HOLDERS MEETING
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a special meeting of the Stockholders of the Kappa Alpha Theta Building Association will be held at Association in the City of Lansing, p.m. on Monday, February 21, 1984. Louis County, Kansas at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, February 21, 1984.
Jeannette T. Wheeler, President
President.
Attest:
Helen S. Barteldes,
Secretary.
SPRING SHOWING of Fine Suit Fabrics
There is only one suit to fit you . , , , and it's made-to-measure.
$25 and up
SCHULZ
The Tailor
"Suiting You is My Business"
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YOU CAN SEE:
1. AN ENGINEER WITH A NECKTIE
2. AN ENGINEER WITH A SHAVE and if that isn't enough there is
3. PRESENTATION OF THE 1938 QUEEN SELECTED FROM:
ROBERTA COOK
JANE WARING
ISABEL WEST
MARJORIE SPEARING
PATTI PAYNE
4. LOUIE KUHN'S ORCHESTRA
HOBNAIL HOP
AT THE
MEMORIAL UNION
9-12 Semi-Formal
No Corsagos
Tickets: 75c in Advance $1.00 at door, plus tax
Friday, Feb. 18, 1938
EVEN SHYSTERS CAN COME
N N N N N N N N N
Valentine FLOWERS
WHAT TO ORDER—This question frequently arises, the appropriate flowers for the occasion, etc. If you will state your problem and about how much you desire to spend we will make a proper selection that we know will please.
THE FOLLOWING ARE A FEW SUGGESTIONS
Valentine Gift Boxes
To assist you in "saying it" we are offering special selections of choice flowers most appropriate for a neat and attractive manner.
First size ... $2.00
Second size ... $3.00
Third size ... $4.00
1
Violets for Valentines
Double English, used in
Colonial Bourquets
75c. $1.00. $1.50. $2.00
CORSAGE BOUQUETS
Very Popular and Appropriate for Valentines.
All cones and shoulder bouquets are tied with ribbons, colors matching the flowers, and pearl headed pins accompany them.
Any combination of flowers in season may be used, the following being the most popular: rosebuds in the Valley, Roses and Violets, All Orchids, Orchids and Lilies at the Valley, Orchids and Violet Gems.
COLONIAL BOUQUETS
Appropriate for Valentine's Day, but much admired and suitable for all occasions.
Each bouquet has a lace paper holder and is tied with tulle.
WE WILL BE OPEN ALL DAY TODAY
Let us telegraph you Valentines anywhere, anytime.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
5
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUNE XXXV
Russian Art Is Also Work
Patrons S e v E Spectacle
Of Rhythm and Grace
In Ballet Russé de Monte
Carlo
By Morris Thompson, c'38
A goodly house of swine received a magnificent collection of pearls from the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in Hoichor auditorium last night. And even the swine appreciated the rarity of the gems cast before them.
The princess would have the magic crook and finally agrees to the prince-swinechirler's price of a hundred kisses, but as she is paying the price, her father appears and banishes her husband. The prince then reveals himself to the princess and departs with the rejected rose.
The presentation last night was in three parts. The first, Les Cen Baisers (The Hundred Kisses) rhythmically told the story of the princess, so engrossed in material beauty, that she rejects the rose and the bird; she gives it gifts by the bird. She is later entranced by music from a magic crook, for which the prince has traded cloaks with a swineherd.
The great ballet, which has been described as the last great flicker of an art that has lost its home, is perhaps beyond the complete appreciation of the ordinary individual. But your reporter, who counts himself most ordinary, thrilled to the technique, though he couldn't analyze it; he danced with the Blue Bird, though he stumbles in a blue trot; his humdum emotional pitch was accelerated by the emotional interpretation of the dance 'till he won't be normal for days—perhaps that's what we were supposed to do.
Presented in Three Parts
Aurora's Wedding Second Ballet
Standouts in this ballet were Tamara Grigorieva, as the princess, Pau Petroff, as the prince, and Serge Ismailloff, as the swineherd.
The second ballot, Le Marriage D Aurore (Aurora's Wedding), tells no definite story, but in twelve parts unfolds a variety of dance portrayal that probably could not have been contained in a story. The Prelude was followed by the Polonaise, the Dance of the Seven Ladies of Honour and Their Partners, Scenes and Dance of the DuchesSES, and Faren-dole. These sketches, from the actual story of the wedding of actually sleeping beauty or were beautifully dignified, or rather, dignified including many of the greats of the ballet, and were flawlessly presented; yet brought only ordinary applause from the audience.
Lichine Outstanding Blue Bird
In contrast the following sketches, which included the fairy tales of Florestan and His Sisters, Little Red Riding Hood, The Blue Bird, The Porcelain Princess and The Three Ivans were all gay, fast-moving spectacular and highly appreciated by the spectators.
Tatiana Riabouchinska and David Lichine, in the Blue Bird desire special note for their brilliant team work as well as their solo dances. Lichine, who is choreographer for the troupe, is one of the few evidences this modern word has of truth that a man can hold lite and extremely graceful and he can dance as well as a woman.
The Porcelain Princess, and The Three Ivans were also enthusiastically accepted. This ballet was concluded by practicing the artists of the ballet."
The last number, "Les Dieu Menicands" (The Gods Go A-Begging), was the shortest of all, but not the least pleasing. It tells the story of the two divinities who visit a festivity of nobles and their ladies in the guise of beggars. The nobles reject the beggars and scoff at their love-making when they reveal themselves as gods, then they are duly contrite. Outstanding in this ballet are Vera Nelidova as the serving maid-dey and Yurek Shabblevsky as the shepherd deity.
Recapitulation: The Ballet was brilliant, pleasing and well-received. Obiti Diae: Music; while good, was completely dominated by the artistry of the dancers; I believe it could have stopped and not been made stage-like in lots of good muck-stage color but I couldn't translate it . . . moving from two dollar seat back to where one could see the ballet as an entity . . . front-round spectators saw heaving chests, testimony that art is also work.
Tau Sigma Will Conduct Solo Dance Tryouts
NUMBER 94
Tau Sigma tryouts will be held this evening at 7:30 in Robinson gymnasium. Solo tryouts are the only ones scheduled for this semester, replacing the class tryouts of last semester.
Candidates will be furnished with an accompanist and they may try whatever type of dance they wish. They are also able to bring their own practice clothes.
Utah School Debates Here
The Kansas team, upholding the affirmative, maintained that a system is needed wherein justice makes right instead of might makes right and that this impartial conciliation board could do it if it were given the chance. It pointed out that labor disputes were coating the surface with $30,000,000 each year. They proposed that capital and labor interests be forced to present their disputes before this organization.
Two members of the University debate team, John Lintner, c39, and Eldon Smith, c39, waged a no-decision debate with the debate team at Providence University of Provo, Utah, yesterday in the Littleton theater in Green hall.
No-Decision Discussion He lled Yesterday With Beaiah Youna College
The Brigham Young debaters maintained that the board would be a political football, inefficient and slow. In addition, they said that a capital and labor would not be satisfied with a settlement forced upon them by a third party. They pointed out that it is 60 percent of the disturbance and no diatribal capitalists determine this but rather the economic interplay.
John Carver and Edmund Moe represented the western university, taking the negative side of the question, "Resolved: The National Labor Relations Board should have the power to enforce arbitration in labor disputes."
The Brigham Young team will meet the Kansas Wesleyan队 tonight. Tomorrow they are scheduled to debate with Colorado Col-
Boyce Talks At Conference
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938
Earnest Boyce, professor of civil engineering at the University, and engineer for the State Board of Health, talked on Kansas water resources at municipal and industrial uses at a conference held last weekend in Omaha. The conference, which focused on the efficient use of land and water resources of the seven states of the Missouri valley.
George Knapp of Topeka, engineer for the State Board of Agriculture, presented a paper on what can be expected from terracing and other devices for using water resources in agriculture.
Transportation by rail, water and highway also was discussed.
Others from Kansas attending the meeting were Ralph G. Rust of Parsons, chairman of the state planning board; John Redmond, editor of the Burlington Republican, member of the board; Sam Wilson, Topeka, director of the board; and Herbert Hare, Kansas City, consultant.
The meeting, Professor Boyce said, was for the purpose of exchanging ideas on problems and, what to do, among the several states having similar problems. A resolution at the close of the meeting provided for another conference upon call of any three of the state planning boards.
States participating in the conference were Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri.
Haskell Girls To Be Guest Speakers in V.W.C.A. Meeting
The Freshman Commission of the W.Y.C.A. postponed its weekly Monday meeting to attend the W.Y.C.A.election meeting held yesterday afternoon in Frank Strong hall. The commission will meet next Monday at 4:30. They will have as their guests, the Haskell girls, who will relate tales of Indian customs among their tribes.
The Men's Student Council last night strongly urged students to co-operate with Men's Advisor Henry Werner's request that all thefts be reported immediately and that the basement of Frank Hall shall.
Report Thefts Immediately
A Cappella
Choir Gives
Annual Concert
An attentive audience was present at the annual nid-winter concert of the Westminster A Cappella Choir at the First Presbyterian Church of Dallas, where she is directed by Dean D. M. Swerthorf of the School of Fine Arts.
The program opened with an orignal prelude, "Masteoos" (Dubois) by the church organist, Mrs. Staffon, and this was followed by the processional, where a statue of Jesus and the members of which were attired in the white church robes.
The Doxology was sung by choir and audience, after which the Rev. Theodore Aszman gave the invocation. The offerty anthem, "Album Leaf" (Schumann) was played by Mrs. Straffon.
A group of a capella anthems by the choir followed. These were "Hail, Gladdening Light," an eight-part chorus song by Wood; a more subdued anthem, "Lord, for Thy Tender Mencers' Sake" (Farrant); and "Ballade of the Trees and the Master" (Van Demon Thompson). This chorus song is memorable ("Bartlett"), by Alice Marie Meyn, fa4, 20 follow. Three Russia anthems by the choir were next: "Agmus Dei" (Kalimnikoff); "Credo" or the Nicaean's Creed (Gretchanoff), in which the solo was sung by Jean Fischer, with a soft humming accompaniment by the choir; and "The Earth Is the Lord's" (Nikolsky), which characteristically fea-
Next was a violin solo "Adagio," from the Concerto in G Minor (Bruch) by Homer Dodge Caine, fa39, who was accompanied at the piano by Dean Swarthow. Following this was a duet. He was accompanied by Virginia Varga, contralto, and Charles Neiswender, baritone.
The last two anthems by the choir were accompanied. They were "Softly and Tenderly" (Thompson), in which the solo parts were sung by Alice Boyer, b41; Helen Campbell, f39, and Charles Neiswender, b38; and "Praise the Lord" (Frank) which provided a fitting climax. The semi-chorus part in this number was sung by Alice Boyer, Dorey McCormack, Loren McCormack, b37, and Edwin Hayt cunel, tunes; and Charles Neiswender and Earl Padfield, c41; baritones.
At the conclusion of this number, the minister pronounced the benediction, which was immediately followed by a response by the choir "The Bell Amen," after which an organ postude, "Minster March" from Lohengrin (Wagner) was played.
The showing of the film, "Stalin's Russia," given Sunday night in Hoech auditorium, drew a crowd of about a thousand persons. Julian Bryan, "March of Time" then followed the picture which lasted about two hours. The movie showed the changes which have been made in Russia in recent years.
Many Attend Russian Film In Hoch Auditorium Sunday
Heavy all of the members of the cast are talkative. They like to discuss and what they may accomplish in the future. Most of the present bal-
Chancellor Returns From Washington
interest in the state continues high, the Chancellor said, even among Kanans who have been long in the capital, and he heard of seven daughters. "We are to return to the University for their college work."
They were guests at the University of Kansas alumni luncheon Wednesday noon, attended by more than forty alumni. The Chancellor was speaker at the belated Kansas Day dinner the same evening, over which Congressman Richard Neal, Hugo Cooper and McGill spoke. About two hundred of the 1400 Kansas in the District of Columbia attended the dinner.
A good part of the success of the projects, Chancellor Lindley believes, is due to the fact that each region has been able to work out its own plans, fitting projects to meet local needs. Reports indicated a high degree of success of projects under college aid (called CSEP at the University), and said the committee hoped the college aid would be continued on somewhat the present level for a time at least.
The committee conferred with President Roosevelt for more than an hour, Mrs. Roosevelt, who is greatly interested in projects of the NYA character, sat in with the conference, and by her comments showed a wonderful fund of information about projects she had via
Ballerinas Seek 'Movies' Upon Arrival in Lawrence
One of Committee That Discussed NYA Projects With President La s t Week
Chancellor E. H. Lindley, upon his return from Washington, D.C., Saturday, said that reports to the President's committee of thirty, serving in an advisory capacity for the National Youth Administration, indicated highly successful programs were being carried out. Chancellor Lindley was one of the few committees from the Middle West.
in the Kentucky mountains, for example, pupils had rebuilt their school house under an NYA project. From the building process one of the boys learned enough about carpentry to be able to do much of the supervision in the construction of a residence. In NYA practice, another team was made, the sale of which was reimbursing the NYA fund.
Dean L. D. Havenhil of the School of Pharmacy spoke before Kappa Psi, pharmaceutical fraternity, last night at 7:30 in the mounte's lodge on the Union building. Dean Haenhill's topic was "The Value of a Professional Fraternity in the School of Pharmacy."
And so yesterday afternoon when the corps of the Ballet Russe of Monte Carlo arrived in Lawrence at the Union Pacific station a score or more of the ballerinas climbed down out of pullmats and inquired, "Which way to the nearest theater?" Almost the entire trope, leaving its baggage at the station, walked across the bridge and up to our local movie houses. With about four hours before their own curtain call, they joined the Russian artists spent their time watching our Hollywood performers. In the words of Tamara Grigorievich, who plays the Princess in "The Hundred Kisses," I 'want to go. I haven't been for so long--Seattle."
By Richard K. Laban, c. 25 Ballet dancers, artists, and impresarios, whether they are born in Lawrence, New York, London, or three blocks from the Kremlin, are just like you, and you, and you.
These people have the same desires and the same hopes as almost any fair college co-ed. They even think in the same way, and spend most of their spare time in the true University manner—at the movies.
Dean Havenhill Speaks
Lindley Speaks at Dinner
Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley, while in Washington, were guests of their son, Ernest K. Lindley, Washington correspondent for News-Week.
Plans Fit Local Needs
4y Richard K. LaBan, c'39
Tamara Grigorieva, Tatiana Ria-bouchinisa, and Irina Baronova, who top the present talent list, have been with the company on five or six of its tours, although not any of them is over 25 years old. Tamara, a dark-skinned Caucasian, was born an a train in Siberia as her parents were attempting to escape from Russia during the Revolution.
leinas studies under the e' former pupils of Serge Diaghileff, who first took the Russian Ballet to western Europe in 1909. The present Baller was organized in 1932 by Co. Mozart and was presented at a Russian opera house in Paris. With the support of the Princess of Monaco he assembled those children of the Russian emigrants who were trained in the old Imperial ballet school. Teachers Kcbeskiha and a Precrainjerska material for de Bali, but critics have termed the present crop as among the best.
Tatiana was born a fair-haired daughter of a banker during the Tzarist regime. She has so many stage admirers that Colonel de Basil once rushed her to Lloyd's to inquire her against marriage; years after, the dancer has a pure emotional quality, seemed to Continued on page 3
“Spring Dance,” the play right up the collegian's alley, will reveal all about Joe and Jane College, not to mention what happens at a spring party. The curtain goes up on Philip Barry's comedy for the first time tonight.
'Spring Dance'
Promises a Big
First Night
"Students haven't gotten over the blues of the semester exams, and now they need a little pepping up," said Prof. Rollka Nuckle, as a reason for presenting the rollicking comedy. "If the preview audiences are any indication of the sentiment the regular student body has toward the play, then the audiences will added Professor Crafton director.
Sorority Scenes Pictured
The action of the play revolves around sorority girls of a fashion-able school, who give a spring dance, inviting all the "spring struck" males from Princeton, Yale and Harvard. Of course the girls discuss all the eligibles, and the males talk about what the spring does to the heart. But there is one wise cracker, Hat, who exclaims:
"And I don't know why all this talk about spring, either. I feel good all the time!"
A preview of the "bedroom" scene was presented last night over KFKU under the direction of Professor Nuckles. Among the students taking part in the preview were Betty Smith, c'39, who is substituting for Miss Butter Budy, c'41, who was injured at a rehearsal Thursday evening; Margaret Ramage, c'uncl; Jaime Coats, c'39; Ernestine Hodge, c'uncl; and Mary Elizabeth Schreiber, c'38.
The preview took the place of the regular play presented each Monday night from the "Little Theater on the Hill" group.
Preview Given Monday
"There won't be any chance of seats after tomorrow for the production," warned Gerhart Tonn, ticket manager. "This promises to be one of the best first nights since last year."
Tickets for the production will be sold tomorrow and Wednesday.
Betty Butcher, c'41, who injured her spinal cord in a rehearsal of the play, Spring Dance. Thursday, has been released from Watkins Memorial hospital, but she will not be able to take part in the production, according to a statement by Dr. R. I Catusentho.
CSEP Fills Many Job Applications
Seventy-eight students are receiving CSEP work for the first at the University this semester. Forty of these jobs were made possible by an increase in available CSEP money, while 38 occurred through the filling of vacancies occasioned by withdrawals.
The past week has been spent filling requests for assignments. According to Miss Martha Tillman, executive secretary of CSEP, there is still a small balance of CSEP funds unexpended. Any qualified student may still apply for a position. The jobs are awarded to those students who find it impossible to attend college without this aid, who are of good character, have good references, and who show ability to do high-grade college work as judged by the standards of the University.
For the past payroll period, the month of January, 353 undergraduates worked a total of 14,001 hours to earn $4,734.35, an increase of $781.50 over the month of September. The average income for each student amounted to $13.41. Eleven graduate students worked 439 hours to earn $179.60. The average income for each graduate student was $13.60. Students may expect their checks by Feb. 16.
Department of Design To Display Textiles
Textile fabrics from Marshall Field and company will be placed on display tomorrow in the exhibition room of the department of design, 328强壮 hall. The collection is from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week and on Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock. The exhibition is shown through the courtesy of Ms. Blaise Byerley of New York
'Poco' Frazier Lectures Tonight
Huskers Rout Cyclones To Enter Third Place Tie
Lincoln, Feb. 14—(UP) - Bob Parsons, all-conference guard, scored 17 points as the Nebraska basketball team to 28 before 5,000 fans here tonight.
The Cyclones scored only 5 field goals. Nebraska led at the half to 13. The victory placed Nebraska in a tie with Missouri for third place in the conference with four victories and four defeats.
Career Ends For McIntyre
"Turn your face toward me so I can see you," he said to his wife in their Park avenue apartment. Then he died.
Famous Columnist Died
In Park Avenue Home
Yesterday
New York, Feb. 14 — (UP)—O. O McNlytrey, most widely read newspaper man in the world, who owned a magazine that ran on his typewriter, died today.
He has been in uncertain health for weeks, and the last "New York Day by Day" that he was done on heart disease was the cause of death.
McIntyre counted his friends by the thousands and they included many newspaper men who valued his friendship while unappreciative of the things he wrote. His audience was anywhere in the United States except New York, although his column appeared here daily in the Journal-American. He may have had as high as seven million readers on the 580 newspapers that subscribed to "New York Day by Day."
For them he made New York an exciting, glamorous place and cast himself in the role of the small-town boy from Gallipolis, Ohio, who walked wide-eyed through Bagdad on the Hudson. He wrote of sinister ways that people and Pell streets seldom saw him; he was able to hear earie cries from prisons and hear knives flash in the half-light of street灯s; he told of eating epicurean foods in restaurants crowded with famous actresses, maharajas and millionaires. His critics said he built a New York all his life; and he became the people who never half had been wanted it to be.
Independents To Dance
At Memorial Union Tonight
Novelty dances will be featured at the Independent hour dance to be held this evening from 7 to 8 $c/clock in the form of the Memorial Union building.
A balloon dance and the cakewalk will be among the special dances Door prizes will be given.
Admission is 10 cents, date or stag
Professor Taggart Speaks in Kansas City
J. H. Taggart, associate professor of economics, will speak at noon today before the Kansas City Co-Op creative Club in the Hotel Baltimore. His subject will be "Current Economic Trends."
Professor Taggart will discuss some of the causes of the present recession, and possible cures. A delegation from the Co-operative Club of Lawrence will accompany the speaker.
The Kansas City club is made up of about 352 independent business men interested in the promotion of rade.
Katherine Gibbs School Offers Two Scholarships
Two memorial scholarships consisting of full tuition for one year and a cash award of $300 have been announced for the year 1938-39 by the Katherine Gibbs School of Boston, New York, and Providence.
Applications must be filed with the Memorial scholarship committee not later than April 1.
These scholarships are granted to the two applicants whose academic record, personal qualifications, and fitness to profit from secretarial training shall recommend them most highly to the scholarship committee. Further information may be obtained from Miss Elizabeth Megular, adviser to women, or by writing to Memorial Scholarship Committee, Katherine Gibbs School, 230 Park Avenue, New York.
NOTICE
The Engineering Book Exchange will be open today from 8:38 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for the purpose of paying off.
Raymond Rogers, Manager.
Council Petitions for Day of 'Grace' Asks University Senate For One Day's Recess Between End of Classes And First Day Finals
The Men's Student Council last night petitioned the University senate for a day of "grace" between the men and women at the first day of final examinations.
Petition Unanimous
The petition, which was passed unanimously, is as follows:
Climaxing discussion which had carried over from the last meeting of the group, President Don Vooreh instructed the secretary to draw up a pition asking for the free period.
The Men's Student Council respectfully petition the University Senate for a day of grace between the last day of classes and the first day of the final examination week. The above mentioned group unanimously feels that such a day would prove of definite benefit to the students of the University of Kansas in preparing for their final examinations and in completing their academic activities of the semester.
The Council voted an appropriation of $275 from the reserve fund for a dance for Negro students. The dance will be on the "midwife" stage in Jackson City colored orchestra拜
Council To Send Letter
Frank Harwi was named chairman of the joint W.S.G.A.M. S.C.P. parking committee replacing Don Hanwi as Harwi and Frank Harwi as a member of the committee.
The council voted to send a letter to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce informing it of the ruling against "defacing University property." Action was taken as the result of a local theater's advertisements which appeared on Campus sidewalks last week.
President Voorehees instructed both parties to submit nominations for the two council vacancies. Don Hansen, an independent representative of the School of Law, was graduated at the end of the first semester. Don Ebling, P.S.GL president of the sophomore class, failed to meet the scholastic requirements for council membership.
Women's Rifle Squad Picked
The following women have been selected to compose the 1938 women's rifle squad of the University:
New members: Betty Adair, p; Jane Adair, p; ph; Maria Andrews, ed uncl; Belt Alkins, cun; Betley Clayton, cun; Claveridge, c30; Margaret Cleverenger, fa 38; Mary Cosgrove, cun; Lauda DeForest, c41; Mary Fitz-Gerald, c40; Esther Gilleson, c40; Maxine Dodge, c40; Jennifer Dorman, c41; Jane Irwin, cun; Marjorie McCarty, c41; Eleanor Overmier, fa 39; Ann Righture, fa 40; Joan Oldmen, who are returning, arc: Mary Alice Bertot, fa 38; Betty Jane Boddington, c40; Ruth Riesberg, c40; Patricia Eisewhner, c40; Marjorie Frazier, c39; Helen Geis, c40; Mary A. Gerrill, c40; Helen Hoffman, c40; Judd, c40; Jane Kellman, c40; Ben Kellman, fa 38; June Lentz, c40; June Miller, c40; Helen Naramore, fa 40; John Newall, t39; Charlotte Stafford, c39; Virginia Clawson, fa 38; Helen Warden Lincoln, fa 38; Cal Woodson, c38.
A meeting of the squad will be held tonight at 7 o'clock in Fowler shops. Prospective matches and other important business will be discussed. Attendance at the meeting is required, but if it will be impossible for a member to attend, she should notify Helen D威尔登.
WEATHER
Kansas - Unsettled Tuesday and Wednesday; some probability of rain except rain or snow in northwest; no decided change in temperature.
Dr. Naismith Escapes
Iniury in Automobile Wreel
Dr. James Naimith, professor of physical education, escaped injury in an automobile accident Saturday night. He was returning to Lawrence from Kansas City, where he had attended high school basketball games, when his automobile missed a turn and went in to the ditch. None of the occupants of the car was injured. The car was righted by passing motorists and Doctor Naimith drove it home.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1989
||
Comment
Let Us Still 'Remember the Maine'
Forty years ago today the American battleship Maine was blewn up in Havana harbor; thereby, and not at all incidentally, precipitating a war.
Yes, the destruction of the Maine hastened the war, for the same blast that sent it down also sent American newspapers into a frenetic frenzy of screaming headlines and editorialized front pages. Two days later, Hearst's New York Journal was offering $50,000 reward for "The Detection of the Perpetrator of the Maine Outrage!" and barely a week later, on Feb. 25, on the "ears" of that paper was the plea "Help the Maine Monument Fund! If You Can't Send a Dollar Send a Dime."
"Remember the Maine" became the cry that blared forth from every front and editorial page—from church and school.
Today we can laugh at all the facial aspects of the whole thing. The war was not especially costly in life, and if it typified a militant imperialism of the moment, the reaction was quick to set in after the conflict, historians point out.
"Remember the Maine." The world will do well to remember it today—to remember it as an instance of snap and erroneous judgment—of inimical mob madness.
It is a far better slogan today than it was 40 years ago.
Simeon Had Nothing on Odd
Q, O. (Odd) McIntyre died yesterday
Irvin S. Cobb once said of him: "St. Simeon Stylites, the first flapstone historian, was but an amateur. He merely lived thirty years on a column . . . 'Odd' McIntyre has not lived for thirty years yet on his column—only about half to two-thirds that l o ng. But look how much better he has lived than the original champion ever did, and I maintain he has brought a thousand times more joy into a be-dragged world than any poor old patient soul who thought to set a penitential example."
We could tell more about him: the number of papers which ran his syndicated column—stories of his life and his success. They would mean so little to you.
If you are a reader of his column you will be more interested than if you are not. But it may become vague in the press of the day's work. A week from today you will have forgotten. But some morning you will look for his column, and not finding it, will wistfully recall:
Odd McIntyre is dead.
Religion: Model---
Twentieth Century
Tricks from the pupit make up a new method of luring hesitant persons to church. Adjutant William B. Plews of the Volunteers of America has found it a successful method.
Before joining this organization William Plews was a vaudeville magician performing under the title of "William the Great." For the past nine years he has been preaching to a waming audience, until last week, when his announcement that he would perform tricks brought a capacity crowd to the Volunteers Chapel in Rochester, N. Y. Curious churchgoers apparently appreciated Mr. Plews' efforts to make sermons more realistic.
Record attendance at Mr. Plews' church may be expected. His repertory of 3200 stunts will be drawn upon for future services.
In his services, the adjunct first impersonated St. Paul chained in prison at Phillipi. "St. Paul" prayed for God's help and, thanks to years of training in vaudeville magic, was released from his fettered state within two minutes. So could they escape the bonds of sin by appealing to God, the fascinated audience was informed.
A pertinent question is: are people going to consider this a regenerative or a degenerative function of the church? Is religion reduced to a farce or is its socializing value enhanced thereby? Our god-concepts do change and have changed through the years of known history. Can it be the austere god of our fathers is learning to smile?
Campus Opinion
Editor, Daily Kansan;
M.Dear, "Prepared for Anything:"
Unfortunately I did not read the letter submitted by said "Preparedness." It must have been rather remarkable to draw the return fire of so worthy a word to the lips. Yet, if one could imagine I realize that undoubtably I am something of an up-start probably still slightly damp behind the ears and with their all inclusive knowledge of world affairs have not already duly weighed and accounted for; hence I shall endeavor maintain due respect of them.
noted continuation, because that a person of your undo-subduced integrity should be able to do so. The person who has a little girl, and at such a tender age.
---
age--I'll bet you have calliower flowers by now. Let us
use some more trouble in our adjectives.
Did you ever step accidentally on a marble? If so how long did you stand, there?
If it was on a hard surface you were probably lucky to stand on it long enough to invite a "push in the face" of course I accept your word without question. I only wish to set at ease those who might fail to grasp the point of the accident (accident), whereby the present Sino-Jap, conflict was precipitated, with was doubt an instance of Japanese stepping on a Chinese marble. Now had China only made the proper apology and retribution for have fallen over the edge, there would be could on it think of all the slips in water that could have been avoided.
Enough! I girl iire of bandying words—what happens to little girls who wl allow themselves to be pushed around, granted I have a week point here, and what of them? Do you have a friend whose marbles? You as a would be psychologist should know the answer; personally I have forgiven the exact social misisl probably for life.
Is this not also true of nations? After all does not the nation which allows itself to be pushed around and its marbles, ships or what have you, stepped on and sank invite the contempt and further subjection
My friend in spite of your air of haughty learnedness, I felt that you had been much in the field of International Politics by recalling the events that occurred after that little boy you spoke of called his gang. Personally I have no doubt that you were a very nice man.
You do not astonish or even surprise me at your evident squeamishness concerning the possibility of "your immortal girls fertilizing American respect in their way they are doing little to imbue its growth here."
Prepared for the worst.
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular public days and 11:50 a.m.
at the Office of the Chancellor.
Vol. 35 Tuesday, February 15, 1938 No. 94
COLLEGE FACULTY. The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building—E. H. Lindley, President.
A. I.E.E: There will be a joint meeting of the Kan nas City section of the A.I.E.E, and the KU, bran at 7:30 this evening in Marvin hall auditorium. Refreshments will be served: D.W. Shiner.
ELECTION OF HOB-NAL HOP QUEEN: The day's events are the day and Wednesday at the Book Exchange in the engineering building. Pictures of the nomines will be posted on the bulletin board in the engineering build-
FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office this week, according to the following schedule of number.
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday and
Saturday
H to M inclusive
N to M inclusive
T to Z inclusive
T to Z inclusive
Those unable to appear
in the exam
= "see O. Foster, Registra"
GERMAN LANGUAGE TABLE: All those wh wish to speak German are invited to the german table, where pieces in their own Union build a $3.50 tableau. There is another objection other than to speak Germans—W. B. Schaffrath.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB: The International Relations Club will meet Thursday, Feb. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union building—Kathryn Turner, Secretary.
"TSMS" COMMISSION: the "Jens" Commission of the Y.W.C.A. will meet at 4:30 this afternoon at Henkey House. Paulin will speak on "The Meare- Jenne Youngman. All University women are invite-"
TAU SIGMA: Tau Sigma tryouts will be held in the gymnasium this evening at 7:30. Bring your critical summaries of the Ballet. Attendance is required—Catherine Dunkel, President.
WOMEN'S RIFLE CLUB: There will be a meeting in Fowler Shops tonight at 7 o'clock. Attendance is required. New uniforms and other important business will be discussed—Helen Ward, Captain.
W. S.GA: There will be a meeting at 7 o'clock the evening in the Pine room -Doris Stockwell, President.
YMCA.-FRESHMAN COMMISSION ELEC-
TION: Freshman Commission officers will be elected
from the YMCA office in the Union building. All freshman members should be present - Charles Weight, President.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDG
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOEBEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GUY CLAINSON
NEW ERA EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERTHAM
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERTHAM
SOFT EDITOR LION TORKEENCH
MARPOL EDITOR JEAN THOMAS PARK
REWRITE EDITOR DICK MARTIN
TELLER EDITOR HARRY HILE
FOUNDATION EDITOR
EDITOR IN-CHIP
ASSOCIATE EDITORS! MARTIN BENTION AND DAVID W. ANGHESETT
TOM A. FELLE
News Staff
ALICE HALDMAN-JULIUS
J. HOUSE RICO
DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
KENNETH MORNIS
KENNETH MORNIS
JOE COCHRANE
F. QUINTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZGERald
DRAW MLAGLEHUNG
TOM ALEXANDER
EDWARD BRANTEY
MARTIN BENTON
MARVIN GOEBEL
JIM FLOOD
MORRIES MORELL
CLAUDE DORNE
ELTON E. CARTER
ALAS ANSE
CHARLES Alexander
Kansan Board Member
1937 Member 1938 Associated Colleeride Press
Distributor of College Digest
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
College Publishers Reprintation
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
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National Advertising Service, Inc.
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Fortieth Anniversary Of Maine Explosion Is Today
F forty years ago today occurred the event which made that slogan the by-word for rallying American troops and sending them to the swamps of Cuba, to the thickets of the Philippines. The United States battleship Maine in 1865 was the mission of diplomatic unity, was mysteriously blown up.
By Kenny Lewis, e'39
Even to this day no one can say authentically whether the Maine was sunk by Spanish mines or internal explosions. Probably the actual truth will never be revealed to the world. But in this, as in all similar cases, it is difficult. What did count was the interpretation which the American public, pap-fed at the breasts of yellow journalism, placed upon the event.
And there were very real reasons why the two leading papers of that era had been so hard to accept the explosion as the initial incident in an active war with Spain. Their sensational treatment of the news, which they syndicated for smaller dailies throughout the country, helped to make this popular center in America.
Hearst Steps In
Although it was probably the agile brain of the newcomer which first conceived the idea of evolving open warfare from the tangled skein of diplomatic relations between the United States and Spain, Pulitzer himself is quoted as admitting that he "rather liked the idea of a war—not a big one—but one that would arouse interest and give him a chance to gauge the reflex in his circulation numbers."
In 1895 a newcomer to the world of American journalism invaded the New York area by purchasing the Evening Journal. His name was William Randolph Hearst. At that time Joseph Pulitzer's New World lead the world in circulation. By offering wagons unheard of in the past, he forced newspapers needed in enticing into his employ several of his competitor's star reporters. Naturally, dog - eat - dog competition ensued.
These two papers, and unconciously their smaller followers in other areas, had already been bustily at work laying the kindling for an international confession when the Maine incident exploded the situation, and lingered and lightened the skilfully rearrangedfound. De Lone Letter Found
Six days before the Maine disaster, a full-page spread in the Journal announced the discovery of the famous Rupuy De Lome letter. De Lome was the Spanish ambassador to Washington, who had vented his personal opinions of President McKinley in a private letter to a friend. Some of these were not flattering. Cuban patriots had managed to steal this epistle, and although it had no official significance Mr. Hearst published it gleefully as an ally of the cause.
In the preceding months both
Phone K.U. 66
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For three years Doctor Woodfin was on the staff of the Osatwainstone state hospital. He also has served as associate medical officer in the neuro-pychiatric departments of Veterans Administration hospitals in Los Angeles, Calif., and Wadsworth, Kan. Recently he served as psychiatric consultant for the Kentucky State Children's Home.
French students at Emporia Teachers college will present a French version of the novel "Don Quixote" by Cervantes.
Dr. L. Le, Woodfin, m31, has joined the staff of the Kansas City Mental Hygiene society as director of the child guidance clinic at the Alfred Benjamin dispensary in Kansas City, Mo.
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papers had printed more or less spurious pictures of Cuban refugees slowly dying of starvation in congerio, a small island in the Spanish military government.
Long indeed will the yellow journalist and his historians remember the Maine!
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In vain did the conservative papers point out that the country should at least wait until the findings of the military investigating commission were reported. In vain did they point out that Spain would have no interest in involving the United States in its territorial disputes. Yellow journalism ha d triumphed. Circulation figures were soaring due to unheard of heights. Anyone who refused to jump on the band-wagon was likely to be crushed beneath its wheels.
Candid Camera-lly Speaking
But it is doubtful if even the combined jigism of these papers could ever have succeeded in stirring up the public to the fever pitch required for war if the Maine incident had not happened propitiously along. On Feb. 17 both the Journal and a World covered their entire front pages with headlines, "artists' conceptions," and news stories founded almost entirely on rumor and all charging or implying that Spain was directly responsible for the death of the 120 men on board.
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Heartset left no stone unturned to exploit his paper through the escuising struggle, and Pulitzer was never more than a day behind. If the Journal carried a full-page picture of the American war front, the Cuban war-front," the World would carry a double-page spread the following day. But the Journal even went so far as to print a "Memorial Album of the Maine Disaster," and deviled a game of colored cut-outs on its pages with "The Game of War With Spain."
Journalism War Ensued
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From then on, without knowing exactly what it was all about, the entire country was "off to the wars." "Remember the Maine!" echoed from coast to coast *from newspaper* to newspaper and general-station discussion groups.
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Graduate School Shows Increase
The number of students in the Graduate School has been increased the second semester by 41 new students, according to the latest report from the office of Ellis B. Stouffer, dean of the Graduate School.
The following fifteen persons received their degrees from the University in the fall of 1877 and have been the Graduate School this semester.
Lyle O. Amberg, Andrew O. Arnold, Russell Beatie, Edith Borden, Leish L. Halbert Edwin C. Hyatt, Noh Webster Moore, Robert Howard Jordan, Frank Lewis, Harry E O'Connell, Perry Clifford Sharp O'Connell, Charles Domino Shrader, Helen Stuifner, and Barbara Tummer
Claude H. Trotter, B.S.C.E.'7, civil engineering; Robert H. Sedore, B.M. '37, music; Kenneth Mattingly, B.M. '37, mining engineering; Helen Cunningham, A.B. '36, special; Robert Wood, A.B. '37, maxeology; Max E. Temple, A.B. '37, entomology; Elizabeth Mertens, A.B. '36, biochemistry; Frank N. Liscum, B.S. mining eng. '32, geology; Martha Tillman, A.B. '37, sociology; Richard T. Harvey, B.S.C.E.'32, civil engineering; Vivian Strange, A.B. '21, education; Jennifer King, civil engineering; Kenneth Middleton, B.S.bus. '37, economics; and Wayne Mobervl. '37, chemistry.
Others who received their degrees from the University and are entering the Graduate School are listed in the field in which they will work.
Those who have been graduated from other schools and the fields in which they will work are: Lorenora Jensen. A.B. 35. Univer-
Lenora Jensen, A.B. '35, Univer
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situations of Southern California; economies; Mary M. Johnz, A.B., 38, University of Southern California, psychology; Ione Venta Peña, B.S., 38, Washburn, botany; Jeanne Sheeran, economics; Frank Cunckle, home economics; Frank Cunckle, B.M., 33, M.M., 35, Eastman School of Music, special; William D. Durwell, B.S., 34, Massachusetts state; special; Benjamin Barrett, A.B., 38, Washburn, economics; A. Hicks, economics; Lorenzo Loe, E. Olmstead, B.A., Colorado State A. & M., chemistry; and Carl F. Stueker, A.B., 29, Baker, history
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PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY NANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
26
2
Here on the Hill
--an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHIERTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m., call K.U.215; after 5, call 2702-K3
--of the University department of zoology, will speak on "Memories of the Malaws"
--of the University department of zoology, will speak on "Memories of the Malaws"
Rachel Shetlar, 37, Johnson, is visiting this week at the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority house.
∞
Miss Geraldine Chartier, Eureka, was a guest at the Press Club's annual dinner-dance, held Friday night at Hollow hall.
The pledge class of Sigma Phi Epsilon is entertaining with an hour dance this evening.
Lois Leigh Willecus, Topeka, akc
Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Sikkon, Kansas
City, Mo., were guests at Corbin hall
Sunday afternoon.
Thelma Kirk Ramsey, '37, Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest at Corbin hall Sunday.
心
Dorothy Wingerd, Emporia, was a guest at Corbin hall last week.
of the University department of zoology, will speak on "Memories of the Malaws"
Members of Corbin hall entertained with a Valentine dinner last Saturday.
∞
Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, announces the pledging of Jules Grogan, b'uncl, Kansas City, Mo.
The University Club entertained with a formal dance Saturday night which was attended by about seventy-five members and guests. A five-piece orchestra played. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Holmes and Mr. and Mrs. Karl Klooz were hosts for the evening.
Gamma chapter of Pi Lambda Theta will hold its annual open meeting Thursday evening at 3:30 in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building. Mrs. A H. Turney will address, after which tea will be served.
~
Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian sorority, will hold a formal banquet this evening at Evan's Heath, preceded ceremonies at 5:30 a.m. o'clock.
The K. U. Dames bridge group will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Seigle, 1735 Masrana, with Frank Wicken as hostess.
~
The junior group of the American Association of University Women will meet tomorrow evening at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, June 14, in Tennessee street. Dr. E. H. Taylor
.
The marriage of Miss Mary Anne Haines, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Haines of Augusca, to Earl Kirk, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kirk of Hutchinson, was solenized Fri-
day at the home of the bride's parents.
After March 1, Mr. Mrck. Mrs. Kirk will be at home in Hutchinson, where Mr. Kirk is associated with father in the automobile business.
Mrs. Kirk was graduated from the University, where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Mr. Kirk attended the University and was graduated from Washburn law school. She is a professor of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Mary Guild, c40, Kappa Kappa Gamma, returned last night from a week's visit in Philadelphia.
The chaperons at the Rickett hall party Saturday night were Miss Marie Miller and Miss Elizabeth Rupp.
Kappa Sigma fraternity entertained last Saturday night with its annual Black and White dinner dance. Louie Kuhn and his or-
dance. Louie Kuhn and his or-chestra furnished the music.
The chaperons were:
Mrs. C. D. Wilson
Mrs. C. A. Thomas
Miss Ileana Meguin
The following were guests:
Gregory Gaylord, c41
Hilda Slieve, c41
Jean Howes, c1unl
Mary JoeConnell, f19
Larry Latter, c40
Helen Forbes, c40
Annette Reid, b'19
Virginia Anderson, afunl
Jola Heimbrook, juncl
Betty Barnes, c19
Mary Markham, f19
Mary McCarthy, c41
Alexa Marks, Kansas City, Mo.
Berry McVeY, cunicl
Dorothy Fruz, c41
Virginia Hawkinson, f58
Mary Lou Schmeier, c18
Kathleen Rable, c41
Joy Morrison, c41
Sarilou Smart, c41
Mary Iablese Taylor, f40
Mary Inhale, c40
Helen Hiley, c40
Frances Jones, c40
Donna Hughes, f40
Pamela Pryse, c41
Jo Yonder, Independence, m
Helen Heard, cunicl
La Do安娜 Megincoln, Lincoln, Neb.
Jason Crowell, c41
Jason Coulson, Wichita
Jason Marten, c4un
Jonny Jackson, c4un
Jeanine Williams, fa41
Phyllis Gosset, Coldwater
Miriam Whitford, c41
Miriam Johnson, c4un
Maxine Pendleton, c4un
Betty Wyatt, c41
Ana Ruth Maso, c48
Anna Slavey, c40
Peggy Waldham, Lawrence
Doris Carr, Augusta
Camila Scott, c67
Gary Carson, c43
Mary Alice Livingston, Wichita
Jindle Leighn, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Lawrence, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lawrence, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Fusley, Lawrence
Mr. and Mr. Paul Rogers, Lawrence
Mr. and Mr. John Marriott, Kansas City, Mt.
Road Nate, 57, Kansas City, Mt.
Bill Blicca, Wichita
Bill Bricca, Kansas City, Mt.
Kernick Runch, Omaha
Diane Haas, Kansas City, Mo.
Triangle fraternity held open
house for the parents Sunday.
Guests present were:
Grae Play, player c'ucm
Lola May Barshall, e41
Hike Damerberg, Kauai City, Mm
City Ham,
Florence Green, Topaka
Bettick Thompson, Topaka
Cassie Munroe, Kauai City, Mm
Mr. and Fred W. Towney, Kauai City, Mo.
Mirthanthar, Kansas City, Mm
Mr. D. C. Lucas, Topaka
Marijey Lucas, Topaka
Gordon Smith, Topaka
Mr. and Mrs. Barbara Bush, Topaka
Mr. and Mrs. Carlson, Topaka
Dr. K. W. Carlson, Topaka
Mr. E. L. Shley, Kansas City, Mm
Mr. E. H. Shiner, Kansas City, Mm
Mr. E. L. W. Gwin, Kansas City, Mm
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Gwin, Kansas City
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gwin, Kansas City,
Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. G, N, Gault, Kansas City,
Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Sanford, Kansas
Citi, Mo.
City, Arc.
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Laws, Kansas City, Md.
Helen Kitemiller, Kansas City, Mo.
Dennis Sullivan, Chicago
Dellen Kirkstine, Kansas City, Mo.
Oscar Sandberg, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. M, C. Knapp, Kansas City,
Mo.
Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Walker, Kans
Citr. Mo.
Marjorie May Knapp, Kansas City, Mo.
Marle Cole Knapp, Jr., Kansas City,
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Stevenson, Kansas
City, Mo.
Dennis Smith, Overland Park
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Stebbins, Kansas City Mo.
Laura K. Stebbins, Kansas City, Misc.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Sherer, Kansas
City, Misc.
Kenneth C. Sherrer, Tulsa, Okla.
Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Greene, Topeka Charles Greene, Topeka
tained at her home Saturday afternoon with a linen shower in honor of Mrs. Robert Finley Frakes, c'40, who before her recent marriage was Middled Marie Ewing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Ewing. The val-
Dorothy Deichert, c'40, enter-
Ms. Frakes
Label Went, c40
Babriya Edmiths, c40
Jon Perry, c40
Ruth Mason, c41
Hedy Hay, c41
Gorill, c41
Ann Reynolds, t40
Jay Lowen, c41
Louise Graynon, t41
Dorothy Howe, c41
Louise Graynon, t41
Carolyn Henry, t40
Mary Label Taylor, t40
Sarron Smart, c41
Warmie Warren, c40
Vidma Wilson, c40
Pauline Snyder, c40
Mary Keimedy, c40
entine theme was carried out in the
refreshments and more decorate
Invitations were extended to;
Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained
he following with a buffet supper
lunday night;
Elizabeth Hannah, c19
Jane Blaney, c40
Dennis Leakey, c40
Margaret Raugaue, c1und
Betty Birch, c141
Betty Birch, c141
Barbara Beaum, c141
Betty Wytt, c41
Barbara Beaum, c141
Margaret Snowley, fond
Betty Lou McFarlane, c18
Dorothy Jones, c18
Carolyn Green, c41
Mary Neel, c1und
Anne Foreman, c18
Jane Reid, c19
Norma Slan, c41
Maxine Miller, c41
Anna Morette, c18
Jen贝杰, c18
Elizabeth Barclay, c1und
Helen Jane Edwards, c18
Jurge R. M. Price, Lynnson
Charles Pipkin, Kansas City, Mo.
Hub Mayer, Topeka
Lily Root, Kansas City, Mo.
Leo Root, Kansas City, Mo.
Glen Goodlee, Kansas City, Mo.
Jack Dressor, Kansas City, Mo.
H. W. Wilson, Horton
Bilch Rick, Topeka
Nome, Nampa
C. A. Calloway, Lincoln
E. H. Howbart, Kansas City
Shona Chi had the following week-
10
end guests:
Kenneth Reyburn
Paul Ryan
Raymond L. Fowler, Jr.
Bill Jones, 17, Frank Cury, Ms.
Weekend guests at the Alma Ch
Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma
Omega house were:
Phyllis Forche, Ulyses
Mrs. Schreiber, Garden City
Mrs. Corbett, Wichita
Mrs. Solevic, Russell
Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Williamson, Kansas City, Mo.
V
Bob Clark, c. 95
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Winter, Kansas City,
Chi Omega entertained the following guests at dinner Sunday;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Crunn, Kansas City,
b.
City, Mo.
Norman Lee Wilkinson, Kansas City, Mo.
Summery Onfrio, c$40
Ray North
Wayne Anderson, £41
Dav Rhale, $19
Joseph Broun, £24
Juan Lorden, Wichita
John Fitzhugh, Fishbock
Acacia fraternity house were:
Mr. and Mrs. O. Mc Calpy, Marywillz
Bradley, D. D. Willz, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hirman, Lawrence
Edward Willeford, Salina
Guests for dinner Sunday at the
Pi Kappa Alpha entertained the
Mr. and Mrs. John Summers
Selma Hensler, c.19
Mariory Smith, c.41
+
Sunday dinner guests at the Delta
Tau Delta fermentite house were;
Virginia Lee Willisian, c#1
Pennsylvania Cedarville, Cuny
Maryland City, Moyo
City, Moyo
F. A. Caball, Kansas City, Mo.
F. A. Carter Morrison, Rochester
Rochesterville
Weekend guests at Corbin hall
were
Noll Zimmerman, Cameron, Ms.
Olive Sileich, Wichita
Earth Ann Arbor, Alabama
Earth Ann Arbor, Arkansas City
Mrs. C. A. Stafford, Nodolosa
Mrs. R. C. Stafford, Altona
Mrs. Frederick Maker, Arkansas City
Sunday dinner guests at the Delta
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hollinger, Tulsa Henry Butler, Wichita Harold Leigh, Welch Anthurium, Jude Gronicha Catherine Cannon, edn cdl, Lorraine Love, 48
Rick Rikken, 51
Jon Watney, 40
A group of Kappa Sigma alumni held a dinner Saturday evening at the Colonial tea room preceding a retreat, the fraternity at the chapter house.
A group of Kappa Sigma alumni
Those in the group were:
Vice President of the Group We are:
Richard L. Richard, Chicago, IL
Emily K. Kovac, Omaha, OK
Charles Meyers, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rogers, Lawrence
Mary Livingston, cunel
Jon Morrison, Kansas City, MO.
Mr. and Mr. Carl Clifton, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Pumbley, Lawrence
Initiation services were held for the following Sigma U pierces
Sunday:
Al Hyer, c^41
Liam Diven, c^40
Steve Wren, c^40
David Karmon, c^40
Jack Arthur, c^40
John Begert, c^41
Hersher Begert, Umland
Herbert Begert, Umland
Maurice Jackson, c^41
Jim Swainer, c^41
William Umland
Cary Jones, c^41
Ray J龚, b^41
Brian J龚, c^41
Bill Johnson,
Bob Brown, c^41
Sunday dinner guests at the Phi Kappa Psi house were:
Alumni Meet In Honolulu
Graduates of University
Outnumber All Others
At Kansas Day Party
Sixty persons were present at the annual Kaunda Day meeting held at the central Y.W.C.A. offices in Honoulu, according to a letter receive by Fried Ellsworth, secretary of the University Alumni Association, from a former University student, Vivia Walworth of Honolulu.
The guests introduced themselves and each pinned a tag on the county of a cartographic map; this was to represent the particular county in Kansas which he considered to be home. The map, which was originated by his fiancé fow, now an engineer Honolulu, it always used at the meetings.
During the program the former Kansas sang a group of songs including the Crismon and the Blue and other University of Kansas songs. Letters from Chancellor Linds, and Governor Huxman were read.
A roll call was taken of the different colleges represented. It was found that there were more students from the University than from any other college. Former students of the University present included: Col. Adon Clark, Ben Yap, Robert Cohen, Rich Colin Chan, Marcia Sharp, Bess Scail, Lawrence Walworth, and Vivian Wal worth.
Mr. Ellsworth also reports that similar meeting is to be held in Berlin, Germany, Feb. 24. Dr. Dietrich Zwicker, a former German exchange scholar at the University, is promoting the affair. He will be assisted by John Coleman, the present Kansas exchange scholar to Germany.
Dean Crawford To Speak
Dean Ian C. Crawford of the School of Engineering will address a meeting of the Kansas City Engineer and the Hotel President in Kansas City.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bolin, Kansas City Mo.
Bakun, Karan City, Mk
Tayo Fort Garcia, c40
Mary Corneil, Kowal
Mary Cornish, King
Marriette Trombly, b4
Mr, and Mrs. C. H. Westall, Harper
Mrs. C. J. Westall, Harper
Franklin Clay, Kansas City, Mo.
Dinner guests at Ricker hall Sunday were:
Mildred Abel, Kansas City, Mo.
Ruth Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.
Lyle Amberg, Kansas City, Mo.
Frazier Will Speak On Sculpture Tonight
The first of a series of eight lectures at Spooner-Thayer museum will be given tonight by Bernard "Poco" Frazier at 7:30 o'clock. The subject of this lecture will be, "S ulture. A Discussion of Styles."
Frazier, Campus sculptor, was recently awarded a grant from the Carnegie Foundation for a year of creative work beginning next September. This work, which will prolong, will be done here of teaching, will be done here.
Tonight's lecture, as well as all the lectures of the series, are free to the public. They are made possible through the co-operation of Uni-
tions for Education and the adult education department of the Lawrence public schools.
'Ims' Commission Meets
This Afternoon at Henley House
The "Fam" Commission of the Y.W. C.A. will meet at 4:30 today at Henley house. Dr. W, T. Paulin of the department of history will talk on topics such as the war; his talk will be followed by general discussion and questions.
This is the last meeting in the series on "Collectivism." The next meeting on March 1 will be a student panel on political philosophies. It will be an open meeting for everyone interested.
Ballerinas--
Continued from page 1
be closely watched by her zealous parents on three U. S. tours. But two years ago the wide-eyed Irina Kashmanova of Bask's handsome young secretary.
"Wait until you see black-hairied David Lichine," said the English educated Mr. Grigoriev, Jr., the husband of the glamorous Tamarra. "His leap should exert the envy of your institution of your University track stars."
The merchants of the show business classify the Ballet Russe as a girl show without songs, but, continued Mr. Grigorieva, Jr., "the more soler analysts regard it as a kind of three-ring circus of the arts in which the senses are stimulated by symphonic music, painting, and human movement. Americans are taking to the ballet more and more."
And it does truly seem that this is so. Although the ballet failed to achieve success at the box-office 20 years ago, it now grosses huge sums on tour. They perform in curious places, too; in Montreal a hockey arena had be hired; in Mexico City the troupe played in a bullfight. But overtessors in the present corps of the Ballet Russé de Monte Carlo is a worthy heir and successor to the old Imperial ballet troupe.
New Dance Step Makes Bid For National Recognition
'College Swing Is Contribution Of the West
Here it is, folks, designed especially for the itching feet of dance-conscious collegiate students — the more spectacular steps of a half dozen different dances all moulded into one typical "Joe College Rick."
THE DANCE TEAM
The dance is the "College Swing," and is the west's first contribution to national dancing. In the past the dances have either come out of the south—like the Charleston and the Big Apple—or come out of Harlem.
↓ ↓
-
DANCE
IN THE COLLEGE SWING, as danced by JACKIE COOGAN and BETTY GRABLE, the boy hops on the right foot, extending the left; the girl on the left, extending the right. Repeat on the other foot.
But out west the Collegians are really swinging it in the craziest dance to be seen in years. Even its most ardent devotees admit there is no sense to it and that it out-applies the Big Apple. But they insist that it is far more fun to dance the College Swing than any dance which has come along in years.
T
PARTNERS EXCHANGE SIDES on a two-row, making the complete change in four steps. Step No. 1 is then repeated and pattern again. Step No. 2 is this figure. This figure is repeated for six rows of the same size.
DANCE
IN THE BREAK, boy and girl hop on left foot,
kapping right behind; then on the right foot,
kapping left behind. This figure is repeated for a total of eight counts, making up two bars of music.
10 20
1
← ↑
The dance has become so strong that one of the fraternities of Southern California turned its semi-annual rush party into a College Swing party and it was a sensation on the campus.
1 2
3
The dance is a collection of kidding steps, which LeRoy Prinz, a movie dance director, saw during a tour of western colleges, and moulded into a set routine.
←→
To the right you will see a diagramatic sketch of the various steps involved in this crazy routine which is sweeping the country and so threatens to supersede the popularity of previous crazes.
MAN STEPS FORWARD with left foot, right remaining in position. Executes left, right and step bringing right forward. Repeat right, left and step. Keep repeating in a rotating movement for six bars.
THE BREAK AWAY is a standard break. However, instead of doing it in place, the dancers back away from each other, hopping on the ball of the foot to the rhythm of the music. This takes up two bars.
A man and woman are facing each other.
8.
---
DANCERS JUMP HIGH into the air on a fourth count, the field hold firmly to the side, the forelegs pointed straight down. The body also is stiff. They land jerkly and assume any silly pose they wish.
W
JOHN LANE
88
~ ~
$ \rightarrow $
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
DANCERS TRUCK FORWARD for four counts. On fourth count they assume another silly pose, back away for four counts, then forward for another four counts, ending in silly pose on four count
8 8
IN RUNNING BALDRA, tone is in stiff third position. Step forward 1-2, 1-2, last three counts are taken in double time. Picture circle each other, finishing side by side, then兢兢 forward for four counts.
TUXEDO DANCE
IN HEEL BEATING STEP, heels are best for two counts facing forward, then two counts facing each other, the feet striking between the partner's feet. Then repeat front for two counts, and side for two counts.
---
=
NOW BACK TO CHILDHOOD for a table
praise and jingle in the rhythm of the music.
The potsyra is alternated every four courts
for four counts of bass note, and
for four counts of four bass of music.
I
↓ ↓
THE FLEA FIDA is a stitching note from motion to position. the marshal's man is right to the right foot, his left joint the right arm, then alternate. The fidel's blade the side the couple.
PAGE FOUR
---
7
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 15. 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Game Friday Will Probably Decide Race
Sooner-Jayhawk Tilt IIs
-All Important as Teams
Are Tied for Lead, Fat
Ahead of Rest.
The Jayhawkers play their most important basketball game of the season Friday night at Norman against the Oklahoma Sooners. The game will probably decide the conference championship race, as Kansas and Oklahoma are tied for first place in the Big Six at the present time with no other team in a threatening position.
Oklaham will go into the game with everything in its favor, but the Jawhackers figure to make it a battle. "Undoubtedly Oklaham has the edge, but Kansas has the underdog determination," is the way Coach F. C. Allen describes the situation.
Oklahoma will be playing on its home floor, which is usually a considerable advantage. The game is expected to draw the largest crowd in Oklahoma basketball history, and arrangements are being made for seating more than six thousand spectators.
The sophomoric Sooners defeated Kansas in their previous meeting this year, and are confident they can do it again. With regard to height, Oklahoma's center, Mullen, is 6 feet 5 inches tall, whereas Kansas' tallest player is Pralle, 6 feet 21/4 inches. Mullen counted 10 points against Nebraska and 11 against Kansas State last week.
Main worry for Doctor Allen is the Sooners' scoring power. The Jayhawk mentor fears that Oklahoma may collect more points than Kansas can hope to match. In six games Oklahoma has scored 57 points more than have the Jayhawkers. Kansas has a better record than the Sooners on defense, but not as good comparatively, having limited its opponents to only 42 less points than have the Sooners.
The injury jinx struck the Crimson and Blue quintet last week in the form of an injury to Dick Harp, first-fstring sophomore guard. Harp's left hand was kicked in a scrimmage Thursday and although no bones were broken, he still sure that he has been unable to use it in workouts since then. Wayne Nees, sophomore guard, has been filling in at Harp's place in practice.
It is expected that Harp's hand will be all right by time for the game, but if it should not be, Kansas will be severely handicapped.
Women's Intramurals
--w ft f
The following teams will compete, in the intramural swimming meet tomorrow night at 7:30. Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Chi NT, Chi Omega, Alpha Gamma Delta, and Watkins hall.
Basketball
Willecus, Alpha Delta Pi, defacete
Van Cleave, I.W. W.E. LeMoine will play
Willecus and Curd will play
Baker in the semi-finals.
Gamma Phi Bieta will play Kappa Alpha Theta at 4:20 tomorrow after noon and Chi Omega will play Corbin hull at 5 o'clock.
Basketball practice for the freshmen and seniors will be tonight at 8:30 and for the juniors and sophomores at 9:15.
Professor Carman To Talk Over KFKU This Afternoon
All high school and college students who have not yet selected a subject in which to major for a University degree are urged to listen to Prof. J. Neale Carman speak on "Foreign Languages" or "English," and the subjects will be the sixth of the "Choose Your Vocation" talks by the University staff.
Five additional lectures on the subjects medicine, mathematics, ontology, business and engineering may be heard at 2:47 p.m. every Wednesday and Thursday during the month of February over KFKU.
The object of these speeches is to help the student select that occupation which most nearly fits his peculiar talents or abilities and also which there seems to be openings for employment and advancement.
Reynolds To Discuss Argentina At Spanish Club Meeting
Leon Reynolds, 'euncl,' will talk on "Argentina" at a meeting of the Spanish club Thursday afternoon at 3 in room 113 of Strong Club.
During the semester various members of the club will report on each of the most important South American countries. "Spanish Art" will be presented by the painting by Karl Kratz Mattern of the opera of drawing and painting.
Along the Sideline
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Snorts Editor
Gene (Topeka Capital) Kemper says he reads where Delmar (Hutchinson News) Curry looks ahead and sees trouble for critics who would pick all-big Six basketball guards. Kemper goes ahead to tell Curry to ask something hard, as he (Kemper) knows the answer. Praelle and Parsons, he says, are the class of the Big Six guards.
Now while we aren't in a position to cast reflections on Mr. Kemper's ability as a judge of basketball talent, and while we think that Praille undoubtedly the class of them all, and while we think Parsons is also a good guard, still we must ask what is to be done with Martin and Mesch of Oklahoma, Blaink of Missouri, Lobiger and Halastad of Missouri, Cleveland of Kansas State and Harp of Kansas. All of these guards have been more or less outstanding in conference play and all have undeniably stood out as important me to their team.
Especially have Martin, Mesch and Blahnik stood out, and it will be hard to disregard any of them. In the other positions there is not the large number of outstanding players fighting for conference honors.
Undecided on Forwards
Outstanding forwards are few McNutt and Walker, Oklahoma first-year men, have set a torrid pace for their first season. No Kansas State forward has merited serious mention this year, as also is the case at Iowa State. Nebraska has Amen to offer, but he has been far from consistent, and personally, we would put the Cornhuskers in the same category with Kansas State and Iowa State. Missouri has Harvey, a sophomore who has been developing into he he has developed confidence. The same is true of Ebling, Kansas' first-year man, who has been developing into one of the loop's stars as he has developed confidence. However, his nervousness in his first few games may have cost him much deserved conference mention.
Wesche May Be Center
As for center, there is, in our opinion, not an outstanding pivot man in the conference with the possible exception of Wesche, Kansas State. Wesche has been scoring rather consistently, and two "hot" nights have given him an excellent scoring-average. Schmidt, Kansas, has been a steady team player, and is corking on defense, but all-star pickers are prone to forget the less brilliant appearing defensive man in favor of the more publicized "high scorer." Mullen is another player with great ability, and classification. Nebraska, Iowa State, and Missouri are not able to furnish a center worth mentioning, unless it is upon reputation established in last's year play. All star pickers are also prone to this fault and some of them might mention Ebaugh, Nebraska, and Brown, Missouri, on sor
Praile Still
Tied for Scoring
Leadership
After considerable shuffling of leaders in the Big Six scoring race last week, Fred Pralle, high scoring Jayhawker guard, still remains in a tie with Blahnik, Iowa State guard for first place, although many coaches have not court appearance since last Monday night.
McNatt of Oklahoma, topping the list of conference scorers last Wednesday, with an average of 12 points, dropped to third place. Blahnik, formerly tied with Pralle, dropped in 13 points against Kansas State to berth himself into the number one berth for a while, but his 10 points against Nebraska last night, dropped him back into a tie with Pralle.
While Blahnik elevated his scoring level at the expense of the Kansas State cagers, Wesche, a Wildcat ace, poured 18 points through the Cyclone hoop to move from seventh up to fifth.
Parsons, Nebraska guard, made a big climb with his 17 points against Iowa State last night. This made his average 10.75 and put him in fourth place. Amen, senior Husker forward, was held scoreless by Missouri, and scored only 4 points against Iowa State last night. This moved him down to a tenplace tie with Martin, Oklahoma guard.
Harvey, sophomore Tiger forward, scored 15 points against Nebraska. Saturday, to boost his average to 74, he earned a position a notch to seven place.
Ebling, sophomore Kansas forward, took advantage of the recent searing laps of Amen and Martin to move into ninth place even though Kansas has not played since a week ago.
It is interesting to note that five of the first nine scorers are sophomores.
Following are the 11 conference leaders and their records up to date;
| | g | fg | ft | tp | avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Praille, Kan. | 8 | 25 | 12 | 69 | 1.15 |
| Malak, Okla. | 8 | 25 | 19 | 68 | 1.13 |
| Makubi, Kan. | 8 | 25 | 10 | 68 | 1.03 |
| Parsons, Neb. | 8, 35 | 16 | 86 | 10, 75 |
| Mesch, OKla. | 6 | 26 | 11 | 63 | 10, 50 |
| Wesche, K.S. | 6 | 26 | 10 | 63 | 10, 50 |
| Harvey, Koi. | 6 | 24 | 10 | 58 | 9, 67 |
| Walker, Koi. | 6 | 24 | 10 | 58 | 9, 67 |
| Neb., Koi. | 8, 24 | 18 | 56 | 8, 66 |
| Ebling, Kanla. | 6 | 13 | 18 | 44 | 7, 33 |
| Martin, Kanla. | 6 | 13 | 18 | 42 | 7, 33 |
Lawrence Choral Union Meets Tonight in Hoch Auditorium
John Andrews, president of the Lawrence Choral Union, announces that the regular practice session will be at 7:30 a.m. on 8th floor in Hoch auditorium.
of a last year's hangover
In our opinion, it will be well for the all-pickers to start from scratch, forgetting the listed centers, and shift one of the outstanding guards to this position. One of the guards undoubtedly could hold the pivot position in good shape under the new rules.
Darling you'll love them
10
Royal College Shop's dashing new spring footwear is to love it . . . to wear it is divine. Drop in today and choose yours from an endless variety of styles. Explore the chic originality of Hollywood at a purse-fitting price you'll adorc.
$695
In late Thursday's games, Westerbrook scored 15, with 48-22 victory over the Phil Chila by scoring 19 points, while the Beta team defended the Phil Delt "31 team."
837-39 Mass.
Pictured: Royal Blue Leather and Black Patent
Men's Intramurals
Stoland, scoring 18 points, followed closely by McCaskill, scoring 16 points, set the pace for a 72-27 victory over the Auckland Saturday.
Royal COLLEGE SHOPS
--w ft f
In the D.U.-Triangle game, Hoece before being forced from the game with a badly sprained ankle. The D. u's won over their opponents 42 to 18.
Gaskill, of the Sig Ep team, got the before, or a scoring duteturn Sutellier, of the Sig Ep team. Although the Sig Eps lost 46-45, Gaskill said his opponent 17 to 15 in
Scores of other games played Friday:
Lemming, KEK. "B" forward, scored all but 2 of his team's 18 points as it lost Friday to the Phi Psi "B" team, 18 to 46.
Hexagons II 24, K.E.K. 21; Gas-house Gang 33, Theta 78; Appi 69; clones; Obsen won by forfeit from the Panamanians; Galloping Ghosts were given a forfeit by the Blanks; "C" or "CU" a forfeit from the Sigma Nu $^{B-}$.
Box scores of Saturday's games:
Beta. (72). Acacia. (27)
W'iick, f 8, 20
Stoland, f 8, 20
Castlin, c 7, 10
Faucett, g 2, 30
Faucett, g 2, 30
Littoo 10, 11
Nessby 10, 11
Official: White. Phi Gam (46)
9 A A A
g ff 01
Steiger, f . 2 01
Ritchie, f . 2 01
Harwc, i . 7 11
Morris, g . 5 12
Coleman, g 3 00
Joss' rand, f 4 10
Youssi, f 0 0 0
Martin, c 1 0 0
Meier, g 4 1 1
Wood, g 4 0 3
S. P.E. (45)
G g ff
Gaskill, f. 7 3 2
Kuchs, f. 2 1 0
Weltmer, c 5 1 0
May, g. 5 0 3
Fisher, g. 1 0 1
1200 Tenn. (20)
A. K. Psi (22)
g f 1f 2
Cordts, f ... 3 1
Sutton, f ... 1 1
M'c'mrC'ck, c 0 0 2
Hull, g ... 2 0 3
Ferrell, g ... 4 0 0
Tenn. g f 11
Mair, f ... 0 0
Raup, f ... 3 00
Allen, c ... 2 11
Peterson, g 2 01
Bryant, g ... 2 11
2056
Relse, f | t f f
Release, f | t f f
n-t-m-j-f, n-f- | t f f
Shaw, c | 1 0 2
Crumg, m | 1 0 2
Collins | 2 1 1
Collins | 2 1 1
Owali | 1 0 1
g f ft Peterson, f
Glencoy, f
Bettig, e
Fahler, f 1
Halgren, w
Wongwang, r
Peterson. 2 2 2
1028
Panamonians (22) Dunakins (16)
Official: Engleman.
22 2 5
Official: White.
646
8. 65
Official: Engleman.
S.A.E. "B" (32) Phi Gam "B" (22)
Winters, f. 2 **g f t**
Winter, f. 1 **g f t**
Haven, c. 1 **g t**
Stub nrg b, 1 **g t**
Barber, g. 2 **3**
Tibbets 1 **6**
Hymphies, f 1 0 3
Houk, f 1 0 3
Scott, c 1 0 3
Milton, f 3 1 4
Yakkee, c 3 1 4
11 10 8
9414
g t u f
Rolfs, f 0 0 1 Sundgef, f 4 2 4
Foreman, f 5 3 1 Troffer, f 5 0 1
Kunkle, g 5 3 1 yatt, c 5 0 1
Shaffer, g 2 1 3 Moore, f 4 1 2
Shaffer, g 5 2 1 Wilhelm, g 4 1 2
O'Dell, f 5 2 1 Moore, f 4 1 2
13314
| | g n 1 |
| :--- | :--- |
| Hocevar, f 10 | 0 |
| Gallowy, f 8 | 0 |
| Oakes, g 5 | 0 |
| Oakes, g 1 | 0 |
| McCann, g 0 | 0 |
| Gallup | 0 |
Triangle (18)
cannon, f .3 111
Toowey, f .2 001
Bradley, c .2 000
Shelegy, g .0 000
Sharp, g .0 000
Carmouche, g .0 000
g ft
Carper, I 2.10
Powell, I 6.00
Ewstein, I 2.00
Martin, g 6.00
Timothy, g 2.00
Powell 3.00
823
/° (15)
g f tf
Nye, f 0 0 1
Gdfrey, c 0 1 0
Nelson, c 0 1 0
Blanchard, g 0 3 1
Blanchard, d 0 3 1
Souder 0 0 0
Young 0 3 1
Glenn To Race Tonight:
In Baxter Mile Saturday
904
Glenn Cunningham, the cream of the crop for the present indoor season and the most consistent, if not best, miler of all time, will continue to track realm tonight in the Bishop Koele mile at Providence, R.I.
Tonight's appearance will serve as a warm-up for the famed Baxter mite Saturday night at the New York A.C. meet in Madison Square Garden. In 1835 the flying Kansan stepped off 11 laps on the Garden track in 4:09.8 for his best time in the Baxter mite.
Archie San Romano, a fellow Kansan, who has not been competing recently due to a spike wound, will be sufficiently recovered again to match strides with his barrel-chested New York Curb Exchange team mate.
After running a 4:15.2 mile Friday night on the Seventh Regiment armory's unbanked track, Cunningham domned his spikes in Boston the day before. He walked a mile ever in that city. Cunningham was clocked in 4:10 flat.
Dove To Appear Soon
A new issue of the radical Hill publication, "The Dove," will appear in the near future. This edition proposes to deal with the Memorial cataclysm labor situation, Japanese bootcourt, and the "Red" investigation.
Steres Co-operate With Pittsburgh University
Eight department stores of Pittsburgh, Pa, have joined with the research bureau for retail training of the University of Pittsburgh is offering to college graduates practical preparation for positions in merchandising, fashion, management, personnel training and advertising, according to folders and posters received at University of Kansas offices.
LEARN TO DANCE
The one year of specialized training in modern retailing consists of classroom study combined with practical working experience and research in the several Pittsburgh department stores.
LEARN TO DANCE
Don't envy good dancers—be one!
Enroll now — Private lessons
Marion Rice Dance Studio
9217 Mass. St.
Over Rummage-Allison Flower Shop
BUY A MEAL TICKET
and Save 10%
$2.75 Value
for $2.50
UNION FOUNTAIN
Sub-basement Memorial Union
JAM SESSION
at
COE'S No. 2
411 West 14th
WEDNESDAY NITE
8:15 o.m.
By Clyde Bysom's Band
PILGRIMS' CITY
ENJOY THE POST TONIGHT
"I just got out of ALCATRAZ!"
No. 293 did twenty times on America's Devil's Island, most dreaded all Federal prison. In an insider's story of "the Rock," where they count the prisoners every thirty minutes, he tells about Al Capone, Alvin Karpis and Machine Gun Kelly; shows you where movies about Alcatraz made their mistakes. He reveals why the inmates go imagine, and predicts a mutiny this Spring which will be "foolproof!"! See this week's Post.
Twenty Months in Alcatraz
As told by BRYAN CONWAY,No.293, to T.H. Alexander
Introducing AMERICA'S LEADING MUMMY
PIERCE D. LEE
TOM PIECE
Instead of a piano... I SEEM TO HAVE BOUGHT A LION! ...Now What?
"The Man Who Killed Lincoln"
Meet the mummy who tours under this banner: $1000 REWARD TO ANYONE WHO CAN PROVE THAT THIS IS NOT JOHN WILKES BOOTH. He has been bought and kidnapped and seized for debt. He's been chased out of towns for "not having a license," and threatened with hanging by indignant G. A. R. veterans. You'll find his strange story in your Post this week.
"John Wilkes Booth" on Tour by ALVA JOHNSTON
et the auction, Mr. Benedict hadn't raised his hand more'n a fraction ... and now he owned a lion! What would Miss Satterlee say when he returned without the grand piano for the Female Seminary? By the author of Drums Along The Mohawk.
Mr. Benedict and the Madagascan Lion
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST 5¢
by WALTER D. EDMONDS
ALSO HOW MUCH SCHOOL DO
ALSO HOW MUCH SCHOOL DO YOU NEED wrong with education, and what we can do about it, by Dr. Robert M. Hutchins. AND stories by Booth Tarkington, Mosee, Everett Rhodus, G. Chute; serials, editorials, fun and cartoons.
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST
64.12
18
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Faculty Hears New Proposal
may Set Up New Group
To Select Committees:
Nelson Explains Policy
On Failures
A proposal thetee on committees be provide- urity of the Collec. to replace the present plan of nomination and election by letter balloon or direct appointment by the dean, was made at the meeting of the College faculty yesterday afternoon.
142 Failed in Fall Semester
Dr. F. B. Dains, in making the motion, suggested that a committee on committees might be able to select more representative members for committees than now obtained by the mail balloting. The matter was referred to the administrative committee for report.
The other principal business of the day was the voting of A.B. degrees to 37 persons who have completed all requirements, and the hearing of the report on the reinstation committee.
For this committee, Associate Dean J. H. Nelson reported that 142 students in the College failed in 40 per cent or more of their work for the fall semester. Seventy-four petitioned for restatement, and 67 were permitted to enroll for the spring semester "on probation."
In the fall semester, 132 student
In the fall semester were on pi to meet to meet the tertiary students. The titioned for a final if we re-rolled. O failed. 30 were on whom atten roll.
Students Carry Too Much Work
In reply to a question, Dr. Nelson said he estimated that fully half the 'students who have scholastic difficulties are carrying too heavy a load, either of class work or outside work.
On the same point, Dean Lawson said the definite policy of the College is to recommend, even insist, that students doing outside work cut their class schedule, adding that scores of students in the College are attempting no more than 10 or 12 hours.
Decreasing Number of Failures
To a further question, Dean Lawson replied that the number of students listed as having scholastic difficulties is perhaps somewhat greater than was a few years ago, but he said, was due to administrative.
"The number of 'red cards' (failures) coming to the dean's office is definitely less, perhaps not half what it was a few years ago," he said. "However, we are becoming more sympathetic with the student, and are permitting second and third opportunities to more and more of the students. Not so many are reinstated; our statement committee was likely to be 'Failing in 40 per cent of the work 152: reinstated. 1.'"
NUMBER 95
The administrative committee reported that it had granted request for the change of title for a course in the department of philosophy, and the change of prerequisites for one in economics and another in chemistry.
The request of the department of history for the establishment of a course, "Reading for Honors in History", at the administrative committee for report.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1938
HAY $ ^{-} _ {b y} $WIRE
--the bus driver can suddenly
into gear and the bus went down the
Hill to the accompaniment of laughter
and the foreign tongues of the ballet performers.
With 119 laughs and a titer, an in the words of the “Spring Dance” last night we'll say that it is a hell of a good play. We kept track of the laughs, and with a little polishing through the week the play is good for many more. The lifetime of a person so that even a person of average ignorance will enjoy it. It's worth seeing; don't miss it.
Our attempt at rhyme last Friday via the Little Audrey route was more powerful than we anticipated. We were greeted by a petition on the Journalism bulletin board last week asking us to refrain from any more such rhyme without reason. We wouldn't mention the thing at all except for the fact that the list of names on the bulletin maintains a
Continued on page 3
A Cappella Choir Broadcasts Over KFKU Tonight
The Westminster A Cappella choir of 70 voices, directed by Dean D. M. Swarthorst, will present a 15-minute performance at 6 o'clock tonight over KFKU.
The program is: "Hail, Gladden
Light," (Wood); "Ballade of the
Trees and the Master," (Van Den
hammers); "Garth Gartle" song arranged by J.
Cloisey; "Ave Maria," humming
chorus, (Archer).
Register For Tests
Language Requirement May Be Met by Passing Proficiency Exam
Proficiency examinations in French, German, Spanish, and Latin will be given at 9:30 Saturday morning, Feb. 26. Any student wishing to take one of the examinations should register immediately at the college office. The deadline for registration is Wednesday, Feb. 23.
Any student who is working for a degree, must meet the foreign language requirement in one of three ways; he may take ten hours of one language in college; he may take five hours in college in continuing education; he may attend school; or he must pass the proficiency examination, which will consist of reading simple prose with the aid of a dictionary.
All professional schools for which university prepares students are co-operating in asking students to meet the distribution requirements of freshman and sophomore years. Thes "requirements include at least 50 credits in a foreign language except for those who pass the proficiency examination.
The language examination is one of the first steps in permitting students to demonstrate proficiency in English. It gives them a certain number of hours or units.
The French examination will be held in room 111 Frank Strong hall; German, 313 Fraser hall; Spanish, 294 Fraser hall; and Latin, 310 Fraser hall.
Elections for the Hob Nail Hei Queen were held yesterday in Marvin hall and will continue today. The voting has been very heavy and it is close. Interest has been keen owing to the enthusiasm of the engineers.
The winner will not be announced until the Hop, which is to be held Friday night.
Make Nold Director Of National Apple Institute
Truman Nold of Wathena, secretary of the Northeast Kansas Apple-growers Association, who is on leave this spring to carry on special studies in co-operative marketing problems at the University, yesterday received word that he had been appointed a director of the National Apple Institute. He is to be the director in charge of co-ordination and finance.
Mr. Mold found that he could get some courses he wished in the School of Business, and he is making some special investigations also, under the supervision of Dr. Raymond Lawrence, who came here last fall from California to be assistant professor of journalism, and who has had direct contact with California fruit cooperatives.
Six new members were initiated into Entomology Club Monday afternoon. The new members were chosen from the list recommended by the professors and instructors of the department. The initiates are:
Russell Baeatic, c'38; Burger Guntter,
"41; Aler Humphrey, c'38; Alice
Ginney, c'40; John Riling, c'41;
and ane Sanford, c'38.
Entomology Club Initiates Members in Recent Meeting
Foreign Language Exams
Foreign language proficiency examinations for College students will be held at 8:30 SAT morning, Feb. 26. All students wishing to take this must register not later than Feb. 23 in the college office, 121 Frank Strong hall.
Paul B. Lawson, dean
Nazis Get Austrian Cabinet
Vienna, Feb. 16 (Wednesday)—(UP) Ferdinand Adolph Hitler of Germany, backing up an ultimatum with strong military forces along Austria's northern frontier, early today forced Chancellor Kurt Schuschnig to place five Austrian Nazisympathizers in his cabin.
Hitler's Brow n Shirts
Obtain Five Positions
In Chancellor Schuschnig's Ministry
Schuschnig, long a bitter foe of Nazi penetration into Austria, where the Nazi party has been outlawed since June, 1933, announced his capitation and submitted his new cabin list to President Wilhelm Miklas after Hitler's three-day ultimatum expired at midnight.
In accordance with the Fuercher's foremost demand, he appointed Dr Arthur von Feys-Inquart, a leader of the outlawed Austrian Nazi party, to the major cabinet post of minister of interior and public security.
The reconstructed cabinet as announced officially, also contains pro-Nazis, although not in all instances actual party adherents, in the cabinet posts of labor, justice, industry, and forestry.
By this one stroke, Hitler gained his domination over the Austrian police and gendarmerie and enabled the nazi to regain a measure of their forfeited power and further suppress the activities of Austrian monarchists who want to place a sniper Otto on the Hapsburg throne.
"Hitter has conquered," said a prominent political leader of the Fatherland Front that has been the most important political organization for four years.
Schuunchn, who went secretly across the German frontier to Berchtesgarden last Saturday and conferred with Hilter on a "reconciliation" of Austria and Germany under their July 11, 1936 pact of friendship, was said to have joined in keeping Feyss as minister of interior.
The new cabin took its oath of office during the early hours of today, while most Austrians radio broadcasts were discontinued shortly after midnight—were unaware of what had transpired.
Business Office Begins Cancelling of Enrollments
Every effort to pay should be made by those students who have not yet paid their semester fees, Bursar Karl Klooz said yesterday. Beginning yesterday being cancelled at tady being checked for payments, they are checked for payments.
Kansas: Snow in north, snow or rain in south, colder in east and south portions Weednesday; Thursday, considerable cloudiness, rising temperatures in West and north-central portions.
In spite of the number who have fallen behind, the business office reports payments are 52 ahead of those of a year ago.
WEATHER
This act, passed in 1916 and amended in 1920 as a result of lessons learned in the World War called for a minimum of 280,000 men in the regular army, a national guard of 425,000 and an officers' reserve of about 35,000 vided for a navy "second to none". At present, the total military force
Forty persons boarded the University bus as it waited in front of Hoch auditorium Monday night at the close of the Ballet Russe. The bus has a seating capacity of 20. The passengers were a motley collection of student, ballet dancers and musicians, townspeople and children.
New significance was given to this year's commemoration by the introduction in Congress of the most sweeping peacefense defense legalization and a robust dossement of greatly augmented army, navy and air corps.
The Reserve Officers' Association contends that the United States' military manpower is only about half of the authorized by the National Defense Army.
The Reserve Officers' Association, originator of the annual event, is urging the building of an "adequate" national defense.
Act of 1920 Set Minimums
Motley Crowd
Jostled in Ride
After Ballet
Washington, Feb. 15.—UP)—With the world engaged in the greatest armament race in history and wars raging on two continents; National Defense Week, now being observed throughout the country, extends tricolor groups throughout the nation.
When a passenger wanted to leave the bus a member of the ballet assumed charge and in a tanner malice ordered, "All right, boys, off you go!" Those standing in the fore part of the bus would follow, then the former would troop back on the bus again. This happened several times.
'Spring Dance'
Is Captivating
Light Comedy Secures
Three Custain Call
From First-Nighters
A low moan was heard from one man as he removed his toe from beneath another foot, but the trip was made without further casualty.
National Defense Week Spurs Activities of Patriotic Groups
Our thanks to Margaret Ramage for that newly-pledged look and not knowing just what she thinks about love—to Mariibeth Schreiber for being such a shrewd manager and an understanding roommate—to Betty Smith for a vitality and sureness that builds on itself up to the end of the play—and to Jayne Coats for being the best part of the first act and that hat-snatching job.
Bv Otto Janssen
She made the whole business of alling in love seem important—and right—even in the midst of a group f characters that too often booed it and tried to explain it away. Which something.
It was this little clique of five that gave the play the verve and punch that it had. Yes, there were some men in it, too--we're getting to that. Bill Fey did a more than creditable job as the "oaf"—the "egplant"—and seems to have made
*Continued on page 1*
Typical? Probably—typical of the high spots of college foolery tha t might happen here or anywhere, typical characters—they are all there.
Barry Bury wrote this play, "Spring Dance," but now Roberta Cook owns it. One of the largest first-night audience in years heard the Dramatic Club presentation of it last night—to the tune of three curtain calls—and firmly decided that the whole thing belongs to her.
Of course, the play is mainly a rollicking bunch of impossibilities put together to make what the dramatist calls a swallow. College people do not keep up such a high pitch of repartee — that consistently. But it is fun to hear them do it on the stage.
By Otto Janssén
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
By Richard MacCann. c'40
Typical of College Foolery
Men Consistently Good
[c estimated at about 474,000—approximately 160,000 in the active army and 308,000 in the trained service.
Although new defense appropriations will increase this per capita cost in the United States, large increases are anticipated in other countries.
Because of the reluctance of some countries to reveal information of a military nature and rapidly change the size of the army, and naval strength vary.
The most recent statistics available showed that the United States stands 18th in the list of military bases in Europe, Greece, Portugal and Switzerland.
This country also spent less per capita annually for national defense than any of the major powers. Recent data show that for each person in the United States, $5.08 was spent annually for land, air and sea forces. In Germany the cost is estimated at $8.25; Japan, $13.9; Italy, $13.8; Great Britain, $12.8; France, $22.5; and Soviet Russia, $33.2.
It is estimated, however, that Russia has approximately 40 times as many men ready for military service as this country. France and Italy
Continued on page 3
Increases To Be World Wide
Thirty-seven Are Eligible For Diplomas
Committee Votes That Members of Group Have Filled Requirements for A.B. Degrees
Thirty-seven students completed the requirements for graduation last semester and were voted eligible to receive the A.B. degree by the College faculty committee yesterday. Those students who fulfilled the requirements as set up by the College
Frederick Richard Auen
Lyle O. Amberg
Lyle B. Beattie
Mirabel Ruth Blair
Edith A. Borden
George Rex Bowls
Audrey An Chapman
Avoid Condemner
Gertrude Field
Dorothy Jane Fink
Fergus Fitzalden
Burbara Jane Goll
Mary Jane Haynes
Icelandene Robert
Eveline Moe Hollecker
Jane Edythe Howe
Frank Lewis Irwin
Chesley Milred James
Mabelle Mahler
Robert Howard Jordan
Jean Roy Lindley
Evangeline Fletch
Joey May Martin
Lewis Hart Maser
Edwin Collins Nelson
Fredish Gossin O'Boyell
George E. Oller
Ellen Pauline Rawlings
Howard Saina
Bobannian Salatelh
Charles Donald Shader
Alice M. Luiss
Glenn Cuffier
Frederick Morrill Swain, Jr.
Barbara Mayhew Tupper
Mrs. Marion Keighley Snowden, of London, will present an illustrated lecture on "The Story of Old England" by Stephen Kendall, the auditorium of Frank Strong hall.
Gives Music Talk Tomorrow
The lecture, which will be accompanied by musical examples and llanter slide illustrations, will replace the regular weekly Fine Arts recital. The talk will cover the composers living between the reigns of Henry VIII and Elizabeth of England, introducing examples of their work with short descriptions of the musical instruments of the period.
Mrs. Snowden is returning to New York to sail for England after several weeks of lecturing on the Pacific coast. Her Lawrence adductions will be presented at University Concert Course, and will be open to the public without charge.
Choose Evelyn Swarthout To Play in Philharmonic
Evelyn Swarthout, daughter of Dean D. M. Swarthout and Mrs. Swarthout, has been chosen by Karl Krueger, director of the Kansas City Museum, as one of the guests solitists to play next season with the group.
Miss Swarthout will play on Nov. 17 and 18, appearing in the Schumann Concerto in G Minor for piano and orchestra.
Civil Engineers Elect Tomorrow
For president: Sterling铅
e'38; John Robeson, e'38; and Keith
Corbin, e'38. For vice-president:
Frank Drake, e'38; Norvin Souder,
e'38; and James Shipley, e'39.
for secretary: Joe Karp, e'uncil; John
Headrick, e'38; and Harold Taylor,
e'38.
The following men are candidates for office in the University chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers at the election which is to be held tomorrow evening at 7:30 in room 210 of Marvin hall.
NOTICE
The Fetteration of Counselors will meet in the Pine Room of the Union building today at 4:30.
for treasurer; Wilber Padden, c.39;
Francis Veadach, c.39 and Thomas
Robinson, c.39 For Senior represent-
ative: Arthur Latham, c.38;
Robert Wallace, c.38; and Everett
Watson, c.38 For Junior represent-
ative: Theodore Maichel, c.39; Roy
Toomey, c.unel; and Proctor Ritchie,
c.39 For Sophomore represent-
ative: Edward Sheley, c.unel;
Arthur Williamson, c.40 and Clarence
Hammond, c.40.
Signed, Dorothy Trekell.
Baldwin Speaks Today On National Defense Week
Included in the meeting will be talks on "Safety" by John Heardrick and W. C. McNown, professor of civil engineering.
Col. Karl F. Baldwin, of the department of military science and tactics, will speak to R.O.T.C. students on "Arms and Armaments" in Marvin hall at 4:30 this afternoon, as a feature of National Defense Week. The lecture is open to the public, and students are invited to attend.
National Defense Week is sponsored by the Reserve Officers Association of the United States, and is observed between the birthdays of Lincoln and Washington. Feb. 12 to 22, inclusive.
Dr. J. E. Moore Will Lecture Address To Be Given Tomorrow on 'Syphilis And Its Control'
Dr. Joseph E. Moore, University alumnus who has won wide recognition as an authority on venereal disease, returns to the Campus tomorrow night for an address on "Syphilis and Its Control."
Doctor Moore will speak in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall m- under the auspices of Sigma Xi honorary scientific society. His appearance here was arranged by Dr. N. P. Sherwon, chairman of the department of bacteriology and president of the scientific society, who was a classmate of the speaker at the University.
Preceding the evening program, Doctor Moore will be a guest at a dinner for the medical faculty and students of Sigma Xi at the University of Sigma XI at the University of Chicago.
The well-known physician was graduated from the University in 1914 and received his M.D. in 1916 from Johns Hopkins, where he is now a professor of medicine. He is editor of the Journal of Syphilis and Veneral Disease.
The appearance of Doctor Moore has aroused wide student interest and has received the approval of the Men's Student Council. The council Monday night passed a resolution that the student body to attend the address.
Doctor Moore spoke in Memphis yesterday, and will speak in Kansas City on the night following his Lawrence address. His is being brought to Kansas City under the sponsor of the Kansas City Academy of Medicine.
Baker Addresses Group Tomorrow
Ralph T. Baker, secretary and field manager of the Kansas Press Association, comes to the University tomorrow to deliver the first of a series of five professional talks, more especially to majors in the department of journalism, but also to students who have met edited in the newspaper business. His first talk will be on "Business Publications."
Mr. Baker received his B.S. degree from Northwestern University in 1916 and his A.B. in journalism from the University of Oklahoma in 1922. After a year doing extension work for the University of Oklahoma he came to Kansas to the position he now fills. He is president of the Topena Club of Chicago, Chicago. Other Kansas newspaper men are to be invited to speak, making a bi-weekly course throughout the semester.
Mrs. Turney To Address Pi Lambda Theta Meeting
Mrs. A. H. Turney, state superviser for nursery schools, will speak on the subject, "School Begins at Two," at the annual open meeting of Pi Fiat. She will be the most famous of the Memorial Union building, tomorrow at 3:30 p.m.
More than two hundred women enrolled in the School of Education and the faculty of the school have been invited as guests.
Arrangements for the tea which will follow the lecture are in the charge of Miss Ruth E. Lichen, instructor in education, Miss Mary Grant, professor of Latin and Greek, and Miss Katherine Rutter, executive correspondence study, will pour. Active Pi Lambda Theta members will assist in serving.
W. S. Johnson, chairman Department of English.
Bebout Lectures Today
Mr. G. Newell Bebout will lecture on "Contemporary American Poetry" at 3:30 this afternoon in 295 Braser. The lecture is primarily for freshmen, although a class of open is being anyone interested.
Rejects Plan for Day Of 'Grace'
W.S.G.A. Suggests That 3:30 and 4:30 Classes Be Scheduled on the first Day of Exams
W. S.G.A., considering the action of the Men's Student Council in petitioning for a "day of grace" between end of classes and the first day of final examinations, last night suggested the committee to attend a request that 3:30 and 4:30 classes be scheduled on the first day.
Plans for Carnival Discussed
The general sentiment of the council was that such action would lighten the load of students on the first examination day and still allow seven full days of actual examination periods. The M.S.C. Monday night petitioned the University senate for the free day.
Additional plans for the W.S.G.A. carnival to be held Feb. 25 were discussed at the meeting. Besides having organized houses sponsor boots, the council plans to engage a jungle officer during short shows during the evening.
The council voted to select a committee consisting of two faculty members and one student to judge the booths on the basis of originality and cleverness of decoration. A suitable prize will be awarded to the winner. The advisability of having a travel bureau in the Memorial Union building was discussed. The council decided that it would be a useful fun-
Delegates to National Meet
Two delegates from W.S.G.A., the retiring president and the new president, will be sent to the sectional convention of the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students to be held this spring in Pullman, Wash.
Grace Valentine, c'38; Betty Kumble, c'41; Marie Norton, c'40; and Ruth Olive Brown, c'40 were appointed as members of a committee representing the nonsheath presenting petitions at the time of W.S.G. A.E.,
W. S.G.A. elections will be held March 10. Candidates for the offices must have qualifications which will fulfill the requirements set up by the W.S.G.A. constitution. These requirements are:
Most Maintain 'C' Averages
"The president, the vice-president, the secretary, and representatives of the schools shall at the time of election have credit for five semesters' work, of which three of the four immediately preceding must have been done at this University. The treasurer, the managers of the point system and of the book exchange shall have credit for at least three semesters' work, of which the two immediately preceding must have been done at this University. All representatives must have been at the University during the semester preceding the election.
"The class representatives shall be elected by the incoming senior, junior, and sophomore classes. All officers and representatives shall hold office for two years. The formation of the point-system manager who shall hold office for two years."
"All members of the Executive Council or candidates for membership must maintain an average grade not lower than "C" and no member receiving failure may remain a member of the council.
Issue Kelly Reward Posters
Posters for the $1000 Russell Kelly award fund have just been issued by the Kansas state highway patrol. Ever five thousand posters will be placed in the eastern section of the state, advertisement boards around two of men who fully assaulted Russell Kelly, University student. Sept. 24.
Five hundred dollars for the reward was authorized by the State of Kansas, and the remaining $500 was raised by Topka and Lawrence business men, University students and faculty members.
The poster consists of an announcement of the authorization of the reward, description of the car and the two men, and a statement of the award. COL J. B.Jenkins, superintendent of the Kansas state highway patrol at Topkape.
Lindley Will Speak
At Lawrence High School Friday
Cancellor Leland will speak in
his presentation on the
Lawrence Memorial High School.
His topic has not been announced.
PAGE TWO
P
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 192
一
≈
Comment
As a Final Plea---
Just One More Day
Last minute "cramming" may be the bane of professors' lives, but it has been the ministering angel to untold generations of college students. Eleventh hour review, if done calmly and determinedly, may mean the difference between failure and a passing mark.
But those of us who are usually unfortunate enough to have one and possibly two examinations in the morning and afternoon following the last class day are denied this opportunity. We have one short evening to review a semester's work.
Even those few students who do not indulge in this "cramming" process will surely not object to a day of rest preceding final examinations. A semester's end carries with it numerous extra activities, it brings the deadline to long-delayed term papers, book reports and projects. By the last day, the average student is worn down to a remnant of his usual self and is overpowered by an "it matters not" attitude. A 24-hour period before examinations begin, whether used for relaxation, study, or readjustment to a new situation from four to eight important tests within a week's time, is in order.
Surely the petition of the Men's Student Council to the University Senate for a day of "grace" will receive the whole-hearted support of every University student.
'Dumb Bunnies?'-- Naw! Individualists!
Are you a "dumb bunny"? Can't make an A and even have a difficult time making an occasional B? Ah, how sad, but dry your eyes on this little morsel of comfort, and "take heart again."
The adult life of the child who always gets A's in school may develop into anything but a bed of roses is the conclusion of certain psychologists and educators.
Dr. Robert N. McMurry, executive secretary of the Chicago branch of the Psychological corporation said of the child who never fails to get an A. "That sort of a child is likely to grow up to be a conformist—a person who never blazes new trails—the sort of person who accepts what is told him without question. The pattern of what the teacher says is carried over into adult life. He is not likely to be a leader or a dynamic individual."
This description may be applied to college students too. We as college students accept what our instructors tell us without thinking or reasoning about it. Many of us never try to digest the facts and make them our own. We cram and depend on our memory to store facts until we have a test. We follow grades instead of interests.
So you see, we aren't really "dumb bunnies." We are individuals—progressive thinkers of the first water. Kow-tow to more figures and letters called grades? No, sir! not we! We are non-conformists, and nothing else.
A Rational Animal!
Well--It Depends-fine a situation in mutually understandable terms.
We often read or hear of man as a "rational being." Man is what he is because he is—"rational." And so, we suppose he must be. But there are times when we look with askance upon this theory, even though certain facts do seem to make it reasonable.
For example: Have you ever watched a crowd of persons being "rational" at a football game? Of course it is reasonable to desire such things as: "kill that umpire!" "bust that end!" and other such "rational" though hilarious actions. But you haven't noticed probably, because you would be too busy doing your share of "rationalizing."
June is a great month for rationalism especially among us who are young and not especially sympathetic with the ascetic tendencies which Paul held to be so commendable. Have you never sat beneath the moon with another rational human of similar age, opposite sex, and great attractiveness, and just "rationalized" to your heart's content? We recall that the great philosopher, Schopenhauer, once pursued a woman through most of Europe, only to return home in dejected failure to write of women that they "are squat, broad-broad creatures" with no redeemable virtues. Now Schopenhauer, as Mark Anthony might have put it, "was a rational man." And to continue in the same view of treatment the oracular Mark might have accorded. "So are we all—all rational men."
All of which merely leads us back to our first contention: "Men are rational beings."
But what do we mean by rational? As we have described it, it would seem to embrace a host of ambivalent emotions, for primarily we imply reason when we use the term. The sociologist would say that to be rational, a man must be in a social situation he understands, and that to co-operate rationally, he must be able to define a situation in mutually understandable terms.
~
But here we have a term that is only theoretically mutually understandable. We use it so freely and often in conveying our ideas but what do we mean by it?
If the sociologist's concept is right, then "rationalism" presupposes a great deal and the term as commonly used is often wrong. If, on the other hand, the term is right, then it would seem that the world itself—refusing to fit consistently—is wrong.
Campus Opinion
Another Marble Player
Editor, Daily Kansan:
Say, what is all this "Prepared" business? Is it some kind of series? To date we have letters signed "Prepared" (was he fighting mad!) "Amused" (and not too amusing) "Now Prepared for Anything" and "Prepared for the Worst!" And, oh my gosh, now I'm contributing!
So far these people have been very brave and virel and outspoken, but what have they said? I'm no little Beake Carter, but I don't need to be told that the Japanese are being mean to the Chinese, nor that the ordinary run of poor Japanese taxiper isn't actually the new incarnation of His Satanic Majesty, or that America is going to be sorry if it doesn't watch out. And I'll wager there are lots, just LOTS of students who don't want to pay attention to square deal and one remarkably little coaching on how best to need their country.
Furthermore, I don't like the attitude of "Prepared for the Worst." He wants to talk about marbles and he hasn't read the first letter by "Prepared. The He knows how Prepared we are, not down to seem real to that fellows like "Prepared" don't grow on every bush. No, sir. Not in EVERY bush. I maintain that "Prepared for the Worst" should have given the American Cricket attention before contributing his bit to the series.
Well, I'm willing to do him a good turn in spite of that, and tip him off that he spikes better than he spikes well. He'll hell be "perverse" back into Rhetoric 0 and that it's not being "Prepure for the Worst," that's getting it not!
Sure. I Play Marbles, Too.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Cancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:50 a.m.
Vol. 35 Wednesday, February 16, 1938 No. 95
--lived on Park Avenue but he took his readers through Central Park, great department stores, slums, along the river and to fires.
CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE LECTURE: Mr. G. Newell bewall w i 114 lecture on "Contemporary American Poetry" at 3:30 this afternoon in 205 Brasser to freshman students — W. S. Johnson, Department of English.
ELECTION OF HOB-NAIL HOP QUEEN. The election of the queen for the Hob-Nail Hop will be held today at the book exchange in the engineering building. Pictures of the nonines will be posted on the bulletin board in the engineering building—Proctor Ritchie.
EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty
meeting will be held on Tuesday,
Feb. 21, in 115 Fresno E. H. Lindley, Chancellor
FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's offer this week, according to the following schedule o r mapo.
Wednesday
Wednesday Thursday Friday and Saturday ...
N to S inclusive
T to Z inclusive
These unable to appear
at George O. Foster Registrar
FEDERATION OF COUNSELLORS: There will be a meeting of the Federation of Counsellors at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine room. Please try to be there if at all possible—Dorothy Trokel, President.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB: The International Relations Club will meet Thursday, Feb. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union building—Kathryn Turner, Secretary.
JAY JANES: There will be a meeting at 4 30 p.m. in the lounge of the union building -Roberta Cook
SPANISH CLUB: At El Teneto will meet Thursday in 113 Administration building to discuss a plan by Leon Reynolds. All prospective new members are invited to attend Refreshments will be served—Karl Ruppenthal, Press
W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a W.S.G.A. tea afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock in the lounge of the Administration building. All University women are invited—Bette Wasson, Secretary.
Official Student Payer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
University Daily Kansan
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOBEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GEOGE CLANE
NEW BOOK EDITOR DOROTHY NEILTHERON
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NEILTHERON
SPORTS EDITOR ELON TORNEKEN
MARGARET MARTIN JEAN THOMAS ROWE
REWRITE EDITOR DICK MARTIN
TELEGRAPH EDITOR HARRY HILE
TEDDY EDITOR JEAN TYLER
Editorial Staff
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ADDITIONAL AUTHORS MARTIN BENTSON AND DAVID KENNY
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A Nation Will Mourn Passing of Odd McIntyre
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
He died today also in Lawrence, Kans, in Plattsburg, Mo., where he was born and in Gallipolis, Ohio which he regarded as "home," and in every one of the nearly 400 towns whose newspapers carried his daily column, for all these people knew him intimately.
O. O. McIntyre died this week in New York City.
Bv Uarda Sherry, c'40
Well to begin with, once he wrote a rather unimportant little column in the daily newspapers. Occasionally in a popular magazine his name would appear under an article that might have dogs as its subject, often his subject might be biographical, and when it was, the reader always found a poignant word picture of a quiet country town. In a rocking chair on the front of an old wooden table a pleasant faced grandmother and at her feet lounged a gawky boy whose eyes were filled with dreams.
Who was this man, McIntyre?
Had a 'Hankering'
The boy grew up, went to college, courted his first girl and married her. His career? He seemed to have a "hankering" as his Gradma would have said, for newspaper work and he became successively, a reporter in Gallipoli, a feature writer in East Liverpool, Ohio, a managing editor in Dayton, and city editor in Cincinnati.
That isn't important - it isn't important that he spent some time as dramatic editor of one magazine and as associate editor of another—for in 1912, he began his daily column in New York and it is that column by which he was known.
What did he write? Was it politics, sports, news? None of these things.
What Did He Write?
Marguard, Mo., Feb. 15—(UP)—The Rev. Noel Bremner, preacher for the Church of the Nazarean, believes that a mixture of beer and the Bible will bring about the salivation of this Ozark community.
Preacher Uses Tavern Pulpit In the Ozarks
When Bremner, an itinerant preacher, came to Marquand he was unable to find a church where he could conduct revival services.
He complained to Murphy Myers, proprietor of the "Dead Horse Imm," a beer tavern near the city limits, a beer tavern in New York, and presch in the layer, every night.
Since that time Bremner hasn't missed a single evening at the tavern, where promptly at 7:30 he hangs out his hand-painted signs, informing everyone that the tavern is now a church, and begins to preach.
Patrons of the tavern like it, Myers says, and the revival services have proved a real boon to the beer business, as many persons who come for the preaching stay on for a few glasses of beer.
Editor Cupid Permits Puns In Valentines
The streamlined Valentine goes in for puns and plays on words. Yet the missives only say in another way the thought expressed in these words, sent on a Valentine to Catherine, wife of Henry V:
New York — (UP) — The little winged boy bow boy is a sentimentalist, judging from 1833 Valentines. The sentiment; however, is expressed in a strictly up-to-date way.
"I love on which excellently allie." Designs show definitely the influence of contemporary decorative thought in elimination of unnecessary details; in the use of modern pastel shades enlivened by metallic touches, and in conventionalized motifs.
The modern girl, according to lines appearing on Valentines, is expected to send many a February 14 message. Verse are a bit casual and offhand for the most part, but they mean a message of love just the same.
He wrote of head writers, celebri-
ties, actresses, opera singers, down
and outs, and with the turn of his
pen returned to Gallipolis and his boyhood days. He could describe the happiness of a little crippled
man, louded a perfect handkerchief on the street beside
his stand or cut through with clarity to give a picture of the pseudo- great.
More Than a Hundred Students Enroll for Reading Course
With more than one hundred students signed up for the special course for the improvement of reading technique, regular assignments in the course will begin next week. Each student enrolled will be notified by postcard the exact time for his first appointment.
This week has been devoted to eye-testing, and the making of other records necessary as preliminary to the course. Prof. Bert A. Nah, who is in charge of the work, asks that any student who has not yet had the preliminary tests, do so this week.
Chancellor Returns Yesterday From American Medical Meeting
Dr. E. H. Lindley returned to Lawrence yesterday morning from Chicago where he has been attending a seminar on the American Medical Association.
This evening the Chancellor will speak on "Education in the Machine Age" at the Kansas State College Founders' day banquet in Manhattan will accommodate her husband on the trip and will attend the banquet.
Brothers and Sisters Visit Southwestern Students
Winfield, Feb. 2. The past week was devoted by Southwestern College students to showing off their brothers and sisters. This was the first attempt made by the student bracket for a "brother and sister" day.
As the first courtesy extended the visitors, they were admitted free to the Hays-Southwestern game on Friday night.
On Saturday morning, the guests had a chance to exhibit a variety of talent at the assembly program they presented. Two piano solos, a xylophone solo, a twirling exhibition, a 'cello solo, and a tap dance were features of the program. Brothers and Sisters were picked as to the closest resemblances at the conclusion of the program. The judges were unable to eliminate any two, so eight groups were declared equal sharers of the honors.
College Women Younger. Pittsburg Survey Shows
Pittsburgh, Kan—That college girls at K.S.T.C. here are getting younger, taller and heavier is shown by data collected for a period of more than twenty years by the department of physical education for women. This year's survey shows freshman women to have an average height of 5 feet, 3.49 inches. This is an increase of one-half inch over that of 1928, and more than one-fourth inch over that of 1932. The average weight this year's 119.79 pounds as compared with 118.7 pounds in 1932.
A recent survey of 17,000 college women from all sections of the United States shows that the average 18-year-old college woman is 5 feet, 3.69 inches tall and weighs 129.48 pounds.
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U. S. Leads In Industrial Expenditures
Pittsburgh, Penn, Feb 15—(UP)—The United States spent $100,000,000 last year to lead all other nations in the field of industrial research, according to a world survey read to the American Chemical Society by Dr William A. Hamor, assistant director of the Institute of Industrial Research.
The never-ending search for new products and materials has led to scientific experiments on almost every conceivable subject and in many countries novel synthetics have opened a new era of solvents, plastics, paints, pharmaceuticals and perfumes. Doctor Hamer said.
Smaller Nations Active
Hundreds of scientific investigations are underway in Canada, Great Britain, Germany, France, Italy, India, Sweden, Switzerland, Russia, Brazil, Chile, Denmark Honduras, Guatemala, Norway and Palestine.
The report, a comprehensive outline of research activities throughout the world, reveals that experiments flourish in the smaller as well as the larger nations. Switzerland, Doctor Hamor reports, holds European leadership in pharmaceutical research. The demand for insecticides has resulted in reorganization of Palmae industry. German chemists are aiding Brazilian authorities in search of new uses for surplus coffee.
Doctor Hamor summarized research activity in this country in a separate report.
Spodumene, most plentiful of the lithium-bearing ores, has been put to work to produce lithium chloride for use in the conditioning and drying of air, the American report showed.
"Experiments in Texas have shown that the addition of carbon black to concrete gives a highway a dark luster that reduces glaze. Vitamin A is being produced from fish-liver oils by molecular distillation. Food preservation is being investigated on a carbon black can be used for filtration from silica and by a iron frotation process. The electrolytic reduction of sugars to corresponding alcohols has been carried out on a commercial basis.
Silver Used for Bearings
"Silver bearings are employed in high-power aviation engines. High-octane anti-knock gasolines at lower cost promise increased fuel efficiency for airplanes. Specially treated lubricants enable much higher bearing pressures. Heat-treated cast iron are used for gears and other machine parts which were previously constructed of steel. The manufacture of carbon dioxide-filled incandescent lamps has been perfected."
Other recent products of American research, according to Doctor Hamor, include cellulose sponges; synthetic ascorbic acid, or vitamin C, prepared from sorbitol, which, in turn, is made from corn sugar; new adhesives from synthetic resins; plastic wood; rapid-drying ink; electrolytically colored metals; new pigment dyes; new compounds for use as wetting agents; novel emulsifying agents; an organic base said to
be as strong as sodium hydroxide; new plasticizers, such as naphthyl-beta-mercaptan for rubber, and tetraphosphoric acid.
Buffalo Girl Sings Way Into Salzburg Festival
Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 15. — (UP) — Like a hero from a Horatio Alger story, an attractive 25-year-old girl who never trilled a note in public until she was 15 has received international music honors.
According to Walter Hoeshteite, general director of the festival, Miss McClung will be one of two Americans ever allowed to appear in such a program. Famed directors to appear at the festival will be Willie Max Reinhardt, Bruno Walter and Bernard Paungerart, leader of the Salzburg Mozart Orchestra, who will direct during Miss McClung's appearance.
The invitation came nine years after Miss McClung rose in a crowded Kankakee, Ill., school auditorium in 1929 and sang a melody that led her into a career. She had never uttered a note before, not even to sing a hymn in church, according to her parents.
Marjorie McClung, daughter of the pastor of a Methodist church here, has been invited to appear as guest solist with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra at the Salzburg Music Festival in Vienna, Austria, Aug. 6.
She went on to win the school contest and district championship and placed fourth in the statewide finals. So she was sent to the School of Music at the University of Michigan, where she won scholarships which enabled her to study voice in Berlin and Vienna.
Doctor Tells Why Men Prefer Blondes
“There is a good deal of truth in the allegation,” he says in a book. “Exophthalmic goiter is undoubtedly much more common in blenders than in brunettes, and it tends in its incipient stage to produce a type of woman who is clever, volatile, lively and temperamental, with large, lustrous eyes, distinctly attractive to the other sex.”
London—(UP) -Sir James Crichion-
Brown- Browne, 96-year-old doctor,
believes he has an answer to the ques-
tion "What is your gentleman's pic-
te blondes."
Romain Rolland
By
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16. 1928
UNIVERSITY DAIRY HANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
---
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c.a.0, Society Editor
Before 18月, call m. cal.01 a.1 p.219, call t. 2729.1
Alpha Delta Pi entertained with a formal dinner Sunday in honor of Mrs. J. B, Hullbar, national president. The following were guests:
Miss Elizabeth Meguir
Mr. and Mrs. Geo F, Ooster
Mr. and Mrs. John Sturz
Mr. and Mrs. John Sturz
Mr. and Mrs. George Hadricks
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Khamst, Kansas City, Mo.
Ruth World
Barbara Isbell, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. H. L.Ship, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. J. B. Brown, Kansas City, Mo.
Ruth World
Kathleen Myers, 79
Frances Allen, c19
Mr. Brian Smith
Mr. J. G. Jeter
Mr. Ashton
Mr. Leah Willcits, Topeka
Delta Sigma Pi, professional busi-
Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, initiated the following men Sunday:
Donald Clinger, c40
Jack Ledgey, c40
James Nelson, c40
John O'Brien, b40
心
Watkins hall will hold open hous tomorrow from 7 to 8 p.m.
--made by Feb. 1, of each year.
Mary Martha Carson, c'uml, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house
∞
Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma
Nu fraternity house were: Helen
Heard, c'uncel; Tom Yoe, c'uncel;
and Jack Leddyer, c'40.
Dinner guests at Miller hall Sunday were:
Mildred Boyer, Topkala
Mildred Boyer, Kansas City, Kan.
Margurite Leifer, Kansas City, Kan.
Alma Mia Lee, Kansas City, Kan.
Omar Brampel, Kansas City, Kan.
Brie Campbell, e41.
Joe Young, Evan 41.
∞
Phi Chi Delta, Presbyterian Church security, held initiation services for 13 pledges last night. Hrs. M. R. Cloud of Wichita was the principal speaker. The newly initiated members are:
Jan Garber and his original 15-
piece band is coming directly from the
Palomar, popular Los Angeles
dance spot, for an appearance at the
college Kappa Sig party.
The boys are opening the dance to
the public.
Dorothy Hanson, c'41
Jenelle Gouljee
Marie Herard, c'41
Mary Jones, c'41
Ruth Knope, c'40
Norma Jane Laudenberg, c'unel
Lee, c'41
Pierce Riley, c'unel
Edna Ruskin
Margaret Whiteford, c'38
Louise Yeumans, gr
Laurie Ferguson, gr
Viola Knoche, c'41
Phone K.U. 66
Dr. Twente Confers
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LOST, Between Warner library and Fraser
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Fellowships Are Offered
Dr. J. W. Twente, professor of education, spent Monday and Tuesday in Minneapolis, conferring with school officials regarding a school survey in the Minneapolis system. Dr Twente spoke before board members and teachers at a dinner Monday evening.
Application blanks for the fellowships are available in the office of Elizabeth Meguir, adviser to women. The blanks must be returned to the Kappa fellowship chairman, Betty Barnes, c'39, by March 25.
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Offers Total of $1500
To Graduate Students
One thousand five hundred dollars in graduate scholarships is being offered for the fourth consecutive year. Gamma, national social sorority,
The Kappa Kappa Gamma fellowships are awarded to women throughout the United States regardless of sorority or non-sorority membership. During the past three years, two fellowships have gone to non-sorority women, one of whom was aided for two years, and a third to a member of Alpha Xi Delta.
Divided in Three Fellowships
The exchange fellowship, in-augurated last fall, offers free board and room and in most cases tuition for the foreign students in exchange for the same privilege for Kappa's studying abroad. Applications for this exchange fellowship must be
In addition to these fellowships-at-large, Kappa maintains within the sorority a foreign student exchange fellowship and a series of fellowships. Kappa upperclassmen. Seven of the latter were awarded this year.
Each applicant is expected to explain definitely what her work is to be and the use she intends to make of the fellowship. No stipulation is made as to the course of graduate study or the institution in which it is to be pursued. Character, perseverance, well as scholastic and extra-curricular history of the student, must accompany each application.
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
Phone K.U.
The $1,500 is divided into three fellowships of $500 each and are awarded to women students not over 30 years of age, who have, or will receive before next July, their bachelor's degree from an institution in which a chapter of the Kappa Alpha Society exists. ACM China School for Women
WANTED: Roommate for boy at Campus house. Front room. Desirable location. 124' Oread. Call 1504. -+97
ROOM: Single or double room for man employed, or students. Between K.U., town and high school, 124 W. 13th. Phone 3105J. -86
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Old Man Winter paid the Campus a visit last night by bringing another ice storm. Yesterday from early afternoon on, Lawrence was the scene of rain turning to sleet and forming heavily on trees and wires. Students found it hard to keep on their feet and numerous falls occurred.
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The storm came from the west and has left a path of destruction to trees and power lines. Snow has been reported over most of the state. Temperatures dropped last night as winter again took over the reins.
Damage around Lawrence has not been serious. Trees were broken off and minor accidents have been reported.
Prof. Brewster Attends Chemical Society Meetin
Prof. Ray Q. Brewster of the chemistry department attended the February meeting of the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society in Kansas City, Mo. last evening. Professor Brewster is chairman of the Kansas City section.
Lawrence Forman, Glenn Steven-
law, Lester Olmstead and Harold
b Smith, all graduate students, ata-
tion with the meeting with Professor
brewster.
Dr. Lee I. Smith of the department of chemistry of the University of Minnesota spoke on "The Rearrangement of Polysalkyl Benzenes." The meeting was held in the Science building of the University of Kansas City, S2 and Rockhill Road. Preceding the meeting an informal dinner was held in the University cafeteria.
Sash Leaves on Lecture Tour
Bert A. Hass, professor of education, left yesterday afternoon for Parsons, where he spoke last evening before a city-wide meeting of teachers and school patrons. He will go to Coffeyville today, and tomorrow attend a luncheon meeting of the League of Women Voters at Wichita.
Students Speak at Pharmacy Colloquy Tomorrow Morning
The Pharmacy School will hold its weekly colloquy Thursday morning. The program will consist of a series of short talks given by J. Clark Ciss, MD; Danny G., Sally Salzer, ph.; and George Wood, ph.; and singing college songs.
Men's Intramurals
---
The Sigma Chiu interim basketball team tromed the A.T.O. court, scoring seven scoring holes in which three players found the hoop for 19 or more points.
Sawyer of the losers seemed to have little difficulty in tossing *f*12 in 12 seconds, and Souders and Jones of the winners secured 23 and 19 points respectively. In another one-sided game the PL team scored on the Theta Tau "B" team 22 to 11. The strong defense of both teams kept the scoring from mount-
The Campus Raiders and the Cauhouse Gang battled through four closely contested periods after which the former stood on the long end of a 28 count. Saved, crapped high scoring honors with 16 points.
Jones, f 9 12
Tyer, f 1 0 1
Souders, c 10 3 0
Thomason, g 7 1 0
WFarl'd, g 2 0
Monday's games:
Sigma Chi (63) A
Sawyer, g ft
Arthur, f 12.0
Sople, f 4.0
Selebe, g 1.0
Harlin, g 0.1
Ryder
g
Savliy, f 8 0 2
Slocum, f 8 0 1
Jewell, e 0 0 1
Smith, g 3 0 0
M'An'n'y, g 1 0 1
Torrance 1 0 2
Forman, f. g h i j
Lemaine, f. k l m
Kunkle, f. 1 e 0
Rolfs, f. g 1
Sheafer, f. g 4
Udell f. i j
947
Hilderd, f. | 4.10
Berry, f. | 3.00
Crab, b. | 3.00
Flesion, g. | 2.00
Dalton, f. | 1.00
Frank, f. | 1.00
Debate Entries In
15 2 5
Pearlir, f g t 10
Baurier, f 3 0 0
Ameriine, c 3 2 0
Lille, g 1 0
Klayer, g 1 0
O'Brien, g 0 0
O'Brien
wauwoger.
(26) Gashouse G. (23)
T. **B**. **F**.
Bloom, f. 1 1 0
Anderson, f. 0 0 0
Fraulee, f. 0 0 0
Morelard, d. 1 1 1
Adamsa d. 1 1 1
1307
g ft
Powell, f ... 3 O
Yoe, f ... 4 I O
Doyle, f ... 4 O
Doyle, f ... 4 O
Frankin, g ... 1 O
MNaught n ... 1 O
g ft
With most of the district tournements completed the past weekend, entries for the finals in the Kansas High School debate tournament, to be held at the University, Feb. 25 and are slowly coming in.
District I-Class B, Holton; class C in comp
Sevoreal District Meets
Will Be He d This
Weekend
Jaybirds (26)
Official: Enva. Phi Psi (31) S.P.E. (24)
District II-Class A. Lawrence;
class B. Paola.
In several cases, where the number of schools in one class in a district was small, these schools were transferred to a neighboring district for competition. Not all classes, are, as to be found in all 12 districts.
The reports from two districts on last week's contests have not yet been turned in and there are a few tournaments will held this weekend.
District III-Class A, Coffeyville; class B. to come.
District VII—Classes B and C, to come.
District V—Class A, to come; class B, Junction City; class C, Washington.
class B, to come.
District IV-Class B, Eureka; class C, Neosho Rapids.
District VIII—Class A, ElDorado class C, to come.
Cook, f g f l
Hudson, t' h
Kinney, c 2 0
Lindsey, g 2 0
Dingey, b 0 0
Sutton, s 0 0
Bomer 0 0
Boyer 1 0
Gaskill, f
Rosacker,
Weltmer,
May, g ...
Fisher, g
White
District IX-Class B, Abilene class C. Canton
District VI—Class B, Wakeeney; class C. Lebanon.
District XII—Class B, Dodge City class C, Bucklin.
District XI-Class B. Sheridar County Community High of Hoxie clss C. Oakley
Class C, Clinton.
District X—Class A. Newton.
1304
Extemperateous speaking contests will be held this year for the first time, but with a more limited entry list. Early entries include:
1436
District II-Class B, Keith Martin, Paola.
District 1V—Class B, Lou Ann Souder. Madison.
District III—Class A. William Black, Fort Scott.
District VIII—Class A, Zoe Strum Winfield.
District X—Class A, Allan Conwill Hutchinson.
Hays, Kensington, and Oberlin also will have entries.
Spring Dance-humorous list of fans. The list: Partibrine, Cochrane, Dorssey, Meier, S. Zilkhuss, Russe, William Rose Bennett, Robert Frost, Morris, Herbert Carruth III, William Shakespeare (We told it you it was powerful) and Kathleen Norris (wed like to meter).
Continued from page 1
And when one can see in the same evening; James "Be ever fond and true" Bradfield tap-dancing and Luce Gawain tackling a malf's part the way she does (getting the most comfortable) - It is a pretty complete line-up.
And our thanks to Joe Myers for allowing us to dislike him, though it was pretty hard at that. Dave Conderman made a successful baffling professor of biology, who helped the "man trap" function.
Of course, there was one member of the line-up missing -Betty Butcher- who was injured in rehearsal last week. Betsy Smith did a fine job of caring on. This reviewer caught a glimpse of one of the earlier rehearsals, and it's certain that we missed seeing an interpretation of the part that would have been equally worthwhile.
The first act dragged a little in places, but one soon forgot that. Toward the end it all became a little confusing as to who was fooling whom, but that's a minor matter, And what if the curtain did act up a little? It came down on a successful show.
Tommy Dorsey is scheduled for appearances at Ohio State and Cincinnati U. in his forthcoming westward tour of college campuses.
Coming!
JAN GARBER
And His Orchestra
In Person
-
Admission $1.00 per person plus tax in advance.
Friday, February 18 Masonic Temple
Masonic Temple Topeka, Kansas
$1.25 person plus tax at the door.
Tables 25c per Person
Sig Alph's Celebrate Birthday Anniversary Of House Mascot
Tickets at Round Corner Drug Store
A novel birthday party was held at the Sig Alph house on Monday night. Dyke, the house mascot, a German police dog, was 8 years old and the members thought it necessary to give him a surprise
After dinner had been served, the dog was called in the dining room and one of the waiters brought in a tray of bread and ham burgers, with eight candles.
The candles were blown out and the dog given the hamburger. After the dish was cleaned, a report wore off that the chef eaten it "cake" in 60 seconds flat.
Dean Lawson Accepts Several Speaking Dates
Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, has accepted several speaking engagements for this week.
Last night he spoke at a meeting of the Co-operative club in Topeka. Tomorrow morning he will address a gathering of the Parent-Tacher Council at the Wyndotte High School, and Saturday morning he will speak at the Horace Mann High School to the teachers of Wyndotte county.
Next Wednesday he will go to Harper and Anthony to speak. In the evening he will be the speaker of the teachers of Harper county.
Haywire-humorous list of fans. The list: Partibrine, Cochrane, Dorssey, Meier, S. Zilkhuss, Russe, William Rose Bennett, Robert Frost, Morris, Herbert Carruth III, William Shakespeare (We told it you it was powerful) and Kathleen Norris (wed like to meter).
Continued from page 1
We promise not to write any more poetry for a few days because bucking the world is like that saying about never fight at a balky; he'll get you in the end. So the poem for Nessha's bag is the Greyhound-Tiger News has a bag.
Willie Rose
Sat on a piir Willie Rose Again!
Saturday was Lincoln's birthday, and America paid homage to this history-book idol by going right on worrying about the recession. Lincoln may or may not be a hero, according to your views on the matter, but like practically all men who have gained world reknown he was not alone in his determination. He was a decided melancholic. Several times during his administration he had to be confined in a room void of all sharp instruments because of
GRANADA
Just One More Day
TODAY ENDS
THURSDAY
The Big Show From Rhythm Row! 7 Great Songs to Sing and Swing To! 700 laughs by Actual Count!
See Ann Miller, America's Great Dancing Sensation at Her Best!
She Tops Elenore Powell!
BOB BURK
BAK
RA
BOB
Kawai
BOB BURNS
BAKER
JACK OAKIE
MILLER
Radio City Travels
WITH VICTOR MOORE
Halen Broederiks - Jane
Coleman Mason
Malissa Maelson
Michael Wilson
Mickey Mouse the Goof and Donald Duck
PLUS
In "LONESOME GHOSTS"
Musical Revue - News
Friday - Saturday
The Laugh-a-Minute Romance!
FRANK MORGAN
Is a Riot in His Most Lovable,
Laughable Role
"Beg, Borrow or Steal"
13 Tip-Tap Fun Makers Bring You This Roping Saturday Evening Post Story!
SUNDAY
"Everybody Sing"
Setting a New High for Low-Down Rhythm and Bang-Up Comedy?
ALLAN JONES
JUDY GARLAND
FANNY BRICE
fits of depression, Like Napoleon and other great leaders, this fact probably supplied the spark that drove him to on greatness and also separates the great from the clamoring crowd.
The Best Musical of 1938
Sunday's Denver Post (we read it last Wednesday) contains a short article of an automobile exhibited at Boston University's School of Theology.
Flashes a white light on the dashboard when a car is going fifteen miles an hour.
Flashes green at twenty-five miles an hour.
For most drivers now, an additional record of "Rest in Peace" would have to be added.
After the Cornhuskers beat us in the swimming meet Saturday they left the gym singing "Tanks For a Lovely Evening."
Professor Hood of the Engineering school has devised a new method of removing skin for grafting. The device was successfully used this last week in Kansas City. When skin is removed by knife some parts are thicker than others and must be grown. Professor Hood's instrument is a drum affair which removes the skin in even layers.
We hear that a student from Key Port, N.J., felt such a strong urge to talk early Saturday morning that he called long distance to New Jersey just to talk to a friend of his and the director of the University. It is not for us.
Walt Disney's latest comic, "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," is banned in England for kiddy consumption on the grounds that it would scare them. The English are really just getting even with us for dumping their old tea in the sea, one local witt has concluded.
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What a Titanic Turnout of Talent!
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W. C. Fields
DOROTHY LAMOUR
MARTHA RAYE
BEN BLUE
SHEP FIELDS
and his rhythm
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"Um-m-m! It's GORGEOUS!" The man of the year in the HIT OF THE CENTURY.
IN TECHNICOLO
GOLDWYN FOLLIES
CHILLEY MEN
GERSHWIN SONGS
Directed by George MARSHALI
Released thru UNITED ARTISTS
ADDLPE MENJOY
THE RITZ BROTHERS
BRIAN ANDREA LEEDS
HELEN JEPSON
P H L E
MENGEN BEENGEN
'GHOULLE MCATWYT
100 YEARS OF THE MUSIC
Defense Week~~
Continued from page 1
have about 13 times as many, and Japan nearly 5 times as many.
The United States is in a much better position than most other powers as far as naval strength is concerned, ranking close to Britain in total tonnage affront, appropriated for or under construction. Legislation would also further increase this nation's sea strength. The World's Manners Estimated
Country U.S.S.R.
Japan Italy Germany France Britain Poland U.S.A.
The most recent information available from the War and Navy departments shows comparative trenches as follows:
Reserves Tonnage
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"MANHATTAN MELODRAMA"
end
HARRY CAREY
"DANGER PATROL"
THURSDAY
3 Days
3 Mesquitears
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"SUPER SLEUTH"
'Bulldog Drummond's Revenge'
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Home of the Jayhawk
TONITE TOMORROW
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WALTER HOUSTON
RUTH TATTERTON
No. 21
Newspaper Photographer
Battles Death
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HE MADE DEATH MARK TIME!
Preston FOSTER
IN The
WESTLAND CASE
A NEW UNIVERSAL
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No.2
ADVENTURE IN ARIZONA1
ROMANCE IN HONOLULUI
Smith
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Released by
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SUNDAY
"History Is Made at Nite"
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1938
Oklahoma Is Object For Revenge
Allen Plans T o Return
Humilizing Experience
Suffered Here in First
Big Six Game
By Carl Lundquist
(*United Press Staff Correspondent*)
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 15, (UPC-
Oklahomaans may get a Kansas duse
storm in their eyes and a Kansas
basketball team in their hair nex
Friday night, if the best laid plans
of the north wind and Dr. Forrest C.
Ailen do not go awry.
The Kansas coach will bring a basketball team to Norman that is bent on revenge. Oklahoma's goal-raising Sooners upset the Jayhawkers in the first game of the season and Doctor Allen's team is concentrating on the humiliating experience. Both teams are placed, place both are eyeing the title, and both realize that nearly everything depends on this one crucial game.
Oklahoma Coach Encouraged
All that Hugh McDermott, the Oklahoma coach, has to worry about a Kansas team that seems to get better with every game, a lack of reserve strength, fear that his speedsters will start missing their shots as they did in the Nebraska game, and the fact that a game is scheduled with Oklahoma A. & M. two nights before Kansas arrives.
McDermott received some encouragement over the manner in which his youngsters came back to defeat Kansas State after the loss to Nebraska. Jimmy McNatt recovered his sights for the basket and the rest of the team responded after what apparently had been an off night. He also has been cheered by the performance of two new squadmen, Clarence Benton and Clifton Speele, sophomores who moved in at the semester and who have added to his meager reserve strength.
Nebraska Definitely 'Out'
Kansas elled out a triumph over a Kansas State five that finally hit the stride that had been expected of it in pre-season reckonings. The Jaihawk squad has depended chiefly upon Fred Praille, Sylvester Schmidt and Don Ehling to lead the way, but no team has come around consistency to achieve the record of 14 triumps in 16 games for the entire season.
Nebraska, jinxed by Missouri, and only mediocre in other games, lost its last chance to stay in the race when Missouri won its second game from the Cornhuskers. The preseason favorites defeated lowly Iowa State Monday night, but may have considerable trouble against Loyola in a non-conference game Saturday.
Missouri Still Dangerous
Missouri, on the other hand, is a still foe to be reckoned with and may be a big factor in determining the final status of the race. The Tigers have two games with Oklahoma and one with Kansas. The game with Kansas State Saturday has prospects of being a battle.
Standings of the Teams
Kansas Sate hit the basket with the best consistency of the year in roping on Iowa State, and did not look the part of the last-place role it is playing. Iowa State, however, is at best an in-and-out team and has little chance of winning in its three remaining games, despite a strong sophomore squad which lends great promise for future years.
W L Pct. Pts. Oth.
Kansas 1 5 833 284 183
Oklahoma 5 1 833 280 273
Missouri 5 1 830 267 294
Iowa State 2 6 250 240 322
Kansas State 2 6 250 240 313
Remaining Games This Week
Tonight—Oklahoma vs. Okl
A. & M. at Norman.
Friday—Kansas vs. Oklahoma a
Norman.
Norman.
Saturday—Kansas State vs. Missouri at Columbia; Nebraska vs. Loyola at Lincoln.
Anniversary Committee Meets Tomorrow Afternoon
Meets Tomorrow Afternoon
A sub-compile will discuss further plans for the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of t'h University at a meeting to be held tomorrow afternoon in the office of Prof. U. G. Mitchell, general chairman of the committee.
The members of this committee are Fred Ellsworth, Allen Crafton, J. W. Murray and Olin Templin.
Highway Patrol Gives Red Tickets
Officers of the Kansas Highway
Patrol are now issuing a red ticket
to certain aggravated traffic cases
where an arrest is not made. This
red ticket is filed against the vi-
lator's name with the state driver's
license bureau, and persons who
disregard the highway rules and
regulations and who receive two
or more tickets will suffer loss of
their driver's license.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
Flash: Fred Pralle, stellar Jayhawk guard, with all-Big Six honors apparently cinched for the third consecutive year, will play, or at least is planning to play, with one of the Missouri Valley A.A.U. teams in the national A.A.U. tournament to be played in Denver the latter part of March. While we have no doubt that Pralle will show to a good advantage at the tournament, still it will problemate. We have a good chance of Fred Sig Six baseball competition. Pralle was being counted upon heavily to take care of third-base duties, a post he held down on the Jayhawk nine last year, and the position at which he starred during the summer in Ban 'obson play.
Note to those competing in intramural basketball: When you get out there on the court and run up and down it a few times and think you are worn out, you are largely kidding yourself, or so tests being conducted by Ed Elbem seem to indicate. Elbel, in working on his doctor's thesis, has worked out a number of tests determining the speed and accuracy of a person's co-ordination and reactions. After a number of tests upon examination before and after vorsons and lengthy exercise, the results have almost invariably shown that the individual's co-ordination was better and his reactions switer after exercise than they were before. (Is it clear?)
Elbel has tested members of the freshman basketball squad before practice and again after an hour or two of hard scriumption, with the results shown above. He has also taken those playing on intramural sports in a new league to tests before they played a game and then again after the game was over.
Big Six Basketball Games in Detail, to Feb. 15, 1938.
THE SCORE BOARD
(For a team's score, read down;
for opponents, read across; winning
scores marked with *; remaining
tames...)
In. St. L.S. KU K S Mo. Nb. Ok.
Kn. 17 ... *31* 30 *51* 35 *48* 323
Kan. 17 ... *31* 51 32 33 *49* 185
KSC *41* *23* *35* ... 28 *46* *54* 315
Mo. *34* *37* *29* 18 30 ... 186
Neb. *22* *48* 32 *32* *28* 292
Neb. *22* *48* 32 *32* *28* 292
Ok. 26 46 ... 30 48 ... 452
Tl. pts. 240 230 261 203 *512* 237
G won. 2 3 2 3 4 3
G lost. 1 1 6 2 3 1
Pct. 250 833 2 50 500 833
In all but two times out of several tests the results have shown improvement after exercise.
An interesting variation of the experiments has been for a person to do some individual exercises, such as "pushups" — in successively increasing length; i.e., first 10, and take the tests; then 20, and the tests, etc. One person did this until he left the room, and "pumped" at one time, and this individual "swoe his arms were too tired to move"—but he did better on the tests then than at any time previously in working up to the 40.
So, as we have said, when you think you are tired, it is probably largely a matter of mind.
At any rate Elibel's experiments have led him to some interesting conclusions. One deduction is that many more athletes are injured in competition from lack of proper "warming-up" than are ever hurt from overdoing in competition. Another is that the sub being sent into a game is probably much less efficient than the player whose place he is taking.
Cunningham Wins Another
Leads a Classy F i e l d Home in the Excellent Time of 4:14.8
Glenn Cunningham, the Kansas mile king, still refusing to abdicate his crown, won another victory last night over a classy field in the Bishop Keogh mile at Providence, R. in the time of 4 minutes, 148 seconds. Gene Venkee was second, Don Lash, third, Archie San Romani, fourth, and Joe McCluskey was last in a field of five.
The race was run in a smoke-filled hall before a crowd of frozened, cheering fans, who watched the barrel-chested Kansan run in last place for the first quarter and gradually work up to the second position from which he stepped out into the lead on the last of the 11 laps.
The first quarter was run in the fast time of 61.2 seconds with McCluskey leading. The time on the half was 2 minutes and 6 seconds with Lash out in front. Vonkze had an 11.4 second quarter and was clocked in 3 minutes and 13 seconds at the three-quarter mark.
The next race for the tireless mile champion will be in the well-known Baxter mile to be run in Madison Square Garden Saturday night.
In the last quarter, Cunningham moved up into second place, following the flying heels of the former Pennsylvania star, and moved around him on the bell lap to come down the stretch the winner.
Stranathan Addresses Chemistry Club Tomorrow Afternoon
Dr. J. D. Stranathan, professor of physics, will speak on "Methods of Determining the Avogadro Number" at a meeting of the Chemistry club Thursday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in room 201, Chemistry building.
What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools By Newt Hoverstock
In a recent swimming exhibition and water show at the University of Texas, the Longhorn tankers broke five standing records. Ralph Flanagan, twice an Olympic swimmer and a member of the frosh team, broke Johnny Weissmuller's record in the 200-yard free-style, but fell slightly short of his 220-yard mark. He swam the 200-yard event in minute 81.1 seconds to break. Weissmuller's mark of 1 minute, 54.4 seconds. Mrs. Elsie Jane Allison, A.A.U., official was one of the timekeepers, and there will be an attempt to make the results of the meet official and get recognition for new records.
The University of Oklahoma is getting into big competition next season. The Sooners have obtained permission from the Big Six to play a post-season football game at Norwalk and the team to team up on Dec. 3. Washington State is a member of the Pacific Coast conference.
Somebody in Oklahoma besides the Sooners can also be of a 50-point pace for a basketball team. The Northwestern State Teachers College of Alva, Okla., in first place in the Oklahoma Collegiate Conference, beat Northeastern and the Oklahoma Baptists in successive nights with scores of 59-39 and 55-36 respectively.
The University of Wisconsin Men's Union Board is praying for snow in order that its planned snow week will not be somewhat upset. Plans are set for skiing, skating, races of all sorts including running, a fashion show for winter, etc.; but, at present, all the University skies can produce is a light drizzle in the form of ruin.
The Oklahoma Daily, in a writet just before the Sooners entrained or nebraska, stated, "Oklahoma's 50-point team has team sued a merry turtle all over the western plains." After Wednesday night's 42 points gathered for a loss to Nebraska, we watched a win by twinkle-toke seat boys are trilling now. (Ed's note: Wonder if it isn't "The Broken Record?")
Women's Intramurals
--lengths; crawl for form; biggest stroke, two lengths; free style, three lengths.
Intramural swimming meet-The elimination meets are to be held tonight and tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be held Wednesday, Feb. 23.
Teams competing tonight are: Pi
Bhi Phi, Kappa Theta, Alpha
Chi Omega, T.M.T, Chi Omega,
Alpha Gamma Delta, and Wakatha
kills.
Relay; breast stroke for form; free style, two lengths; diving; back-stroke, two lengths; side stroke, two
Each organization is allowed to enter four girls in each event, and each girl may not enter more than three events and the relay.
SEE! HEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Dr. J. E. Moore Talks Tonight On Syphilis
Authority on Veneval Disease Returns H e r e To Address Students On Vital problem
A University graduate who has won a national recognition in the field of music returns tonight to the scene at his undergraduate schooling to speak on a vital student problem.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1938
Dr Joseph E. Moore, 14, associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, speaks at 7:30 in the hall on "Syphilis and Its Control."
University students already have shown that they are interested deeply in promoting the current nationwide drive against venereal disease. The nearly 100 per cent approval given the idea of a Wassermann test in the questionnaire circulated last spring and the student response to it was overwhelmingly one voluntary basis in December are evidence of that fact.
Preceeding the evening program, the physician will be entertained at a dinner at the University Club by members of the medical faculty and of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society.
It was through the efforts of the local chapter of Sigma Xi and its president, Dr. N. P. Sherwood, head of the department of bacteriology, that the address was arranged. Doe-ter had a regular meeting a regular meeting of the society.
Doctor Moore, who is editor of the American Journal of Syphilis and Veneral Disease, speaks tomorrow night in Kansas City before the Kansas City Academy of Medicine. Tuesday's lecture will be presented by medical men in Memphis, Tenn.
The speaker was a classmate of Doctor Sherwood at the University and later in graduate study at Chicago University. In a letter to the University professor accepting the invitation to speak here, he remarked that the principally the control of the disease because he believed students were more or less acquainted with the causes and symptoms of syphilis.
HAY by WIRE
The President is going to have to call out the national guard if any more Campus Opinions are written on preparing to give all for the fatherland. The series has turned into a name calling contest in a nice way. One-word signatures would help the next writer too.
The navy men want to build battleships enough to defend both coasts. At present we would have a tough time taking care of both. On the other hand, why do we have to protect our coasts with a steel wall when the oceans can do it for us? It is 4,200 miles from Yokohama to Seattle. Most battleships today have a 5,000-mile range, 2,500 over and back. It would take ships 1,000 miles and army tanks in America to keep the ships refuled. The same goes for an enemy. Oil tankers make good targets, too.
This being National Defense Week, sponsored by the Reserve Officers of the United States, many patriotic peace organizations are out in full swing. We read somewhere that all wars are started to discover who is right. But they always finish by looking for who is left. We hope we're numbered among the blessed.
NUMBER 96
Navy men want battleships though, because they are still masters of the sea. You can just about cut one into two parts, and it will still float, because of its construction.
Personally we are going to miss O. O. McIntyre's daily column on Manhattan and Podunk. So me people, including many newspaper men, did not like McIntyre's work. He spent eight hours a day working on his column. He mentored many people away than probably more people away than he will time wipe out his name, but for the present we and millions of others will miss that happy glow that reading his column gave.
Bob Busby, K.U. columnist for the Journal-World, is not only a first-
Continued on page 2
Tau Sigma To Perform In Dance Symposium
Members of Tau Sigma, honorary lancing sorority, will go to Manhattan on Feb. 26 to participate in a Dance symposium. The groups are practicing now upon the dances which hey will perform.
One group composed of Annette Lawrence, *ed'uncl*, Virginia Appel, c'41, Betty Sates, c'40, Marjorie Rowland, *c'38*, Helen Cooper, c'38, Ruth Olive Brown, c'40, Patti Payne, c'41, LeArline Shull, c'41, Maxine Pendleton, *c'uncl*, Hilde Shilt, fa'40, Fern Hill, c'40, and Irene Moll, ca'40, Kate Littner, of Miss Alice Sherbon Bauman, assistant instructor in physical education. They will do a dance composed by Miss Bauman.
The technique group is under the direction of Miss Elizabeth Dunkel. The personnel of the group is: Mickie Learnard, ed39, Jeremy Elm, ed40, Catherine Dunkel, ed38, Edher Gilkson, ed39, Ann Rightmire, fa40, Docothy Bucher, c39, and Anna Grace Doty, fa38.
Miss Slentz, Máry Learnard, ed39,
Miss Dunkel, Miss Koll, and Arline
Irvine, b39, will do the Shining
cause, a Russian pleasant
number.
Wright Given Freedom
Insanity Plea Saves Aviation Official From Penitentiary
Los Angeles, Feb. 16.—(UP)—Paul H. Wright, 38-year-old aviation official, was given his conditional freedom late today when the same superior court which had convicted him of manslaughter decided he was temporarily insane at the time he shot down his wife and his best friend in his home last Nov. 9.
The same jury in the first trial found Wright guilty of manslaughter in the slaying of his pretty wife, Evelyn, and his friend, John Kimmel, traffic manager at the airport where Wright was president.
Wright had testified he found the two in an allegedly erotic embrace on the piano bench in his home.
When the verdict was returned Wright's father, Dr. J. J. Wright or Milwaukee, wept his relief.
A lecture on "The Story of Old English Music" will be given this afternoon at 3:30 by Mrs. Marion Brilliant and the Frank Strong hall auditorium.
Lectures Today On English Music
Mrs. Snowden will present the story of the renaissance of English music dealing with the composers writing during the reigns of Henry VIII and Queen Elizabeth. Wearing an authentic period costume, she will lead a rehearsal and instrumental streams of that period by piano elections and lantern slides.
The lecturer has compiled her historical data through many months of research in the British museum and among other collections. She is on her way home to London, after a vurecture on the west coast.
The University Concert Course is sponsoring her talk, and the public is invited to hear her address without charge. It takes the place of the regular Thursday afternoon Fine Arts recital.
Department of Design Has Display of Modern Fabrics
An exhibition of modern fabrics a now on display in the department of design, room 329. Strong Frank hall. The textile designs were by the hands of style and design of Marshal Field and company.
Many of the designs are modern interpretations of rare old English and French documents which closely resemble the work of the old textile masters. One more is an interesting example of screen painting.
only until next Sunday, Feb. 20.
It came to Lawrence from the Kansas City Art Institute and goes to the Kansas State Teachers' College, Pittsburgh, from here. The hours of the exhibition are from 9 to 5 except Saturday. It will be shown from 2 to 5 on Sunday.
The exhibition will be on display only with next Sunday. Feb 20
in yesterday's Kansan two names were omitted from the list of those voted eligible to receive the A.B. degree by the College and the J.K. degree. The two are Jane Hannah and Jack Edward Schiffacher.
Correction
Moscow, Feb. 16. —(UP) Four Russian scientists, marooned on an ice foe off the Greenland coast, late yesterday greeted an airplane which arrived to rescue them, with the announcement that they are prepared to remain on the ice to complete their observations.
Dr. Ivan Papanin, leader of the four men who have ridden through Arctic storms for 8 months and 18 days, said they were fully able to remain another three months if necessary. As a result, plans for the actual removal of the men were delayed and the rescue plane flew back to the Soviet ice-breaker Murman to report and to ask the advice by radio of the Great Northern Sea Route administration in Moscow.
Vienna, Feb. 17 (Thursday).—(UP) —Relations between Germany and Austria headed toward a fresh crisis early today as Fuehrer Adolf Hitler apparently sought to extend his Austrian cabinet "coup" to include Nazi generals; in July he key men in the Schuhschnig government hurried to Berlin.
Austro-German Affairs
Aproach a New Crisis
Minister of Interior Dr. Arthur von Feyss-Inquart, placed in the cabinet 24 hours ago when Chancellor Kurt Schuschnig capitulated to Hitler's demands, left for Berlin in order to several urgent telephone calls.
The semi-official Reichpost said the Nazi minister went to Berlin to "inform the German government, as a representative of the Austrian government, of the execution of the agreed measures."[7]
Ambassador to England Disagrees With Perkins
Washington, Feb. 16.—(UP)—Joseph P. Kennedy, red-haired, blue-eyed Irishman who resigned the chairmanship of the maritime commission to become ambassador to Great Britain, today heatedly attacked as “a complete policy” the views of Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins on the need of restricting maritime industrial unrest.
Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 16—(UP) Jack Frye, president of TWA, announced tonight that a special plane will drop 3000 pounds of food it more than 400 marooned men, women and children bound area of Taobu City, Calif.
His parting shot at the woman cabinet officer was taken in a letter to the senate commerce committee in which he warned the "complete destruction" of the American merchant marine will follow failure of congress to enforce discipline and responsibility on maritime labor and correlative obligations on maritime employers.
Oklahoma Alumni Plan Luncheon
Dispatch of the plane followed a telegraphic appeal by Mayor Angelo Rossi of San Francisco.
Chinese Report Attacks On Ten Japanese Positions
Chinese Army Headquarter, Huchow-Fu, Kaingsu, Honkong, Feb 16—(UP) Inspired by a personal appeal from Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese mobile units have attacked Japanese positions in 10 cities on the network of railways and airports over the past 24 hours, according to a telephone dispatch to headquarters tonight.
An army spokesman said that heavy losses had been inflicted on the Japanese in hand-to-hand fighting and that the whole Japanese advance in series of triangles around this railway center where the eaxtent bridge was located north-south Tientian-Pukow (Nanking) railway, has been stopped.
South of this city on the railway to Nanking the Chinese had recaptured Pao-lai-cho, five miles north of Pengpu along the Haiw river. Severe fighting was raging near Shan-Yao and Hasin-Chin-ko, 15 miles west of Pengpu near Feng Yang.
The spokesman said the situation at noon today (Wednesday) was as follows:
Kansas alumni in Oklahoma City are making plans for a luncheon to be held tomorrow in honor of the University of Kansas basketball team at O. Burnside, c24, of Oklahoma City. Will be in charge of the luncheon.
Special Plane Will Drop
There's nothing much he can do about it. They're building or something. But at first he thinks the library has gone into that much-he-railed but little-expected Susie Q down the mountain side.
"Quiet Please, This Building for Study"? . . . This warning greets the study-bound student as he enters the library, and, trying to build up that sort of an attitude anyway, he tip-aces into the reserve room, requests a book in a whiper, oozes to a seat, nudges herself to chair, and launches on a cruise of unbothered perusal! and excitation.
Quaint Sign
'Quiet Please'
Ouite Misleading
When, of a sudden, somethin', resembling the burden liberation of herd of mustangs in a gymnasium invades the atmosphere.
He, of course, must go on with his study . . . minus thy beneficial attitude . . . however, he can, and does, cast a disillusioned glance at the "Quiet" sign on the way out.
German Hello For Kansas
"Hello, Kansas," will come from four German short-wave radio stations the night of Thursday, Feb. 24, according to wired received from Germany by the German Club at the University. The program is to last 45 minutes, from 6:30 to 7:15, central standard time.
Four Nazi Short-Wave Stations Will Broadcast Program on Feb. 24
CLOSING HOURS TONIGHT
John Coleman of Atchison, German exchange student at Freiburg this year, is on the program, and is listed about halfway down the program. Dietrich Zwicker, who was the German exchange student at the University two years ago, appears earlier on the program. German stations broadcasting the program will be:
Station Wavelength Kilocycles
DJL 19.85 m. 15110
DJD 19.44 15090
DJD 25.49 11770
DJD 49.83 6020
Sations DJB and DJD are said to
"The Crimson and the Blue" is scheduled near the close of the program, but the last number, listed as a folk song, "The Hills Send Out Dogs," is scheduled as a song of the early days, having solid reference to a keg of beer.
A large group from the School of Business will go to Kansas City, Mo. today to make a tour of the larger industries there. This morning they will visit the Armour Packing company and the Kansas City Board of Trade. At noon they are to be lunch-cons guests of Sears, Roebuck and company. This afternoon they will inspect the Harris Upshaw company, a brokerage firm, and the Federa Reserve bank.
oe the easiest to get in this region.
The program received indicates the broadcast is to start with 'the "Star-Spangled Banner," and in addition to the talks mentioned, will have George Bowles "Tm a Jay-hawk," Kate Stephens "Corn Song," and other numbers by chorus and orchestra. Ernest Wilhemy, not identified as a Kansas, appears second in this program, including the telling of "The Legend of the Sunflower."
Business Majors Take Field Trip
Washington, Feb 16. - (UP)—President Roosevelt today signed the $440,000,000 crop-control bill, opening the way to an agricultural program designed to stabilize farm income, and at the same time protect the consuming public from price-gouging on foodstuffs.
Sixty-five students will make the trip, accompanied by four members of the faculty: Edgar Dowling, assistant instructor of economics; Fred Petite, instructor in economics; F. B. Jenes, instructor in economics; H. D. Assistant instructor in economics. The trip will be made in two busses.
Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, is sponsoring the tour, which is the first of its kind ever made by the School of Business
So that women may attend the rally at 10:45 tonight, closing hours will be at 11:30 instead of 10:30 p.m.
DORIS STOCKWELL
Roosevelt Signs Crop Bill
W. S.G.A. President.
Wassermann Tests Prove Favorable
Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, said yesterday that two positive recessions in 180 Wassermann tests to date.
Dr. Canuteson Reports Only One-Fourth of One Per Cent of Total Have Positive Reactions
That record, one-fourth of one per cent, compares favorably with the results of tests given at other universities, Doctor Cametuson said. In tests given at the University of Minnesota since 1953, 39 positive reactions were found in 19,000 examinations, or .2 per cent. Of these 39, 30 were ignorant of their infection.
Missouri reports a percentage of 1.01 after two years of the Wassermann test. Wisconsin, in its first year, examined 3400 students. Syracuse tested 2,000 last year. The University of Iowa has given the Wassermann test to students since 1924.
Doctor Canuteles said that finding two students who could be treated for a disease which they unknowingly had "justifies the expense of installing equipment for the test."
'Spring Dance' Nears Sell-Out
Only a very few tickets remain for the Dramatic Club's presentation of Philip Barry's play, "Spring Dance", according to a statement by Gerbart Tomn, c39, manager of the ticket sale.
The first night's performance given Tuesday was as close to a sell-out as for any of the plays this year, and last night's was a sell-out. Toun said.
Less than 50 tickets remain unsold for the two remaining performances tonight and Friday. However, according to Tom, chairs will probably be set up to take care of as many students as possible.
Tickets may be secured upon the presentation of activity tickets at the office in the basement of Green hall. The curtain rises at 8:20 p.m. As a whole, the plays this year have been better attended than those of last year, stated Tonn, a and "Spring Dance" has proved as popular as the two preceding plays this year.
Women Counsellors Plan Party for New Freshmen
The Federation of Counselors for freshman women held a meeting in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building yesterday afternoon for the purpose of making plans for this semester. A party for all new freshman women who enrolled this semester afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. All freshman women are invited.
Plans were also discussed for selection of counsellors for next year. A group of senior women will probably be selected by this year's group. This is the first year that there has been a Federation of Counsellors for freshmen women and the Council will go through the office of the adviser to women, with Dorothy Trekell, c38, as the first president.
University Graduate Sings on National Chain
Etta Moten, 31, "Nigro contriato,
has received a contract to sing on
a national radio program. Since her
graduation Miss Hoten has studied
in Europe, and in 1936 made a South
American tour. She has sung in
several movies, among them, "Flying
Down to Rio," "My Forgotten Man"
and "Gold Diggers of Broad-
way."
At present she is living in Chicago, the wife of Claude Barrett, head of the Associated Negro Press in Chicago. Miss Moten will be heard at 9:15 a.m. over WREN on week days.
Contract Let for Senior Graduation Announcements
The contract for the senior graduation announcements was let late yesterday afternoon. The Star Engraving company of Dallas was awarded the assignment. The design to use on the covers will be selected by means of a contact to be sent to the School of Fine Arts next week.
It is expected that the announcements will go on sale sometime after April 1.
Ralph T. Baker, secretary and file manager of the Kansas Press Association, will deliver the first of a series of five talks at 2:30 this afternoon in the Journalism building. The talks is open to all journalists and morsels.
Mr. Baker, who is president of the Topeka chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, received his B.S. degree in 1916 from Northwestern University. He accomplished his A.B. in 1932 from the University of Oklahoma.
Throughout the semester other outstanding men of the Kansas press will be invited to address the students of journalism. It is hoped that the talks will be made bi-weekly features.
Many Teach
At Oread High
Seventy - Seven Seniors
Take Practice Teaching
This Semester
Seventy-seven new student teachers are observing and practice-teaching in 18 subjects at Oread High School this semester. Seniors who are applicants for the University teacher's diploma must secure four hours of credit in such student teaching.
Algebra: Rosemary L. Delap, c38.
American history: Naomi Lorene Campbell, ed 38; Leon Heepner, c38;
Arthur E. Peck, c38; Helen Stauffer, c38; Frances Elizabeth Strait, c38;
Kathyn Turner, c38.
The subjects and students teaching them are as follows:
Art: Lecule Mavity, fa 38; Cordelia Myers, fa 79; Nina Salafo, fa 38.
Biology: Mary Pauline Bure, c 38;
Science: edap, Raymond Maassmith, er.
Chemistry; Loren W. A. Akers' e'unel; Vergil Johnson, e'unel.
Dramatics; Maribeth Schreiber' c'38.
English; Margaret Babcock, c38;
Rosamond Barr, c38; Edwin R.
Brown, c38; Basil R. Covey, c38;
Jane Craveins, c38; Cleo DeCamp,
c38; Roberta Hackman, c38; Rosem-
ary Harris, c38; Evelyn Longer-
beam, c38; Margarita Amo, ed38;
Thelma Irene Page, c38; Mary R.
Schaufoelfel, ed sp; Max L. Sims,
ed39; Milderd L. Stuart, c38; Geral
Dean Sutton, cunc!; Mary Mildred
Thies, c38.
French: Jessie M. Lemon, c'38;
Dorville Wyrick, c'uncl.
Sixteen in English
General Science: G. H. Clucas c'38; Virginia Huntington, c'38.
Geometry: Sue Fowler, c'38; Eunice Hyre, c'sp.
Home Economics: Dorothy E. Alexander, c.83; Mildred Grable, c.88; Sholander Lsouthern, c.83; Eleanor Slaten Man, c.83; Robert Wiggins, c.84; Martha Wiggins, c.88
Music: Worth A Bair, ed;38: Rory Boyle, fa'aucl.; Vera Caruthers
Boyle, fa'aucl.; 38: Bel G Dinger, fa;38: Marges, fa;39
Louis Maser, fa'aucl.
Thirteen in Physical Education
Physical Education: Ruth Baker, ed38; Lucille Bottom, ed38; Maurice Cannady, ed38; Margaret Curd, ed18; Elizabeth Dunkel, ed38; Gilee Elmore, ed38; Esther L. Gikelson, ed39; Forrest Hardace, ed39; Annette Lawrence, eduncl; Paul Maures, ed19; Irene Moll, ed38; Raymond Swanson, ed'uncl; Maxyne Jo Woody, ed38.
Problems: Aileen Herndon, c'38
Crichton P. Miller, gr; Marie Russell,
c'38.
Spanish: Mary Lou Oliver, c'38.
Tyning: Onita Dellinger, b'38.
Sociology: Ala Dell Meinke, c'38
Ethel Newland, c'38; Robert Welch
c'38.
World History: Bernard Anderson,
c'38; Ruth Elizabeth Boisseau
ed'un; Sarah Margaret Glem, c'38,
fley E. Faddion, c'38.
Authorized Parties
Friday, February 18, 1938 Limited Date
Hobnail Hop, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Saturday, February 19, 1938
Delta Chi, chapter house, 12
p.m.
Phi Gamuna Delta, chapter house, 12 p.m.
ELIZA BEBET MEGIUAR,
Adviser to Women for
the Joint Committee on
Student Affairs.
Sigma Phi Epsilon, chapter house. 12 p.m.
Sigma Nu, Hotel Eldridge, 12 p.m.
Big Rally For Cagers Tonight
Jayhawkers To Leave at 10:45; Closing Hours Extended; Women May Attend Demonstration
Students will rally at the Santa Fe station tonight at 10:45 to send the Kansas basketball team to Norman in high spirits.
The Jayhawks, now tied with the Sooner for the Big Six lead, meet the "boys scat" in a crucial conference game tomorrow night.
Dr. F. C. Allen, varsity basketball coach, says that "Oklahoma has beaten Kansas on our own court, but if tradition or custom or precedence has anything to do with the outcome of tomorrow night's game, Kansas should win. We have in past history heated the Sooners more on their court than we have on our own. In helping to keep this tradition, let's turn out 100 per cent in a rally that will equal the one after we beat Oklahoma in football last fall."
The University band will play and the Ku Ku's and Jay Jones will lead the demonstration. Bailley, b'39, president of the Ku Ku's, who are sponsoring the rally, says that a good rally will go a long way in helping the team defeat the Sooners. Dr. Allen heads the list of speakers for the rally which includes members of the team and student esp enthusiasts. Freola Prelude a d Sylvester Schmidt, co-captains of the team for this game, will each tell their views of the coming game, and Elwyn Dees, trainer, will also talk.
Closing hours for women have been set at 11:30 in order that they can attend. Sororites have aIndicate their members will go to the station.
"There is no reason why we can't have a crowd like some which attested our football rallies last fall." They argued that the team who arranged the demonstration.
"We want everybody to be at the station at 10:45 sharp," he said.
Tau Sigma Accepts Three New Members
Three new members were chosen by Tau Sigma last night at the close of solo trouts.
Jerry Ulm, ef 40, and Mickie Leearand, ef 40, were admitted into regular membership. Donna Hughes, fa 41, was permitted to enter as an apprentice. The apprentice group is 2:30 interpretive dancing class.
These additions bring the total membership to 33.
Y. W. Prepares For Election
Elizabeth Barclay, c'uncle and Eleanor Cavert, c'uncle, were elected from the membership at large Monday afternoon, to serve on the nominating committee for the election of officers of the W.Y.C.A. These officers included Slaten, Y.W.C.A. president; Miss Rosemary Ketchum, chariman of the advisory board; Dorothy Caldwell, c'38, and Jane Roberts, c'38, senior members of the cabinet; and Ellen Payne, secretary of W.Y.C.A., to select nominies for the offices of the council and secretary. The election will be held in the rotunda of central Frank Strong hall March 1.
At the meeting Dorothy Werner, c'39, was elected to serve on the nominating committee for new members for the advisory board of Y.W.C.A. She will serve with Mrs. Hunt, Cracken, crispay board members, and Eleanor Slaten, c'38, and Irne Moll, ed'38, of the cabinet.
Alex Russell, fa39, vice-president of the Y.W.C.A. had charge of the Monday meeting, and the World Student Christian Federation's Day of Prayer was observed in a worship service. Margaret Louise Garrett, c'39, and Georgia Sue Ruter, fa38, assisted in the service. Two violin numbers were played by Paul Stoner, fa40.
Class of 1913 To Plan Commencement Reunion
representatives of the class of 1913 will meet here Sunday to make plans for their reunion which will be held Commencement Week. Orla Weed of Kansas City is chairman of the class and are members of the class are expected to be present Sunday when the preliminary arrangements will be made,
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1938
≈
Comment
You're Wrong If You Think-really leaned towards chemical engineering, he believes that his business course will be more easily remembered in case he should follow the
It can happen here! In fact, it has.
Of the 789 students to receive the Wassermann test at the University, two have revealed a positive (4-plus) reaction. This by itself, in the words of Dr. Canuteson, "justifies the expense of installing equipment for the test," for by this revelation two young persons have been made aware of a malignant evil—of which they had been completely ignorant—and which, unchecked, might have wreaked their whole lives.
Now, thanks to the Wassermann test, that evil will be removed from their lives, and no one shall ever know of it.
The University has every right to be proud of its Wassermann tests. The percentage of positive reaction is extremely low—about 25 per cent—and compares favorably with those of other schools. The University of Minnesota, for example, revealed a similar percentage, while that of Missouri University was slightly higher.
However, only 780 students have had the test to date. Have you had your yours? To be sure, you think you have no infection, and probably you are right. But remember this: Two other students (we don't and shan't know who they are) thought the same thing.
Furthermore, we are proud that we are among the first schools to establish the Wassermann test though Iowa, for example, has had it since 1924. And now—two short months after its inception—we feel we are reaping rich benefits.
They were wrong! Can you be sure?
Come All Ye Interested
To those students who are truly interested in the great war being waged against venereal diseases, the appearances of Dr. J. E. Moore on the Campus tonight, is a matter of grave importance.
This is not a matter of ballyhoo, If you are not interested your presence will add little to the program. But the speaker is a noted authority in the study of syphilis and we are to hear him only by virtue of the fact that he is scheduled to speak before the Kansas City Academy of Medicine on the evening following his appearance here, and that he is a personal friend and former classmate of Dr. N. P. Sherwood.
There is the old saying about leading "a horse to water". However, the horse may be excused if he doesn't drink—he cannot read his paper.
It Might Bite---
If It Had Some Teeth
Roosevelt's demand for an 800-million dollar navy was supplied by his plea for enactment of the Hill-Sheppard so-called "Industrial Mobilization" plan.
Last year the American Legion, meeting in New York, approved this program "to constrict money as well as men in the next war." But the Hill-Sheppard bill perpetuates all the infringements on personal freedom which governments have used in the past without fulfilling its specific purpose—to take the profits out of war.
Conscription of women and child labor for industry, the court martial of any laborer who "fails or neglects to perform fully any duty required of him," and control of the press to furnish only "such information as it is right and proper that the public should have" are among the features of the bill-infringements which were successfully practiced by our government in the last war.
The bill's excuse for existence is the 95 per cent tax on "all incomes above the previous three-year average with adjustment for capital expenditures". This provision, the bill's proponents allege, would take profits out of久
Power to determine those "adjustments for capital expenditures"—a figure which might easily be inflated—lies in the hands of industrial leaders themselves. Labor, under the bill, finds itself in the grip of industry without representation on any board or commission.
As Texas' Mauray Mauverick says, "The bill does not ablist war profits—it guarantees them." The Hill-Sheppard bill perpetuates the violations of personal liberty by government in time of conflict and at the same time allows war to remain economically profitable for a few individuals.
But the average profit of a firm for the three years preceding America's entrance into war will be far in excess of normal profits. For every war is preceded by an arms race that inflates the profits of any munitions maker, and American entrance will probably be preceded by a period of hostilities elsewhere which will have contributed mightily to war-makers' profits.
Until the bill is amended truly to remove profits from war it remains a farce—worse than ineffective in that it purports to do a thing for which it is quite inadequate.
≈
A Good Plan But---- WS.G.A. Objects
Students with 3:30 and 4:30 classes will be doubly unfortunate if the W.G.S.C. petition is accepted instead of the M.S.C.'s day of "grace" for having classes at those hours for a semester is bad enough without being subjected to first day examinations in them in final week.
Every enrollment day sees a rush for morning classes. If the W.S.G.A. petition goes into effect, only those 3:30 and 4:30 courses which are required and which are offered at no other time would attract students. Since these are mainly science courses the burden would be placed on a special group.
Any step taken should be a general one benefitting all students. The petition of M.S.C. for a day of "grace" between the last class and the first day of examination week is such a movement. The extra day makes no appreciable difference in the length of the semester but it means a much-needed interlude of rest and study for the over-worked student who has just finished catching up on long-delayed assignments at the semester's end.
W. S.G.A. offers no good argument for not supporting the M.S.C. on this question. This is a matter which requires the co-operation of every student and especially that of a group representing a large portion of the student body.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular public hours, by 10 a.m. on Monday for daylight hours.
Vol. 35 Thursday, February 17, 1938 No. 96
DILETTANTE COMMISSION. The Dilettante Commission will meet tonight at 7:15 for a discussion on the program which the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra will play Feb. 23, Alice Russell, Chairman.
EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the School of Education will meet at 3:00 Thursday, February 24.
FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Grades for the fall semester may be obtained from the Registrar's office this week, according to the following schedule of names:
Thursday Friday and Saturday ...
T to Z inclusive Those unable to appear at the scheduled time George O. Foster, Registrar
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB. The International Relations Club will meet at 7 o'clock this evening in the Pine room of the Union building.—Kathryn Turner, Secretary.
"OLOGY" COMMISSION: The "Ology" Commission will meet at 4:30 Friday at Hoodley house—Evelyn Burwell.
By William Fitzgerald, c.193
It was during one of those football celebrations after a long-hoped-for Kansas victory. More than a thousand boisterous students had crowded into one of the seating theatres, wired-crusted and housed one perfectly good feature, and hooted at several better-than-average dancers. It was a bad spot for a young performer.
SETSE POOC: There will be a meeting of all interested in the Estes conference at Hensley house on Sunday, June 21 at 10 a.m., "Mountains," Make reservations at Hensley house. Eden May Parks.
Just Another Freshman Who Is Juggling Through School
SPANISH CLUB: El Ateneo will meet at 3:30 afternoon in 113 Frank Strong hall. At this meeting we are to have a talk on Argentina by Leon Reynolds. All prospective new members are invited to attend. Refreshments will be served—Karl Ruppenthal, President.
VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL
Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council: law representative and athletic representative. Petitions for the above offices are welcome to the Secretary of the Student Council on or before Monday noon, Feb. 28, 1932—Moe Etterson, Secretary.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
JANE RENAKE
Higher Education Preferred
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDE
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOEBEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CLAUSEN
NEWS EDITOR BILL FITZGARDT
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERTHAM
SPORTS EDITOR ELON TOWRENCE
MARKED EDITOR JEAN THOMAS AND SANDRA
WRITE EDITOR DICK Martin
TELEGRAPH EDITOR HARRY KILL
SUNDAY EDITOR JANE FLOOD
Then a tall, poised freshman, making his first appearance before a University audience, took the stage and began tossing tennis rackets and furniture around with seemingly careless abandon. The crowd was amused at first, but as young George Lupfer began to do more and more difficult tricks, the students quieted down in an almost amazed silence. It was a real tribute to a young man who has, by hard work, become expert enough to pass up drills that most players must use as too intricate. One of his tricks, that of juggling five Indian clubs at one time, is a world's record and is done by only one other juggler in the country.
EDITOR-IN-Chief
AUTHORIAL EDITORS: MARTIN BENTON and DAVID W. ANGSTEIN
MARK T. HALVEY
ALICE HALEMAN-JULIUS
J. HOWARD RINCON
DAVID E. PARTINGE
KENNETH MORRIS
VAN WILLIAM PAYNE
JOE COHANIE
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FITZGERald
DRAW MELAUGHAN
MARIO RICO
EDWARD BANNETT
MARTIN BENTTON
MARKIN GOEBEL
JANE FLOOCE
MOREN THOMAS
CLAUDE DORKY
F. QUINTON E.CATTER
ALAN AUSER
CHARLES ALEXANDER
Kansan Board Members
1937 Member 1938
Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of
Collegiate Digest
Among the many different schemes utilized by ambitious college students in order to get an education, George's is unique. His earnings during the summer finance him during the winter, and he's good enough that he could make a very good living without bothering with a higher education. But he wants to be able to settle down sometime, he says, and he figures that a good business course may come in handy. Although he
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Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Now 18, the Larned, Kan., boy looks back to five years of exacting practice and modestly gives much of the credit for his development to his teacher, Stanley Nickerson, a retired actor who runs a dramatic school in his home town. One day Nickerson learned to grind trick as a means of doing away with nerveness in the hands. George mastered the trick so easily that the veteran showman became interested. Being a well known juggler himself in early days, Nickerson began to give his protem more and more difficult tasks until the pupil began to surprise the teacher,
But juggling isn't all play and no work. For five years now George has been practicing two and three hours a day, and his studies at the University don't keep him from putting in his daily workout in the gym. His first public performance came three years after he began practicing the guitar. His expansive home town, and the act went over so well that his appearance was in demand at all the entertainments in that part of the country.
One of George's nearest tricks is his three-plate act. When he gets going he places a plate on his head with his left hand, jars it off back of the plate and brings them back with his right hand, flips it back into the air, catches it with his
This trick is one of the most pleasing to the crowd, but George says the most fatiguing is the rather simple-appearing cigar-box trick, which W. C. Fields made famous. Three boxes are interchanged in this trick so as to make it appear that the middle box is suspended in mid-air.
left hand and places it back on his head again. When you can keep three plates in rotation you can be sure you're in for a busy evening.
Some day I'm going to take my B.B. gun and shoot the H--- out Of that d--- street light!
Juggling Comes Handy at Meais
Fellow boarders at the club where George eats have just one complaint to make about their talented tablemate. It seems he has a ravenous appetite, and his juggling ability makes it easy for him to spear potatoes and flip them from his fork to his knife, where he balances them before putting them on his plate. In this way they feel that he takes unfair advantage of them and gets more than his share. And in a college boarding club you'll find that every split second counts!
If you happen to be walking along the Campus and a toy car passes you, don't get the galloping jitters. It is only an engineering student doing a little advertising for the Hop.
Maybe it's the hard work that gives him his appetite. Anyway, this plus rhythm and timing and a pleasing personality should shove this young Kansei far up the vaudeville ladder if that's the way he chooses to go up. Anyway, juggling has always been his life, and a pastime which he wouldn't trade for any business course in the world.
Haywire--
Busby's friends say that he sits so close at the movies that they look like a screen door.
University of Texas men voted "no" on the question whether they would go to war under the same conditions as in 1617. The vote was 61.3 per cent negative.
Continued from page 1
Pome From Somewhere
Through the heavy black of night,
Comes a soft, warm ray of light.
Streaming through my window-case,
Soft it touches on my face.
Shining on my humble bed,
Shining on my toured head...
nighter but a first seater. He sat on the first row at the play Tuesday night, and even leaned forward in the night scene. We hadn't heard about it or we wouldn't have gotten that prompter's seat in "Q" row.
SEE! HEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
( )
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.
O
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY NANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
PAGE THREE
Mrs. Waldemer Gallet will entertain with a bridge luncheon Saturday at 1 o'clock in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. Guests will be present for eight tables.
Triangle announces the pledging of Forrest A. Miles, e'uncl.
Watkins hall held open house las night from 7 until 8 o'clock.
Announcement has been made on the marriage of Miss Edna Stauffer and Howard Weindel, both of Lawrence. The wedding took place the evening of Dec. 31, at 8 o'clock, at the home of the Rev. Vorman Roberts, minister of the Methodist Protestant Church in Alexandria, Va. The couple was attended by Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Dye of Washington, D.C., formerly of Lawrence, who are uncle and aunt of the groom.
Mr. and Mrs. Weinfeld attended the public schools in Lawrence and were graduated from the University in 1937
~
They will make their home at 1315 Vermont street.
The K. U. Dames sewing group will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Keith Foster, 746 Maine street.
The pledges of Sigma Phi Epsilon hold a dance at the chapter house Tuesday afternoon.
The following were guests
following were good
Jorge following were good
Marina Smith, c41
Jose Montgomery, c41
DeArline Shull, c41
Ruth Hudson, b'unl
Simon Schull, c41
Alice Jones, c41
Patti Payne, c41
Vívain P烛, c41
Carrie Harrison, f'anl
Ardath Carble, c39
Y.W.'s Open Finance Drive
the finance committee of the Y.W.C.A. met at the cafeteria for a luncheon meeting Tuesday to open the finance drive which will close Friday. Mrs. Mildred Lamb Lesur, secretary, said May Parks, c40, were the main speakers. Ruth Olive Brown, e40, presided at the meeting.
Thirty workers were assigned to three teams, named for mountains near Ester Park. Colo. Long's team, captured by Pauline Snyder, c'40, includes the following: Jane Kellman, c'40; Betty Van Deventer, c'41; Elean Overmier, c'41; Mary Jones, c'41; Virginia Huntington, c'40; Ann Browning, c'uncl; Gevene Landrith, c'39; Erma Lee Brewer, c'39; Elean Camfield, c'39; and Eleanor Slater, c'38.
Eduna Mac Parks is captain of the Ypsilon team which is composed of the following: Margaret Louise Garrent, c'ell; Elizabeth Meyerk, c'ew; Betty Jane Sayles, c'40; Rumie Meyer, c'39; Alice Russell, c'13; Lenora Grigel, c'41; Jeanne Youngman; Irene Moll, ed 38; and Dorothy Calwell, c'38.
Members of Teddy's Teeth, head by Betty Boddington; c'40, are Pat Nell, c'41; Bettie Coulson, fa'41; Marian Savage, c'42; Jane Roberts, c'38; James Galloway, fa'41; Jennifer Farnsworth, fa'38; Velma Wilson, c'40; Ruth Fenech, c'40; and Dorothy Treherr, c'38.
Registration scholarships to the Eates Conference will be awarded to the three women bringing in the highest contributions.
Graduate Accepts Position in Hawaii
Jane Howe, '38, will leave Saturday for Hawaii, where she will have a position in Queen's hospital. She will sail Feb. 26.
After completing her work for an A.B. degree at the end of the fall semester, Miss Howe accepted a place in the Midwest laboratories at Emporia, with the understanding that she could attend Queen's hospital. After a week in Emporia, she received the position as laboratory technician.
Two University graduates who are already in Hawaii are Arah Weidmann and Ola Fulton. Miss Weidmann accepted another laboratory job in Honolulu and thereafter left an opening for Miss Howe, whose major in the University was bacteriology.
French Pilot and Mechanic Injured in Crash in Mexico
Mexico City, Feb. 16. —UP)—Pan-American Airways announced today that Antiope de Saint Euxipe, French flier, was seriously injured and were seriously injured when their plane crashed while taking off at Guatemala City.
The machine was demolished.
Saint Euxepe, who was eminent to
Gustafian capital, had died at
Pietatinum capital at 12:45 p.m. from
Vera Causse.
Dr. Daniel T. Sigley Speaks to Math Colloquium
Dr. Daniel T. Sigley of the University of Kansas City will be the speaker at the Mathematics Colloquium at 4:30 this afternoon, in room 208 of Frank Strong hall. His subject is "Enumeration of Groups Whose Orders are the Product of Distinct Prime Factors."
Doctor Sigley received h. is A.B.
degree from the University in 1927
aid his Ph.D. from the University of
Illinois. At present he is a member
of the faculty of the University of
Kansas City.
The meeting is open to any visitors who may be interested.
Urge Schools ToMoldYouth Discipline Which Will Educate Rather Than Destroys Is Wanted
Denver—(UIP) -Discipline in education—a discipline which will educate and not destroy it—is advocated for Denver schools, super-intendent of Denver schools.
"It is not enough to give knowledge," according to Doctor Stoddard "the necessity is for a definite curriculum which comprehends all the forces of society which make up the world." Of a child in this changing world."
Doctor Stoddard stressed the need of progressive education. One of the major factors of progressive education, he said, is discipline.
To Reduce Selfishness
"We stand in this country for the production of a disciplined people," he said, "not the sort of discipline we have now. We grow to hate self-contained citizenship."
"We hear a lot about self-expression these days and the need for allowing children to grow by expressing themselves. That's all very good, but we do not believe in unrestrained untramitted self-expression, which in too many cases is a form of ruthless selfishness and inordinate vanity and lack of intelligent parental guidance.
"Progressive education wants the disciplined individual who has found out the value of self-discipline."
'Schools Must Serve'
u schools are to be progressive,
they must serve, Doctor Stoddard
pointed out.
"What was good enough for my parents is not good enough for my children," he said.
"Why? Because all the conditions of life and society have changed. We have to prepare people to live in these changing conditions."
He urged that form of discipline which will educate and not destroy, to discourage that self-expression which has and has no place in real education.
Prof. U. G. Mitchell To Speak On 'Mathematics' Over KEKU
Dean Wahl Broadcasts On 'Medicine'
"The medical profession is no place for an unsupervised, grasping, selfish person," emphasized Dean H. Wrab, of the School of Medicine in his broadest over KFKU yesterday afternoon at the University's sixth of the "Choose Your Vocation" series being presented by the University staff.
'Choose Your Vocation'
Presentation of Series
Discusses the Need for Doctors
"Although the body has a remarkable ability to recuperate," stated Dean Wahl, "there are always times when you need help, and the assistance of a well-trained doc."
tor. Men of this profession must know the body thoroughly, teach us how to use and care for it, and often help us repair it."
Medicine, Dean Wahil believe, is very fascinating, while the social status of a doctor is highly respected. Although great responsibility and personal service is required, it never becomes monotonous. The man trained in medicine is a great influence upon the lives and happiness of his patients. His duties are exacting; and he is never through studying, for new ideas along his 'feld are constantly developing.
"Patients are often ungrateful." reminded the head of the medical school, "Bills are paid infrequently, and almost always the doctor is the last of the person's creditors to be paid. More money for the amount of work done can be gotten in almost any other profession."
From seven to ten years study are necessary, calculated Dean Wahl, which includes a minimum of two years of college work. Three or four years at a University are desirable. The cost runs from $8,000 to $10,000. The tuition of medical school costs anywhere from $100 to $300 a year. One to three years must be spent as an internee after the medical degree has been received. After receiving it, the beginner doctor will most likely wait in his office for several years before a good practice can be acquired.
"Why, Arrow, of course. Your Arrow dealer has a large assortment — $2. end up."
"Everyone considering the medical profession," said the dean, "should think of the competition he will be up against when trying to enter medical school. The number of students admitted is limited. One school had 1000 applicants for 125 vacancies, and is the most of all schools."
Character ranks highest among the personal attributes named by Dean Wahl. The person desirable for the medical degree should have high morals, honest policies, cheerfulness, wisdom and high intelligence. A familiar with foreign languages is a great asset.
"What shirt on the market absolutely defies shrinkage — is known for high style, and is reputed to give lasting wear?"
The field of medicine is broad and offers rapid advancement. Included in the various divisions are: specialist, county, city and state health clinics, community, and word clinics for a regular salary, as well as general practice.
ARROW SHIRTS
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A new shirt if one ever shrinks.
Kansas Press Secretary
T. E. BROWN
Ralph T. Baker, field secretary of the Kansas Press Association, who will speak to journalism majors today.
"Every men and women needs to know some foreign language," stated E. Neale Carmon, associate professor of romance languages, in a broadcast over station FKUU on day after summer's "For You" concert. The sixth of the "Choose Your Vocation" series presented by the University staff.
Prof. Carman Speaks on KFKU
Anyone with an accent was not take advantage of the opportunity to learn a foreign language," asserted Mr. Carman, "his handicap helped if he intends to be able successful in the business world as an socially."
That positions as interpreters and translators are scarce was emphasized by Mr. Carman. He also stated that although the amount of foreign languages offered in schools varies from community to community, there is a fairly wide field in teaching.
That the terminology of all the sciences is made easier by the knowledge of a foreign tongue was the firm opinion expressed by the audience. And a speaking knowledge is absent disadaptive to the applining singer.
"High school students should prepare for taking a foreign language," advised the speaker, "by first learning English thoroughly." He also added that public speaking, since it loosens the tongue and trains the throat, is a valuable preparatory subject.
Groups for whom foreign languages are valuable because they are constantly hearing or reading them, according to Mr. Carman, are social workers, government officials, especially those in the diplomatic service, historians, musicians, and writers.
"All students should have a reading knowledge of a foreign language without making the subject his major in college," he concluded.
Baldwin Talks To R.O.T.C.
Col. Karl F. Baldwin assested in a speech yesterday afternoon to the R.O.T.C. students in Marvin hall that "we are most certain to face any war without reserve arms, ammunition, gas masks and equipment."
Is Second in a Series Of Lectures on International Situation
The speech was the second one given in a series of lectures on the international situation. "Arms and Armaments" was the title of the talk; it was given as a feature of National Defense Week.
Colonel Baldwin suggested as a method to alleviate this situation the adoption of a plan proposed by General MacArthur, retired chief of staff. This plan, briefly, would call for 900 fighting planes a year over a period of five years, a reserve of 150,000 trained men, further mechanization and the recovery and increase in trained plots and air hives.
Colonel Baldwin does not expect Japan momentarily to start dropping bombs on Los Angeles. However, he does feel that, as President Roosevelt before a D.A.E. hearing, "defense must be nationally accurate."
Although we have some of the finest anti-aircraft apparatus in the world, Colonel Baldwin pointed out, we have only about enough to defend two cities. He further explained that we have the resources in this country for a large defense program, but that it takes time to develop the resources and that during a war crisis time is important.
The armament program of the United States was shown to be quite small in comparison to that of other major powers of the world.
School in Dixie To Add Special Lincoln Course
Harrogate, Tenn. Feb. 16—(UOP)—Pioneering in a new field of education. Lincoln Memorial University will offer a special course of study on the history of the university, according to an announcement of Dr. S. W. McClelland, president.
The course will be devoted to a study of Lincoln as the 16th President, with special emphasis on his governmental policies during the Civil War period. It will deal with the various phases of Lincoln's life such as genealogy, parentage, childhood, western migration, law and civil war, Civil War, political policies, addresses and messages. Considerable time will be devoted to Lincoln's writings from the standpoint of literature.
Prof. R. Gerald McMurtry, of the history department, and a recognized authority on Lincoln, will be the instructor in the new course,
Dr. McClelland announced. He is making, an extensive research of Lincolniana so that authentic material will be available for the students when the course is begun in the next scholastic year.
Lincoln Memorial University,
founded 40 years ago by Geo. O. O.
Howard as a memorial to Lincoln
and for the education of the boys
and girls of the Highland section of
the South, has an extensive Lincoln
library, the only one of its kind
south of the Mason and Dison line,
Kansas State College Celebrates Anniversary
The seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of Kansas State College at Manhattan was celebrated yesterday in a broadcast on the National Farm and Home Hour over the National Broadcasting company.
The broadcast depicted the major events in the history of the College It began as Bluemont Central College and then was renamed cultural College, and finally the
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The different departments in the school were described and the program was interspersed with orchestral and incidental music.
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2
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Big Six Championship Is At Stake
Possibilities of Victory
And Title for Sooners
Will Draw Crowd of
More Than 6,000
A Big Six basketball championship will be at stake tomorrow night when the Kansas Jayhawks tangle with the Oklahoma Sooners at Norman
The two teams are tied for first place in the conference, each with five victories and a single defeat. The team which wins the game tomorrow will be in a dominant position to go on to the title.
Visions of Oklahoma's first conference championship in 1929 will draw more than six thousand fans into the Sooner field house. Oklahoma's "Boy Scouts" have captured the hearts of Oklahoma sportmen at the same time that they have been winning games.
Kansas, the underdog, pins his hopes for victory on accurate射击 and a sturdy defense. The Jayhawkers have not been nearly as high-scoring a team as Oklahoma, but will endeavor to hold the Sooners to a reasonable number of points while scoring themselves.
Kansas' scoring strength is not as evenly distributed as Oklahoma's, however. Every one of the Sooner regulars is a potential high-point man and is dangerous every minute. This means that Oklahoma cannot be stopped by concentrating on one man. Every one of the Sooners has scored more than 10 points in one or more Big Six games.
Kansas is expected to go into the game at full strength. A hand injury suffered by Dick Harp has responded to treatment and it appears that he will be in top form for the game.
The Kansas squad will leave for Oklahoma by train tonight at 10:57, and will start back to Lawrence to tomorrow night at 10 o'clock. The Jay-hawkers play Iowa State at Ames Monday night.
What's Doing in Sports
At Other Schools
By Newt Hoverstock
In its last four games, the De Paul University of Chicago has furnished fans with real thrillers, winning three and dropping one. It won from Illinois Wesleyan, 41-39; beat St. Louis University, 31-29; lost to the Western State Teachers, 39 to 40; and won again from St. Viator, 34 to 31. All four of these games were won or lost in the closing minutes of the games, and the De Paula, student newspaper, is rightfully worried for fear the fans will be disappointed in the future if the games end with more than a basket difference in the score.
The R.O.T.C. unit at Washington University of St. Louis is offering the use of its new rifle range to all faculty members at $2 a year. Both rifle and pistol shooting are offered. Perhaps the R.O.T.C. is trying to get the professors in shape for a good deal when they first come into school, which generally get around to "shooting that professor" for some unhappy assignment.
After going for 16 consecutive victories over all court foes, the Bradley Tech team of Pooria, Ili, bowed to Northwestern last week, 28-26, although it went down fighting. With the tally at 28 to 17 against them, the Bradley boys put on a fine rally, but fell short after scoring 9 points to Northwestern's 2 before the final gun.
With tennis in full swing at the University of Texas, the Noel squad played a practice match against the second team and found itself confronted by the Van Ryn family. Substituting on the second squad, Johnny Ryn, former Davis Cup star, downed the Steer captain, while his wife also played for an absent second squadman, but lost in close sets
Nazi Heads May Make Personal Trip to Austri-
Berlin, Thursday, Feb. 17.—(UP) —Feuerher Adolph Hulter and Field Marshal Hermann. Wilhelm Goering may go to Berlin for further extension of Nazi influence there, it was understood today.
These plans were being formulated as the controlled Nazi press, including Goering's own national Zeitung of Essen, spoke of the eventuality of an actual attack on the long dreamed of Anschluss—as result of the wedge driven by placing five Nazis in Austrian cabin posts yesterday.
Temple University's student paper reports the display of the S.R.O sign during exam week.
Men's Intramurals
S. A.E. 32, Beta 28
The S.A.E five fought off a last minute challenge of the Beta quintet last night to emerge the victors by the comparatively narrow margin of 32 to 28. The game was an important one for division I as the two teams of the Beta teams were undefeated before last night's encounter.
The Sig Alphs were playing without the services of their hall-bawk-hunting guard, John Zieglemeyer, but had enough power to come through.
The game definitely establishes the defending intramural champions as one of the favorites to cop this year's 'bike.
Hall led the individual scoring for the Alph team with 5 field goals, but the passing and floor play of Nourse was outstanding. McCain of the Beta team tied with Hall for 17 points in coors of the game with *field goals*.
The Rock Chail basketball five dropped a close 40 to 27 intramural game to the Hell Hounds last night, while in a game in which a large margin separated the two teams the All Stars handed the Whitaker cagers the short end of a 29 to 5 wore.
In the first game, Crabb and Hillbeth each accounted for 16 points or the Houl Hounds. Whitakeres were eided to a pair of field goals and one outer by the free throw route, scored both baskets from the out.
Tuesday night the Beta "C" men buried the S.P.E. basketers under a 41 to 10 score. The 1200 Tenn. team pitched up a 27-point lead to trounce the Optimists 41 to 21. P.K.A. and Delta Chi fought on more even terms as the former won 35 to 28.
Wednesday's games:
g ft
Buck ... 2 2
Barber ... 2 0
Nourse ... 2 0
Hall ... 5 0
Amerine ... 2 0
Beta's (28)
g f
wien'cko 1.0
M Caslán .5
Stoland .5
Janetet .5
Wilson ... 1.0
Sigma Chi 'B' (27) Phi Delt 'B'
Sigma Chi 'B' (27) Phi Delt 'B' (14)
Jeasberg . . . 0 0 Clootman . . . 0
Brown . . . 0 1 Baskett . . . 1 0
Hersch n . . . 0 1 Sleeper . . . 1 0
Duler . . . 1 0 Tink p'hg . . 0 1
Divens . . . 1 0 M Crosy . . 0 1
Summers . . . 1 0 Haynes . . 0 0
Summers . . . 1 0 Heynes . . 0 0
Swimch't . . . 1 0 H head'n . . 0 0
12 2 19
1411
White, f 1 g t f
White, f 2 g
McNally, f 2 g
Patrick, g 2 f
V.Brassman, 2 1 0
Gillespie, 2 1 0
D. Branson, 1 0
Broadwood, 1 0
Brown, 0 0
Olympic Greene:
Hell Hounds (40)Rock Chalk (37)
218
1926
| | g f t | g f t |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Frank's, f | 0 0 0 | F And's, r' n 13 |
| Frank's, f | 0 0 0 | B And's, r' n 13 |
| Berry, c | 0 2 0 | B And's, r' n 52 |
| Hildreth, g | 7 2 2 | Schmidt, g | 5 0 |
| Halton, g | 0 0 | Buse, g | 0 0 |
| Falcon, g | 0 0 | Buse, g | 0 0 |
| Ward | 0 0 0 | Crouch | 0 0 |
Official: Enna.
17 3 7
Tuesday's games:
Beta "C" (41) S.P.E. "C" (10)
| | g ft f | g ft f |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Robinson, f | 5 0 | Burweed, f | 6 0 |
| Johnson, f | 5 0 | Burweed, f | 6 0 |
| Banks, c | 3 01 | Grogan, c | 0 0 |
| Hibbart, c | 3 01 | Grogan, c | 0 0 |
| Fisher, f | 0 0 | Fisher, g | 1 0 |
**Opinions** g .5 ft
Stucker, f g 0.1 ft
Scott, e 0.0 ft
Bourlard, g 0.0 ft
Riison, g 0.0 ft
M Gugetg g 0.0 ft
Raup, f. g t 10
Nanina, f. 3 0
Virbon, c. 10
Peterson, g 4 10
Allen 20
Optimists (21)
| | g ft f | g ft f |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Morgan, f | .6 4 | 0 Onrofio, f | .6 4 |
| Hall, f | .6 4 | 2 1 Hecomp, f | .6 4 |
| Fry, c | .6 4 | 2 1 Hecomp, f | .6 4 |
| Wilkinson, f | .6 4 | 2 W wdst d, f | .6 4 |
| Faulon, g | .4 4 | 2 C W'dst d, f | .5 3 |
| Fegler, g | .4 4 | 2 Birney | .5 3 |
Today's games, 6 p.: Min. Rumold's boys vs. Obers; 10 p., Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Chi, and KEK "B" vs. S.P.E. "B"
Games tomorrow at 5 p.m.: Delft Chi "B" > Siug "N", Bai "S" and SAEC "C" > Beta "B" > "6 p.m.". Jaybirds vs. Hexagons 10:35 p.m. Slugetians 9:35 p.m. Slugetians 9:35 p.m. Phil Delt "C" > Tau "T".
Basketball Schedule
Senior Sooner Guard
15 5 7
Official: Thompson.
10 1 8
Saturday, Feb. 19 at 8 a.m.: S.Fa vs. Beta, and Pki Ai, vs. Sigma Kfi. S.Fa vs. Pki Ai, vs. Sigma Kfi. Pki C* vs. Phi Delt B*; 10 a.m. ATO. v. Phi Giam, and S.E. *B* v. Phi Phi B*; 11 a.m. D.T.D v. D.U. Phi Giam B*, v. S.E. *B* v. Phi Phi B*, v. Acacia *B*, and Phi Kappa Pki vs. Delta Chi. 1.pm. Stig Khi B* vs. Phi Giam *D*, and
D. R.
BILL MARTIN
Martin is the only senior on the Sooner squad, and has been the steadying influence for Oklahoma's young team this season.
House Votes Large Amount For Relief During Year
Washington, Feb. 16—(UP) —The House late today voted the administration an additional $250,000 per year for relief in the current fiscal year, after beating down a spitted drive增长的 liberals to increase the amount.
The measure, a deficiency appropriation, was requested by President Roosevelt to provide 750,000 WPBA jobs until new relief funds are available. It now goes to the senate, where it is expected early next week.
The final roll call vote was 351 to 23. A motion to recommit by Rep. John Tabor (Rep., N.Y.) was shouted down.
Pittsburgh, Kan, Feb. 16—(UP) The body of 12-year-old Bert Wurtker of this city, sought by hundreds of men since his disappearance from his home Sunday, was found in the lead and zinc mine are today.
Swimmers Will Meet K-State
Body of Missing Pittsburg Boy Found After Three-Day Search
Criticizing present governmental and political conditions, political science students at Washington and Ohio started a move for a third party.
His body was found near the Player mine and mill after a search by miners, CCC workers and airplanes
Pl K.A. "B" vs. S.A.E. "B."
Volleyball
This afternoon at 5 o'clock: Hellhounds vs. S.A.E. and A.T.O. vs. Phi Psi; 7:30 p.m, Phi Mu A. vs. D.T.D. and Delta Chi vs. Phi Delt
Team Standings
Here are the standings of the intramural basketball teams in each of the five divisions. The standings are corrected to include games played
| | W L. Pet. |
| :--- | :--- |
| Sig Alph | 8 | 0.100 |
| Kappa Sig | 8 | 0.100 |
| Betta | 7 | 1.875 |
| Phi Psi | 6 | 2.750 |
| Phi Psi | 7 | 3.214 |
| Pi K A. | 5 | 3.625 |
| Pi K Delt | 4 | 3.574 |
| Delta Tau Delta | 3 | 4.426 |
| Phi Gam | 3 | 4.426 |
| Triangl | 3 | 4.286 |
| Delta Chi | 2 | 2.886 |
| Sigma Nu | 1 | 6.143 |
| Acacia | 2 | 1.643 |
| A T O | 1 | 6.143 |
| S P E | 8 | 0.000 |
Division I
A victory over Kansas State to balance the loss to Nebraska last week will be the aim of the Jayhawk swimmers when they meet the Wild-cat swimming team here Saturday afternoon.
Two Wichita men, Proctor Ritchie and Harry Brown, won the only two firsts Kansas made against Nebraska and will lead the attack on Kansas State. Ritchie, a junior, won the 80-64 victory, won the 150-yard backstroke. Browne, a sophomore, was first in the 200-yard breast stroke.
W L. Pct.
Westminster 7 0 1.000
Bell Hounds 7 0 900
Lepardy 7 1 875
Campus Raiders 6 2 750
All Stars 6 2 750
Whitakers 4 3 754
Rock Chalk 4 3 574
Calvin's Gang 5 4 555
Trojans 5 4 575
K. E K. 2 4 333
Hexagons II 2 4 650
Teta Tau 1 5 167
Cottage 1 10 000
Union Cafe 0 11 000
W L. Pct.
A, K Psi 9 0 1.000
Galloping Ghosts 7 0 1.000
Hexagons 6 1 1.000
Pai Mia Alpha 4 1 8.000
1200 Tennessee 6 2 7.550
Obers 6 2 7.625
Dunakins 3 2 6.000
Rumold's Boys 3 2 3.755
Odium 3 5 3.757
Cyclones 3 6 3.333
Phi Chi 2 4 3.333
Panammonians 1 6 1.141
Blanks 1 6 1.141
Bullseye 0 11 0.000
Division III
Division IV
W L. Pct.
Phi Delt "C" 6 0 1.00
Phi Bert "B" 6 0 1.00
Phi Gam "C" 5 0 1.00
Beta "B" 5 1 0.833
Theta Tau "B" 3 3 5.00
Phi Pte "P" 3 500
Delta Chi "C" 3 4 4.00
Delta Tau "B" 2 3 4.00
Sigma Chi "C" 2 4 3.33
Delta Kep "B" 2 4 3.33
K E K "B" 1 6 1.141
Sigma Nu "B" 10 0 1.00
Vote Nowsinske, a veteran, should show to considerably better advantage against Kansas State than he did against Nebraska. In the dual meet with the Huskers, Nowsinske took third in the 220-yard free-style and third in the 150-yard backstroke.
W L. Pct.
Kappa Sig "B" 7 0 1.000
T 6 0 1.000
Sigma Chi "B" 4 2 0.667
Phi Gam "B" 4 3 0.574
Beta "C" 4 4 0.500
Acacia "B" 3 3 0.500
Phi D A "B" 2 4 0.400
Phi Ki "B" 2 4 0.350
Phi Phi "C" 5 2 0.286
Phi Gam "D" 1 4 0.200
A T O "B" 1 4 0.000
A T O "B" 1 4 0.000
Division V
Kansas State bowed to Nebraska 65-10 at Manhattan last Friday, and the following day Kansas was defeated by the Huskers 28-56.
University of Michigan Has Letter of Geo. Washington
Ann Arbor, Mich. - (ACP) - Aithertro unpublished and unknown letter written in 1788 by George Washington University of Michigan's collection of Americans; it was made known recently. It was discovered among the Gage papers in the William L. Clements Library of American His-
Dr. Randolph G. Adams, director of the library, said the letter reveals Washington's continuing interest in efforts of Virginians to develop it.
Washington, a well-to-do planter,
and a member of the Virginia House
of Burgesses, addressed the letter to
John Blair, president of the Virginia
council and acting governor of the
colony. The letter asked Blair to
attain through General Thomas Gage,
commander-in-chief of the British
forces, a favor for some Virginia
merchants.
Blair, in writing to Gage, enclosed the original communication from Washington instead of a copy. It remained in possession of Gage's descendants until his papers were acquired recently by the library.
International Relations Club To Hear Papers by Students
The international Relations Club will meet tonight at 7:20 in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. Forrest Stem, c38; Thomas Kennedy, c38; and Lawrence Birch, c38. A discussion of "Politics With South America." A discussion will follow the reading of the papers.
Graduate Student Accepts Job
John Shaw, graduate student, who received an offer of a job from the Phillips Petroleum company, Kansas City, Mo., earlier in the semester, has accepted and will work in essential laboratories of the company.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
The national collegiate basketball tournament, being established and promoted largerly through the efforts of Eml Liston, director of athletics at UCLA, to establish a basketball in Kansas City, March 7 to 12 inclusive, should be some affair.
Phone K.U. 66
The first entry in the tournament was Marshall College of Huntington, W. Va. This team has won 16 games as compared to one loss, including a victory over the strong Long Island University five. Top flight teams expected to follow on the *t*he entry list include Colorado, Bradley Tech, Long Island University, Stanford, and perhaps two teams from the Big Ten Loston, general manager of Oklahoma from this area s uch strong teams as Drury, Warrenburg, Oklahoma A. and M., and (this is surprising, in view of contrast Big Six rules, but we hope it is true) the two leaders of the Big six, Kansas and Oklahoma.
CLASSIFIED ADS
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fountain pen. Name Edward W.
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721. -98.
Personally we would like very much to see Kansas get in the tournament, as we feel that the Jayhawkers would go a long way. The resulting national prominence would be not in the least harmful to Kansas or to Big Six basketball. When the teams line up on the opening day, we hope Kansas will be right in there.
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New Rackets, Balls Soft Balls, Bats INITIUTING SHOP
TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG
Hear more rumors about Mike Gotto leaving Kansas, but as far as we can ascertain there is about as much foundation to them as there has been to similar rumors concerning the popular line coach for the last five years. That Beta-Sig Alg game provided plenty of fast action last night. Coach Dick Harp is taking after "Phog" in letting himself worked up at the way his players play or don't play. The only thing missing was that he didn't have a bottle of water handy., He heard by
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"Candid Cameroing . . . It's the rage."
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
It is a little premature perhaps, but we are going out on the limb and predict a Kansas victory at Norman Friday night. It will probably be close, but that old Jayahawk is going to be flying high when the smoke of the battle clears away—just wait and see. We are worried more about the Nebraska than our 50 men's tent nights (one where they make half of their shots go through the rim) and Kansas has only a 15 per cent night, we believe the team will come through there. Not that the varsity has anything to be confident about—far from it—for it is going to take a full 40 minutes of bravely, creative, aggressive basketball to win each of these games—and the test of YOUR six games. YOUNG YOfer of the Orange Basket take note: Have you any money to put up on your ideas that Kansas will lose to both Oklahoma and Nebraska?)
with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
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Phone K.U. 66
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg
Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed
the grapevine: Ad Lindsey isn't going to coach spring football, but instead will coach baseball and leave the football work to Getto an Conger. Seems odd, wonder if there is anything to it.
Permanents and End Curls
$1.00 complete
Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 50c
Women's Intramurals
Basketball: Practices scheduled for today have been postponed. There will be a game Tuesday night.
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Deck Tennis: The schedule for tomorrow is 4:30 p.m., Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Chi Omega 5 p.m., Gamma Phi Beta vs. Corbin hall.
Suits
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Clothes
50c
Swim Elimination Meet
Intramural swimming team: Meet Teen participates in the 2016 Kappa Gamma, Alpha Delta Pi, I.L W., Corbin hall, N.I.D. Sigma Kappa, Miller hall, and Gamma Pi.
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The women's intramural swimming meet was held last night in the Robinson gymnasium pool. This was the only time the team will qualify the winners for the finals to be held Wednesday, Feb. 23. Pi Beta Tau emerged as the winner of the engagement. T.N.T. amassed 18 points to be runner-up. Close behind, tied for third-place honors, were Karen Schaefer and Julia Gamma. Alpha Gamma Delta wound up with a total of 9, and Chi Omega placed in several first-place contests. Two meet records were broken.
A complete summary of the events follows:
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
Relay: Pi Phi, first; Chi Omega second; Theta, third; T.N.T. fourth. (New meet record of 38.3 min.)
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50
6 Breakfasts, 50c
Breast stroke for form: Rowland, T.N.T., first; Blaney, Theta, second;
6 Breakfasts, 50c
DUNAKIN CLUB
1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas
Flake, Alpha Chi, third; Lawrence, Alpha Chi, fourth.
Two-length free-style: Lewis, Pi first; Lohmeyer, Alpha Gam, second; Edgerton, Pi Phi, third; Smythe, Pi Phi, fourth.
Diving: Woods, Pi Phi, first; Leon-
ard, second; Owens, Alpha
Wang, third.
Two-length backstroke: Lewis, Pi
Phi, first; Lohmeyer, Alpha Gam,
Gamma; Huffman, Alpha Chi; third;
Edgerton, Huffman, (new meet
record of 24.3 min.)
Henlev Hostesses Hold Meeting
Two-length sidestroke; Leonard,
TNT, first; bridges, Alpha Chi,
second; Lohmeyer, Alpha Gam,
Bidn Smooth Pi Phi fourth.
Three-length free-style: Woods, Pi Phi first; Edgerton, Pi Phi second; Owens, Alpha Chi third; Nelson, Theta fourth.
Oriben Conducts School Survey
Prof. F. P. Oriben of the School of Education spend Monday in John-
ohnson Hall, where he is conducting a school survey.
Final Prices On:
Crawl for form: Neison, Theta,
first: Leonard, T.N.T., second: Owens,
Alpha Chi, third; Short, Phi Phi,
*orth.*
Breast stroke; Woods, Pi Phi first;
Fleke, Alpha Chi, second; Blaney,
Theta, third; Montgomery, Theta,
auth
There will be a supper meeting of the Henley House Hostesses Thursday, Feb. 17, at Henley house, from 5 to 7 o'clock. Martha Painte c939, has charge of the meeting at which aprons for the kitchen will be made. Any woman interested in helping on the committee should call Ellen Payne Thursday to make reservations.
Suits
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Leather Coats
Sweaters
Odd Pants
Fancy Slacks
Flannel Pajamas
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Pajamas
Wool Gloves
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Flannel Robes
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825 Mass.
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Phone 195
A
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Z229
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 97
Dr. J. E. Moore Explains Evils Of Syphilis
Tells Audience T h a t "Conspiracy of Silence" Had Made It Impossible To Fight the Disease
"The conspiracy of silence has made it impossible to do anything about syphilis," asserted Dr. J. E. Moore, '14, associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, last night to members of Sigma Xi and students, in a lecture in Frank强牢 hall.
"From 1905 to 1915, nothing could be done about syphilis because they spread, but since 1915 nothing could be done about syphilis because it was dirty and was acquired by means in polite society," Doctor Moore maintained.
100 Cases to One of Paralysis
"Why, when I attended the University of Kansas no group would dare meet to talk of such a thing as syphilis."
Collage students may stop the march of syphilis, the speaker said, by educate. Our doctors to take blood tests. They may disseminate information about the disease and give it back into the light, and urge legislative bodies to vote money for its control." he urged.
"Money is necessary to fight syphilis," Doctor Moore continued. "It is true that syphilis is more prevalent in the lower economic group, but it filters up into other groups. It hurts all groups if it hurts one."
Insanity Results From Syphilis
Comparing syphilis with infantile paralysis, Doctor Moore said that there were 100 cases of syphilis to each infantile paralysis case. He said that the schools of Lawrence would close today if 40 cases of infantile paralysis should occur in the community, but that there are more than forty cases of syphilis in Lawrence today, and no school will close.
While syphilis is primarily a disease of youth and attacks persons ranging from the ages of 19 to 30, the middle-aged persons are the one who are harmed. Doctor Moore probed the youngest on and on for many years before it silently claims its victim, he said.
Using Al Capone, former public enemy No. 1, as an illustration, Doctor Moore pointed out that syphilis symptoms may appear and disappear without even the knowledge of the persons affected until later life. Stating that Capone was affected by paresis, Doctor Moore said that that is another form of insanity which results from syphilis.
It is possible to discover syphilis at an early stage by using the Wasser-maestrom test, and then 606 may be used to cure the patient. At first mercury was used successfully to cure syphilis.
Columbus Carried Disease
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1938
"Strange to say," he said, "the word 'syphilis' developed from the name of a shepherd, a character in an Italian poet's masterpiece. It was connected with the venereal diseases because it can be transmitted only through wet surfaces on the body, as by kissing and through the genital organs. 'Venerale' came from the word 'Verus', which means love."
Syphilis was carried to Europe by Columbus, said Doctor Moore. "When Columbus came to America he did not know where he was going and when he got there he didn't know where he was going. He had seen it, he had been, but somebody paid for it because Columbus brought back syphilis in 1433."
Doctor Moore was presented through the efforts of the local chapter of Sigma Xi and its president, Dr. N. P. Sherwon, head of the department of bacteriology and a former classmate of Dr. K. M. Shewang, meeting took the place of the regular meeting of Sigma Xi, scientific honor society.
Doctor Moore is the editor of the American Journal of Syphilis and Veneral Disease and associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University. He left last night following the lecture for Kansas City, where he will speak before the Kansas City Academy of Medicine.
Kansas: Cloudy Friday, becoming fair in north portion, not so cold in west and extreme north-central portions in afternoon; Saturday probably fair and warmer.
WEATHER
FLASH—
Shirevport, La. Feb. 17—(UP) Several persons were killed tonight by a tornado in the vicinity of Roanoke, according to reports received here.
Announce Two More Town Hall Meetings
Two more Sunday evening meetings of the Lawrence Town Hall, to follow the present series, were announced yesterday by the Rev. H Lee Jones of the Unitarian Church secretary of the forum.
Dean John Warren Day of the Episcopal Cathedral of Topkau will be the speaker on Feb. 27, when the president or discuser will lead to Peace "Epigrammage."
On March 6, two outstanding newspaper men of this territory will lead the discussion on "Propaganda in a Democracy" in the last meeting of the Town Hall winter series. The group, led by the editorial staff of the Kansas City Star and Marco Morrow of the Paparibs Publications of Topeka.
Discusses English Music Marion Snowden Speaks About Queen Elizabeth Period
Mars. Marian Keighley Snowden, who lectured on "The Story of Old English Music" in Frank Strong hall auditorium yesterday afternoon, told her audience that people of the time from Henry VIII to Queen Elizabeth were more music-conscious than the present-day English. Instead of magazine and Police Gazettes, barber shops in those days wished with which patrons whined away their patrons whined away their turns came.
Musicians Were Priveged
Mrs. Snowden wore a velvet gown which was a replica of one that Queen Elizabeth wore, and played songs and dances on a virginal, a small forerunner of the piano. The instrument is very small, and the strings are plucked by a lever when a key is struck, giving a tone much like plucking a piano string by hand. Difficult to Tune
Good servants were all musicians. One shemaeker was thought to be an imposter because he could neither sing nor play an instrument. Queen Elizabeth gave one choirmaster a license to kidnap any children in England he wanted to have sing in his church.
"The lute," said Mrs. Snowden, "was one of the favorite instruments of old England. A New Year's custom of the period was the giving of lute strings to young ladies by gentlemen. Because the lute was such a hard instrument to keep in tune, it was said that if a lute player were 80 years old he had spent 60 years of his life tuning his lute."
Mrs. Snowden's address, arranged by the University Concert Course, replaced the regular Fine Arts recital. Mrs. Snowden, who has been lectureing on the Pacific coast, will return soon to her home in London.
Delta Sigma Pi Sponsors Picture at Granada Sunday
Delta Sigma Phi, professional business fraternity, will sponsor the photoplay "Everybody Sing" at the Granada theater *n*ect *s*t Sunday through Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the picture, a MetroGoldwyn-Mayer production, are Allan Jones, Judy Garland, Fanny Brice, and Billie Burke.
Competitive examinations for the following positions have been announced by the United States civil service commission:
Government Announces
Customs examiner's aid, $2,300 a year, U.S. customs service, treasury department.
Civil Service Examinations
Whitcomb Scholarship
Full information may be obtained at the Lawrence postoffice.
Wheelwright, $1,500 a year, wa
department, Ft. Leavenworth.
Junior engineer (various optiona
$2,000 a year.
Junior engineer (various options subjects), $2,000 a year.
Women interested in applying for the Edna Osborne Whitcomb scholarship should make application immediately to Miss Persia Cook, executive secretary of the committee on aids and awards, in room 1, Frank Strong hall. The scholarship is awarded from a fund established in 1931 for the benefit of needy students who are majoring in English.
Engineers Present Queen Tonight
Today there are five hopeful candidates for Queen of the annual Hob Nail Hop. After intermission tonight at the engineering dance, one will be "Her Majesty."
The coronation ceremony will take place immediately before intermission (around 10.15' o'clock). Stuffard, e'39, president of the engineering council, will announce the winner, presenting her with a miniature vase and flowers. Louka Kuhn's orchestra will play her sorority song.
From the following beauties will come the woman who will reign as queen of the School of Engineering "green shirt" forces in 1938.
Patti Payne, Alpha Chi Omega,
Isabel West, Gamma Phi Beta.
Jane Waring, Kappa Kapp
Gamma.
Roberta Cook, Gamma Phi Beta.
Mary Spearing, Kappa Kappa
Gamma.
Last year's winner was Mary Katherine Dorman, whose machine tactics "sweed up" the Theta Tait's fraternity fraternity, and enabled her to defeat a candidate from the engineering school, and enabled her to win the first contest conducted on the Hill for a Bob Nail Hop queen, Jerry Gaut was elected.
Pre-dance activities in past years have seen bitter feuds between the traditional Campus rivals, the engineers and the lawyers. From their roost on the steps of Green Hall, the laws heckle everybody in general and engineers in the business, the excellent opportunity for such annoying.
Candidates for Queen are determined by a nominating ballot in the school, from which those with the highest totals compete in the final election. Dancing tonight will be rom 9 to 12 o'clock.
However, this year the engineers feel that because they have not molested the laws, the Hop should be allowed to sit, affair, undisturbed by "barbarians."
The secrecy surrounding the identity of the queen has grown out of this feud. In past years it was not uncommon for law students to kidnap the engineers' queen so she could not be presented at the dance. For that reason the winning candidate (known this morning to only three persons—not including your writer) is not revealed until the coronation services at intermission of the dance.
Religious Group Plans Meeting
A new series of meetings for those interested in a religious discussion group was announced yesterday by the W.Y.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. For the next three months the Rev. Harold King of the Congregational Church, the Rev. Carter Harris of the Hospital of Boston, the Rev. G. Barr of the Christian Church, will lead discussions on "The Teachings of Jesus."
The "Olymp" Commission of the Y.W.C.A. and the Reinterpretation of Religion Commission of the Y.M.C.A. have joined and planned this series. The remainder of the meetings this spring will be joint meetings of the two organizations. These meetings will be held at 4:30 on Friday afternoons. Every other Sunday evening there will be a guest which anyone is invited. These Sunday meetings will be held at Henley house from 9 p.m., until 10:15 p.m., and they will be open forums.
Marriage customs among the different Indian tribes will be discussed by six Indian girls from Haskell at Preshmish Commission 4:30 Monday afternoon at Henley house. These girls are members of the W.Y.C.A. at Haskell, which is affiliated with the University W.Y.C.A. Eleanor Halfmann and Rachinda Cordelius will be in charge of this discussion. Some of the Indian girls will be dressed in native costumes and tell Indian stories as well as marriage customs of their own tribes.
At the last meeting the Rev. Mr. King gave a talk on the political background during the life of Jesus. He will continue to lead the discussions during the next three meetings.
The meeting this Friday will be in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building at 4:30 p.m. and is open to the public.
Evelyn Brubaker, c'39, and Donald DeFord, c'urel, are co-chairmen of the new joint committee on religion.
Indian Girls From Haskell To Discuss Marriage Customs
Engineers HoldTwo-Day Convention
Eighty - N i n e Register
For Thirtieth Annual
Meeting, H e l d H e r e
This Week
The thirtieth annual convention of the Kansas Engineering Society began yesterday morning with formal presentations. Eighty-nine registered yesterday.
The two-day convention was called to order in the auditorium of Marvin hall at 9:30 yesterday morning by President G. M. Shelley, chief engineer of the Winkler-Coke company of Wichita. This was followed by an address of welcome by Dean Ivan C. Crawford, of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
The next section to hold a meeting is the "Mechanical and Electrical" division, at which Chairman Linn Helander will preside. A sideway on tractor fuel will be presented by E. L. Barger, assistant professor of agricultural engineering at Kansas State College.
The program for today opens with a meeting of the "Water Resources" section at 9:30 a.m., with Chairman R. E. Lawrence presiding. A discussion of "National Water Resource Planning" will be given by Dean Crawford. This will be followed by a general discussion, with George S. Knapp in charge. Mr. Knapp is connected with the division of water resources of the State Board of Agriculture. "An Engineering Approach to the Analysis of Hydrological Data" is the title of the next talk by J. O. Jones, professor of hydraulics at the University.
Luncheon at Eldridge Hotel
A luncheon will be served at 12:15 at the Eldridge hotel, at which the annual meeting of the Kansas state section of the American Society of Civil Engineering will be held. "Society Affairs" will be discussed by R. C. Gowdy, vice-president of the society.
Business Session in Afternoon
At 2 o'clock, the meeting of the "Mechanical and Electrical" section resumes with a talk on "Rural Electrification in Kansas" by George A. Mills, president of the Kansas Electric Power company of Lawrence. Also at 2 o'clock the section on "Mining, Oil and Geology" meets with Chairman Earnest Boyce presiding An explanation of "Petroleum Engineering Practice" will be given by D. R. Knowlton, general superintendent of the Phillips Petroleum company of Bartlesville, Okla.
A luncheon was held at 12:15 yetday, at which there were group meetings for the various sections. Entertainment for the wives of the attending engineers was provided by a luncheon at Evan's Hearth and afternoon bridge at the home of Mrs Ivan C. Crawford.
Following this a business session will be held, which will include special society business, reports by the committee on professional relations the auditing committee and the nominating committee, and an election of officers, after which the convention will stand adjourned.
Students Represent University in Debate
The meeting of the "Transportation" section was held at 2 o'clock, with Chairman F. F. Frazier presiding. A discussion of the Missouri river development by P. A. Hodgson, lieutenant-colonel in the engineering corps of the United States army, was then given, after which "Research and Railroad Operation" was reviewed by R.C. Gowdy, of the National Railroad company and vice-president of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Following this was a talk on the "Trends of Highway Construction in Kansas" by A.B. Nuss, state highway engineer, and a report of the committee on safety by George Knap, chairman. A film entitled "Safety on the Highways" was next shown through the courtesy of the Kansas Electric Power company. A short resume of "Engineering Regis-
Eldon Smith, c'39, and Keith Schurman, c'40, will represent the University in a series of debates to be given in Texas, Feb. 24, 25, and 26. Nine debates are scheduled to be given in Denton, Temple, and Austin, Texas. Five of them will be tournament debates.
Annual Social Banquet Held
Continued on page 3
Radio station WOAI in San Antonio, Texas, will broadcast the debates given on Thursday afternoon.
Members of Debate Team Speak in Winfield and in Iowa
John Stewart, c'38, and Omer Voss, T'39, will return today from a debate contest which has been held in Iowa.
They represented the University of Kansas in debates which had as subject "Should the federal government crop production control program?"
Four University men went to Winfield yesterday to participate in a sophomore tournament. Kansas will be entered in oratory, extemporaneous speaking, and debating. The four entries from Kansas are Ivy Baldwin c'40; Robert Hebden c'40; Robert Sullivan c'40; Robert Sullivan c'40; and Rhoeides c'40.
Presents 57th Vespers
Orchestra and Women's Glee Club on Sunday's Program
The School of Fine Arts All-Musical Vespers, the 57th in the series, will be presented Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock in Heuch auditorium. The program will include the Orchestra and the Women's Glee Club, besides several other numbers.
Frank Cinkle will open the program with an organ choral prelude by Walter Mourant, a number dedicated Professor Cinkle by the composer.
The orchestra, directed by Prof. Karl Kurtsteiner and now numbering 90 selected musicians; will play the symphony in Russia Easter ("Himsky-Korsakoff").
The University Women's Glee Club, with 52 voices, under the direction of Miss Irene Peabody, will sing a group of three numbers from Bach, Mendlessohn, and H. T. Burleigh.
The University String Tri, composed of Ruth Orcutt, pianist, Karl Kuersteiner, violinist; and Raymond Stull, cellist, will play the sustained melodious slow movement from the 'Trio Op. 87' (Brahms). The Allegro Movement from the 'C Major Quartet' (Sublert) will be played by the University Strings Quartet, assisted by Rita Cumlaini. Another feature on the program will be the 'Variations' (Shumann) for two pianos with two cellos and one French horn. Solo pianists will be Ruth Orcutt and Allie Merle Conge, assistant professors of piano.
The new portable orchestra and bard stands recently purchased by the University will be used for the first time at this program. The vescers are open to the public without charge.
'Spring Dance' Ends Tonight
Making a bid for the attendance record and for the fun record of the year, "Spring Dance" will be pre-recorded on video from Foster auditorium to a full house.
Every available seat in the auditorium has been sold, according to a statement by Gerhart Tonn. ticket manager, yesterday. The chairs that will be placed to accommodate students will also be taken. Tonn assured.
Tonight's presentation of the Philip Barry comedy of sorority girl life will close a four-day presentation of the play. The leads are being taken by Bill Fey, c'40, and Roberta Cook, c'39.
All men interested in golf are requested to meet with Gwinn Henry in the K Club room in Robinson gymnasium Monday for a meeting in regard to the 1938 University golf team.
Golfers Will Meet
Authorized Parties
--inside track to an undisputed championship.
Friday, February 18, 1938 Limited Date
Hobnail Hop, Memorial Union,
12 p.m.
Saturday, February 19, 1938
Saturday, February 19, 1938
Delta Chi, chapter house, 12
p.m.
Phi Gamma Delta, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Sigma Nu, Hotel Eldridge, 12 p.m.
Sigma Phi Epsilon, chapter house. 12 p.m.
ELIZABETH MEGUAR,
Adviser to Women for
the Joint Committee on
Student Affairs.
It's Do or Die For Kansas Tonight
Jayhawks 'Must Win' at Norman To Clinch Inside Track for the Championship; A Deafat Will Make It Hard for Allen's Men To Catch the Fast-Moving Sooners Again
By Harry Hill, c'40
Kansas' hopes for a seventh Big Six basketball championship will either "boom" or "bust" tonight in Norman, Okla.
New Group Moves Into Demonstration Home
By defeating Oklahoma's "boy scats" with whom they are co-leaders in a hotly-contested court race, Kansas will be virtually certain of a tie in the final standings and will have the
Tied for the conference lead with four games to go, the Jayhawkers invade Soonerland with the "must win" sign hanging over their title possibilities.
A new group of women has moved into the Home Management house, and will live there for the next six weeks. This house is for the use of majors in home economics. The women are: Virginia Cairn, c 38; Lois Sholander, c 38; Josephine Lawc, c 38; and Mildred Messheimer,
Convocation Next Monday J. F. Cooke, President Of Presser Foundation Will Speak
University students will be treated to stories about great men next Monday in conversation when James Francis Cooke, president of the Presser Foundation, will speak on "Encounters With Genius."
At one time he made a study of teaching systems in European conservatories. He has been editor of Etude, musical magazine, since 1897, and was chair of the group since 1918. This is a financial foundation which sponsors building of halls and auditoriums throughout the country, and was endowed by the Theodore Presser company, music publishing house, of which Mr. Krauss was chairman.
Mr. Cooke should have many interesting reminiscences, for he has lived an active life both in America and Europe, and has known many famous persons on both continents. He was educated under many teachers here and abroad, and was a teacher of piano and voice in New York and Brooklyn for several years.
He is also the author of several books on music, and a member of various dramatic and music clubs. He has been honored with degrees of doctor of music from Ohio Northern University, Cincinnati Conservatory, and University of Pennsylvania; and LLD, from Ohio Northern University and Ursinus College, and LH.D. from Bethany College.
The convocation will begin at 16 o'clock, and morning classes will be shortened to the usual 35-minute period.
Many Attend Late Rally
There was lots of noise at the Santa Fe station last night and it wasn't all made by shivering bones of chilled rallrers.
More than 150 Kansas fans saw the crusading Jayhawk basketball team begin its journey to Norman. Okla, home of the Sooners.
Hearty cheers through chattering teeth featured the first rally in honor of a traveling Kansas cage squad. The University band played despite the frigid temperatures and the entire crowd was enthusiastically responsive to the yell leading at the Ku Kui's and Jay James.
Dr. F. C. Allen, varsity basketball coach told the ralliers that their numbers were "a wonderful tribute under most adverse circumstances." He said that he did not, however, share the crowd's optimism when he thought of facing a capacity partisan Oklahoma crowd.
Fred Praille and Sylvester Schmidt,
co-captains for the game and Don
Ehling also spoke.
Graduate Injured in Collision
Miss Cecelia Robinson, 21, o Lawrence, suffered head lacerations in an accident north of Pleasant Grove yesterday afternoon. She remained unconscious for six or seven hours, but regained consciousness a about 11 o'clock last night and showed improvement. David Bryan Baldwin, also was injured in the crash, which was a head-on collision
-ination of the weights on both sides reveal a near perfect balance of the prediction scales.
Although some dopesters choose to term the Jayhawkers as *uorbdogs*, a careful exam. What advantage there is in playing before a home crowd—6,000 fans
A loss to the high-scoring Sooner sophomores, however, will remove all but an outside chance of overtaking them again.
BULLETIN
The Kansas - Oklahoma basketball game will be broadcast over radio station WREN from 8:15 to 10:30 tonight. Ronnie Ashburn, WREN announcer, will broadcast the game from Norman.
re expected to jam the Snooner field house—will be Oklahoma's. If there an advantage in the coaching of B. P. C. Allen, that belongs to Kan-
While the Jayhawkers fall short of the Oklahoma offensive record of 287 points in six games, they may counter with a defense which has limited opponents to 52 less points in the same number of contests. And the relative mottles of offensive and defensive strength long have been unchanged among basketball followers.
Martin and McNatt Threats
With 4 men in the 10 high Big Six scorers, there is no disputing the Sooner basket-making supremacy. Each man on Coach Hug McDermott's quintet is a potential high-point man. Jimmy McNatt, who is third among individual scorers, was the chief factor in Oklahoma's 49-64 victory over the Jay-hawkers in the opening conference game, and has been the most consistent point-gatherer.
Two other sophomore stars, Walker and Mesch, have at times set a burning pace and Mullen, Sooner center, has displayed a steadily improving basket eye. Lastly, there is Bill Martin. For two years he was a bulwark in Oklahoma's offensive. This season, he was concentrated on steadying a brilliant but erratic sophomore crease and has sauntered his basket honors. He then he has a deadly aim from the tree throw line and with fine dribbling he is a constant threat. 'Gallons of Fowl' for OU.
One fact which prevents Oklahoma from being a heavy pre-game favorite is a simple sentence of six words: Freel Praille will play for Kansas. Not that the star Jawshaker guard won't have able support from Corli, Ebling, Harp and Schmidt. A third point is that the season, he has been the one dependable scorer and the most effective defensive player.
His running mate at guard, Dick Harp, has recovered from an injury received last week in practice and should be in top form for the game. Corlis, who has shown new life in recent workouts, may be the deciding facker against the Sooners. Don Ebling, who besides Pralle is the only Kanan in the first ten scores, can very easily cause Hug McDermott six gallons of worry (in terms of Doctor Allen's trouble remedy).
John MacGregor, Oklahoma business manager, said last night that sale of tickets to the game exceeded capacity of the Sooner field house.
The probable starting lineups:
Kansas Ebling F Oklahoma
Corls F McNatt
Schmidt C Mullen
Praille G Martin
Harp G Mesch
In its drive for W. funds, the University of California Y.W.C.A. organization sponsored a series of no-date nickel dances held at noon.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
---
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1928
≈
Comment
Hello, Kansas!
Of Thee We Sing-gray row of a ship, appears beacaley. You think of the play, "Outward Bound; with passengers slowly realizing they were dead. The erie, sicky green blobs of quick photo shops, open all night, accentuate the ghostiness. A Syrian drink-stan man, a dot in the racial amalgam, turns his lights and whistles up a side street.
Of Feb. 24, we are informed, four Nazi short-wave stations will broadcast a cheerful "Hello" to Kansas. To make the program more compliment to us, certain state songs will be sung.
We have no quarrel with Germany because she wishes to send across several thousand miles of land and water a special greeting to Kansas, but we would like to point out for you some features of Germany's radio propaganda system, for definitely, we consider the Kansas greeting propaganda.
In the current edition of Life magazine are to be found three pages of picturey illustrated comment upon the radio propaganda of Europe. One statement strikes the t reader as rather startling: "The European ether is shot through with propaganda just as the American radio is shot through with advertising."
A reporter in the service of a Chicago paper reports that the German stations are flooding the world with their propaganda. They are replacing wire service in continental Europe by virtue of the fact that news go broadcast, costs little or nothing.
We have read from time to time in our own newspapers of foreign radio propagandizing. The English and the Italians have been distributing to the natives of northern Africa, radios which are tuned so that they may only receive from one station—English or Italian as the case may be—and are thus the helpless recipients of national propaganda.
The German-American scholar exchange system is thought by many, and probably correctly, to be a propaganda measure.
So when Germany says "Hello Kanas!" we may believe she does it out of friendship? Well, possibly—probably. Shall we think of it as propaganda? Certainly.
Insurance companies have been waging for years, campaigns against such chronic diseases as cancer and heart disease. They have recently added to the list another great enemy of society—syphilis.
Trained Youth--
Unemployment--?
Unemployed college youth is an important factor in bringing about revolution according to a world-wide survey of unemployment in the learned professions made by Dr. Walter M. Kotschnig.
"Where the overcrowding of the professions leads to a prolonged unemployment of successive generations of graduates, it may become a formidable threat to the very existence of an ordered society." observes Dr. Kotsching.
Dr. Kotzsching found many promising young men and women, equipped with degrees and certificates, who were unable to find positions. After trying by calls, interviews, and letters time after time to get a position without success, they became dejected and hopeless.
Since the present society could not provide positions for them, there was a reaction: The old order must be changed or destroyed to make place for a new one which could give positions and happiness to educated youth. Unemployed professional men and women have played important parts in revolutions in Germany and other nations.
The situation in the United States is less dangerous, but Dr. Hotchkiss urges a nationwide search for new needs for professional services.
If the nearly one billion dollars that President Roosevelt urged for the navy were used for improvements in the United States, it would go a long way towards providing work for our youth. By giving our youth chance to work for happiness, we will do much towards avoiding internal disturbance and perhaps a revolution.
What!--
Not a Buggy Ride?
What is the coming world going to do for horses? An absurd question, you may think, yet a press dispatch from Washington this week, reports the last census of mules and horses, taken in 1935, revealed that the birth rate of these animals is only half sufficient to replace those that are dying each year.
Your presupposed reply is: use "iron horses" and the "horseless carriage." But that is where you err, for the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers predicted this week, that within 35 years at the present rate of consumption, the Lake Superior iron region, which produces 85 per cent of our annual output in this country, will be exhausted.
Syphilis has always been an unmentionable word until the recent campaigns against it have made it assume a position almost in the nature of a fad.
≈
Campus Opinion
Editor, Daily Kansan:
Yours Till April
I should like to ask one question of the bundle o words who signifies himself "Prepared for the Worst." We may assume that he was one since he highly admires the neighborhood bully; but didn't he find out what happens to the neighborhood hot-shot when he ventures across the trails without his bodyguard?
Stretching this, as he does, to apply to nations; we see that the United States has had little trouble in bullying around a declining Spain, primitive Mexico, and several of our small neighbors to the south. Our enemies have been trying to win them over. War also shows clearly what happens to the neighborhood bully when he mixes in quarrels out of his bribery. Of course, there is another way to deal with such situations, related to tell all our nations what to do and what not to do; there is also the possibility that some of the other nations, believing in slightly different gods, may question the source of
Yours till April, the customary month for our entering the arena of honor and glory to protect our prestige, our investments, Democracy, or whatever seems to need protecting. L.E.O.
Editor, Daily Kansan:
A Library Gripe
As the hearts of the instructors harden
And assignments increase their pace
And poor students are made to suffer-
Oh, what a helluva place!
Students waiting in line and just hoping
-Hoping that they will be next
Hoping that they will be next to Hoping that they will be next to that blamed book they are wanting.
The crowd is too large and important. The candidates are from Troutville, Libertarian soon become Troutville.
Do you suppose there could be a system—
Librarians soon become frantic
Striving to please without irk.
Do you suppose the books would just work it out. To obtain needed books more quickly, you could go to a library.
10. Would you please turn back without having to take turn about?
Let us pray that in the near future
Some wise guy will give us his best.
And work out some sort of a system
to solve our problem.
Norman E. Fisher.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 p.m., premed-
regular publication days and 11:30 a.m.
at the Chancellor's Office.
Vol. 35 Friday, February 18, 1938 No. 97
--gray row of a ship, appears beacaley. You think of the play, "Outward Bound; with passengers slowly realizing they were dead. The erie, sicky green blobs of quick photo shops, open all night, accentuate the ghostiness. A Syrian drink-stan man, a dot in the racial amalgam, turns his lights and whistles up a side street.
EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty meeting will be held on Monday, February 22, in 115 Fraser. E.-H. Littleton, Chancellor
FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Students who have not yet obtained their grades for the fall semester may secure them at the Registrar's office today or tomorrow—George O. Foster, Registrar.
HOUSE PRESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Presidents of all organized houses which we have wounded at the second floor of Robinson gymnasium at 4 clock Monday. This is very important; Barbara Humphrey, president of the city's basketball league.
REINTERPRETATION OF RELIGION COMMISSION:
The Reinterpretation of Religion Commission will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine Room. The King will speak.-Evelyn Beakter Donald DeFord
SETSE POOC: There will be a meeting of all interested in the Estes conference at Henley house on Wednesday, where we will have an informal talk on "Mountains." Make reservations at Henley house by Eden May Parks.
VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL:
Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council; law representative and president of the sophomore class. Pettitions for the position are due on Friday, February 18. The Secretary of the Men's Student Council on or before Monday noon, Feb. 28, 1933—Moe Ettsonen, Secretary.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Payer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FOTOR IN CHIEFT
AUTOGRAPH EDITORS: MARTIN BENTON AND DAVID W. ARGENIZI
TOM A. FELLE
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOFELB
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CRASEN
NEWS EDITOR BILL FITZGARDLA
SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERNUT
SPORTS EDITOR ELION TOWRENCH
MARKUP EDITOR JEAN THOMAS AND JAY MARTIN
REWRITER EDITOR DICK MARTIN
TELLEGRAPH EDITOR HARRY HALL
SUNDAY EDITOR JANE FLOOD
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
News Staff
ALICE HALDEMAN-JULIAN
J. HOWARD RUSKO
DAVID E. PASTRINGE
KINNISH MORGAN
KINNISH JARED
MOIRIE THOMPON
JOI COCBRINE
F. QUINTENNIA
WILLIAM FITZGERald
WILLIAM LMACKHUN
DRYE MELCHILD
EDWARD BANNETT
MARTIN BENTION
MARVIN GOEBEL
KIMMY KOHN
JERRY BEE
MOIRIE THOMPON
CLAUDE DOREY
ELTON E. CARTER
ALAN ASHE
CHARLES ALEXANDER
Kansas Board Members
1937 Member 1938
Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of
Collegiate Digest
Columnist Thanks Artists For Designs Squib Inspired
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publications Representative
420 MADISON AVIL. NEW YORK, N.Y.
CHICAGO, IL. FORT WASHINGTON
LOS ANGELES PORTLAND BEATRIA
By Dorothy Caldwell, c. 39
Miss Rosey Kernick, professor of design, received a letter from O. McIntyre shortly before his death, thanking her for three photographs which she had sent to him.
These photographs have an interesting history.
"No place is more starkly forlorn than Broadway at 4 a.m. All life seems suddenly to have run out. And there hovers the stagnant arm of spent焊, the miama of decay The Times building, like the grea
Two years ago Mika Ketchn read the following paragraph in McInnery's column in "New York Day by Day".
HANG ZHOU
material for designs, Miss Ketcham presented the article to her class. Three students undertook the making of textile designs based upon it. The students were Avrid Jacobson, 36, now an assistant instructor at the University Janice Jang, 37, now a professor at Stanford University; and Virgil Lee, 37.
"A few chronic coffee drinkers in Lindy's sip in glum retience. Scrub women in the hotel lobbies glance up through dull, rhyme eyes. News-paper bundles, imprisoning last night's capriches, tudd from non-stop wagons. Broadway, smelly, punch drunk and with fishily glazed eyes, awaits the revivifying whiff of a clean new dawn."
France Reports Hitler Promise
After these designs were sent to several national exhibits, photographs were made of them. These photographs were sent to Mr. McIntyre and in appreciation of him he sent a letter to Miss Ketcham.
Fome, Feb. 18 (Friday)—(UP)—High Faseist quarters asserted tonight in a retort to British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden that Austria is not seeking advice from Paris and London because her independence is fully guaranteed by Germany and Italy, acting in full concert.
Realizing that this was inherent
Vienna, Friday (Feb. 18) —(UP) The Austrian parliament will meet **24** to hear Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg make a declaration concerning Austro-German relations, it was announced officially today.
Faris, Feb. 18 (Friday)—(UP)—French official quarters reported tonight that Fusher Adolf Hitler of Germany has promised, in response to Anglo-French inquiries, to make a strong pledge of respect for Austrian independence in his Reichstag speech Sunday.
The accompanying picture is a reproduction of the design by Virgil Lee.
The assurance of Italo-German protection over Austrian sovereignty followed a semi-official government announcement that the new German inroads in Austria are "welcome with open favor by the Italian government as the beginning of a new era of peace between two peoples who are deeply related in race, language and common culture."
Vienna, Feb. 17. –(UP) – Austrania tonight was on the verge of headling surrender to Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's demands for complete Nazi "pacification" of the government, after Great Britain and France refused aid against German encroachments. Chancellor Kurt Schuchzigg and the Fatherland Front, fighting to escape being brought under the Nazi yoke, struggled to present the main argument and propaganda from being added to the five cabinet pots which Schuchzigg turned over to Nazis or Nazi sympathizers when he capitulated to Hitler's demands 48 hours ago.
The Kansas Highway Patrol made 23,480 light corrections during the last six months of 1937. This means that patrolmen obtained compliance with the law in thousands of cases where cars and trucks were operating on the highways without proper lights.
THE Rexall DRUG STORE ...
for lowest prices in town
H. W. STOWITS
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Phone 238 9th & Mass.
PORCELA
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Sox bottle effervescens GE7 CARBONATES COMPOUND Good for the "meaning alfondred tree excess acidity 75¢
Large tube Buttons Tooth Paste 25¢ Safe cleaning flotation process makes teeth sparkle.
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Sosieni Medico Yellowbole PIPES
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Mi 31 Solution Kills Germs in 10 to 25 Seconds
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Another popular use for Mi 31 Solution is as a gargle to avoid unpleasant breath which, as everyone knows, has often kept a person from securing friends and happiness. Do not use this Solution regularly and you will never have to worry about offensive breath.
Did you know that you can get rid of body odor quickly by sponging yourself with a bit of Mi 31 Solution? It refreshes the skin and takes away perspiring body odors. Mi 31 Solution is effective because it is tested and approved in Rexall's great Research and Technology Department where a staff of doctors, chemists and helpers work.
MI 31 Solution is sold at the Rex-
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Naval Expansion Reaches Billion Mark
Your Rexall Drug Store is H. W. Stowits, 9th. and Massachusetts. --adv.
Washington, Feb. 17. —(UP)—President Roosevelt's naval expansion program will cost more than $1,000,000,000. a about 200 million above original estimates, and present naval yard facilities are inadequate
to accomodate it, Rear Admiral William Dubose said today.
He said the program, exclusive of the 1000 airplanes envisaged, would cost more than $1,000,000,000. The 47 combat ships, he said, would cost $731,955,000, and the 22 auxiliaries, $246,451,000.
A NEW SHIRT
WITH A NEW COLLAR
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In addition, Arrow Dart is Mitoga tailored for better fit and Sanforized Shrink — guaranteed not to shrink.
The Arrow Dart has a specially woven collar, the Arosewa — a new, non-wilt starless collar that will out-wear any other collar of its type!
At its new price — $2.25 — Arrow Dart is within your means.
ARROW DART $2.25
Ocer's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
FASHION
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The perfect sweater-shirt in soft cotton lime with high neck and short sleeves. They come in white and just about every imaginable postal shade. Grand for suits, skirts and shacks.
Dozens of other new sweaters and skirts in lovely pastels.
WEAVER'S
Cosmetics
Phone 636
N N N N N N N N
CORSAGES
Are Necessary to Make Formal Attire Complete.
PARTY DECORATIONS
Are just as important as your orchestra for your spring party. Let our experienced designer help you.
Fine Flowers . . . Always in abundance . . .
Orchids, Gardens, and Roses.
As near as 363 Phone
RUMSEY Flower Shop ALLISON
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill
--an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERIOR, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m. call KU-121, after 5 p.m. call 2702-81
( )
Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pledging of Mollie North, c'uncl.
Sally Bott, Kingston, was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house yesetday.
Mrs. Harry Wiles, Macksville, was a dinner guest at the Dau Tau Dau house last night, for the birthday of her son, Harry Wiles, b38.
Ann Rightmire, fa'40, and Fern Hill, c'40, were luncheon guests at the Chi Omega house yesterday.
The Lawrence alumnae of Alpha Delta Pi entertained the actives and pledges Tuesday night after closing hours, at the chapter house.
心
心
Doris Sholander, c'38, was a lunch- en guest at the Chi Omega house Wednesday.
Mars. Marget Rasmussen, district superintendent of Alpha Omicron IPI, who has been visiting the chapter three times this year, night for her home in Fremont, Nebra.
∞
Allen Johnson, field secretary of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, is visiting the Phi Gamma Delta house this week.
The department of zoology entertained last evening with a party for Dr. and Mrs H. H. Lane, the occasion being their 18th birthday anniversary of Doctor Lane.
心
∞
Pi Kappa Alpha and Alpha Tau Omega will have a smoker Tuesday evening at the Pi Kappa Alpha house.
~
Delta Chi Delta announces the pledging of John Milton Sullivant ed'40.
The Commodopolitan Club announces the election of the following officers:
President, Isami Tashima, c41
Secretary, Ruth Yoyamana, c41
Treasurer, Baily Winton, c38
Radriguez, Katrina Gouw, c40 and William Truman, c40.
Dinner guests at the Chi Omega house last night were sons and brothers of members of Chi Omega.
The guests were:
Alex Macleo, c$99
Tom Bowie, b$18
Joe Bowlus, p$38
Bob Lucy, c$41
Bud Blake, clunc
Ben Bibb, c$12
Bob Tibbs, c$1
Frank Forman, c$1
Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the engagement of Mary Guild, c4: 40 to Mr. Samuel E. Lux III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Luc of Topea.
Phone K.U. 66
Mr. Lux is a member of the Sigma Chi social fraternity at the University of Pennsylvania.
ne following at dinner last evening
me, and Mr. Mary, Henry Werner
me, and Mrs. Jaswine, Lawrence
me, I. S. Julian, John
Miss Elizabeth Meguiar
STUDENT CHRISTIAN FEDERATION
Sigma Chi fraternity entertained
Holy Communion at the Trinity Chapel, 103 West 42nd Street, will be held at 8 o'clock next Sunday. At 9:45 there will be a morning prayer and worship; and at 6:15 p.m., a fireside supper at the rectory for students. The Rev. Carlo DiPietro leads.
Sigma Nu fraternity announces the pledging of Bruce Jackson, c'41.
Christian Church
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the roge."
Wesley Foundation at K.U. and
A continuation of the discussions
of the meeting in the work of the commi-
sion at the M. Murray Work-
Student Conference will be held at
eight o'clock on Sunday evening at 6 o'clock.
The University classes conducted by Dr. Forrest C. Allen and the Rev. Edwin F. Price will meet as usual at 9:45 a.m.
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
THE ARGUS
$12.50
First Methodist Episcopal Church
Election of officers for Wesley
Foundation and its ensuing will be
appointed at the Sunday meeting this
coming Sunday. 9:45 a.m. The
candidates for the election of
the Foundation are:
c39, c49 and Paul Wilson, gr; for
president; c39, c49 and Stafford Ruben, c39;
for secretary, Maxine Patterson, c41;
and Mary Waggoner, c41. The
finally complete the cabinet will be
appointed by the three elected officers.
The new cabin will take office.
The Foster class will meet Sunday morning at 9:45 for the opening worship service and have its own session at 10 o'clock.
The guests were:
The Sig Alph chapter entertained seven members of the faculty at dinner last night. All the guests present were Sig Alph alumni.
The Forum group in the evening will have a faculty recital in which many of the members of the Forum
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
Trinity Episcopal
CLASSIFIED ADS
At the morning worship service of
the St. Mary's Church, held in the Granada theater at 10:50
Sunday, the pastor, Dr. Robert A.
Kennedy, sang "George Washington and America"
Today." The Wesleyan Chorus chair
directed by Dorothy Endy Miller
The guests were:
F. H. Hallands
V. W. Kern
Rolla Nuckels
Howard C. Taylor
Ernest Smith
H. G. Glaney
Adrian Lindsey
LOST: Medium-sized green laminated Parker fountain pen. Name Edward W. Rice engraved on barrel. Reward. Phone 721. -98
ROOM: Single or double room for man employed, or students. Between K.U., town and high school, 124 W. 13th. Phone 1105I. -96
WANTED: Roommate for boy at Camp-
house. Front room. Desirable loca-
tion. 1245 Oread. Call 1514. -97
TENNIS RACKETS
RESTRUNG
New Rackets, Balls
Soft Balls, Bats
RUTTER'S SHOP
Mass. St. Phone 31
Phone K.U. 66
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried, 50c End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, Shop MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass. Phone 2353
with an f4.5 uses motion picture film
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
LOST. between Watson library and Fraser hall, or in a library, by blacked blue, and green Sheaffer pen. Reward. Call 2435. -67
faculty will participate. This will begin at 6:30 p.m. and will be preceded by a social hour at 5:30 p.m.
Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed
Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed
RELIABLE CLEANING
Suits
Tuxes
Dresses
Hats
Coats
50c
Professor Davis of the department of history will speak on "Lobon Troubles of Today" at Westminster Forum, Sunday evening at 7:39 at The University.
732 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 2353
Permanents and End Curls
$1.00 complete
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
292 Main St.
Philadelphia, PA 21235
3 garments for $1.25
GRAND CLEANERS
Guaranteed
Next Tuesday evening at 7:30 under the direction of Samuel Maier, "The Second Miller" will meet in Westminster hall.
R. A. Schwegler, dean of the School of Education, will be the host speaker in a series of three discus-
cuses on Fireside Forum, Congregational people's group, Sunday evening at South Congregational parish house.
Shampoo and Wave 35c
Complete Permanents $1.50 up
Phone $23 1941/2 % St., Mass.
IVA'S
American Artists Group Exhibits Art at Museum
Etchings, woodcuts and lithographs of the American Artists group are now on display at Spooner-Thayer museum.
This exhibit offers students and other persons a chance to see a range of subject matter designed to satisfy every individual taste. Included are examples of conservative and modern art, including abstract and even surreal-artist realism.
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
Westminster Foundation
Fireside Forum
There are landscapes, humorous and genre pictures, sports paintings, scenes of nudes, animals, industrial life, marines and still life. In variety of subject matter and treatment, this exhibition comes very close to being complete cross-section of the whole range of contemporary American art.
Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliv.
Fatty-nine American artists, representative of widely different schools and styles of art, have pictures in the display. The prints are all copies of works which have been created during the past year. A part of the American Artists' group's program is to make outstanding contemporary art available not only to the wealthy collector, but also to all average persons who are interested in the field.
Motorists Must Carry License
DUNAKIN CLUB
1319 Tennessee Street
Lawrence, Kansas
12 Dinners and Suppers $2.50
6 Breakfasts, 50c
Many Kansas motorists fail to observe the law which requires that drivers licenses are to be carried by the operator at all times. The operator who has a license but who has left it at home may encounter delay or arrest because of his oversight.
Orators Meet Next Tuesday
The life and works of Joan Sibellus was the topic of discussion of the Dillette Commission, which met at 7 o'clock last evening at Henley house. The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra will play *Sibelius* Symphony No. 2 in D Major in its concert next week. Alice Russell, fa30, was in charge of the meeting.
Entries in the contest include Dade Angevine, c. 398; William Porter, *uncl*; Donald Voorhees, c. 383; Irving Kass, c. 329; John Lathner, c. C. H. 359; John Stratton, c. cindel Palm, c. 329; C. H. Rappin-phal, c. 329.
Dilettante Commission Will Study Life of Sibelius
Eighth Annual Junior-
Senior Speech Contest
Draws Nine Entries
The annual society banquet was held at 6:30 in the Memorial Union ballroom, at which the toastmaster was President G. M. Shelley. A greeting from the University was extended by Chancellor E. H. Lindley, followed by various entertainment features scheduled on the program. Closing the day's program was an illusory "Funeral Situation" by Lyle S. Powell, M. D., colored in the medical corps reserve.
The eight annual junior-senior oratorical contest will be held Feb 22 in the Little theater in Fraser hall at 8 o'clock. Cash prizes amounting to $20 will be awarded to the winners. There are nine entries. Last year prizes of $15, $10, and $$ were awarded respectively to Martin Maloney, c. 37, William Zupancze, c. 37, and John Milton Phillips, c. 37. For this year's event have not yet been elected.
These entrants will meet with Professor Bebler Monday, Feb. 21, at 12:20 o'clock to draw, in order that the programs may be prepared.
ration in Kansas" was then given by R. J. Paulette, secretary of the State Registration Board.
DOIN' THE TOWN With MARY ANN
Engineers-of the largest, most complete and prosperous of the publications serving the petroleum business, for it is one of the few places dusty and not in a one focal
But college life isn't all parties, and for those themes and assignments which must be written a new Royal portable typewriter at Lawrence Typewriter Exchange may be bought at prices ranging from $42.50 to $64.50.
Mary Ann has found a sure cure for the February dumps. Passing by Weaver's window she was attracted by a new display of Wellesley sweater shirts featuring a high style neck line and short sleeves. The pastel shades quickly caught her eye and she bought several at the exceptionally low price of $1 each..
Y
A Guide for Discriminating Shoppers
In order to "shine" at the Hobnail Hop Mary Ann decided to try a new hair style, and Iva's Beauty Parlor was just the place to go. For an ordinary occasion a plain shampoo and wave set for 35c will suit you perfectly. But for that "special" date, try a revitalizing hair shampoo for 50c.
To keep in step with the changing shoe fashions Mary Ann stopped at the Royal Shoe Shop. Here she learned that the new footwear comes in shades of French blue, Roseberry calf, and patents, with iridescent hose to match. With their cut-out effect, the slippers tend to flatter the feet and make them more comfortable for street wear or dancing.
Why wait for spring to buy that new hat you so desire? Everyone is hat conscious, and you will find it a pleasure, as did Mary Ann, to tinger at Ackerman's Hat Shop and try on the delightful new pastel felts and tricky straw bonnets.
CORNERSTONE
The answer to every maiden's prayer may be found in the new velvet step pump for only $5 a pair at Fischer's Shoe Store. Lovely guaranteed hose in the very latest shades may also be bought for $1. These shades include Carnival, Sunday, Indian Sun, Sony, and Mystic.
For gay letters the *Ockse Printing and Party Shop* has a new stationery which fairly wins its way into your heart. At the top of the sheet and on the envelopes is an unusual jayawk design made by a K. U. student. A package of this stationery is priced at only $1. If looking for original party decorations they can be bought here or ordered made.
Bridal
Baker Talks To Journalists
"The business publication's only reason for existence is to give service to some specialized industry," stated Mr. Ralph Baker, secretary and supervisor of the Kansas Press Association, in his speech yesterday afternoon to students majoring in journalism.
Business publications can be divided into three classifications. Mr. Baker pointed out. They are: trade papers which deal with commodities and their merchandising; technical papers dealing with the scientific efforts toward the trade division; and class papers which are concerned with matter of interest to merchants, engineers and the general public.
"The numerous publications serving some specific branch of industry came into being during the years of the 1920's when business developed so rapidly," observed the press association supervisor. "The paper must develop as fast as the business it is serving develops and the business itself must develop or the publication will die."
There is opportunity for a journalist outside of the newspaper, for specific business publications always need someone trained in news writing if that person is also very well trained in the phase of the industry. Mr. Baker has an excellent example of a specific business publication, Mr. Baker believes, is the Oil and Gas Journal published at Tulsa, Okla. It is one
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SUNDAY
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ALLAN JAMES
JUDY GARLAND
FANNY BRACE
Ignatella Owen
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It Sets the Pace for
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Musical Comedies
"There are all kinds of specifie business publications," reminded Mr. Esker, "from stamp collecting to market news. Some publishers have their own printing press, while others don't. They are printed all over the United States, although usually near the industry they are serving. Magazines and pocket-books are published concerning almost everything for the country in general and also specific areas."
Leave Lights on Parked Cars
Many motorists invite accidents by parking cars on the road sides
and shoulder and leaving them un-
attended and illuminated. The size
law reasons that this parked are
unfitted vehicles which have light
lights installed and are not visible for an distance of 500 feet in either direction.
A New Shipment of Publisher's Specials
(Reprints and Reminders)
has just arrived
Come in and see them.
1
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. St.
WED.----"Top of the Town" - "3 Smart Girls"
ARSITY
Home of the Jayhawk
in
Oklahoma Tonight
TONITE - TOMORROW
A Whirlpool of Intrigue
PRESTON FOSTER
"WESTLAND CASE"
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WITH ADOLPHE MENOUI
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ZORINA KERNY BAKER
ANDREA HELEN YEIKLON
PHIL BAKER *GOBBY JEKSON*
THE AMERICAN BALLET
introduced the
comedy sensation of the world
EDRON BERGEN
*CHARLIE McENNISH*
Story by BEHNET
Directed by MAUREEN MARSHALL
Songs by GEORGE AND IRA GERSWINN
Released since UNITED ARTISTS
IN TECHNICIAN
PAGE FOUR
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
7
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1938
Principals in the Championship Battle at Norman
WESTERN CITY
DON EBLING-FORWARD
[Image]
COACH MCDERMOTT DILL MARTIN
Kansas Has Edge on O.U. In the Past
Series Started in 1920
With Jayhawkers the
Winner in 28 of 39
Contests
Beginning back in 1920, the Kansas - Oklahoma basketball battles show a decided edge in favor of Kansas in total games, giving the Jayhawkers the decisions in 28 of the 39 contests played. Obviously, however, the game tonight will depend on the present teams, and neither team will be thinking of statistics as it enters the crucial game which is touted to decide the Big Six race for this year.
However, for the benefit of the curious, here are a few statistics compiled from past games.
Highest Score in Last Game
The largest Kansas score in a Kansas-Oklahoma contest was in 1936 with 51 points, while the largest Oklahoma score of 49 points was made in the game earlier this season, Kansas' lowest score in the duel was in 1928 when the Jayhawkers could manage only 19 points, but Oklahoma runs down to 16 points in a 1934 game.
The closest game between the two rivals came in 1925 when Kansas nosed out the Sooners, 23-22, in a hair-raising finish. Kansas also holds the largest margin advantage of any of the games played, piling up a 50-23 score in 1953 for a 27-point difference. Total scores have run high for the two teams, but the top was reached in the Kansas-Oklahoma game here (the team with 55 points at 49), which scored 36 and 46 for the Jay-hawks. The smallest number of points was in 1934 when the two teams battled for guarding honors and held the total to 38 points with Kansas gathering the winning 22.
Rough Tactics Last Year
When Kansas fans begin reminiscing over Jayhawk-Soon battles, there always come to mind the individual scoring duels between Bud Browning of Oklahoma and Roy Ebling of Kansas. For three years of their basketball careers, 1934, 1935, and 1936, the two stars battled viciously, but Ebling managed to pick up Big Six scoring honors each of the three years, though by a small margin at times.
Another fond remembrance of Oklahoma games comes to Kansas in connection with the beating Kansas handed out on its home court last season. Oklahoma had arrived on Mt. Oread prepared to knock the Kansas out of their title hopes, but found itself hopelessly trailing in the last half, and Tee Connelly, later nicknamed "Bull" was indulging in plenty of rough playing "Bull," amidst booing of Kansas just finished rogers to the right, when "Little Corporal" Holiday, keenly intent on getting the 11, although already carrying three hurries, buried in a flying block, knocked Connelly into the band, and then got up and calmly walked from the floor on his fourth foil amid Kansas cheers.
A
SVLWESTER - SCHMIDT-FORWARl
M. MURDOZ
1.
VERNON MULLEN ROSCOE WALKER
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
If wishes came true, your Side-lines writer would not be sitting here at this typewriter dashing on a few lines of copy. Instead he would be on his way to Norman, but (ob, frustration—how bitter) here we are.
Just before the battle we are hesitant to add anything about the game, except to repeat our prediction that the Jayhawk will be flying when the final gun sounds. (We tempted to say by 10 points.)
Glenn Cunningham will be running in the Baxter mile tomorrow night for the sixth time. In 1933 Glenn won the race in 4:14.3 but lost to Bronchron by a step the next year, the race going in 4:14.1 flat. In 1935 Cunningham came back to set the record for this special season during outdoor time of 4:09.8. Venkee came through the next year to beat the flying Kansan in the time of 4:10.2, and in 1937 Glenn again won in 4:12.4.
If history repeats itself Glenn will be due to be bested for the first time in the present indoor campaign. Victories in 1933, 1935, and 1937, and second in 1934 and 1936 point to second again this year for Glenn, Cunningham, though, in our opinion, will cross up this history-repeating-itself business tomorrow night. If somebody sets a fast early pace, it might even result in a new record.
It's not long now until the state high school tournaments will be getting under way with their exhibitions of prospective talent. Our nomination for the class "A" championship is Newton. True, they may have plenty of competition from other Ark Valley schools.
SANTA FE
TRAILWAYS
SAVE
TIME and MONEY
Ottawa, Iola, Chanute, Tulsa,
Coffeville, Bartlesville, Joplin,
Schedules
Kansas City, Chicago, St. Louis,
Omaha, Minneapolis, Des Moines
St. Joshua, Ma.
Orkutian City, Dallas
9:20 a.m., 4:20 p.m., 11:55 p.m.
Emporia, Wichita, Mahtanah,
Salina,丹威斯,Angeles,
Lincoln,Danvers,City
Holtown, Hiawatha
8:50 a.m., 1:50 p.m., 4:45 p.m.
9:30 a.m.
5:35 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 2:00 p.m.
3:30 p.m., 6:00 p.m., 10:05 p.m.
Leavenworth, Atkinson
* 5:35 p.m.
* 3:30 p.m.
10:05 p.m.
* Athens connection
Kansas City, Chicago, St. Louis.
Granada Bldg.
Phone 82
For Complete Information
PARKS
Rated as favorites, the Kankas swimmers will meet Kansas State in the Robinson gym pool tomorrow events scheduled for the dual meet.
National Trailways System
100-yard free-style; Fisher and Alex Mitchell.
Having picked up 28 points against Nebraska as compared with the 10 points which the Staters made against the same squad, the Jayhawker tankmen are expected to have little trouble in handling things their own way. Spectators will be admitted on the same basis as at the previous meet, with activity tickets or 25 cents.
LYMAN CORLIS
50-yard free-style; Vete Nowosikia and Gene Forke or Ritchie. Diving: Paul White and Charles Nixon.
Swimmers Meet Aggies Tomorrow
Campbell. 200-yard breast-stroke: Brown and
MADRID MECAL
HARVEY MECAL
Kansas entries for the meet are:
300-yard medial relay; Proctor
Bitchie, Harry Brown and Ray
Davidson.
150-yard backstroke; Ritchie and ammibell.
220-yard free-style; Paul Fisher
and Wallis Campbell.
MARVIN MESCH JIMMY McNAIT
440-yard free-style: Nowosinskoud Feaster.
400-yard free-style relay: Davidson, Ritchie, Mitchell and Bill Horton.
The Reville, Louisiana State University student newspaper, has an amended "safe-driving" campaign around the school's campus. and around the school's campus.
AMOUN
10
METRO
RICHARD HARP - GUARD
BRIAN HAYNES
What's Doing in Sports
At Other Schools
By Newt Hoverstock
DR.F.C. ALLEN
The Iowa State swimmers will meet the Nebraska champs in the Iowa pool this evening with somewhat the same feeling that the Kansas tankmen kown for Kansas State. Formerly beaten 54-27 by the Minnesota Gophers, the Iowa State Cyclones saw that the Minnesota beat Nebraska, 64-11, in a dual meet. In the Kansas case, Nebraska beat them 56-28, and beat the Kansas Staters 60-10.
The Daily Pennsylvania believes that Official Weiss, one of the prominent basketball referees in those parts, must be softening up as he
10
FERDINAND PRALLE
called only 24 fouls in a recent Yale-Harvard meeting. In a previous Yale-Columbia contest he called 33, and in the Penn-Dartmouth game at Hanover he totaled 38 fouls, or enough to put nine men out of the game and half take care of another.
With all the comment about the Jayhawk "Olympic Five" fresh team, Kansas is not the only school which claims fine freshman groups coming on — Creighton, Michigan, Indiana, and a host of are laying out to understand fresh teams, and admit their inferiority to no team.
Yes, Girls, we know your clothes cupboard is bare in February . . . so we have a host of new things with which to re-stock it . . .
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Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
98℃
The intramural basketball schedule for the remainder of the season will be mailed out today to team managers, but if the managers send it in, they may get a copy of the schedule before they receive it through the mail.
Monday's schedule: Feb. 21-5
p.m; Phi Fai "B" vs Phi Gam "C";
p.m; Phi Gam "D" vs Phi ATO "B";
p.m; Phi Gam "D" vs ATO "B";
and Acacia vs D.U. "T"; G: Ghosts
d. Dunkins, Westminster vs All
Stars; 8 p.m: Phi Mli vs Hexagona
I and Optimists vs Phi MA; 9 a.m:
Stars vs K.E.K., and A.T.O.
vs Triangle.
The Sigma Nu quintet tripped the Triangle cages 24 to 20 last night in an intramural league basketball game against smothered Rumold's Boys 45 to 24. Ashley paced the victorious Sigma Nu team, who beat the second game Mason, Ober forward, held the high scoring honors held by players in the team, counted once from the free
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throw line and four times from the field for a total of 9 points. In a late game Wednesday night, the Sigma snuers captured the Sigma Snu scorers 30 to 23.
UNION FOUNTAIN
Coming down the 'home stretch'
Sub-basement Memorial Union
Law Limits Size of Vehicle
The state law provides that the total outside width of any vehicle shall not exceed eight feet and the maximum height is 12 feet, yet the Kansas Highway Patrol finds quite a few vehicles which exceed these maxima. It is not unusual to encounter vehicles or loads 10 or 11 feet wide and 14 or 15 feet high.
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Spring Suits on Display
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
2
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 98
VOLUME XXXV
Jayhawks Leave Tonight For Ames
Big Six Leaders Face
Tough Hurdle a They
Meet Iowa State There
Tomorrow Night
The Kansas Jayhawks, Big Six leaders by virtue of their victory over Oklahoma Friday, leave 0-1 for Iowa State. The Nebraska Iowa State Cyclones tomorrow night
Exciting Game Friday Night
The game with Iowa State will be a real test for Kansas, coming as it does on the heels of the hard fought game with Oklahoma. Iowa State has been a tough team for all op- tions year when playing on its home floor.
RALLY! RALLY! RALLY!
Kansas and Oklahoma played on of the most exciting games of the season Friday night. Oklahoma led 18-16 at the end of the first half and ran their lead to 22-16 early in the second period. Kansas came back to tie the score repeatedly in the second half and finally won 41-38.
Rally tonight at Santa Fe station at 9 o'clock when the Jayhawkers flee for Ames to play Iowa State in basketball. Ku Ku's, Jay Jane, band and everybody is going. Train leaves on Sunday so snow send-off for the conference-leading Kansans.
107
The game served to emphasize the fact that Kansas does not have a "first five" this season, but instead has eight or nine men who alternate on the vivari quintet. George Golay, whose showing in the previous three games had been unimpressive, broke loose Friday and was the leader of the strong Kansas comeback in the second period.
Loren Florel, another tall boy,
also played a fine game, doing his
best work in the first half. Bruce
Reid, sophomore from Arkansas
City, played his best game of the
year and contributed materially to
the Jayhaws' victory. Reid is an
outstanding ball handler.
Lineup Change if Needed
The fact that Dr. F, C. Allen, Kansas coach, is in a position to switch his lineup around if the starting quinet does not click may make the Iowa State game somewhat easier for Kansas. For the Hawkeyes, I would find some of the Jayhawks stale, but there will be others to take their places if necessary.
WEATHER
In three Big Six games at Ame this season, Iowa State has defeated Missouri and Kansas State and los to Nebraska by only three points. It will be a tough game and the Jay hawks know it.
Kansas' reliable guards, Fred Pralle and Dick Hart, as well as Don Ebling, played the entire game at Norman and stood out as usual. Harp, a senior college player, his college career, while Pralle was a bulwark on defense.
Kansas: Cloudy with rising temperatures Sunday except in extreme northwest; possibly snow or rain in extreme west portion; snow or rain Sunday night and partly cloudy Monday.
James Gillipie, senior manager, announced yesterday the personnel of the student committee for the Kansas Relays.
Relays Committee Announced
The following freshman members were chosen after interviews by Gillisip and Horace Mason, athletic publicity director:
Upperclassmen who will be retained on the committee are: Harry Bullen, Bruce Voran, Ray Davidson and Burke. All are from Northern Illinois and Harry Brown, juniors.
Ray Moseley, c41; Ernest Klema, c41; Paul Heinz, c41; Gerald Raines, c41; James Swinehart, c41; and Larry Wim, c41.
Gillispie, senior class representative, had been named previously by Gwynn Hill, director of athletics.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1938
Mason replaces Ed Elibel, assistant professor of physical education, as general manager of the work of preparing for the relays.
The student relays committee does the actual preliminary work of sending out invitations, classifying entries, and handling public for the meet. Work on the program is also done by the committee.
The first meeting will be held next week, the date to be announced in Tuesday's Kansan, Gillispie said.
Independents Elect Three New Officers
Susan Maloney, c'39, women's president of the Independent student union announced yesterday the election of several new officers in the organization. The president is William Vickers, women's vice-president; William Vickers, c'uncil, mens secretary; and Tom Resmer, engineering representative. The organization plans to hold regular Tuesday evening dances, beginning this week. Features of the event will be boo prizes and a dance content.
Tentative plans are being made for an Independent three-hour dance, to be held sometime in March.
To Present 57th Vespers Today
University Symphony Orchestra and Women's Glee Club Will Offers Numbers
The 57th All-Musical Vespers will be presented by the School of Fine Arts this afternoon at 4 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. The program will include numbers by the University Symphony Orchestra and the Women's Glee Club. Novelty numbers by the University string trio, string quintet and ensemble will be features of the program.
The vespers are open to the public without charge.
The program:
The program.
Chorale Prelude, Walter Mourand
(dedicated to Mr. Cunkle), Frank
Cunkle.
Trio, Op. 87, Brahms, Andante con moto- Ruth Curet, piano; Karl Kuersteiner, violin; Raymond Stuhlu ceil
"Thus Then, the Law of the Spirit," Bach; "The Skylark's Song," Mendelssohn; "Swing Low, S weet Chariot," H. T. Burleigh-University Women's Glee Club, Irene Peabody, director.
Quintette in C Majo, Op. 163.
Schubert, Allegro ma non troppo-
Waldemar Gelfch, first琴曲; Conrad
McGrew, second琴曲; Karl A
Kuersteiner,琴曲; Raymond Stubb
cello; Rita Guausen,second cello
Ensemble: Andante and Variations, Schumann—Allie Merle Conger, piano; Ruth Orcutt, piano; David Fielder, Fielder Culler; Stall mill, Carter Ullert.
Overture—"A Russian Easter," Rimsky-Korsakoff—University Symphony Orchestra, Karl Kuesteiner director.
The new portable orchestra and band stands recently purchased by the University will be used for the first time at this program.
Fitzgerald Is New Physician
Dr. Thomas B. Fitzgerald has been appointed assistant physician in the student health service, according to an announcement from the chancellor's office. Doctor Fitzgerald takes the place of Dr. Wade, assigned Feb. 1; to become a member of the staff of the Santa Fe hospital in Topoka.
Doctor Fitzgerald received his B.S. from Rockhull College in 1928 and his M.D. from St. Louis University in 1930. He served his internship in St. Joseph hospital, Kansas City, Mo.
He was in general practice in Kansas City, Kan., and assistant county physician of Wyandotte county from 1931 to 1934. During the following two years he was a physician for CCC camps. Since then the doctor has been in general practice in Topeka.
RALLY
MORNING SCHEDULE
To provide time for the all-University convocation to be held at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning, the following morning class schedule will be observed.
Roberta Cook, President.
All Jay Janes are also requested to attend.
All Ku Ku's are required to be all present at the rally tonight at 9 p.m. at the Santa Fe站 Bill Bailey.
First period ... 8:30 to 9:05
Second period ... 9:15 to 9:55
Convocation ... 10:00 to 10:50
Third period ... 11:00 to 11:35
Fourth period ... 11:45 to 12:20
E. H. LINDLEY
E. H. LINDLEY
Cooke To Be Convocation Speaker
President of Presser Foundation To Address Assembly at Tomorrow Morning Service
Dr. James Francis Cooke, president of Presser Foundation, will address University students at a speech on "Encounters With Genius."
Doctor Cooke has received honorary degrees in music from Ohio Northern University, Cincinnati Conservatory, and University of Pennsylvania; LLD. from Ursusian College and Ohio Northern University; and LH.D. from Bethany College.
The Presser Foundation is a financial organization which sponsors the building of auditoriums and halls throughout the country. This organization was endowed by the Theodore Presser publishing company, of which Doctor Cooke has been president since 1925.
Doctor Cooke also is the editor of the musical magazine Etude and has written several books on music. He wrote "The Musical Foundation since 1918."
The convocation which begins at 10 o'clock will cause the shortening of the morning classes to 35 minutes.
Concludes Convention
Officers Are E lect ed
At Meeting of Kansas
Engineering Society
The Kansas Engineering Society closed its thirtieth annual convention Friday with the election of the following officers: George S. Knapp, of the division of water resources state board of agriculture, president A. M. Meyers, chief engineer of the Kansas City Structural Steel company, Kannan City, Kansas; F. W. E. Wipps, senior designer for the Kansas highway Commission, secretary and treasurer.
The high points of the convention were the talks given by Ivan C. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, on "National Water Resource Planning"; P. A. Hodges, lieutenant-colonel of the Engineering Corps, U. S. army; on "the Missouri River Development"; D. R. Knowton on "Petroleum Engineering Practice"; George A. Mills on "Rural Electrification of Kansas"; and the discussion which followed led by R. J. Paulette, consulting engineer, of Topeka.
Robt. W. Warner, head of the University department of electrical engineering, was elected chairman of a new section which boreer will deal with electrical matters of the society. The new chairman was requested to select a committee to formulate in the future a policy for the general welfare of the Kansas engineers.
R. J. Paulette, secretary of the state registration board, made a brief report regarding the registration of engineers in Kansas. Approximately 350 are now registered for the eh state law.
Blackburn Is New 'Spring Swing' Director
Roberta Cook, f'a39, crowned queen of the Hobnail Hop Saturday night, feels the "same as ever" following her coronation. The ceremony took place before intermission when Ed Stafford, e'39, president of the engineering council, announced the winner and presented the queen with a miniature slide rule and flowers.
"Red" Blackburn, m'40, popular Hill band leader, has been selected to replace Laym Hackler, fau'cl, a director of instrumental music for "Spring Swing," musical revue to be presented April 5 and 6 under sponsorship of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journal fraternity. Hackler resigned because of a heavy course of studies this semester.
When asked how it felt to be "Queen," she merely laughed and said, "Just the same as ever. I was thrilled, though, and it was a great surprise. I didn't leave the play until 10:30, and wasn't informed of the honor until just two dances before the announcement."
Roberta is the second successive member of Gamma Phi Beta to win this honor. La last year's winner, Evelyn Dorman, was a sorority sister.
Karl Kruger, born in New York City, achieved early fame as a member of the staff of conductors of the Vienna Imperial Opera and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Since returning to the United States in 1925, he has won wide acclaim as a conductor in this country. He was instrumental in founding the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra of which he has been conductor since 1933.
Roberta was crowned in the Memorial Union ballroom to the cheers of a large crowd of engineers, who had forgotten slide rules and compasses to swing out in their big spree of the year.
Blackburn is director of one of the leading Hill dance orchestras, and has directed the instrumental music for previous musical shows on the
Louie Kuhn's orchestra, which furnished music for the dance.
The school children of Lawrence will have an opportunity to hear the orchestra Wednesday afternoon at 2:15 o'clock when it will give a special program dedicated to them. This program will be open to others wishing to hear the orchestra in a concert of somewhat lighter selections than will be offered in the evening.
The Kansas City Philharmonic conductor has been director of the New York Music Guild since 1932. Under his direction the Guild has produced American premieres of six operas, among them "Pulcinella" (Pergolesi-Stravinsky) and "Savitri" (Holst).
Intensive chorus rehearsals for the show were begun yesterday.
For the fourth consecutive year, the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra directed by Karl Kreuger will play before University students Wednesday night at 8:20 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. This is a regular attraction on the University Course and activity tickets will ad-
Mr Krueger has been guest conductor in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, at the Hollywood Bowel, and at the Swift pier during the Century of Progress Exposition, as well as in most of the European cities. He is a native of Seattle and has had engagements with the NBC studies in New York.
Queen of Hobnail Hop Uses Slide Rule as Scepter
Director of Music Guild
Ochestra Directed by
Baton of Celebrated
Krueger; Plays Here
For Fourth Year
Philharmonic Treat Comes Wednesday
Karl Krueger is a product of the Vienna Imperial Opera, an organization which has produced many famous conductors. As a young man he was a protege of Nikisch who, feeling that the youth had great potential, enrolled Franz Schulz, director of the Vienna Opera, Nikisch himself had gone forth to his career from the Vienna Opera and it was natural for him to
Continued on page 2
Election Was Surprise
MARY GIBBOND
Three-fold are the talents of this attractive student from Aspinwall, Pa. She played the feminine lead in "Spring Dance," Dramatic club play which closed a four-day run Friday night in Fraser theater. She is a student of arts, studying in the School of Fine Arts. Topping these honors is the testimonial to her beauty and popularity given by en-
played the Gamma Phi sorority song in honor of the winnerr.
ROBERTA COOK
GAMMA PHI BETA
Continued on page 2
Students Meet Today For Protest Consideration
Hunt Calls Meeting Today
To Discuss and Organize Protest Against Legislative Resolution
John Hunt, secretary of the YM-CA, announced yesterday a meeting in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building this afternoon for discussing and organizing a protest against the legislative resolution to set up an investigation of criminal activities at the University.
The meeting will be held under the joint sponsorship of the Y.M.C.A. and the American Student Union. The Y.M.C.A. originally called the meeting but later its cabin approved a request to present 98, ASU, president; that the ASU. be allowed to act as co-sponsors.
The meeting, open to all University students, grows out of the proposal of the state legislature to appropriate $7500 for a committee to devote conservative activitiesa in Kansas, especially with reference to the University.
"It was a small band of indignant and radical revolutionists who made possible our United States despite the opposition of the anti-Semitic radical of Galilee was executed on a cross, but he now has 250 million followers.
Will Be Open Meeting
Hunt in a signed statement issued to the press yesterday said, "I believe that the proposed investigation of communical activities by the Kansas legislature is a good thing. It means that the forces of reactionary thought are pitting themselves against each other and have grave thought. History has proved that when such a conflict occurs, the so-called radicals always win out.
Investigation Approved
"1. That communism, as such, is practically non-existent;
"In brief, this is what I believe the committee of investigation will find at the University:
2. "That a small, but strong, minority of faculty and students are intellectually honest enough to face academic pressure in 14 eighth search for a solution;
"3. That certain religious groups have been brave enough to apply the ethics of Jesus to our own social scene.
"Some of the results of the investigation will probably be as follow;
1. The minority group, now scat-tered, will be united and re-inforced by sympathizers, both locally and throughout the nation;
"2. Nation-wide publicity in progress journals will point a finger of amused scorn at the legislature of Kansas;
"3. That suppression will give rise to expression."
Services Of Hospital Are Utilized
Dispensary at Watkins Memorial hospital totaled 32,378 during the 1936-37 school year. Dr. R. L. Causton announced yesterday following tabulation of the hospital records for the year.
The health fee was paid by 4.270 students for the first semester last year and by 3.192 for the second.
Upon entering the University last year, 1,522 students, 95 per cent of them, received physical examinations. For the second semester, 83 students were examined. During the first school term, 43 patients treated at the hospital and 34 were treated during the second term.
For the first five days of this semester, the hospital treated an average of 190 patients a day. The staff, which consists of three full-time doctors, one interne, and one doctor who comes two hours each day, also attended 20 patients confined in the hospital.
Ten years ago, 14,000 dispensary patients were treated. From 1919 to 1935, students were assessed $3 for the hospital fee. When the fee was raised to $4 in 1935, the only student who complained received 28 days' treatment in the hospital and was assessed only $23.
Added features to the health ser
Continued on page 2
Donald Voorhees Calls Eleven Organization Heads Together for Discussion of Proposed Letter To Be Sent to State Legislature Concerning House Resolution on University 'Red' Probe
Eleven students, including the presidents of the W.S.G.A. and the Men's Student Council, will meet today at 2:30 in room 223 in Frank Strong hall to consider a letter to the legislature protesting the proposed appropriation of $7,500 for investigation of "Red" activities here.
The letter was drafted yesterday by Don Voorhees, c'38, M.S.C. president, Doris Stockwell, c'38, president of W.S.G.A., and John Pierce, former Campus liberal leader. Presentation for
May Air Charges Of Communistic Acts Before Committee
The house today voted 32 to 4 for the investigation. The senate will vote next week.
Topela, Feb. 19. (UP) — Charges that the University of Kansas is a "bat bed of subversive propaganda" from which students go forth imbued with communistic ideas which pass on to "gullible" high school friends at home, apparently will be aired before a legislative committee.
Two Kansas alumni, Donald Muir and Clay C. Carper, brought the matters to a head in the house yesterday. Last fall the Board of Regents—governing body of state schools—conducted an investigation of state schools on behalf of the university of Kansas student, was killed fighting with Loyalist troops in Spain.
Reads From Henry's Diary
Henry's father charged his son was influenced by older men he met at the University. He said he did not know young Henry intended to fight in Spain. Money for his transportation was arranged by Kansas City, Mo., people, he said.
Muir yesterday read a few lines from Henry's diary in which the youth told of attending a communit meeting at Lawrence and being "surprised at the number of faculty members at the University refused to discuss the matter today.
Muir declared on the house floor that the Kansas WPA also was infiltrated with communist propaganda and workers. There are 600 commuters on the WPA train station in the city said. The Y.M.C.A. at Lawrence also was accused of fostering subversive views.
"Faculty members and students alike are spreading communistic doctrines at the University." Muru told a crowded house chamber. Members became curious, appalled to be tapped from their seats as they leaned forward to catch every word.
Brand Kansan Editorial
"Thousands of boys and girls are exposed not only by the instructors but the Y.M.C.A. This legislative committee is appointed to represent who will resign and some who will be fired."
Carver wawed a copy of the University Daily Kansan, student publication before the legislators and told them it contained an editorial that made derivative reference to bombing of Japanese citizens. The American flag into the Wanjoo river by a Japanese.
"If we pay our instructors to teach that rot, we need a new journalism instructor." Carper that man should be proscripted.
The inquiry also would extend to Kansas State College at Manhattan and other states schools, Muir said.
Mitchell To Attend Meeting Of Math Association
The council will be in session Feb 23. 24. and 25.
Prof. U. G. Mitchell, chairman of the department of mathematics, will leave tomorrow evening for Atlantic City, N.J., to attend a meeting of the Mathematical Association of America. He will also attend the meetings of the joint committee of the Mathematical Association and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. This committee is completing a report on the plans of schools in secondary education in America.
signature will be made this afternoon. If approved and signed, it will be sent to the legislature for consideration.
Signing Virtually Certain
"We know that a fair-minded committee would entirely clear this institution," the letter states, "buthe very magnitude of the appropriation forces the committee to justify its existence." The actuary was prompted by the house yesterday by the house of the Muir-Carper resolution proposing a committee to investigate alleged "subversive activities" at the University.
Signing of the letter today by the student leaders was virtually certain last night, although no one had given formal approval. Voorhees said that in discussing the protest with those who have been invited to sign, he discovered anmanship approval of the proposed letter.
The letter follows:
"We have read in the press that the state legislature is considering an investigation of "red" activities at the University of Kansas—at a cost of $1 million. We feel that this appropriation is not only unwarranted by the facts, but is doing the University irreparable harm. Until today this rumored incident was finally acknowledged, we found it hard to believe that any credence was being placed in the many unfounded accusations against the University. We cannot believe that anyone is proposing to investigate realize the seriousness of such action.
"We know that a fair-minded institution, but the very magnitude of the appropriation forces the commitment to justify its government, ban bounties for every every, every innocent action will be scrutinized for ourusement, with a willingness of unjustified insignificance result. Calling people red these cases is very common. We even believe it should be the President of the United States, and could as easily be applied here."
'Inijustice to University
"The waste of money is of negligible importance when compared to the great injustice which is being passed through such an investigation without being subjected to endless criticism and without a criticism will be hailed down upon Kansas for its threat to academic freedom—freedom for which Kansas was so proud. The absolute tolerance, the absolute essentials of education, will be placed in the gravest jeopardy by this investigation. We are in the unanimous confidence in its faculty, and we deplore this shadow of suspicion them, as well as upon ourselves.
"Because we feel that this bill will "because we feel that this bill will not block but the name of the University and foster a feeling of distrust and fear among its faculty and students, we plead with all real students to the University to prevent its message."
Following are the students who will consider the letter in today's meeting:
Doris Stockwell
Doris Stockwell President, Women's Self-Government Association
Donald Voorhees
President, Men's Student Council
Dorothy Caldwell
President, Mortar Board
Chief Sachem
President, Y.W.C.A.
President, Y.W.C.A.
Paul Moritz
President, Y.M.C.A.
Lester, Kappelman
President, Owl Society C.H. Muller
C. H. Mullen
Chairman, Student Correspondence Bureau
EARLY STOCKHOLDER
President, Student Christian
Federation
Telephone: 612-583-0000
President, Young Republican Club
Mark Hewerton Past-President, Young Democratic Club
Student Forum Board
A special meeting of the Stu-
ent Forums board will be held in the Pine room tomorrow after-
ternoon at 4 o'clock.
Dean Moorhead, president.
PAGE TWO
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1923
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
≈
Comment
A.S.U. Discards The Oxford Oath
"We oppose economic boycott of any kind and the unfavorable attitude of the American Student Union concerning the Oxford pledge." So resolved 200-odd representatives from more than a dozen Kansas colleges two weeks ago at Wichita.
The American Student Union with some 600 delegates met on the Vassar campus following Christmas to endorse by a 2-1 majority the popular boycott of Japanese goods, and to abandon their long-standing approval of the Oxford pledge.
There is a connection between these simultaneous actions of the A.S.U.; and the Kansas Collegiate Peace Institute is to be approved for recognizing this connection and condemning the Union's stand.
The A.S.U. seems to realize that in boycotting Japan this act may be the first step in mobilizing public opinion to avenge Chinese women and children, and making the Orient safe for Chinese "Democracy." The A.S.U. recognizes the Japanese boycott may conflict with the absolute pacifist stand, and firmly declares for a step which may lead to war.
Thus the Wichita conference is definitely opposed to the recent action of the A.S.U. and to war as a means to a dubious end—an opposition which has become an end in itself—while the Union stands for the achievement of an abstract standard of justice in the Orient by a means which in the past has led to war. If war should come, where is their justice?
The Union apparently forgets that the means determine the nature of the end.
The student hospital has been handling an average of 195 calls a day. Understaffed, it has been suggested that the addition of two more doctors might be of great benefit. However, this with certain other added services would cost at least $7,500 it has been said.
Will Nations Show True Sportmanship?
The are 1940 Olympic games to be held in Tokyo a stumbling block to world peace?
Because of Japan's war in China, there is talk of the games out of Tokyo and into a more tranquil scene. "But the Olympics either will be held in Japan at the appointed time or they won't be held at all," is the statement made by Mr. I. Sawada, representative of the Japanese A.A.U. in this country.
Mr. Sawada is right in his statement. Once the Olympics are awarded to a country, they stay awarded unless that country is unprepared and fails to provide the necessary facilities for conducting the games. But this is not the case with Japan. She has everything ready, including the stadium.
Since the games have been awarded to Japan, are we of the other countries going to show a lack of true sportsmanship by failing to co-operate with Japan in making the games a success?
Two years hence when the games are to be held, we hope that the war is over and peaceful relations are established between Japan and China. By rousing an antagonistic attitude toward Japan concerning the games, we also arouse the resentment of the Japanese people towards us and lessen the chance for peace.
The Japanese people are just like the rest of us, They, too, like to play. It has been estimated by some authorities that the military clique in Japan has led 90 to 95 per cent of the Japanese people to fight a war they don't want. This appears to us no sound reason for boycoting the games or for refusing to attend.
Co-operation and true sportsmanship on the part of other nations toward Japan will reap a rich reward in good feeling and peaceful relations in the future.
Bring on the Soap Boxes The Women Are Coming
Times have changed since the days when women-suffrage advocates were looked upon as freaks—queer types of non-sexual female impersonators. Since 1919, women ha ve enjoyed the right to national vote, and they were privileged in some states before that. Gradually they have proved their ability to succeed in professions that traditionally belonged to men. And they are, on the whole, well satisfied with this place in society.
Now along comes the National Women's Party demanding an equal-rights-between-men- and women amendment to the constitution. Does this mean equal rights in support of the family? equal care of children? How can there be equality in all matters when the tasks of men and women are obviously predetermined if not psychologically, at least, biologically and physically? Equality of the sort we have now, leaves man essentially the wage earner and woman essentially the home-maker in an environment of co-operation; white co-education
has brought about a greater amount of mutual knowledge, ability, and interests.
An equal rights amendment would necessitate drastic changes in state laws regarding property, wages and divorces; and result in confusion between various states. If the amendment defined more exactly the meaning of "equal rights" it might have more chance of success.
Campus Opinion
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kannan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited.
Editor, Daily Kansam
Calls for the Sandman
Editor, Daily Kansas
Calls for the Sandman
Approximately one-fourth of the students in the University use Fourteenth Street as a means of going home because it is the most convenient place to come down because from physics we learn that all that goes up must come down) said street is a very quiet place.
Since our forebears decided that we must have the state University on a bank, then and the future we can afford to do so. We are going to have a bank. Goodness knew it is bad enough to have to walk such a hill, without having to strain every nerve and muscle. If we can't get the bank, we will lose it.
It is a well known fact that sand increases friction and that it is an almost total absence of friction which makes one's upper extremities assume the position normally mounted on a wall, and can be brought here in Lawrence for only a few cents per hundred pounds. Since this the case it seems to me that the University might well afford to sprinkle a little sand on the walls, benefit the students physically, a d and even mentally.
Sore in Spots
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m. preceeding
regular publication day and 11:30 a.m.
to the address: 265 W. 8th St., Chicago, IL 60611.
Vol. 25 Sunday, February 20, 1938 No. 98
--feel that opportunities for development there were the greatest offered anywhere in the world
ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION. an All-nil universi-
cation convocation will be held Monday morning, Feb.
21, at 10 o'clock in Hoch auditorium. Dr. James
Francis Cooke, president of the Presser Foundation,
will *peak on* "Encounters With Genius."—E. H. Lind-
ley, Chancellor.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION. The regular weekly meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon in room 102. Myers hall. All regular students and faculty are invited and invited are invited to attend—Jack Dalley, Press Officer.
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will begin work on the original movie the afternoon at 230 at Henley house. All members are reed to come. Ruth Forgel Charles Yeemans.
DIRECTORY CHANGES: Staff members who wish to have changes in addresses or telephone numbers listed in the directory supplement should report such information to the office at once. -Raymond Nichols, Executive Secretary.
DOVE. The Dove staff will meet Tuesday, Feb. 6 to discuss the potential contribution. Contributors please bring articles - Mary K. Bob
EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty
and students meet Tuesday, February 25, 151 Frederick E. H. Lainley, Church Street, Philadelphia.
FRESHMAN COMMISSION: The Freshman Commission of the W.Y.C.A. will meet at 4 clock at Henley house on Monday. A group of Haskell girls will discuss "Indian Marriage Customs." Jean Robertson.
HOUSE PRESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Presidents of all organized houses which will have booths at the W.S.G.A. carnival must meet with the carpenter on the second floor of Robinson gymnasium at 4 o'clock Monday. This is very important—Barbara Humphrey, President, House Presidents' Association.
OFFICIAL STUDENT CORRESPONDENTS’ BU-RAEU: There will be a meeting of the Bureau on Thursday, Feb. 24, in room 104 of the Journalism building at 4:30 p.m. All correspondents are urged to arrive to attend. Professor O.I. C.-H. Mullah speak on *Fair Funds to Students*. O.H. Mullah Chairman.
SETSE POOC: There will be a meeting of all interested in the Etes conference at 4:30 this afternoon at Henley house, professor W. W. Davis will give us a tour of the "Museum" and make reservations at Henley house —Edha May Parks.
VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council; law representative and president of the sophomore class. Pettitions for the men's student council are due by February 28, 2013—Moe Etterson, Secretary.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
EDITOR-IN-CHAPTER
ASSOCIATE EDITORS MARTIN BENTON AND DAVID W. ANGSTNER
TOM A. FILM
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
MANAGING EDITOR **News Stag**
MARVIN GORELEC
CAMPUS EDITORS **BULL TYLER AND GEORGE CLANN**
NEWS EDITOR **BILL Fitzgerald**
SOCIETY EDITOR **DOROTHY NEITHERON**
SPORTS EDITOR **ELON TOWENCE**
MARKUP EDITORS **JEAN THOMAS AND JESSICA BAYTON**
AWDITIONS **DICK MARTIN**
TELLERGUM EDITOR **HARRY HALL**
SUNDAY EDITOR **JANE FLOU
News Staff
PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
Editorial Staff
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press
Fursten's Note: This is the first of two articles concerning the activity and personof the Men Student's Employment Bureau of the Kansas Association. The second, which will appear in a subsequent issue of the Kansan, will deal with the personal problems and the issues involved in the burra's operation.
Socialized Collegiate Press Distributor of Collegiate Digest
The next time you hear of someone in the old home town trying to discourage an innocent high school senior from attending the state university because it's a "country club school," or because it "takes a thousand dollars you attend, and anybody who works doesn't have a chance to make the grade socially." you might confound him with a few of the following facts and figures, taken from the files of the Men Students' Employment Bureau conducted in the basement of Frank Strong hall by the Alumni Association.
More than 46 per cent of the entire student body of the University of Kansas is either partially or entirely self-supporting. Almost half of these students study at home and do most of them through outside work done during the school year.
Forty-six Per Cent of K.U. Students Help Pay Own Expenses
More Men Working Than Women
**C Men Working Than Women**
Although a much larger percentage of men than women work, more than 29 per cent of the co-eds also support themselves while in Lawrence.
BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN
Nor do they find themselves hampered materially by this outside work. There is no social ostracization. If there were, there would be very little "society" left, for the average Hill leader in Campus activities is at least partially self-supporting.
REPRESENTATIVE FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. AT 450 MAIN STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10016 AMD HUSTON ... BAY STATENIS CHICAGO ... BAY FRANCISCO
Probably the single institution most responsible for the large number of men students who are able to "work their way through college" here is the Alumni Association's employment bureau, under the direction of Mrs. Frank Parker. At present there are an even 700 enrolled in the service. Of these 135 have steady jobs, averaging something more than 30 cents an hour, and 60 others have part-time jobs which pay about the same hourly wage.
Jobs range from leading local church choirs, to serving as bouncers at more boisterous social functions. There are student stenographers, cooks, artists' models, sheep-raisers, dandelion-diggers, and even getters-of-cats-out-of-trees, all furnished by the employment bureau.
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Although the men's employment bureau was started as a project of the Y.M.C.A., the Alumni Association took it over in 1932 at the depth of the depression. Since that time, enrollment has risen from 395 to last
Penfold Offers Prizes For Best Photographs
Jack Penfold, '36, of Washington, D.C., has offered $25 in prizes for the best photographs taken by journalism majors at the University. Penfold is a member of the staff of Newsweek and the leading photographers for various publications.
Varied Jobs
Mr. and Mrs. Penfold stopped in Lawrence recently on their way to Mexico City for a free-lance photographic expedition.
Kruger Rated High by Sengares
Franz Schäkel's high regard for Kruger's ability to respond in concert when the young man left the Viennese Opera to take over the conductorship of the Seuletia Symphony Orchestra in 1926.
Philharmonic-year's grand total of 734. This year students from 19 different states range from New Jersey and Vermont to Florida and Arizona, are enabled to attend the University with its assistance.
"I have no doubt that he will play an important role among the leading orchestral conductors of his time."
Vienna, saturated with musical tradition and with echoes of Hayden, Mazart, Schubert, Beethoven, and Wagner lingering about it, has produced more eminent conductors than any other city in the world. And it was in this music center on the Danube that Karl Krueger received the larger part of his musical training.
earnings also have steadily increased in the past six years. The total amount for the current year of 1937-38 is $10,723.77 so far. This is already a 12 per cent increase over last year's total of $9,254.42. Most of the jobs are secured with Lawrence business firms and townpeople, although Hill organizations supply about one-sixth of the employment.
Hospital Services-vice since Doctor Canutten has been in charge are the tuberculin, Wassermann, and urine tests. For positive turberculin reactions. X-rays are provided at cost. This department formerly required one operator two hours a day, but now requires three hours of attendance. Other services include small pos and typhoid vaccination and cold inoculation.
Continued from page 1
"We are trying to make the health service an educational program in preventive measures." Doctor C. Johnson substitutes for the "family doctor."
he returned to Vienna last May to appear as guest conductor with the orchestra with which he had been associated as a young man, Mr. Krueger had an unexpected experience. It happened that he followed immediately after Arturo Toscanini, acknowledged as the world's greatest conductor. The critics with one accord placed him immediately after Toscanini. "To Conduct the Philharmonic immediately after Arturo Toscanini, and right after his concert to make an impression, even, yes, to win laurels, that is something!" said Ernest Decsey in the Neues Wiener Tagblatt. The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra gave a concert before an enthusiastic audience of 1,600 in the
Students are mostly treated for cold, respiratory ailments, stomach upsets, injuries, sprains, skin dislays, infections, burns, boils, and abrasions.
"We are trying to show students," Doctor Caplanon pointed out, "the kind of medical attention to expect—without the frills."
Queen of Hop--
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra gave a concert before an enthusiastic audience of 1,600 in the Kansas City Music hall last week.
Continued from page 1
gineers who elected her queen.
Candidates were chosen by a "prIMARY" balloting in the School of Engineering and Architecture of Iowa, which composed six competed in the final voting.
There was very little if any renewal of traditional battling between the engineers and their proverbial enemies, the "Shysters". Engineers advertised the dance by drawing toy cars by strings but the Laws let them drive by without arresting them.
The secrecy surrounding the identity of the queen has grown out of the foul between laws and engineers. In past years it was not uncommon for law students to kidnap the engineers' queen so she could not be presented at the dance. For that reason the winning candidate is not revealed until the congratulations at intermission of the dance.
Sponsor Carnival To Raise Scholarship Fund
"Fun for a nickel" seems to be the theme of the W.S.G.A. carnival which will take place in Robinson gymnasium Friday night, Feb. 25. The carnival is sponsored by the women's organization to raise money for a scholarship fund for women students of the University.
Sororites and other organized groups will have booths featuring entertainment ranging from an old-fashioned saloon to a baby show.
Five cents will be charged for admission to the carnival and to booth entertainment. A committee of judges is to be announced later by Roberta Mitchell, fa'39, general chairman. A donation for the most clever booth is to be offered. A committee of judges is to be announced later by Roberta Mitchell, fa'39, genera
What's Happening This Week
MONDAY - Basketball, Iowa State at Ames. ● Convocation, 10 a.m.
Luger, Franco Cooke, speaker.
Dr. James Franson
TUSKY Hall, dance to 8: Memorial Union building • Tan
TUSKY Hall - Independence
Prieting room, Pine room, 7:30 p.m.
Beta Pi meeting, Pine room, 7:30 p.m.
WEDNAY—Mid-week dance, 7 to 8 p.m.
WEDNESDAY—11dwd—wild fern room.
10a, 11a, Once on Fire, room 8, p.m.
FRIDAY—W.S.G.A. carnival, Robinson gymnasium
10a, 11a, Once on Fire, room 8, p.m.
*WSA CA. carnival, Robinson gymnasium*
*Omega formal dance, Memorial Upland building.* **Basketball, Nebraska, there.**
At the Theaters:
I the I beaters:
KICKINSON—Sunday through Saturday, "The Goldwyn Follies" with Adolphe Menjou, the Ritz Bitchero, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Zorina, Kenny Baker. Andrea Leeds, Helen Jenson, Phil
Bobby, Bobby Club and with Friends
GRACE, GRACE, on Wednesday "Everybody Sing" with Allan
Grenn, Judy Garland, Fanny Brice as "Baby Snoop"
Bennies, Joey Benson, and with Friends
PATTEE —Sunday through Wednesday; "Quick Money" with Guy Kibeee; and "She Loved a Fireman" with Dirk Foran and Aim Sotherm.
● Thursday Friday and Saturday; "Law and Lead" with Rex Belli; and "Sim" with Pat O'Brien, Henry Fonda and Margaret Lindsey.
**OWEN**, Blaine Burke, Regina Johnson
"Historic," Sunday at night; "Charles Boyer and Jean Arthur
'Hurley,' Saturday at made at night"; with Lee Carrollio and Colin Clive,
directed by Frank Borzage; and "Bulldog Drumdunn's Revenge",
with John Barrymore, John Howard, Louise Campbell, Reginald
Denny and E. E. Clive. ● Wednesday and Thursday: Top of the
'town' with Robert Taylor, Eleanor Power, George Darmon and
Buddy Eben; and "Three Smart Girls" George Darwin, Dan
Nray and Barbara Eben; ● Friday and Saturday: "High Speed"
on the Plain
AT THE GRANADA
WILLIAM JACKSON AND JOE PENNELL
A romantic scene from the musical riot *Everybody Sing* with Allan Jennec, the starred and Fanny Price as "Baby Smokies," now playing at the Chelsea Theatre.
AT THE VARSITY
THE MAN IN THE FURSALLE
John Barryman, John Howard, Regal Denny will provide you with the thrill of your life in "Bull Dog Drummond's Reward," today at the Varsity.
AT THE DICKINSON
STREET PHOTO GROUP
Scenes from "The Goldwyn Follies" opening today at the Dickinson for the entire week. The cost includes Kenny Baker, Andrea Leeds, Adolpha Menjau, Zorina and the American Baller, Bobby Clark, Ella Logan, Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Helen Jepson, Jerome Cowan, Phil Baker and The Ritz Brothers.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1958
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
-an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c'qo, Society Editor
FOR Bottom $1 p.m. KU1;起21; FI2 7202-78
∞
Miller hall will hold open house Tuesday night from 7 until 8 o'clock.
✓
Mrs. C. D. Gray, Emporia, and Fern Forman, Kansas City, Mo., are weekend guests at the Chi Omega house.
Emma Ellen Hughes, c. 39; Ima
Ogechring, c. 38; and Marian Goehring,
c. 39; entertained with a hand-
kerchief shower Thursday honoring
Jane Howe, who received her A.B.
from the last semester at the
last of the last semester.
Miss Howe left last night for Los Angeles via Delta, Colo., where she will visit her brother Eloe, editor of the Delta Daily Independent. From Los Angeles, Miss Howe will board the S.S. Matsonia for a month and have a position as laboratory technician in Queen's hospital.
--the chaperons were:
Mrs. F. B. Kincad
Mrs. H. S. Krewall
Mrs. P. H. Linnberg
Mrs. Ed Carlson
Mrs. J. H. Kraimer
Mrs. Hegarty, St. Joseph, Mo.
The guests were:
Verda Ames, c'19
Virginie Salaley, f'40
Brittany Bradley, c'10
Miculiam Whitford, c'41
Ellen Louen Ehy, f'48
Marjorie Smith, c'41
Doris Johnson, c'44
John Johnson, c'44
Jeanette Leech, c'46
Virginia Foster, c'38
Roe McVevey, c'38
Simon Summers, c'41
Elleaner Russell
Peggy G雍良, c'19
Helen Louis Brooks
Fern Forman, Cirmation City, Mo.
Mary K. Dorman, '37
Dorothy Doley
Joan Taylor, c'44
Mary C.丹曼, et al.
Jane Thompson, c'39
About twenty-five guests were present at the shower. Mrs. J. L Howe poured coffee from the serving table.
The wives of members of the Kansas Engineering Society who were in Lawrence for the meetings Thursday and Friday were entertained at luncheon and bridge Friday, with the wives of local members assisting a hostesses. Thirty-three guests at tended.
The valentine theme was carried out in the place cards and luncheon. Following the luncheon, the group went to the home of Mrs. Ivan C. Crawford for bridge. Mrs. Ballard of Topeka and Mrs. W.H.Rusee won high prizes and Mrs. E.D. Kinney received the traveling prize.
Mrs. A. H. Slus is general chairman of arrangements for the women's social affairs. Mrs. Frank L. Brown, Mrs. Ray Warner and Mrs. W. H. Ruse were in charge of the funeral church. Mrs. George A. Mills and C. T. Houth were at the registration desk in Marvin hall.
心
Friday morning the out-of-town guests were taken to Spooner-Thayer museum.
Dr. H. H. Lane was the guest of honor at a dinner given last Thursday evening by members of the zoology faculty and their wives, the occasion being his sixteenth birthday. Doctor Lane was presented with a book. Lane was given a bouquet of roses. About twenty persons were present.
∞
Following the dinner, the group attended the lecture for members of Sigma Xl, given by Dr. J. E. Moore of Johns Hopkins University.
The University Club will entertain with an informal dinner Thursday evening. Feb. 24 at 6:30, with Prof. and Mrs. Henry Werner as hosts. Chancellor Lindley will speak on "Mexico - From a Car Window."
Phi Kappa Psi entertained with a Founder's Day banquet at the University Club in Kansas City, Mo. Senator Harris was the toastmaster.
Carl T. Sloan, Jeannette Pa., came yesterday to spend the weekend with his daughter, Norma Sloan, c'41, at the Pi Beta Phi house.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert V. Kieslich of Burlington, TN., announce the engagement of their daughter, Kathleen Elsie, to Cadet Lawrence Chandler
PATEE
Continuous from 2
Any Seat 15c Any Time
TODAY ENDS
WEDNESDAY
2 First Run Hits
By For His Best Picture
DICK FORAN
Baldwin of the class of 1958 at the United States Military Academy, West Point, N.Y.
Miss Kieslich was graduated magna cum laude in 1896 from the University of Vermont, where she majored in business and economics. She is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, and of the Alpha Chi Omega social sorority. She also serves as chief engineer, American Foundation for the Blind. New York City
Cadet Baldwin is the second son of Col. Karl F. Baldwin, professor of military science and tactics at the University, and Mrs. Baldwin, following his graduation from high school at Leavenworth in 1932, he attended the University of Maryland before entering West Point. The marriage will take place following his graduation in June.
2
"She Loved A Fireman"
ANN SHERIDAN
ROBERT ARMSTRONG
AND
ROMANCE, LAUGHS,
EXCITEMENT!
"Quick Money"
FRED STONE
GORDON JONES
Cecilia Mitchell of Cherryvale is a weekend guest at the Alpha "amma Delta house.
Chi Omega will entertain with a formal initiation dinner at noon today.
2
Mortar Board alumnae will be entertained tomorrow night at 8 o'clock at the house of Miss Elizabeth Mcguir, 1309 Tennessee street. Miss Marie Miller will be the assisting hostess.
∞
News - Novelty
Sigma Phi Epison held its winter formal last night at the chapter house, with Clyde Bysom and his orchestra furnishing the music.
Jean Wyatt, c¹⁰
Joan Davis, c¹⁰
Louise Myers, c¹⁰
Gregory Coulter, c¹⁴
Ken Rikkenhadd, c¹⁴
Elizabeth Duncal, c¹⁰
Helen Wilkerson, c¹⁰
Nicholas Sutherland, c¹⁰
Frances Smith
Bettie Lou Daleau, c¹⁰
Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of John Burge, ed'41.
Members of the Kansas Engineering Society and their wives held a banquet last Thursday night at the Memorial Union building in connection with a two-day meeting of the law in Lawrence. A four-course dinner was served in the ballroom where places were laid for 104 per person.
The president, G. M. Shelley of Topeka, presided as comaster. The following program was given;
Greetings from the University, Dr. E. H. Lindley.
Violin: (a) Liebesbreuf (Kreisler);
(b) Prescaldium, Allegro (in the style of Pugnian); by Paul Stowen
af 40; Alice Russell, in 29, accompaniment.
Junglegirl act, George Luperl; e41;
Juggling act, George Luperl; e41;
(Bizzy): (b2) My Lady Walks in loveliness (Charles), Keith Davis, fa38; Jane Bruce, fa38, accompany
Tap-dancing speciality, Tildie Fowler, c'unel, and Ernest Sanden, c'unel, accompanied by Douglas Tarbet. ba 40.
Illustrated lecture: "The Far Eastern Situation," by Dr. Lyle S Powell, colonel of the medical corps reserve.
Dr. and Mrs. L. S. Nelson of Salma visited the Sigma Chi house yesterday
~
Gamma Phi Beta held initiation for the following pledges yesterday morning:
Jenny Heimbren, c'unel
Betty McVey, c'unel
Betty Cushion, c'unel
Bert Van Devenier, c'41
Bert Van Devenier, c'41
Rene Kokhaden, faunel
Jane Aawaray, c'41
Loy Wilson, c'41
Jennifer Willson, c'41
Virginia Appel, c'41
Jannette Lacech, c'41
Phi Kappa Pai initiated the following pledges last Thursday evening:
Bob Allen, c'41
BRICK'S "ON THE HILL"
SUNDAY MENU
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THE BEST MUSICAL OF 1938—BAR NONE!
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Hear Judy, Allan and Radio's Baby Snooke Sing 14 SONG NITS!
Also
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Cartoon News
Allan Jones Is Even Better. That He Was In Better Town. You'll Be Talking About Fann Brice for Weeks After You So Her as "Baby Smacks" She's the Funniest Thing in Pictures
Bill Gray, c'41
Tom Yeu, c'anel
Tom Arnoldi, c'anel
John Kline, c'anel
Daniel Hunt, b'anel
Larry Winn, f'41
Jack Caddon, f'
Wayne Anderson, c'anel
Davis J. Cook, c'
Marin Coverly, c'anel
George Thomas, c'9
Tom Heggie, c'anel
Judy Garland Is Your New Singing Sweetheart!
basket yesterday more:
Winter Time, Topka
Oviele Longsunga, Topka
Jewell Point, 36
Guerta at the Alpha Omicron Pi
The following were initiated into the
Alpha Omeroton FI will hold initiation services today for the following pledge, after which there will be a formal dinner in their honor:
Jane Chacky, Founder
Jane Goumara, Director
Barrie Hackerden, c.641
Campbell, c.818
Cunningham, c.859
Krysten Langerenberg, c.758
Dinner guests at the Daua Tau
Daua house Thursday evening were:
Betty Jane Paterson, chanel
Judith Harewood, michelle
Mary Jane Edgarson, c19
The following were initiated into the Chi Omega sorority yesterday:
Betty Burrows, c'19
Jam Taylor, c'41
Jan Matsuira, c'41
Jim Wittkinson, c'uncl
Hilda Welan, c'uncl
Viola Groesshard, c'uncl
Betty Ann Wilkinson, c'41
Emily Wood, c'uncl
Marlon Miller, fa 41
Darothy Newell, c'41
Initiation services were held at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house yesterday afternoon, followed by a banquet at the chapter house.
Those initiated were:
Donald Simpson c.185
Gordon Brigham, c'andul
Brooke Johnson, c'41
Daniel Cluster, p'8
Brandon Chandler,
Preston Johnson, c'41
James Bell, c'40
Sam Caldwell, b'uncle
Wilbur Torre, c'41
Donald Meriman, c'41
Waith Frarier, B199
Robert Keplinger, 54
Robert Keplinger, 54
Kansas City, Mo.
and John Bloker, 27, Lawrence,
for the invitation dinner.
(1)
Keith Frazier, B'39
Three national officers of the Sigma Chi fraternity visited Alpha Xi chapter here Friday evening.
They were:
Dr. William Henry McClean, Chicago
Serman S. Senne, St. Louis
L. McAtee, Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibition Illustrating Odyssey Is Displayed in Spooner-Thayer
An exhibition of books, facsimiles and illustrations pertaining to the Odyseyms, sponsored by the departments of English and classic languages, is now display in Spooner-Thayer museum.
Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin and Greek, will lecture informally on the exhibit Tuesday, Feb. 22, at 3:30 in the afternoon.
CHICKEN DINNER
SUNDAY
With All the Trimmings
MIDWAY CAFE
Headquarters for
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JANE WITHERS — "CHECKERS"
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1938
Jayhawks Edge Out Sooners 41-38
Victory Places Kansas
In Big Six Lead; Golay
Stages One-Man Rally
In Second Half
A determined Jayhawk basketball team used some of the same story-book magic that the Kansas football team used at Norman last fall, and came from behind to tie up the game and go on to win in the last five games. So far, 82 lost fastoon team on the Oklahoma court Friday night.
The victory puts the Kansas队 in undisputed possession of first place in the Big Six赛, and victories for the Jayhawkers in their season would give the Jayhawkers a clear title to the conference crown.
It was the superior fight and morale of the proteges of Coach "Phog" Allen that pulled the hot contested battle out of the fire in the closing minutes. However, the Sooners were probably weakened somewhat by
28
M
GEORGE GOLAY-FORWARD
Golay and Florell Star
the absence of Mullen, regular center, who was unable to play on account of illness.
George Golay and Loren Floren substituting for Lyman Corlis at forward, and Bruce Reid, substituting for Sylvester Schmidt, scored 22 points among them, and were largely responsible for the victory. Mesch kept Oklahoma in the running with 15 points.
Harp and Prale were both brilliant at the guard positions. Harp scored 8 points, the most he has scored in a college game, and did some nice work on defense. Prale was not up to his usual scoring form, but this was due to his combo. He also held the high-scoring "Boy Scat" to less than 40 points for the first time in conference play.
Ebling Breaks Tie
The greatest honor, however, goes to Golay, high-point man of the game. This lanky junior staged a one-man rally early in the second half when he scored 3 consecutive field goals and 2 free throws for the Kansas cause, tying the game up at 24-all.
Following Goal's goal bombardment, the Sooners took the lead only to have Kansas it up at 20.30 and 32-all. Here Harp put the Jawhawkers in the lead for the first time in the second half. Meesh tied it up again at 34-all. Dong Ebilson member of the touchdown-twin pass-combination that gave the up-set-finish to the Sooner football game last fall, again proved to be just a "pain in the neck" to Oklahoma as he sank a "dizzy" shot to put the Jawhawkers out in front.
Although the "Boy Scars" tied it up again, it marked the beginning of the end. Reid made a free throw, while Prale and Golay tossed in field goals to make it 41 to 36. an anti-climax, Mesch made a field goal just before the final gun to give Oklahoma 38.
The box score:
Kansas (41): fg | ft | f | mp
Ehling, f-c 1 | 0 | 1 | 40
Reid, f 3 | 1 | 1 | 15
Corliss, f 1 | 1 | 1 | 14
Florell, f 2 | 1 | 1 | 16
Golay, f 4 | 1 | 1 | 16
Sandifsky, f 1 | 0 | 2 | 16
Prulg, r 3 | 1 | 0 | 40
Harp, g 2 | 4 | 3 | 40
Totals ... 16 9 10 200
Oklahoma (38) fg ft fp mp
Walker, f 3 1 2
Snodgrass, f 0 0 2
McClain, f 0 0 2
Grayson, f 0 0 1
Kerr, c 3 1 3
Denton, c 0 0 1
Margt, g 1 1 1
Mesch, g 6 3 0
Totals ... 16 6 11
Halftime score: Oklahoma 18
Kansas 16. Missed free throw: Kansas 4.
Oklahoma 5. Officials: M. G.
Volz and Owen Cochrane.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorf
Volley Ball
Many intramural managers will probably receive volleyball hall scheduled for a practice. The Kansas print has requested that the Kansas print Monday's schedule. There will be Hockey practice, Basketball Hounds vs. S.A.E and Pi K.A. vs Beta Theta Pi.
The S.A.E. "B" intramural basketball battles gave the PI K.A. "B" quintet a 47-4 walloping yesterday in one of the most one-sided affairs this year.
Barber and Winters of the winners tallied 20 and 13 points respectively while the two field goals of the Pi K scored by Davis or Davis are Ward.
in another lap-sided encounter the S.P.E. "C" cagers stopped the A.T.O. "B" men 36 to 6.
DU. trimmed D.T.D. 39 to 25
Sigma Chi downed Pi K.A. 39 to 25
and Phi Chi pit defeated Delta Chi 28 to 13
Gimpler of the Sig Ep's caged 2 points to top the list of scorers, and Bergen of the losers garnered 4 points.
The box scores:
Phi Psi (28) Delta Chi (13)
g f gt f gt
6 1
12 9 2
(7t) (5t) PI KA-B'-F'(1)
Winters, f 0 | Dovis, v 1 | Davis, h 2
Hyatt, f 0 | Graham, h 4 | Tyler, o 6
Tyler, o 6 | Tyler, o 6
Ewers, g, 0 | -1 | Tyler, o 6
Stob, g, g 0 | Coller, g 0 | Harris, r 0 | Dean, r 0
Harris, r 0 | Dean, r 0
--with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
g f
Bartlett, f. 0
Fisher, f. 1
Hpkins, c. 0
Gimpier, g. 9
Ovrm'r, g. 4
D. (43) J f g t f 2 T D. (29) J
Wifd, f, 7 g f t f 2 M'Y n, r J 1
Oakes, f, 7 4 2 Brook, f, 1 0
Gwal, y c, 7 2 2 Cluster, c, 1 0
Bither, g, 2 0 Black, g, 1
Bither, g, 2 0 Black, g, 1
Koester, g, 2 0 Emore, 1
19 5 7
12 1 10
| | g f t | g f t |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Tmasn, f 1 | f 1 | H hall, f 1 | g f t |
| Jones, f 7 | 7 3 | Morgan, f 4 | 0 |
| s ders, c 1 | 3 1 | Beaty, c 1 | 0 |
| Chan, g 1 | 2 1 | Wainson, f 0 | 0 |
| Claus, g 1 | 2 1 | Wainson, f 0 | 0 |
| McFarld, f 1 | f 0 | Fogler, f 0 | 0 |
Onchear. Niswong
Friday's games:
Beta "B" (13)
Beta, law f. 2
Rudfid, f. 2 3
Rowd, g. 1
Rowd, h. 0
Miller, g. 0
Nicholen, o 0
Sund, n. 1 f
Wilh, n. 1 f
Gall, g. 1 0
Gail, g. 1 0
Trotter, g. 1 0
Turner, g. 1 0
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
g ft
Hud ton, f 1
Bona's, g 2
Lindy, g 2
Lindy, l g 1
Cook, g 1
Padden, g 1
Padden, g 1
5 3
Hexagons (12)
g f gt
10 Bobb, g 0
2 Blair, f 1
3 Thelen, c 1
4 Tyrse, g 0
5 Dialp, d 4
6 Laws, g 0
7 Laws, g 0
Official: McDougall.
THE SCORE BOARD
Big Six Basketball Games in Det tail to Feb. 19.
(For a team's scores, read down the score being opposite the opponent scored on. Winning scores are scored with a star (⚙); remaining games, →
| | T.S. KU | WKU |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| In. St. | 31 | *30* 45 *45* 55 *48* 23 |
| Kan. | 17 | *21* 32 33 34 39 23 |
| KSC | *29* 45 28 *46* 54 *54* 30 |
| Mo. | *39* *37* 29 *46* 30 32 23 |
| Neb. | *38* 48 32 27 *38* 18 30 23 |
| Okla. | 23 46 30 48 52 278 |
I. S. KU K S Mo. Nb. Ok
In the matches last week Chiomega won from Kappa AlphaTheta, 2-1; ETC. defeated IND., 1-; and Gamma Beta Belfet defeated
The junior class team will play the senior team and the freshmen will meet the sophomores Tuesday evening at 8:30.
--with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
Women's Intramurals
T. pt.s. 240 271 307 262 312 325
G. won 16 6 2 4 4 5
G. lost 2 6 1 7 3 4
R. scored 250 850 223 531 509 714
200, 500, 700, 314, 600, 114
Basketball
--with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
The following teams will play Monday afternoon: 4:30. Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Alpha Chi Omega and 5:30. Kappa Kappa vs. Alpha Chi Omega.
Advertise your wants with Daily Kansan Classified Ads.
Wildcat Swimmers Tie Kansas
Going into the final event trailing four points and with only a chance to lose or tie, the Kansas State swimming team came through in the 400-yard free-style relay to knot the count and tie Kansas. 42-42, yesterday afternoon in the Robinson gym pool.
K-State Takes Final Relay T Gain Even Break in Tank Meet
Yesterday
At the opening of the final relay Kansas had 38 points against Kansas State's 34. With the first in the relay counting 8 points, and a second 4, the Jayhawks could have clinched the meet with a first in the race, but failed to do so. Mitchell lost a little as the first man in the relay; Davidson started strong to gain, but slowed down. Roberts held about even, and Ritchie gained appreciably but could not make up the entire lead.
The States grabbed five firsts, to the Jayhawker four, with Fisher getting a first in the 220-yard free-style for Kansas, Nowsiake taking the 440-yard freestyle, and Ritchie winning both the 50-dash dash, and the 150-dash backstroke. In the 150-yard backstroke, Proctor Ritchie came in first, while his brother, D. Ritchie, nosed out the second Kansas State man for third in the same game but Pattonism did not but Pattonism of the Wildcats had a small magnitude of point to leave White of Kansas is second position.
The next meet for the Jahawkh tankmen will be wp with Washington University of St. Louis in the Robbins Pool at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon.
The summary of yesterday's mees
306 Kansas State (Eckleson, Carl,
and Ward), second, Kansas (DRitchie,
Birdson, and Davidson), Time: 3:25.9
Fisher, Kansas; Third, Fisher,
Fisher, Kansas; Second, Futrick,
Kansas; First, Ingham, Kansas
Time: 3:25.6
50-yard freestyle — Won by Proteo,
Ritchie, Kansas; second, Nowsin-
ske, Kansas; third, Brown, Kansas
State. Time: 26.1 seconds.
Diving—Won by Pattison, Kansas State; second, White, Kansas; third, Stipp, Kansas.
100-yard freestyle — Won by Brown, Kansas State; second, Mitchell, Kansas; third, Fisher, Kansas Time. 1.005.
150-yard backstroke - Won by Proctor Ritchie, Kansas; second, Erickson, Kansas State; third, D.Richken, Kansas State; 1.52: 1.62 (New Kettering pool) Best previous Kettering pool: Best previous Kettering pool: 1.57: 1.53 made in 1936.)
200-yard breast stroke—Won by Carl, Kansas State; second, Brown Kansas; third, Eppard, Kansas State Time, 2:45.
400-yard freestyle relay—Won by Kansas State (Brown, Erickson, Ingham, and Ward), second, Kansas, and Morton, and Patterson, and Ritchie). Time: 4.10.5.
Total points—Kansas, 42; Kansas State. 42.
Phone K.U. 66
REWARD: for return of turquose ring left in women's rest room in FraserBASE Thursday afternoon. Alice Neal Phone 295. -98
CLASSIFIED ADS
Tennis players at the University of Wichita are planning to begin indoor practice about March 1 in preparation for their annual tour-schedule this year, Harry Marr, tennis coach, annotates that the University of Wichita has matches scheduled with all of the Big Six teams? "Wichita will again meet Kansas here, but no return match at Wichita has been scheduled. In the past two years, Wichita tied one match with Kansas and lost to the Jayhawkers once.
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
What's Doing in Sports
At Other Schools
By Newt Hoverstock
Candid Camera-Illy Speaking
TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG
LOST: Medium-sized green laminated Parker fountain pen. Name Edward W. Rice engraved on barrel. Reward. Phone 721. -98
Director of Athletics Ray Eckmann of the University of Washington has announced that the Washington basketballakers will travel to Hawaii, leaving San Francisco, March 18. The University of Hawaii has invited the Huskies and a five-game schedule has been arranged.
The main speaker on the program was R. C. Gowdy, vice-president of A.S.C.E., who spoke on the relations between the parent society and local sections. Gowdy, who is chief engineer for the Colorado Southern Railroad company, was here this weekend to attend the annual meeting of the Kansas Engineering Society.
New Rackets, Balls Soft Balls, Bats HUTTERSHOP
Use Kansan Classified Ads.
Prof. W. C. McNew described a survey of 100 typical Kansas highway accidents. John Heidrick, e38, briefed briefly the results of the survey.
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the rage."
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New officers are: President, Keith Corbin, c38; vice-president, Frank Drake, c38; treasurer, Wilber Padden, c39; secretary, John Headrick, c38; senior representative, Art Latham, c38; junior representative, Art Latham, c38; junior representative, representatives, Clarence Hammond, c40, and Arthur Williamson, c40.
Student Section of A.S.C.E. Elects New Officers
732 1/2 Mass. Phone 2353
Phone K.U. 66
1014 Mass. St. Phone 319
It's easy to see that the Southeastern Kansas conference and Chaucer haven't forgotten the Miller family even though Ralph is now here at the University of Kansas tossing them in for the Hawkeye Frost. Back there in Chanute, young brother Dick is leading the league scoring with 12.4 points a game so far this season. The second-placer fails to draw up to Dick's average by 1.1 points with an 11.3.
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The Kansas University student section of the American Society of Civil Engineers elected officers for the spring semester at its meeting Thursday night. "Highway Safety" was the study tonic at the meeting.
The Greeley Ski Club at the Colorado State College of Education is offering free coaching lessons in skiing to all enthusiasts. They are laying out a flag course and putting a jump in it. They also want to teach them how to ski with other schools. Perhaps the Kansas Bucket Club will offer free lessons in bucketing down the hills while the snow is still on.
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IVA'S
Cunningham Lacks Only Three-Tenths of Second Of Breaking Own World Record
Glenn Wins Baxter Mile In 4:08.6
New York, Feb. 19.—(UP) —Glen Cunningham, the tireless Kanan, ran the second-fastest indoor mile in hist- torial tonight, failing by three-tenths of a second of shattering his own record.
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12
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DUNAKIN CLUB
Cunningham was clocked in 4.08.6 as he won the Baxter mile, feature event of the seventieth annual New York Athletic Club games, before a capacity pool of 16,000 in Madison Square Garden. His record of 4.08.4 was created on the same pine boards back in the winter of 1934.
Azel Jiviat of the New York Athletic Club won the event four times in a row between the years 1910 and 1913, and Lloyd Hahn of the Boston Athletic Association, won four times in the 1920's.
By winning the event for the 4th time (he took it in 1933, 1935 and last year), Glenn joined four quick incimations as a four-time winner.
6 Breakfasts, 50c
Second to Glenn and 20 yards to the rear by Gene Venzek, former University of Pennsylvania flier, who won the event in 1932 and 1936. Archie San Romani of Kansas was third, 40 yards behind Venzek, while Ray Manannah of Drake University was last in the four-man field. Venzek was clocked in 4:11.6 and San Romani in 4:17.6.
Cunningham's time was a meet record, lowering his mark of 4.09.8 set in 1935.
Earlier, Allan Tomlich of Wayne University had set a world's record of 7.2 for the 60-yard high hurdles over four barriers, breaking the former mark of 7.3 set by Forrest Towns of Georgia, who was second tonight.
On Cold Days. . .
Sip hot coffee with your friends at the
BLUE MILL
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GOLF TEAM MEETING
The Student Hangout
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!
Plans for this year's golf team will be discussed at a meeting in the K Club room in Robinson gymnasium tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. All interested in golf are invited to attend.
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Board of Trade Representative Talks to Economics Classes
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The meeting will be in the charge of Gwinn Henry, director of athletics, who has arranged a included of meet for the golf team.
SUPER-SERVICE
CARTER
Prof. H. F. Holtzclaw, of the department of economics, arranged the speaker's schedule, which included five classroom lectures and a talk for the Kiwian club Thursday noon. Mr. Henry is a former classmate of Dean F. T. Stockton of the School of Business.
Economics classes heard talks Thursday and Friday by Clarence Henry, representative of the Chicago Board of Trade. Topics were "World Trade in Grain" and "The Operation of the Board of Trade."
Win Estes Registration Fees In Finance Drive Contest
Ruth Knoche, c' 40; Irene Moll,
ed38; and Dorothy Blue, fa39, are
the three winners of the W.Y.C.A.
with the content which ended
this weekend.
Your
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Estes scholarships for registration fees will be presented as prizes to each of the winners. Members of the team which brought in the highest contributions are: Buby Towers, Daryl Foster, Fa'39; Pat Niel, c'41; Curl Sengel; Jane Roberts, c'38; and Veima Wilson, c'40.
SPRING SHOWING of Fine Suit Fabrics
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EIGHT EAST EIGHTH STREET Call498
New Records
Annie Laurie Tommy Dorsay
More Than Ever (with male quartet)
Piano Tuner Man
Heigh-Ho ... Bunny Bengan
Ob Promise Me Tommy Dorsey
Shine On Harvest Moon (swing classic)
Margie Like a Ship at Sea Jimmie Lunceford
Girl of My Dreams
Did An Angel Kiss You? ... Glen Gray
Sweet As a Song
The Trump Player's Lament ___ Louis Armstrong
Dogtown Blues
South Rampart Street Parade ... Bob Crosby
Bell's Music Store
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
PRINCE KANSAS TUESDAY FEBRUARY 22.1938
NUMBER 99
Students Hear Genius Defined
Dr. Cooke Emphasizes Vision and Initiative As Qualities Possessed By Great Men
Dr. James Francis Cook, president of Presser Foundation and editor of the musical magazine Etude, emphasized the value of personal contacts with successful men in his talk, "Encounters with Genius," yesterday morning at a special convoitation in Hoe auditorium.
The speaker then enumerated the various definitions of "genius" which have been advanced by great men of the past and present. He cited an example in the case of Beethoven, who was regarded as being "almost impossible," because of his extreme eccentricities. "Yet," admonished the speaker, "he was a great genius." Many people actually believe that eccentricities are essential to genius. Genius Uses Own Initiative
"A genius," he declared, "always possesses the powers of vision and foresight." One of the strongest characteristics of a genius is his ability to "light his own fire," or start on his own initiative. Genius is not regulated by age; it may even remain latent until late in the life of the individual, and then suddenly become active, as in the case of the man who began a brilliant but short literary career at the age of 70.
A man of jovial and pleasing personality, Dr. Cooke began his talk by recalling his first visit to the University. "The East was looking to the 'heart of America' for some residual common sense," he said, "and awareness was considered to be the great accomplishment if the University."
Versatility, though not a necessary attribute, sometimes accompanies genius. "Possibly the greatest genius who ever lived in America," continued Doctor Cooke, "was Benjamin Franklin, who had the distinguishing characteristic of 'trail-making.'"
The speaker told of a guide in Morocco with whom he had come into contact. This guide spoke seven different languages fluently, "and," Doctor Cooke declared, "was one of the greatest geniuses I've ever seen." From the time of Bismarck, this man had acted as his guide, but he could not read or write any of the languages he knew.
Doctor Cooke, when a child, met and was indelibly impressed by the great Henry Ward Beecher. As he was telling of the time when Mr. Beecher introduced to him Oliver Wendell Holmes, one of the immortals in poetry, the speaker ceased talking for several moments, then turned to Chancellor Lindley and said, "You know, you look something like Mr. Holmes yourself." Differentiated From Others
In describing John Philip Sousa, whom he knew intimately, Doctor Cook pointed out that he was different from the other members of his family in various ways. He acquired his schooling at Washington, D.C., and was added to a band leader, an ardent collector of books. He owned a library of some three thousand books which he had first read to see if they were worthy of being added to his collection. Sousa was very kind to Doctor Cook during their early acquaintance, and, strangely enough, Doctor Cook became a Doctor Cook is president of the Theodore Presser publishing company, and has served in that capacity since 1925.
Among other great men in the fields of science, literature, and are whom Doctor Cooke has met are Thomas Edison, Mark Twain, George Cohen, and Henry Ford. "In my opinion," said Doctor Cooke, "we haven't traveled beyond the mark of Mark Twain and Walt Whitman as the 'trail-makers' in the field of literature."
Victor Herbert was another of the great musicians with whom Doctor Cooke established an intimate friendship. A peculiar thing about Victor Herbert was that he always wrote his compositions while he was standing up, and he had the ability to write while conversing with the illustrator," said Doctor Cooke, "the point that genius is sometimes something over which the individual himself has no control."
Cooke Defines Genius
Finally, Doctor Cooke formulated his own definition of genius in the
Continued on page 13
Continued on page 3
W. A. White Says-vs. Oklahoma at Ames.
Feb. 28 -- Missouri vs. Oklahoma at
Columbia.
Take it Easy
Emporia Gazette:
Every year the witch-hunters break out in some legislatures, trying to round up the communists in some state universities. After which every year a lot of hard-boiled young guys who like swash-buckling around in Sam Browne belts at the state meetings get red in the face and go after the subversive professors. Then every year in the cold, gray dawn of the morning after, these red-faced young patriots in their Sam Browne belts are discovered holding the sack at the head of the ravine and nothing ever happens except a dinky little legislative eating.
The annual show this year is staged in Kansas. It will be like the shows in all other states, a lot of whoop-te-do and no evidence. Why? Because there just is no evidence. The basis of all these shows is gossip and tall tales multiplied by ten under the tongues of super-patriots.
College professors don't teach communism. In every group of students of over 300, five or six per cent of them are more or less radical and generally they blow off the steam of their radicalism in youth and grow up to wear Sam Browne belts and get red in the face later in life and go out to hunt the other witches.
The thing for the faculty of the University to do is to take it easy. Don't get excited. Walk, don't run, to the nearest exit and enjoy life in the open. In a few months the sun will shine, water will run down hill and smoke will go up the chimneys just the same.
Chamberlain's Demands Subdue Italy
Rome, Feb. 21.—(UF)- Italy, rejoicing the reservation of British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, was suddenly subdued tonight when Fascist leaders learned that Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain had made a firm appeal to his apperment may be almost as hard as those for which Eden fought.
There was general satisfaction and confidence in official centers, however, that Chamberlain had quelled furor arising from the resignation.
The ministry of propaganda ordered the papers to print everything regarding the resignation but to make no editorial comment.
Officially, the Italian government curbed the jubilation over Eden's departure from the British cabinette and made subjects might not be antagonized.
Outline Plans For Golf Season
At a meeting held yesterday to season, Glen Oatman, '37, stated that outline the plans for the spring golf he expected to have a team as good as last year's squad, which took third place in the Big Six.
Outman, player-coach and captain of last year's team, is the Missouri amateur champion and has attained national ranking as a golfer. He expects to have about twenty-five candidates out for this year's tournament. James Watson and Ray Watson are the only returning members of the 1937 team.
The Big Six schedule of matches has been completed and Oatman plans to schedule several others. He will call another meeting sometime near the middle of March to discuss further plans for the squad.
Bingham Talks Tonight On Color Photography
Mr. Bingham will explain the technique of making color photographs with a minimum amount of equipment. A number of color photographs recently taken in Colorado, and a few Campus shots in color, will be shown. Those who have seen these pictures are amazed at the beautiful effects it is possible to obtain.
Oren Zingham, University photographer, will talk on color photography at a meeting of the K.U. Campus in room 102. Journalism building.
The offices of secretary and of treasurer of the Camera Club will be filled by election. Details of the proposed Camera Club exhibition of exhibitions for the meeting and membership in the club is open to anyone interested.
Relays Committee
The student committee for the Kansas Relays will meet tomorrow at 3:30 o'clock in the "K" Club room in Robinson gymnasium, it was announced by James Gillispe, ph, senior manager. All members are urged to be present.
Carnival Promises Fun
"for a nickel" will be the theme of the W.S.G.A. carnival which will take place in Robinson evynmont Fridav night, Feb. 25.
Five Cent Fun Fest
Is Feature of W.S.G.A.
Show Friday
General admission will be 5 cents. Each dance, consisting of two full-length pieces, is to cost 5 cents per couple. The side shows featuring entertainment ranging all the way from an old-fashioned saloon to a baby show will also cost 5 cents each.
Red Blackburn's orchestra will play for the dance, which will be held on the first floor of the gymnasium. The booths will be on the second floor. In addition to the side shows sponsored by the organized houses, the W.S.G.A. will have a booth where concessions including cakes, confetti, candy, ice-cream and monkeys on strings will be sold
A prize is to be awarded to the organization having the most original booth.
WEATHER
Roberta Mitchell, fa'39, is the general chairman of the carnival. The other committee chairmen are as follows: tickets, Barbara Humbrey, c'38; W.S.G.A. booth, Joyce Vetter, fa'39, booth construction, Dorothea McCarthy, shows Rubie Brown, c'40; publicity Bette Wasson, c'38.
Jayhawkers Get By Iowa State 31-23
Kansas: Cold, mostly cloudy Tuesday, preceded by snow in central and east portions; partly cloudy and somewhat warmer Wednesday.
The carnival is sponsored by the W.S.G.A. to raise money for a scholarship fund for the women students of the University.
Martin Maloney, a former student and now an assistant English instructor, gave impetus to the contest by offering a prize of $10 to the winner. The contest demands knowledge of speech and Maloney hope to make the contest an annual affair.
Foreign language proficiency examinations for College students will be held at 9:30 a.m. daytime morning, Feb. 26. All students wishing to take this must register not later than Wednesday, Feb. 23, in the College office. 121 Frank Storm hall.
LANGUAGE EXAMS
Persons entered in the contest will speak on American politics. Just before the contest begins each person will draw three sub-topics, choosing one of the three for a six-minute discussion.
Several persons have entered the extemporaneous speaking contest that will be held Thursday, in the Little theater of Green hall.
Maloney Offers Prize For Extempore Speech
The speakers are under the supervision of Professor Buehler.
Paul B. Lawson, dean.
Kansas Remains Leader
Of Conference R a e e :
Praille Outscores Blabnik
With 9 Points to 8
Ames, Feb. 21. —(UP)—The University of Kansas, league leading cage team, chalked up another conference victory here last night over a determined Iowa State Cyclone five, 31-23.
Standing of the Teams
During the entire first half the smaller Cyclone team held the Jayhawks to either a tie or a slight
| | W | L | Pet. | O.I. Pt. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kansas | 7 | 1 | 875 | 362 |
| Oklahoma | 6 | 2 | 750 | 369 |
| Missouri | 4 | 2 | 500 | 317 |
| Missouri | 4 | 5 | 444 | 341 |
| "Kansas State" | 3 | 7 | 300 | 348 |
| Iowa State | 7 | 7 | 222 | 354 |
Saturday, Feb 26—Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln, and Iowa State vs. Oklahoma at Ames.
-Season finished.
Columbia March 3--Kansas vs. Missouri at Lawrence.
lead, but late in the second period Harp connected with three buckets to put the game on ice.
The Cyclones put a strong defensive game under the Hawkjack basket but were unable to capture scores from the taller Hawkjack five.
in the scoring duel between Pralle and Blahmik. Pralle had the edge with 9 points to 8 for Blahmik.
Kansas (31): G FT MFRP
Ebling, f 1 0 0
Reid, f 0 0 2
Flore, f 0 0 2
Corlis, f 0 2 0
Schmidt, c 2 2 1
Golay, c 2 0 0
Harp, g 4 0 0
Pugh, g 3 3 1
Arand, g 0 0 0
The box score:
Totals 7 9 5 10
Score at half: Kansas, 18; Iowa
State 14
Totals 12 7 4 11
Iowa State (23) G FT MF PF
Allan, f 1 0 0 2
Bernard, f 1 0 0 2
Monez, f 1 1 1 2
Maxon, f 0 0 1 0
Ryan, c 0 3 2 0
Blahnik, k 3 2 1 2
Bliss, g 1 3 0 2
Officials: Pat Mason, Rockhurst; M. G. Volz, Nebraska.
Speech Contest Tomorrow Night
The eighth annual junior-senior oratorical contest will be held to-morrow night at 8 o'clock in Fraser auditorium.
The judges for the contest will be John Hankins, associate professor of English, Rev. Harold Guy Barr, instructor in the School of Religion, and Don Hultz, Lawrence lawyer. The judge will be master of ceremonies.
The eight entrants will speak in the following order; Karl Rupendel, c39, Irvin Kass, c39, David Angevine, c39, John Stratton, c1uml, Paul Morite c39, C. H. Mullen, c39, C. and John Litner, c39.
Impetus has been added to the contest this year by the offering of $30 in prizes, the first prize being $15; second, $10; third, $5.
The deadline for applications for University fellowships and scholarships with all supporting testimonials is March 1. All necessary matter, be in the office of Elli Mason School, or the Graduate School, by that date.
University fellowships and scholarships are granted on a competitive basis, in 27 different departments of the University. Announcements of awards will be made on April 1.
Professor Buehler is in charge of the contests.
Those interested in graduate work in other universities may obtain information at the office of the Graduate School.
Set Deadline for Receiving Scholarship Applications
Chancellor Lindley Speaks Tonight
Independents Dance Tonight
Chancellor Lindley Speaks Tonight
Chancellor E. H. Lindley will speak on "A Curbstone View of Art" at the Museum of the Seum. This will be the second of a series of seven lectures to be given in this field.
Independent Dance Tonight Independent Hour dance to night from 7 to 8 in the Union ballroom.
SUSAN MALONEY,
President, Independents
Latest Contest Details In Sour Owl Today
Bill Grant, business manager of the Sour Owl, promises "The biggest thing of its kind in University history" in announcing the contents of the latest issue to be released today.
This copy of the Sour Owl contains details of the "Most Alluring She a and Fascinating He" contest. The winners are to be given a five-day trip via TWA during the Easter vacation.
The magazine presents pictures taken of the dancers rehearsing for the musical show "Spring Swing" to be given in March; and also it will feature photographs by University activities by candid camera shots and fascinating articles.
Will Present Two Concerts
Orchestra Directed by Baton of Karl Krueger To Play Tomorrow
The only symphony orchestra concert in the University Concert series will be given in Hoeh auditorium tomorrow night at 8:20 o'clock by the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra.
Much of the success of this orchestra is due to its conductor, Karl Krueger, who received his master of arts degree from the University in 1916. Since he has become a nationally-known musician and now ranks as one of the leading orchestral conductors.
The orchestra will present an afternoon matinee for the children although anybody may attend this lighter program.
The evening performance will begin at 8:30. The overture will be the "Overture to Cenerentola" (Giaochino Antonio Rossini). After the overture the orchestra will play the "Symphony No. 2 in D Major", Op. 43, (Jan Sibelius). The Symphony is a product of the composer's early years and was performed and produced in Helangfons the year of its创城ation.
After intermission the orchestra will play "Andante from Third Violin Sonata" and "Preludio from Sixth Violin Sonata" (Johann Sebastian Bach); prelude and finale from "Tristan and Isolde" (Richard Wagner); "Impressioni dal Vero," suite for orchestra, part one (G. Francisco Malpiiero); Siegfried's "Rhine Journey" from "Gotterdammerung" (Richard Wagner); and the final number, "Bachanale and Finale," from the Tannhauser" overture (Wagner).
Tickets are on sale at the fine arts office, the Bell Music company, and the Round Corner store. Tickets will be admitted upon presentation of activity cards.
Dramatic Club Picks Cast For 'Taming of the Shrew
A special meeting of the Dramatic Club has been called by Rolla Nuckles, instructor of speech and art, for a three-hour afternoon at 4:30 in Green ball.
The purpose of this meeting is to pick the east for a modern version of 'Taming of the Shrew', which will fill this special feature some time in May.
Tom Geraughay, e39, president of the University of Kansas Society of Architecture, announced yesterday that an elaborate exhibit for the annual spring engineering exposition is being planned by the society.
Society Plans Exhibit For Engineering Exposition
Plans for the exhibit will be unde-
the supervision of Geraghty, Foster
Parriott, e'38; Jm Bounds, e'39; and
Ira Sutton, e'39.
Austria Bans
Nazi 'Heils'
Vienna, Feb. 21.(UP) -Chancel lurk Kurt Schuchsnig took stern measures tonight to show that he still is a power in Austria, as Nazis fought in the streets and anti-Jewish groups out into other parts of the country.
It was understood that Schuchnigg, after banning all political demonstrations but his own for a period of four weeks, issued orders for officials drastically to restrict Nazl demonstrations.
The instructions, issued after Naziis and the anti-Nazi "Fatherland" groups organized a gigantic demonstration against each other, banned all Jews from the houses, use of the words "Heil Hitler," and the wearing of the Nazi colors.
'Red' Satirists Meet City Police Rebuke
Trio Apprehended for Humorous Demonstration When Red Flags and Insignia Were Displayed on Auto; Governing Organization Heads Offer Advice Against Ridicule
Three students, attempting to ridicule the proposal of the state legislature to investigate alleged communistic activities at the University, yesterday evening were taken to the police station for a lecture, and then released.
The men were flying on their car red flags on which they had painted the insignia of the Russian communist party. Flying the flag of another country without the presence of the American
Big Orchestra In Vespers
Jayhawkers will be available to morrow at the W.S.G.A. book exchange between 1:30 and 5 o'clock. The issue is devoted mainly to professional and honour fraternities, with the university's beauty contest are announced.
Articles are on the basketball season and on social highlights. Special photography features include "Snow on the Campus" and Art Wolf monthly "Glamour Girl!" Art Wolf time is Maxine Miller, BPI Phi Beta.
Fine Arts School Gives All-Musical Program in Auditorium Sunday
The largest orchestra in the history of the School of Fine Arts appeared Sunday afternoon in the closing number of the 57th All-Musical Vespers at Hoch auditorium Over 50 players of the University Symphony Orchestra, under Kari Krasner and Jennifer Easter" (Hrisky-skara-kosof).
The University Women's Glee Club of 50 voices, directed by Miss Irene Peabody, sang three numbers: "Thus Then, the Law of the Spirit" ("Must We Go"), "Sing (Mone de dosmisson)" ("Swing Low, Swing Catherine") (H. T. Burleigh).
Prof. Frank Cunkle opened the program with an organ selection, "Chorale Prelude" (Walter Mou-tter) by Mr. Mourant to Mr. Kuckle.
The University String Trio consisting of Rush Orcutt,琴inist; Karl Kuesteiner, violinist; and Raymond Stubl, cellist, played the andante con moto movement from "Trio op. 87" (Brahms).
The University String Quartet composed of Waldemar Gelfch, first violinist; Conrad McGrew, second violinist; Klaur Kuesterrein, violinist; Raymond Stuhl, first cellist, was assisted by Rita Gursalss, fa'ulc, in playing the opening movement of "Quintet in C major" (Schubert).
Of particular interest was the andante and variations for two pianos from Schumann with a background of two cellos and one horn. At the piano, Ruth Orcutt and Allie Merle Conger were supported by Saral McGee and Arthur Folder, c38, cellists and Stuart Mill, c38, French horn.
The final All-Musical Vesper of the season occurs on March 20.
Hospital Notes
Miss Grace Scott, dispensary nurse, has returned to her home in Manhattan because of illness. She first had a severe sore throat and developed an eye infection. She is expected to return in about a month.
Ernest Eberth, c'41, was released from the hospital Sunday following four weeks of rheumatic fever. He was also admitted and returned to his home at Baehser.
F. Quentin Brown, 'T38, was released from the hospital Sunday. He had suffered a severe attack of appendicitis, but was not operated on
Rosemary Sebesta, c'40, underwent a tonillectomy Saturday morning. She is still confined to the hospital.
Newman Club Meeting
B111 Kunkle, c'41, suffered a sprained ankle in a bobsled accident Sunday night.
Newman Club Meeting
The Newman Club will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the Parish hall.
signed:
The number of patients in Watkins Memorial hospital dropped from 23 to 16 over the weekend.
Joe Gover, vice-president.
flag above it is in violation of the laws of the United States, according to Jude Anderson, chief of police.
Police removed the flags and warned the students. The students were not arrested.
In an attempt to halt further Campus plans for ridiculing action of the house of representatives, student
The men, Charles Herold,
b'38, Phillip Nohe, c'39, and
Willard Winters, b'38, were starting
to carry out plans made yesterday
by organized houses to satirize the
leisure of the leilature.
LIVEWORK
Joint Committee of Students'
Committee will meet
today at 5 p.m. in the Fine room.
Signed: J. HOWARD RUSCO
DORIS STOCKWELL
DON VOOREHEES.
Voorhees Disapproves Joking
leaders joined last night in statements asking students to refrain from such activity.
"This apparently is a time when even our most innocent humor can become a boomerang," said Don Voorhees, c³8, president of the Men's Student Council. "Since our own interests are at stake, I know the men students will feel I am above reproach that they cannot possibly be misinterpreted by the people or press of the state."
Katherine Hurd, f38, president of the women's panhellenic council, last called sororities at the request of Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women, and asked them to cancel any plans for satire campaigns.
Meanwhile, activity in Topeka was suspended temporarily following passage Saturday by the house of the Muir-Carper resolution. With the legislature recessed today for the celebration of Washington's birthday, the senate is expected to act tomorrow on the resolution.
Four measures preceded the resolution on yesterday's program in the senate. Legislative leaders, however, believed the proposal would find little opposition in the upper house.
Brown Sends Letter
Protesting statements made on the floor of the house which have been widely interpreted as directed at the University class in abnormal psychology, J. F. Brown, associate professor of psychology, yesterday sent a letter to Representatives Muir and Carper, signed by himself and members of the class. Professor Brown said that a "certain abnormal psychology professor" had lectured for three hours on "free love." Members of the class signed the letter in the Brown's behalf.
No further action had been taken last night by the joint student committee, which is considering the situation. This committee is composed of 12 members who were appointed at the meeting Sunday called by the Y.M.C.A. and the American Student Union (which, though, was attended by a generally representative group of students) and 13 members representing other Campus organizations.
Committee Drops Lobby Plan
This committee met Sundav night in the Journalism building and decided to pursue no policy of protest or lobbying at the state legislature. A proposed motorcade of students to Topeka, which had been suggested at the Sunday afternoon meeting, was not considered by the joint committee. Paul Moritz, c380, chairman of the joint group, and Mary Robb, c38, was elected secretary-treasurer.
The Student Emergency Committee, the 12 chosen at the Sunday afternoon assembly, last night had received no reply from a telegraph sent Sunday to Representatives Muir and Carper, inviting them to present their charges against the continual unpaid.
Continued on/page 3
---
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1929
≈
Comment
Topeka Sees Witches
Editor's note: Rudy Rumman, editor of the Journal- Post and probably writer of this editorial, was an editor of the Kansan nearly twenty years ago. Kansas City. Journal Post.
Kansas City Journal-Post:
A number of years ago a student at the University of Kansas wrote for the campus daily an editorial suggesting a presidential pardon for Eugene V. Debs, who was in Atlanta prison for obstructing prosecution of the war. The editorial stirred up a storm. There was talk of seditious influences at the University. The controversy was at its height when that well-known Marxist Comrade Warren G. Harding, released Debs from Atlanta. The inquisitors sheepishly folded their tents. The author of the editorial probably voted for London in 1936.
The Kansas legislature should guard against the possibility of making itself similarly ridiculous through the house proposal to appropriate $7,500 to finance a red hunt at the University. A sponsor of the proposal is probably correct when he says the campus reds could be cured with a dose of castor oil. He is inconsistent, however, in contending that $7,500 is necessary to finance the administration of this simple therapy.
With such a sum at its disposal, a red-hunting committee could magnify a rooming house argument into a Bokshiest congress and could detect in "I'm a Jayhawk" the pernicious hidden strain of the "Internationalale." Parents and taxpayers would be alarmed beyond justification and the University would acquire a notoriety entirely inconsistent with its long and splendid record of training young men and women for citizenship. Intolerance and unjustified suspicion are the usual fruits of legislative hunts, which have little to show on the other side of the balance sheet.
Before the appropriation is authorized finally, the legislature should have before it substantial evidence of conditions which are beyond correction by the Board of Regents and the University administration. Otherwise, the money could be better used in the student loan fund to aid deserving and needy students to complete their education.
The University has set up equipment for giving the Wassermann test and after a baret two months of service, it is reported to have paid for itself many times in human value. For a sum ranging between $7,000 and $8,000 equipment could be installed in all our state institutions, it is reported.
Kansas City Times:
'Subversive Activities'
In connection with the proposed legislative investigation of "subversive activities" in the state of Kansas—and particularly at the state University—certain considerations are pertinent. Wherever 4,000 or 5,000 young people are gathered in any institution, there are bound to be some with radical views. Such views carry a certain appeal. Experience shows that most young radicals grow out of them under the pressure of living.
Such groups are found in most institutions. Usually they make little impression on their fellow students who are apt to regard them with disdain. But it always is a problem with faculties how to deal with their young leftist friends.
There are, we believe, certain constitutional provisions about freedom of speech. A man isn't held to be a criminal because he is against the profit—and loss—system, for instance, although most of us don't see how our present standard of living, imperfect as it is, could exist without it. Aside from this aspect of the case however, there is the practical question of how to handle the matter most effectively.
If university authorities get hardboiled and resort to repressive measures they are apt to advertise the situation, create a martyr complex and make matters worse. Proverbially the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church, and many youngsters who ordinarily would pay no attention to a leftist movement might be incited to go in as a delightful challenge to authority. A reasonable and tolerant attitude on the part of the rulers of the university kingdom usually gets the best results.
cause of the advertising it would give them. Whether it would accomplish anything else is doubtful.
The University is in need of a laboratory for the study of photography and picture development. However, such installation with the added expense of an instructor for a year would cost about 7,500, it has been said.
The Legislature's "Red" Scare
At the University of Kansas the inquiry begin by the regents over the unhappy case of Don Henry is still uncompleted. Henry was the student who was killed fighting for the loyalist cause in Spain. He was one of several hundred young enthusiasts who embarrassed the state department by evading the neutrality laws. So far nothing unusual has been brought out in the investigation. There was a small group of radicals with whom he was meeting—a group to which apparently little attention was paid by the student body. How a faculty could prevent students from getting together to discuss questions—even if the faculty wanted to do so—is not apparent.
Kansas City Kansan;
Since so much smoke is being stirred up by demands for a legislative investigation of the "red" at K. U. and other places in the state, perhaps it may be well to the investigation and let facts take the place of rampant charges that are being voiced in the legislative chambers.
The charges are being aimed mainly at the University of Kansas, and in view of the fact they are making exceedingly bad publicity for the school there should be, in fairness, an opportunity for the school officials and students to place themselves on record in reply.
There is no call, however, for a "pogrom" or an "auto da fe" or otherwise an emotional field day which might result in the persecution of individuals and unwarranted interference with proper investigation of the various ideas of government and social organization.
The legislative investigation, if there is to be one, should be a dispassionate fact-finding undertaking. If the facts point to the conclusion, as we believe they will, that the pending "red scare" is much overdrawn, then that is the conclusion that should be presented to the public. In other words, the conclusion should not be drawn in advance, with the investigation directed only toward the end of getting testimony to support it.
Of course a legislative investigation of communism in Kansas, where communism is hardly heard of, would delight the Communists be-
'Ism' Meets 'Ism' in Drama Bv Washburn College Student
Editor, University Daily Kansan Lawrence. Kansas
Washburn Campus February 20,1938
Dear Sir:
You will find enclosed a little skit which might or might not prove of interest to you. If you have followed the instructions carefully who have urged the current "red" skits, you should clearly I submit this to you because our Washburn paper is only weekly — therefore any timeliness which this skit provides by the date of the owner's publication.
I have written some eight or nine personal letters with regard to this school, and one of them leading one to Governor Huxman. I am not conceived enough to believe that such action will be very effective, but the teacher who gives it this gives college students an opportunity to summon what capacities he needs for or what rightfully belongs to them.
COMRADESHIP IN DANGER
(A play in one act by B. V. Munger
28 Washburn College)
Cordially yours,
R V Munger
Scene: Floor of the newly established Lower House in the United States of Russia.
Time: The present.
(The curtain runs upon a smokefilled room. The members of the legislature are talking excitedly about something which seems to have moved their depths. The Speaker hates and raped for order and Repentance but Kirkpatrick tries to receive recognition.)
Rep. Berkowksy: "Mr. Speaker and Comrades!" I would bring you some facts which shall shock you greatly, **great** with you to listen to these tales of young revolutionists that come from the University of Leningrad! I have here (waves some papers through the air while talking) sworn statements which lead me to believe that there are at present sixy University students actively engaged in spreading propaganda about the value of some of the features of government in the United
States of America. Must not be such. But action must be stopped if the cause of good citizenship and Community is to be furthered. (Aplause) Thank you. I would not have you ignorant of the fact that in the membership of some of our campus clubs there are young radicals who would turn us from the true paths of Communism. They are seeking to lead us into social changes. The money far such activities as these is coming directly from John Bull and Uclee Sam. (Great booing). This we must not tolerate. This we must bring to an end.
Representative Lvofsky: Mr.
Speaker: Will the gentleman speak?
Representative Berkowsky: I yield to my comrade.
Rep. Lvofsky: I hear not only of these student activities of which my comrade has spoken, but also of professors in our institutions of higher learning. Some of these professors have been seen and heard in public and private forums where the advantages of the Democracy are painting point to the action is almost beyond belief, but I swear that it is true.
Rep. Berk: Conrades, it is my plan that we appoint a committee that will force these students to give evidence against their fellows. If this committee is appointed some teachers will be forced out—others will change their ways. This is only as it should be. Conrades, this is not the answer. The drive for Democracy but also against the forces of Fascism which are the direct outgrowth of Democracy. (More and greater applause.)
Gentlemen: I imply you to grant the authorization of this committee. For if this body goes on record as opposed to such student and professor activities, these young rebels will protect their foolishness. They will be
seared to death. By force we shall rid this land of such subversive influences. By force and intimidation we will free ourselves from free and glorious and this great system that makes of all men comrades shall not perish from this earth!!
FINIS
(Deafening applause which continues until the curtain falls.)
Prizes of ice cream, cakes and pies,
were awarded to the winners in
Oklahoma A. and M.'s annual co-ead
amateur dairy judging contest.
University Daily Kansan
DAVID E. PARTRIDGI
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER.
MEMBER
KANSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-IN-CHEFT ...TOM A. ELLIS
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MARTIN BENTSON AND
DREW W. JAMESMAN
W. WAGNER
FEATURE EDITOR
KLENNY LUWY
MANAGING EDITOR
MARVIN GOBEL
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER, GIOA CLAMEN
NEWS EDITOR
BILL Fitzgerald
DOWNSTREAM
SHOES EDITOR
TILOR WORCESTER
MAKEUP EDITORS
MARY JONN AND
Associated Collegiate Press
TWRITT EDITOR DICK MARTIN
LEGACY EDITOR HARRY HILL
UNDAY FILM JANE FLOOD
1938
Distributor of Collegiate Digest
Member
COLLEGE Publishers Reference,
420 CHICAGO BOSTON BAN FRANCISCO
CHICAGO BOSTON BAN FRANCISCO
Entered as second class master, Sept. 17,
1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
BUSINESS MANAGER, F. QUINTENN BROWN REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc.
M
DRESS FOR DINNER
AT 8 AM!
Putt on an ARROW Hitt at 8 A.M. and at dinner you'll still dress dressed-to-perfection!
For the non-wilt collar of
the Hitt looks starched
and stays near 18 hours a
day. It's starchless, yet
doesn't wrinkle!
The Hit is Mitoga cut to fit better . . . Sanforized Shrunk.
ARROW HITT $2.
OBERS
ARROW SHIRTS
Campus Opinion
ARROW SHIRTS
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kanne. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited.
Correction for the Editor
Correction for the Editor
Editor: Daily Kansas:
Editor. Daily Kansan:
I saw in a news article in the Kanan last week a reference to that live little journal of opinion, the Dove, as a Campus "radical" paper. I have been associated with the Dove for several years and it has always been known as a "liberal" journal of opinion and philosophy, writing with anything radical (well, not right now, anyway).
Yourrs plenty mad. John W. Pineau
Editor's note: The term "radical" had not the "red"
corrected in last test that it has this week. May we
apologize?
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 1 p.m., preceding
regular publication days at 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m.
Vol. 35 Tuesday, February 22.1938 No. 99
A. I.Ch.E.: The American Institute of Chemical Engineers will meet at 8:15 Wednesday evening in the Chemistry building. Mr. George D. Walters, vice-chairman, Lawrence National Bank, will speak. F. L. Ballard.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular meeting will be held this afternoon in room C. Myers hall. All students and faculty members invited are invited to attend - Jack Daly, President.
DIRECTORY CHANGES: Staff members who wish to have changes in addresses or telephone numbers listed in the directory supplement should report such information to the office at once.-Raymond Nichols, Executive Secretary.
DOVE. The Dove staff will meet at 8 o'clock each
contributor please bring articles; Mary K. Bobb.
KU. CAMERA CLUB. Color pictures will be held in the Education Building, 202 Journalism building. Mr. Bingham will tell how it is possible for anyone with a camera to take pictures in color. Everyone is welcome—L. A. Pastina.
EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING? The faculty education meeting will use C358 this afternoon in 14th Fraser.
GERMAN LANGUAGE TABLE. All those who wish to speak German are invited to the german Table, which meets in the lounge of the Union building other than to speak German—W. B. Schaffrath.
OFFICIAL STUDENT CORRESPONDENTS’ BU-REAU. All correspondents are urged to make every effort to ensure that the Journal building, day, Feb 24, in room 104 of the Journal building at 4:30 p.m. Professor Olin Templm will speak on “Finnish Language” for students.
LE CERCLE FRANCAISE: Le Cercule Francei will meet Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 in 113 Frank强壮 hall. The program will be on chatsuits of France. We will all be interested to come—Helen Cooper, Secretary.
TAU SIGMA: There will be no regular meeting tonight on account of the rehearsal for the symposium. All women planning to attend the symposium at Man-
please inform Elizabeth Dunkel -Catherine Dunkel
W.S.G.A: There will be a regular meeting of WS-G.
A clock this evening in the Pine Room—Bette
Wasson, Sewell.
Y. M.C.A. FRESHMAN COUNCIL. The Y.M.C.A. freshman Council will meet at a 9 o'clock meeting on Wednesday to speak on "The Uses of Propaganda." Election of officers for this semester will also be held. All members are asked to attend.
POLYMERIC
ADVERTISEMENTS Make Neighbors of a Nation
The Yankee clipper-ships are sailing phantom seas. The western two-gun man has retired to the movies, and the southern plantation has been subdivided. The old sectional distinctions have passed into tradition.
Where there was North, South and West, there is now one people. Those old barriers of distance and prejudice have been worn down by many uniting forces: Railroads, radio, automobiles, telephones, newspapers, magazines, Advertising.
These are the things that have united America into a nation of neighbors. You have the same automobile as the chap a half-dozen states away. You both eat the same advertised foods, smoke the same tobaccos, enjoy concerts from the air with the same radio sets. You have a lot of things in common.
Advertisements give you and your neighbors in all the forty-eight states the same chance to know and obtain new things as soon as they are ready. Through advertisements, you learn of a thousand devices that save you labor, increase your comfort, and help you enjoy life generally. They give you a broad panoramic view of this modern age we live in.
Read the advertisements----your neighbors are reading them too.
50
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1938
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill
an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m. call KU, 213 for 2, cell 7203-823
o
--with its winter formal Saturday night at the Hotel Eldridge. Louis Kuhn and his orchestra played.
The chaperons were:
Mrs. J. H. Riley
Mrs. J. MacLanan
Mrs. James A. Hooke
Mrs. William Hurtig
The guests were:
Lucille Borton, c'38
Lucille Burton, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Lou Bordre, f'39
Elizabeth Short, c'40
Athlia Am Woodbury, c'39
Halifax Burden, c'11
Peggy Porter, c'unel
Margaret Holford, Topeka
Helen Jane Edwards, c'38
Helen Jane Winni, c'38
Marjorie Crume, c'39
Ruberta Mitchell, f'44
Virginia Runnel, Kansas City, Mo.
Marjorie Runnel, Kansas City, Kansas City
Marcia Norris, c40
Jeannette Dunn
Betty Barney, c19
Virginia Browley, c39
Anneid Roose, b39
Isabelle Bash
Betty Smith, c14
Hilary Dear, b39
Alice Marie Meyn, f40
Betty Wyatt, c41
Harriet Smith, c19
Judy Fried, c1p
Janet Wilkinson, c41
Betty Van Deventer, c41
Dorothy Newell, c41
Helford Hewitt
Martha Browning, c4un
Louise Taylor, c4un
Donna Hughes, fa41
Helen Forrest
Jolien Stevens, c4un
Jullette Trenthy, c41
Virginia Lee Williams, c41
Doris Wood, c10
Bettie McKay, c10
Bernice Jenkins, c41
Bernadine Hall, c41
Meredith Dyer, f41
Mickey Wood, c10
Bernice Jenkins, c41
Bernadine Hall, c41
Meredith Dyer, f41
Mickey Wood, c10
Bernice Jenkins, c41
Annette Lawrence, ed'unl
Mary Smith, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Jane Roby, Kansas City, Mo.
Mary Jane Roby, Kansas City, Mo.
Farrel Strawn, Kansas City, Mo.
Mark Dubach, Omaha
Mark Dubach, Omaha
Carol Lester, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gruppy, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Hago Gruppy, Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Phipps, Kansas City
Mr. and Mrs. Park McDonald, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Newcomber, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Parker, Kansas City
Mr. and Mrs, Paul Parker, Kansas Ci Mo.
City, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Newcomber, Kansas
City, Mo.
Jim Campbell, Kansas City, Mo.
Ralph Wells, Kansas City, Mo.
Weekend guests at the Chi Omega
unity home here.
Sunday guests at the Alpha Omi
Eleanor Troup, 16, Kansas City, Kan.
Halion Clipinger, Kansas City, Mo.
Jennifer Feegrand, El Dorado
Mrs. R. M. B. Ehy, Barrisville, Okla.
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater-
2
Mr. Charles H. Klusman, Topeka
Winteria Frost, Topeka
Lloyd Rourk, Topeka Cany,
Orydium Lake, Topeka
Jewell Potts, 67, Halstead
Rachel Sheelal, 37, Johnson
Mr. Eileen W. Slater, 38,
Mr. Thomas Thompson, Topeka
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity entertained the following guests at the weekly buffet supper last week.嘉宾
Jane Blaney, c'40
Virginia Shields, f'40
Ellen Coleman, c'40
Elva Chouston, c'40
Bettie Blake, c'40
Denise Lemona, c'39
Helen Jane Edwards, c'38
Elizabeth Hannah, c'39
Mary Hill DeMotte, c'39
Barbara Bonham, c'40
Francene Zentnery, c'40
Horstine Horton, c'41
Fred Black, Lawrence
Delta Chi entertained with a "Barnyard" party Saturday night at the chapter house. Chuck Dorn and his orchestra furnished the music for the
The chaperons were:
Mrs. L. C. Harris
Mrs. Eva Okes
Bernard Frazier
Following is the list of guests:
Elizabeth Kemp, c'40
Helen Tibbets, fa'38
Jeannette Hardy, c'unel
Louie Higgins, ph
Lorraine Pyle, b'59
Neale Neane, c'41
Juan Robertson, c'41
Margaret Ramage, c'38
Alice Ann Jones, c'41
Ivain Icelin, c'41
Juan Bowell, c'41
Virginia Varga, fa'39
Hilda Slentz, fa'40
Marlene Marriott, c'49
D'Johne Shull, ed'41
Jean Mantele, fa'unl
Ruth Link, c'41
Marthon Miller, fa'40
Boodlington, c'40
Gwendre Gronzd, c'uncl
Dorethly Noble, c'41
Shirley Jean Smith, c'40
Sarah Margaret Glenn, c'38
Ann Reynolds, c'41
ean Wellman, Topeka
Jani Wellman, Topeka
Kimberly Clark, KC '19
June Schlegel, MN
Peggy Dodd, c'uncl
Virginia Martin, c'18
Joy Summonm, c'18
William Walker,
Betty Wilkinson, c'18
Mary Theys, c'19
Mary Tayne, c'19
Margaret Marshall, b'uncl
Elanor Troop, 36, Kansas City, Mo.
Marian Feiler, Kansas City, Mo.
Elizabah Klautz, Kansas City, Mo.
Virginia Monahan, Manhattan
Helen Clipping, Kansas City, Mo.
Gladys Voe, Kansas City, Kan.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Crawford, Kansas City, Mo.
City, Mo.
Mo. and Mr. Charles Lawrence, William
Mr. and Mrs. Dave McKeever, Lawrence
Benny Hart, Kansas City, Mo.
Sunny Pyle, Havland
George Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.
Bill Witton, Kansas City, Mo.
Edward Vaughn, Kansas City, Mo.
Francis Longan, Kansas City, Mo.
Bud Muller, Kansas City, Mo.
Elizabeth Cade, c40
Dylan Davis, Kansas City, Mo.
Bob Closing, Coffeyville
20
Sunday dinner guests at the Tri
angle house were:
Barchara Bucheim, c'40
Barbara Allen, f'aucl
Derrard J. Dermond, c'19
Grace Player, c'19
The Music Club will meet at Wie-
manr
Club club will meet at Wiedemann's Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Preceding a program of Rachmannioff numbers, Mrs. Paul Rankin will review "Rachmannioff collections," by Oskar von Rieseheim.
The hostess will be:
Mrs. Henry Weaver
Mrs. Browning
Mrs. Duk William
Mrs. Jill Bacon
Mrs. G. W. Stratton
guests were:
Mrs. Jane MacLean entertained the hilltop Bridge Club and a table 4 guests at luncheon yesterday at the Pi Beta Phi house. Additional
Sunday dinner guests at the Delta
Mrs. Ed Charles
Mrs. Ed J. Ogden
Mrs. Ralph Baldwin
Mrs. C. H. Lands
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reitz, Kansas City.
cni host included:
Virginia Lee Williams, c41
Margaret Parker, c41
Tama Tumala, Tama
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Retiz, Kansas Cs
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Crawford, Kansas City, Ms.
Alpha Chi Omoga entertained the
Mr. and Mrs. Charles William, Lawen Bud Muller, Kansas City, Mo.
Jim Cram, Manhattan
Hilbright Klazer, Kansas City, Mo.
Irvine Morgan, Kansas City, Mo.
Virginia Eleanor, Manahattan
Evelyn Suberg, Hastings, Neb.
Willi Dallay, Kansas City, Mo.
George Thompson, Kansas City, Mo.
Melissa Foster, Kansas City, Mo.
Edward Vaughn, Kansas City, Mo.
Elanor Troup, Kansas City, Mo.
wings going over the fence
Thelma Wempel, Kansas City, Kan,
Lucille Swanson, Kansas City, Kan,
Virginia Mahan, Manhattan
∞
The department of botany entrained Professor Stevens at Evan's Heath last night. Prof. A. J. M and Mrs. Mixed acted as hosts and about a dozen other guests were present.
Jewell Potts, '36, Halstead, was a weekend guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house.
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Kell, Lawrence and Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Bretschneider, Horton, were dinner guests Sunday of the Sigma Chia fraternity.
Miller hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock.
∞
.
Rachel Shetlar, 37, who spent the past week visiting at the Alpha Omicron Pi house, has returned to her home in Johnson.
∞
Virginia Gray, c'41, was initiated into the Chi Omega sorority last Saturday.
Bud Dresser, Leavenworth, and Don Schultz, Lawrence, were weekend guests at the Acacia house.
Ricker hall will hold open house this evening from 7 until 8 o'clock.
~
The Saturday Night Club met with Raymond Nichols Saturday evening. Following dinner, the host read a paper on the effects of club wager. Richard Wagstaff, Fred Ellsworth, Henry Werner and William Nichols.
The first meeting of the American Association of University Women
group for the study of toys and pla-
material will be held tomorrow even-
ing at 7 o'clock at the home of Mrs.
T. D. Jones. The meeting will close
in time for the concert by the Kansas
City Philharmonic Orchestra. Mem-
bers of the League of Women Voters
are invited to attend.
∞
The K. U. Dames will hold initiation tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the women's lounges of Frank Strong hall. The hostesses will be John Hanson, Mrs. Charles Dotts, Mrs. Thomas Robb, and Mrs. Keith Bentz.
Mrs. Waldemar Geltch entertained with a bridge luncheon Saturday in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building, guests being present for eight tables of cards. Miss Irène Beaudy assisted the hosts.
Prizes were won by Mrs. Ben. Nash, Mrs. Faye Oreilup, and Mrs Robert Haggart.
Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of John Milton Sullivant ed'40.
Marie Stevens, 37. Nortonville and Kay Foster, Leavenworth, were dinner guests at the Chi Omega house last night.
~
∞
Dr. Lee Travess of Iowa City, Iowa,
dr. of the speech clinic at the University
of Iowa, was the guest of Dr.
Raymond Wheeler for the weekend.
The K. U. Dames bridge group will meet this afternoon at 2 o'clock at the M. L. Sherman apartment, 1237 The Ohio State University. Thomas Ashley acting as hostess.
。
William T. Paullin, instructor in the department of history, was a Sunday dinner guest of the Delta TauDelta fraternity.
Prof. Domenicus Gagliario entertained the Old and New Club at dinner last Saturday evening at Evan's Hearth, after which members went on a tour of the campus to paper on "The Wagner Law Act." Prof. F. B. Jensen was a guest.
.
'Red' Satirists--
University to an open forum of students here within the next two weeks.
Russo was elected chairman of the group in a meeting held immediately after the adjournment of the general discussion assembly.
Kappa Alpha Theta Elects Heinlein as New President
Kappa Alpha Theta elected the following officers at a regular chapter meeting last night: president, Catherine Heinlein, b39; vice-president, Betty Cole, c1unc; treasurer, Eleanor Murray, c39; corresponding secretary, Mary Jane Shockley, c1unc; recording secretary, D Dorothy Werner, c39; house manager, Julia Eidson, f40; social chairman, Jean Eichenberger, fa39; archivist, Nancy Borsen, fa40; historian, Sue Stacey, c41;chairman, Marsha Marsalys, Alice Neal, c39; and Helen Forbes, c40; chaplain, Joyce Yetter, fa39; song leader, Charlene Barber, fa39; committee chairmen: captain, Merideth Dyer, fa39; intramurals, Ruth Olive Brown, c40; activities, Sue Henderson, c40.
Members of the Student Emergency Committee are: Ejibah Cole, c40; Roscoe Born, c41; John Poirre Jr., c42; David August, c43; Marvin Goebel, c49; Wilbur Leonard, c39; J. Howard Russo, c38; Martin Bentson, c48; Ellert Carter, c38; Mary Robb, c48; Norton Knight, gr; and William Schmeling, c3. Russo was elected chairman of
V
Students Hear-following words: "A genius is one who does work which is to the greatest advantage to the greatest number of people and lasts over the longest period of time." In conclusion, Doctor Cook declared that one of the few things that can never be replaced in a particular field is a true genius, and that if one is lost, humanity must be content to wait for another meter in the sky." The program opened with a selection by the University band, after which Chancellor E. H. Lindley introduced Doctor Cook to the audience. After the session, theChancellor Lindley made mention of the fact that Doctor Cook has written several books on the history of music, and is a member of the "Legion of Honor," the members of which are chosen in recognition of their distinguished service in music.
~
Continued from page 1
Baylor University celebrated its 63rd anniversary in a Founder's Day program February 1. A special edition of the student newspaper, *The Courier*, published a return of famous alumni for speeches on chapel programs featured the
education of a new building, and return of famous alumni for speeches on chapel programs featured the day's celebration.
Continued from page 1
associate professor of Latin and Greek, will give a brief informal talk on "Our Knowledge of Greek Civilization" this afternoon at 3:30 in Spooner-Thayer museum. The talk is one of a series being given in connection with exhibits, and is being sponsored jointly by the department of English and classical language.
Grant Speaks On Greek Culture
Miss Mary Grant, associate pro-
New on exhibition are reproductions of a cup and several dress ornaments of gold found when Troy was excavated in the 1870s. Until the discovery of gold and silver ornaments and e cups l a s t century, scholaries were mystified as to why Honor constantly referred to the
Two old printed books of the "Odyssey" are also being shown. One is nearly 400 years old. Both have, rather than English translations, translations of the Greek into Latin. The paper for these books was made by hand, as was all the other work.
Reproductions of the earliest complete copy of Homer, made in the tenth century, show comments more than 1500 years old. Reproductions of papyrus, though not nearly complete, are much older. The papyrus is rather thick and textured, rather than for the manuscript which appears on the back.
At the close of the World War, when the Italian government needed money, the English department of the University was able to purchase a small stone head; on which remains some of the original decorative paint, which is approximately 1500 years old.
Spring Dance' Sets Year's Record
According to a statement made by Toun, in the future, if all four nights are sell-outs, the play will be presented a fifth time. However, owing to the expense and time involved, it will not be shown the fifth time if the theater isn't filled for the first performance.
The play, "Spring Dance," presented last week, had the largest attendance of any production this year, 2600, according to Gerhart Toom, ticket manager. The Play was presented before a full house each of the last three nights, and some were unable to secure tickets.
Tomm expressed the hope that in the future students would secure tickets as soon as possible, in order to avoid the last-minute rush. At the first performance of "Spring Dance" several seats were not taken, and Tomm hopes that the first performance of the forthcoming production, "Winterset," will play to a full house.
This afternoon at 5:30, the Snow Zoology Club will hold a supper for members, followed at 6:30 by a lecture open to the public in 101 Snow Dr. Dr. F. B. Dains, professor of chemistry, will give an illustrated talk on "The History of Urinalysis Prior to 1750."
Zoology Club Holds Supper
Phone K.U. 66
TENNIS·RACKETS
RESTRUNG
EARN EXTRA MONEY -- Student agents wanted to represent Old Hickory made-to-order fraternity paddles, plaques, dance souvenirs, and fun activities for the students of Old Hickory Paddle Co., Indianapolis, Ind.
LOST: Camera, Kolak resin 3.5, German
make, marked in meters; Lost in library
Saturday at 9:00 am; p.m. lockup. Reward.
Return to John Dibble, Fresher 302. -12
THE ARGUS
$12.50
New Rackets, Balls Soft, Balls, Bats
Permanents and End Curls
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with on f4.5 uses motion picture film
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See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
Candid Camera-Ily Speaking
"Candid Cameraging . . . It's the rage."
Prizes Offered for Essays On Subject of Advertising
CLASSIFIED ADS
HIXON STUDIO
Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
Advertising Age, the nationa newspaper of advertising, offers $200 in prizes to college and university students for essays on the subject, "How Advertising Benefits the Consumer."
First prize is $250 in cash, plus an all-expense trip to the thirty-fourth annual convention of the Advertising Federation of America in Detroit. June 12-15, where the award will be presented. Prizes are $100, and $30, $50. Ten honorable mentions with a cash award of $10 each will be given.
Essays must not exceed 1,000 words. The contest is open to all undergraduate students enrolled in high school, colleges, and universities in the United States and Canada during the period from Feb. 1 to March 28. The final state of the submission is midnight, April 17.
Further information may be obtained by writing to Contest Secretary, Advertising Age, 100 E. Ohio street, Chicago.
Turner High Debate Squad Wins District Tournament
The Turner High School debate team emerged victorious in the class "C" debate tournament, held in Fraser theater Saturday afternoon. All teams entered were from the first district.
The results were as follows: First, Turner, with 6 decisions; second, Fairview, 4 decisions; third, Valley, decisions; and Eskridge, no decisions.
The Turner squad will be entered in the class "C" division of the state debate tournament to be held here next Friday and Saturday.
Prof. Twente Attends Convention in Chicago
Miss Ethete Twente, assistant professor of sociology, was in Chicago last Wednesday and Thursday as one of 10 representatives from the Society of Social Workers.
A program was worked out for the national convention to be held at Seattle in June, which will be attended by chapter delegates representing the ten thousand members. The organization of social workers corresponding to the American Bar Association for lawyers.
Home Ec Club Meets Today
The Home Economics Club will meet at the Home Management house, today at 4:15 p.m. Miss Helen Cooper will speak on "Home Life in the Philippines." Members of the Home Management House, Kiene, c;38; Margaret Curd, ed'38; Elizabeth Wiggins, c'38; and Mildred Grable, c'38.
Engineers To Hear G. D. Walter
The University student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will meet Wednesday at 8:15 p.m. in room 305 of Bailey Chemical laboratory. George D. Walter, of Lawrence, will speak on "The Relation of Banking to Engineering."
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Cornell Offers Scholarships
The College of Engineering at Cornell University it has announced 12 John McMullen Graduate Scholars of an annual value of $1,000 for graduate study. Several other scholarships were also announced, the principal one being the Fellowship in hydraulics, with a stipend of $510 for research in Europe or America.
The scholarships are open to graduates of accredited schools of engineering.
British Crowd Invades House of Commons
Applications must be made before March 1, 1938, to the dean of the School of Engineering or to the dean of the Graduate School.
Schwegler Attends Convention
London, Feb. 21, - (UP) An angry crowd, heartily sprinkled with Communists and shouting, "Chamberlain must go," burst tonight into the house of Commons where shortly before, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlin gave, during a fury oration, his stand in the crisis precipitated by Anthony Eden's resignation as foreign secretary.
Dean R. A. Schwegler of the School of Education will attend a meeting of the National Association of the Heads of Departments of Education in Universities and Colleges, at Atlantic City this week.
PATEE
Any Seat 15c Any Time
ENDS
WEDNESDAY
TODAY
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"She Loved A Fireman"
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'Bull Dog Drummond'sRevenge'
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CHARLES BOYER
"History is Made at Night"
TOMORROW
10c 'Til 7 Then 15c
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TOP of the TOWN
The Biggest Sites of Fashion and the Picture at Today!
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DEANNA DURBIN
Prof. E. N. Doan To Address Y.M.C.A. Council Tonight
F. Prof. E, N. Doan of the department of journalism w111 speak on "The Uses of Propaganda" at the meeting of the freshman council of Y.M.C.A. tonight at 7 clock in the Memorial Union building.
Following the talk and discussion officers for this semester will be elected.
This meeting will be under the direction of Charles Wright, e41 president.
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图
1
EDGAR BERGEN and CHARLIE McCARTHY
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THURSDAY
All-American Hilbily Favorites
The One and Only...
WEAVER BROS.
and ELVIRY
Coming 'Round the Mountains
Smack at You in Their
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"Swing Your Lady"
SUNDAY
"Gold is Where You Find It"
In New Technicolor A New World of Thrills!
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1938
K-State Ends Season In Glory
Louly Wildcats C l a w
Mighty Huskers 41-29
Klimek, Burns, Wesche
Lead Scoring
Kansas State pulled one of the many upsets that have marked the present Big Six basketball season by defeating Nebraska, 41 to 28, last night on the Mahatam court. The team has been the Mahatam court with a blaze of glory.
Burns, Klimek, Wesche, and Cleveland kept up a barrage of the goals that the Cornhuskers could not match. Klimek took high score with 11 points, but Burns and Wesche both had 10. Cleveland scored 7.
For the Cornhuskers, the veteran Parsons was high with 7 points, while Ebaugh had 6 and Amen had 5.
The Wildcats finish the Big Six season with 3 victories and 7 defeats, to assure them of no worse than a tie for fifth place in the final stand-
The box score:
Nebraska (29) FG FT PF
Amena f, 1 2 1
Thomas, f 0 0 1
Kovanda, f 0 1 1
Dohrmann, f 2 0 1
Elangau, f 3 0 1
Tallman, c 0 1 0
Parsons, g 2 3 0
Ellott, g 0 1 1
Wertauer, g 1 2 2
Grimm, g 1 0 0
Wilson, g 0 1 0
Totals ... 10 9 9
Kansas State (41) FG FT 9 9
Burns, f ... 5 0 2
Fulton, f ... 0 0 0
Likinek, e ... 4 2 0
Weselda, g ... 5 0 3
Kramer, e ... 1 1 2
Cleveland, g ... 3 1 4
Poppenbeck, g ... 0 0 0
Totals 18 5 13
Missouri Tigers Scare 'Boy Scats'
Missouri gave the second-place Oklahoma Sooners a scare at Norman last night, lofsizing a closely fought game 39 to 41.
Martin, senior guard, and McNatt,
sophomore forward, pulled the "Boy Seats"
through to their sixth conference victory. Martin got 4 field goals and 6 free throws for a total of 14 points, while McNatt made 13 points on 5 field goals and 3 free throws.
The box score:
A Missouri sub, Tison, proved to be the big gun for the Tigers, scoring 16 points. Brown, veteran center, had the ball well before sophomore forward, met 8 points.
Missouri (38) FG FT PF
Currence, f) 0 0 1
Harvey, f) 1 0 4
Kiersey, f) 2 0 1
Conner, f) 0 0 1
Ettinger, f) 0 0 0
Brown, c) 0 0 4
Tison, b) 3 3 2
Lionson, g) 0 2 1
Holstag, g) 0 2 1
Totals ...15 11 13
Totals ... 15 11 13
Score at half: Oklahoma 16, Missouri 13.
Totals 14 11 17
Oklahana (KG) **FG** 11 **FT**
Walker, f 2 1 2
Mennat, f 2 1 3
Roof, f 0 1 0
Speegle, g 1 0 0
Kerr, c 3 0 0
Mess, g 4 6 0
Mesch, g 1 0 3
Snodgrass, g 0 0 1
Haugh, g 0 0 1
Allen and Oatman Discuss Golf in Broadcast Thursday
The "Physical Education for Health" radio program Thursday evening will consist of an interview by Dr. F. C. Allen, chairman of the department of physical education and in charge of the program, of Glen Burnie High School, capital of the University golf team, who received his B.S. in business last Jun
Ootman last year was the Missouri state amateur champion, and had summer at Portland, Ore, he qualified in the national amateur tournam
The subject of the Thursday program will be "Golf and a College Education."
Appoint Bye Second Lieutenant
Ernest W. Bye, '34, has received an appointment as second lieutenant in the medical administration corps of the regular army.
Candidates for the appointment are required to pass a strict examination in addition to a physical examination. They must also be graduates of a four-year course in an accredited college. This is the second year that the examination has been given for pharmacists. Nine out of the 52 candidates passed the examination.
Bye received his B.S. in pharmacy from the University in 1934.
Along the Sideline
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
100 Hoo! Oklahoma done got heat.
Not only that, they wuz robbed! Now everybody weep and dm nourring for the poor little, ooh so little (in comparison with the giant, husky, overgrown Kansas brutes) "Boy Seats," whose title chances received a nearly fatal blow at the hands of (biss!) those villains and robbers, M. G. Volz and Owen Cochrane, the Oklahoma referees, or to be technically correct, the referees who worked the Kansas-Oklahoma game at Norman.
Quoting Bill. English from the Oklahoma Division, lost some accuse of is sympathetic too greatly with he Sooner cause, we find the University of Oklahoma sports editor aying this:
"That 41-38 Kansas victory is a still bitter hit to take—" going no further, we see there the whole secret of Mr. English's rambings — "It was unearned, there's no doubt about it since those four gift awards awarded the Jayhawkers by officials M. G. Volz and Owen Cochrane would have sternened the title.
"The young Sooners never once lost their poise. It was height and weight under the basset" (tsk, tsk, perhaps the Big Six would better legislate height and weight limits—it wouldn't have been a bad idea to have a football limit for the basket football line last fall, either) "together with an 11-day Kansas rest that hurt. The Jay-hawkers were keyed to concert pitch."
Enough for words from English's column, "English on the Ball"—he just put enough back "English" on it to bring it bouncing back in his mouth.
Now let us take up his alibis, one by one, for a more careful consideration, and see if we cannot get to the real truth of the matter.
First and chief seems to be that the referees were primarily responsible for the final result. We might agree that the refereeing could have been at fault. We didn't see the game, but we can understand where somebody with a prejudice for the home team could very easily lay the blame for the defeat on decisions of the enemies that were involved in understanding it because friend.
of ours (we'll admit they were probably seeing the game with only a Kansas viewpoint) came back from Norman with reports of the same referees. Of how Reid on his "two-handed-reverse-scoot" shots had to shoot with one hand because there would be a Sooner hanging on the other. Of how—this wasn't blamed to the referees—the timekeeper rang the gong when Kansas was advancing the hall down the court—that might have made up for that goal Mr. English birds so about. Of how ... We could go on, but that much will give the point we are trying to make.
We aren't implying criticism of the officiating. Rather, we are establishing the fact that as usual the officiating was as fair to one side as it was to the other, and it just depends upon the viewpoint as to whether or not a case can be built for terminating team's victory "unearned." Oklahoma, by a selection of certain lapses of the officials, has built such a case. Kansas, by just such a biased selection, has established the case that it should have won by an even larger margin.
It is true that Kansas had a height-weight advantage over the Sooners, but with that height-weight advantage it sacrificed speed. The Sooners were smaller, but they were also faster—if fact that has carried over to the Knicks in basketball this year. The Kansas were taller, heavier, but more deliberate; and Kansas played its game just a bit better than Oklahoma did.
The most justifiable alibi is the fact that the Sooners were handicapped by the absence of Mullen, regular center. Although Kerr came through with a wahoo of a game, scoring more points in this one game than Mullen has averaged in the conference games he has played in, still it meant the host team had to play the brunt of play in every contest for Oklahoma. We sincerely wish Mullen had been in the game—at full strength.
Perhaps the fall, heavy substitutes "Pho" sent in at frequent intervals, as English says, may have broken the morale of the young Oklahoma team. That would be a shame for such to succeed. But conversely, as the "Boy Scats" are supposed to have. But conversely, how does Mrs. Inglish suppose the "giant" Kansasans felt when they found a fresh Oklahoma "Scat" in the game, one they
Bears Here For Swimming Meet Today
Washington University
Is Opponent of Kansas
Team Which Tied K.S.
C. Here Saturday
Washington University of St. Louis, Missouri Valley conference champion in swimming 13 of the last 14 years, will invade Lawrence this afternoon for a dual swimming meet with the University of Kansas.
Kansas showed to best advantage in the free style events against Kansas State. First place was captured in three of the four free style events and in the other the Jayhawks took second and third.
The Jayhawks, fresh from a 42-42 tie with Kansas State, will be up against their toughest opponent of the year in Washington. The Bears have a team which compares with their aggregations of past years. In their first dual meet of the season they won every event.
Proctor Ritchie, junior letterman, won both the 150-yard backstroke and the 50-yard free style, setting a new Kansas record of 1.529 in the back stroke. The old record of 1.575 was set by Kester in 1936.
Ritchie's time in the back stroke did not threaten the pool record of 1:45.5 set up by Kiessling of Washington last year, however. Kiessling will hook up with Ritchie in the 50-yard free style and the back stroke Tuesday in a duel which should be worth watching.
Vete Nemosinke, Juyhawk letterman, won the 440-yard free style in 5:45.1 and was second to Ritchie in the 50-yard free style. Paul Fisher of Topeka set a new Kansas record of 2:35.6 in the 220-yard free style and was third in the 100-yard free style.
Kansas Players Present 'Winterset' in March
"Winterset," a Maxwell Anderson drama of how low life can sink in a time of peace, will be the next dramatic production from the department of speech and dramatic art, and the annual Players March 23, 24, 25 and 26.
Following a four-day run in Fraser theater, the play will be taken on the road, according to Prof. Allen Crafton, director.
would have to drag along after when the other Oklahoma "Seats" already had the Jayhawkers' tongues hanging out?
Now for the fact that Kansas had an 11-day rest while the Sooners had only two days. According to Sooner press release, the "Boys Scat" were in very extraordinary condition—as shown by the "fire-department" ball they played. If this were true, two days should have been enough to rest up from one game, especially when both of them were played on the home court. On the other hand, teams often lose some of the "feel" of competition when they have a lay-off more than a week long. Considering the fact of the long Kansas trip, we must说 that both teams were undoubtedly near the same peak in condition. Except, as we granted before, the loss of Mullen, which was a handicap.
for the Kansas being "keyed to concert pitch." we must remind Mr. English that his team was playing for its first title in nine years. What more could you ask for to key up a team? Title-winning is a habit with Kansas, but we don't mean to imply the Jayhawkers were not keyed up. They were, but English can't tell us the
Another factor Mr. English has neglected to mention was the fact that the game was played before "500 title-ly Sooner fans." That certainly wasn't anything to Kansas' advantage.
Sooners weren't also.
We have just about run down, folks, but before we sign off, although these are minor grievances, we wish to inform Mr. English that Prale isn't any more temperamental than Bill Martin. We know Fred, and though we don't have the pleasure of knowing the Oklahoma guard, we know that Prale really isn't in the least temperamental—that is, in Innisfree's auditory workshop. Am I wrong if all Prale could do was connect for three bulls-eyes from mid-court? That shooting is plenty good for us, especially when he has been instructed to hang back and not drive in for baskets. Perhaps Prale didn't scare the Sooners, but he certainly helped beat them.
What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools Be Newest Hooverstock
And so we say, Kansas beat Oklahoma, no ifs, and buts, or back-Inglish about it. Not only that, but they EARNED it, earned it by playing a better game over a good team; before a hostile crowd. And that, Mr. Inglish, is Kansas' answer to your deplorable remarks.
in line with the swimming mee which will find the Washington University team of St. Louis facing the Jawahar swimmers, Washington took the Oklahoma Aggies, 50-25, in the Stillwater pool Friday night. The Bears grabbed six of the nine firsts, allowing the Aggies only the fancy diving, 150-yard backstroke, and 100-yard style. Both of the Washington team has more than just a single strong man in each event, since they took two or three places in nearly every event.
We plan on having certain sports like baseball, tennis, and a track rained out every so often, but it is rather unusual when rain can stop a basketball tilt. However, when the Arkansas team, on its way to play Baylor, fell and was arrested in footwear it found the way blocked by the game and the game in Waco had to be postponed a little while before game-time.
Colorado State College at Fort Collins doesn't appear to appreciate its basketball team. The Rocky Mountain Collegian gives the impression that the boys have been accused of everything from fraternity duels among the teams, through lack of training to lack of sufficient subsidizing of players. The Colorado team won its first game season has been outdone on the trip to Brigham Young quintet, 45 to 39. The Collegian again came through with the idea that the win must have been because the State boys were better looking than their opponents and ended with the post-mortem that it was "a daring game, all in all."
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
The Phi PiI "PIR intramural erapers found tough going in their contest with the CQ" quintet night as they heyed to laughed to the limit to win 18 to 16.
--by I. A. R. WYLIE
Lemine of the losers grabbed high scoring honors with 9 points. Cadden and Alnsworth of the win-ended second with 3 field goals apice.
The Galloping Ghosts broke away on another scoring rampage as they were downed, 20. Kelly of the Ghosts had little opposition and scored a team-high 25 points. Niwenger, Dunakin guard, scored half of his team points as he scored five from behind.
In two other games last night the DU. men turned a powerful Desai trimmed Kappa Sig "B" 20 to 14 in a low scoring match. "B" 35 to 24.
Phi Psi "B" (18) Phi Gan "C" (16)
gf ft gf ft
Cadden, f . 3 01 Shuefer, f . 4 10
Libert, f . 3 01 Shuefer, f . 4 10
c . 2 00 U dell, c . 0 10
O'Donnell, g . 1 02 Rolls, g . 2 00
ainswrth, g . 1 02 Forman, g . 2 00
Official Engelmann
G.Ghosts (59) Dunakins (20)
824
| | g ft f | f | g ft f |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Vogel, f | 2 1 | f | Fisher, f | 0 0 0 |
| BCovey, f | 4 2 | f | Peterson, f | e 0 1 0 |
| MCovey, f | 6 2 | f | Peterson, f | e 0 1 0 |
| McCovey, f | 2 1 | thomas, g | hg, 2 1 2 |
| day, g | 3 2 | 0 | Nisw ing, r | g, 5 0 0 |
| Dawes, f | 0 0 | | bgei 0 | 0 1 1 |
| Armold | 2 0 | 0 | Glance | 1 0 2 |
| Reed | 1 0 | 0 | McCoy | 0 0 0 |
25 9 2 McDougall
Acacia (33)
**Result (X)**
Galloway, f 5 g ft f
Galloway, f 30 Josserand, f g ft f
Welford, t 10 u 0 Watson, f 0 01
Welford, t 30 u 0 Watson, f 0 01
Kenaggy, g 20 Meier, g 1 20
McCann, g 20 Wood, g - 601
叫落, hup 40 Granger - 601
叫落, hup 30 Granger - 601
Official Thompson.
20 4 3 15 3 3 Official Thompson.
Phi Delt "B" (20) K. Sigma "B" (14)
g ft f g ft f Mize, f ___ 2 00 Lyon, f ___ 2 00 Cheatum, f ___ 1 01 Alldice, f ___ 2 00 Tklepgh, f ___ 1 01 Hendey, c ___ 2 00 Baskett, g ___ 1 01 DeFever, g ___ 1 02 Hdricks g, ___ 3 01 Cosgrove, g ___ 1 02
0 2 4
Official: Thompson.
Volleyball Schedule
Today, 5:10 p.m.: Sigma Chi vs. Phi Gam and S.E.P., which Kaveri and Triangle vs. Phi Fat and Triangle vs. Phi Fat and Triangle vs. Phi Delta Theta.
Tomorrow, 5:10 p.m. Sigma Nu vs.
PhaI Delt and Kappa Sigma vs. Beta
Sigma Cai vs. Delta Upsilon and PikA K.
Chi vs. Delta Upsilon and PikA K.
Sigma Chi; 7:30 p.m. Hell Hounds
vs. Triangle and PhaI Delt vs. S.A.E.
vs. S.P.E.
Basketball Schedule
Today, 6 p.m.; D.T.D. vs. Sigma Nu and Phi Diu vs. S.A.E. 10 p.m.; Theta Tau "B" vs. S.A.E. "C" and Rock Chalk vs. Campus Raiders.
Thursday and Friday there are no games.
Tomorrow, 6 p.m.: Theta Tau vs. Trojans and Westminsters vs. Gas-house Gaug: 8:30 p.m.: Galloping vs. Phi Mu A. and K.I.A. vs. Thiam.
Saturday, Feb. 26, 9 a.m.; Sig Chi "C" vs. Phi Gam "C" and Chi Phi "C" vs. Phi Gam "C" and Chi Phi "C" vs. Phi Delt "C" and Westminstervs. Rock Chalk; 11 a.m.: Phi Gam vs.
Kappa Smaid and Phi Pii "C"vs. Acacia B*; 12 m; Phi Gam "D"vs. SA.E *B; and Phi Gam "E" vs Phi Pii Dumakin and Joyibirsi vs Whitakers; 2 p.m; Phi Chi vs. Ober's and All stars vs. Theta Tua 3 p.m; Phi Kappa Pai v. Beta s. vs Phi Pii Deltai and S.E.v vs Phi Deltai and S.A.E vs. Delta Upaion.
THE SCORE BOARD
Big Six Basketball Games in Detail to Feb. 19.
| | LS. KU K | S | K | Mo | Nb. Ok |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| la. St. | 17 | *31* | *51* | *35* | *48* |
| Ka. St. | 17 | **21** | *51* | *35* | *50* | −354 |
| Kau | 17 | **23** | **33** | — | — | **38** | 246 |
| KSC | **41** | **33** | — | **28** | *46* | **38** | 246 |
| | **29** | **35** | — | **59** | **29** | **44** | 398 |
| Mo. | **34** | **29** | **37** | **29** | **14** | — | 272 |
| Neb. | **32** | **48** | **32** | **27* | **50** | — | 433 |
| Okla. | **26** | **46** | **30** | **39** | **48** | — | 317 |
| | **26** | **46** | **31** | **39** | **52** | — | 317 |
Pl. pts. 262 302 248 301 341 306
G won 2 7 1 4 3 4 6
G lost 7 1 7 1 4 5 2
Ret. 822 875 300 590 444 750
(For a team's score, read down; the score being opposite the opponent secured on. Winning scores are scored with a star ("⚙"); remaining games, —>
Pct. .222 .875 .300 .500 .444 .750
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POSTTONIGHT
EnjoyThe
ENJOY THE POST TONIGHT
MEET
"THE GAY BANDITTI"
THEY match their wits against a lonely old lady's heart. You will find them irresistible, this family of engaging fakers, who live by their charm and off their friends and chance acquaintances. The author of "Furious Young Man" and "To the Vanquished" has written a truly lovely story of the four Carlyons.
like leaves in the wind.
Vivien
A New Novel
MARMY, who has lost every thing but her appetite.
Who could love a GIRL ATHLETE?
Not columnist Ancel Hunt, who viewed all female athletes as a pain in the neck, including young Ellen Charles. He pulled new golf metronome on the pan and let it strike. Ellen's game cracked, but so did Hunt's hate on girl golfer Ellen, however, knew how to play a better recovery.
Interview by BROOKE HANLON
A man and a woman in suits are holding hands.
--by I. A. R. WYLIE
Start it in this week's Post
A MARSHALL BARNARD COLLEGE
CAPTAIN CARLYON, "late of the war." FERNAL LENNERS
**AND "SCUPPER THAT FOX!"** cried the Admiral. "After the blighter with a belaying pin!" The story of an inadvent that nearly ruined the Meadowhill Hunt Club, by Edward Shenton." .FRENCH SLEUTHS CAN'T CATCH CROOKSI! Are the French plain super-descursors, or are they just plain寇—floatet with waxed mounts? Read *Monsieur le Cop*, by Guy Gilpatric. .BROOKLYN MICK, sparking partner for champions, was doing O.K. until it turned out his backer was a dope smugglier. Eddy Orcutt tells you the story... PLUS . Serials, articles, fun and cartoons.
HE SHOT THE WORLD'S MOST DANGEROUS RAPIDS
...alone!
in a homemade boat, young Buzz Holmstrom showed off last fall to do what no man ever did before; run the Colorado River alone, from Wyoming to Boulder Dam—and live! It took him 52 days to cover those 1100 miles, and an accident meant death by drowning or slow starvation. Here is the story of that incredible trip.
bv ROBERT ORMOND CASE
THE SATURDAY
EVENING POST
5¢
THE SATURDAY EVENING POST
DAILY 12:34
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 100
Kansas City Philharmonic Plays Today
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1938
Well-Known Orchestra Under Direction of Katr Krueger Will Give Two Performances
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Karl Krueger, who obtained his Master of Arts degree in music at the University, will present a concert this evening in North auditorium.
Through the efforts of Mr. Krueger, the orchestra has commanded national recognition. Krueger himself ranks as one of the nation's leading orchestra conductors. Impressive Program Arranged
After intermission, the orchestra will play "Aandante from Third Violin Sonata" and "Preludio from Sixth Violin Sonata," Johann Sebastian Bach); prelude and finale from "Tristan and Isolde" (Richard Wagner); "Impressioni dal Vero," suite for orchestra, part one (G. Francesco Malipiero); Siofried's "Rhine Journey" to "Gotterdammerung" (Richard Wagner); and the final number, "Bachanale and Finale," from the Tanhhauser" overture (Wanner).
The evening performance will begin at 8.20. The overture will be the "Overture to Cenerentola" (Gliocastro Antonio Rossini). After the overture the orchestra will play the "Symphony No. 2 in D Major" Op. 43 (Jan Sibelius) and the symphony "A melody by the composer's early maturity, written in 1901-02, and produced in Helsingfors the year of its completion.
A new type of concert, introduced to this region by Karl Krueger, will be given in Hoch auditorium this afternoon by the Philharmonic, for the young people in and about Lawrence. It is a type of concep't depending largely on the personality of the conductor, for so close is the contact established between conductor and juvenile listeners that there is never any difficulty about youthful behavior or quiet.
Children Guess Instruments
A feature of the Kansas City Philharmonic concerts for young people that has captivated grown-ups and children alike is the gay ceremony of getting acquainted with the instruments, presented one by one—violin, cello, piccolo, bassoon, horn, and harp.
The young listeners are apt to be hotly competitive as to who will be the first to recognize the voice of the flute, the viola, and double-bass, or the rat-a-tat of the snare drum. The conductor asks the musicians to play a phrase or brief tone, each by himself. The children guess the name of the instrument.
Beging Program Open in Public
First Program Open to Public
Mr. Krueger allows the children to hum with the orchestra certain tunes that they recognize. Last season, the orchestra played the Finale to Tschaikowsky's Fourth Symphony in one of the children's concerts in Kansas City. The children participated first by raising their hands whenever they heard a fultune that they recognized. Then, at the suggestion of the conductor, they honed the tunes with the orchestra.
Activity Tickets Admit
Hundreds of school children from Lawrence and nearby towns will be seated in sections especially reserved for them in the auditorium for the matinee concert today. Each year many adults wish to visit full advantage of the orchestra during the afternoon perusal also. Dean D. M. Swarthout, manager of the Concert Series, is offering adult tickets for 50 cents apiece. The program will begin at 2:15 o'clock.
The program of selections, chosen by Karl Krueger, has been studied by the children in their music classes.
The following numbers will be played:
Prelude, "Hansel and Gretel"
(Humperdinck); Allegretto from the
Eighth Symphony, (Beethoven)
"False Taste" (Sibilius); "Night or
the Bare Mountain" (Dovrak)
Overture, "The Bat" (Strauss).
Tickets for the evening performance are on sale at the fine arts office, the Bell Music company, and the Round Corner drug store. University students will be admitted upon presentation of activity cards.
WEATHER
Kansas: Fair Wednesday and Thursday, warmer Thursday and in east and south portions Wednesday.
Charles Scott Says-vice-chairman.
The Red Inquiry
Iola Daily Register:
If the Kansas Legislature wishes to investigate alleged Communist activities at the state university or elsewhere in the state it probably will do no harm. But it will do no good and it will not disclose anything of importance to the state or to the government.
The investigation will be held on the alleged ground that a student, Don Henry, was induced by influences brought to bear upon him at the university to go to Spain, where he enlisted in the government army, and was killed. It probably will be discovered that the young man was an extremist when he went to the university, that he soon became the leader of a very small group of political radicals, that he was much more likely to have induced others to go to Spain than to have been induced by others to take this step. The discovery will be made that instead of there being several hundred of these political extremists among the student body there are not probably to exceed a score, and that they have no following and little influence.
However, as already remarked the investigation may as well be held. There has been a lot of talk at intervals to the effect that the faculty at K.U. is honeycombed with Communists and radicals of other breeds and the truth may as well be known. There is always danger of course that such an investigation may result in having the impression given out that academic freedom is threatened, that members of the faculty will be restricted in their expression of political opinion unless they conform to the conventionalities; but that risk will have to be taken. The principal objection to the inquiry as we view it is that it will advertise the Communists, the few of them who may be at K.U. and who dearly love advertisement. It will give them the impression that they are really important, which as a matter of fact they are not. But that risk will have to be run.
Britain Backs Chamberlain
House Gives Confidence Vote to Prime Minister On Bargaining Policy
London, Feb. 22. — (UP) The House of Commons tonight voted overwhelming confidence in Prime Minister Neville Chamberlin's direct bargaining with European dictators after he warned that the swift toward war by the "shams" of League of Nations policies.
The vote was 330 to 168, with National Liberals joining with the Conservative majority in giving a mandate to Chamberlain to pursue negotiations with Premier Benito Mussolini and later with Fuehrer Adolf Hitler on a plan of general European appeasement.
The Prime Minister had been accused in wild debate of "stabbing Anthony Eden in the back with an Italian dagger" and forcing the latter's resignation as Foreign Secretary after the government's failed deal with the dictators will bring enormous war preparations.
Dangerous for Dictators
Chamberlain Assails League
"If conliliation is achieved, our people, when rearmed, will be in a position to make it difficult and dangerous for any dictator to attack," F. Murcia, pouncer Conservative, in the last speech of the debate.
Chamberlain Assails League The vote of confidence, taken shortly after 11 p.m. following hours of bitter attacks upon Chamberlain by such fiery orators as David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, consisted of rejecting a Laborite motion of censure.
The house adjourned at 11:15 p.m.
The highlight of the debate climaxing the cabinet crisis precipitated by Eden's resignation was Chamberlain's experience in questioning the weakness of the League.
Chamberlain warned gravely that the nation must act without delay to make friends with Europe's disease be drawn into another war.
A.S.M.E. Meeting
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet at 8:15 tomorrow evening in room 110, Marvin hall. Prof Raymond H. Wheeler of the psychology department will speak.
K. W. Willey,
Sad tale: About the fellow who finally got his Phi Beta Kappa key, and then bought a double-breasted suit.
Winner of the Y.W.C.A. Scholarship Announced
the winners of the Estes Registration Scholarships which were awarded for the most money brought in in the recent finance drive of the Y, W, C, A. are: Ruth Knoche, e'40; Robert Browne, Hibaye Rhodeau, f38. Am Browning, c'unl, will receive a book for having reached her quoted in the drive.
Ruth Olive Brown, c'40, was chairman of the drive, which lasted from Feb. 15 until Feb. 18. The captains of the three teams were Betty Boddington, c'40; Edna May Parks, c'40 and Pauline Snyder, c'40.
Chicago Train Wreck Kills One
Students Give Recital Tomorrow
The next regular student recital of the School of Fine Arts will be presented tomorrow in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall.
ium of Frank Strong hal
The program follows:
Hal Kemp's Bandman
Ae Among 50 Injured
When Fast Flier Hits
Truck
Voice:
Amarari 9 Cacina
Donzello, Fugite Cavalli
Vera Carruthers
Piano:
Polonaise op. 9 Paderewski
Luther Cortelyou
Voice:
Nachtgang Richard Strauss
Alfred Gallup
Cello:
Air Lally-Spalding
Sarai Mohler
Voice:
Villaselle Dell'Acqua
Angel Gabriel ... arr. Pochon.
The Mill ... Rafi
Worth, III., Feb. 22, (UP) -A cracker of the Wanash railway was derailed today and nearly 50 of its passengers were injured after a crash which reduced a heavy payload to matchwood and kill its driver.
Olga Eitner, 1st violin; Mary Olta Wallace, 2nd violin; Carroll Nickels, viola; Sara Mohler, cello.
The School of Engineering faculty members met yesterday afternoon in Marvin hall to pass on the qualifications of those students who completed their course in engineer-ing last summer.
The driver was identified as Frank Gregson, 40, Chicago.
Engineering Faculty Meets
BARCELONA, Feb. 22 —(UP)—Five Nationalist war ships and three airplanes shelled and bombed Valençis tonight, the war off is announced
Members of Hal Kemp's band which had completed a one-night appearance in St. Louis were among the injured.
H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education and director of the teachers' appointment bureau, will attend a state conference of the North-Central Association Committee in Topeka this afternoon.
Tracks were torn up for a distance of half a mile along the right of way as the heavy engine plowed from the rails and jolted down the track more than 600 yards before coming to a halt still erect. The five passenger cars topped into the ditch.
Chandler Will Attend
Nationalists Bomb Valencia and Sagunto
The truck was so badly demolished that it was not until more than two hours later that its identity was established. The company name on the side of the truck was erased completely.
Nationalists Bomb
Attendants at the little Company of Mary and St. Bernard hospital said some of the injured were in critical condition.
State Conference at Topeka
Carl Beetting, Milwaukee, a passenger on the train, said he felt a perceptible jar as the locomotive hit the truck and the "next thing I knew steel rails were flying past the windows."
Carnival Plans Completed
W.S.G.A. Also Discusses Possible Changes in Way Of Electing Members
Eight o'clock was set at the W.S.G.M. meeting last night as the opening time for the W.S.G.A. carnival to be held Friday.
The committee to select a prize reported that a silver platter had been chosen as the reward for the house having the most original booth. At the close of the carnival the prize will be presented by Doris Stockwell, c38, president of W.S. G.A.
Act Against Beauty Contests
A complete list of boots includes: Kappa Alpha Theta, Big Baby show; Sigma Kappa, ballon darts; Alpha Gamma Delta, rings and hoops; Chi Omega, Smoky Joe's bar; Alma Omitron II, shooting range; Alpha Chi Omega, Beile It or Not; Corbin ball, bingo; Watkins hall, matrimonial bureau; Alpha Delta Pi, fish pond; Kappa Kappa Gamma, penny throw; W.S.G.A., juggle and food. A resolution was passed against University women entering beauty contests sponsored by business firms, the Women's Health Council, passed by the Women* Pan-Hellenic Council. The two councils agreed that such contests were not in keeping with academic pursuits.
Grace Valentine, c38, chairman of a committee to investigate methods of electing members of the W.S.G.A. council, made the following sug-
(2) Any woman who wishes to be a candidate for election to the W.S. G.A. council should make application to the nominating committee of the council two weeks before election, stating her qualifications, which would include activities and experience.
(1) That there should be set up a nominating committee composed of five seniors, to include three members of Mortar board, the past-president of W.S.G.A., and one selected by the council.
Suggestions for New System
(4) The list of candidates should printed in, the University Daily Kannan several times, the list to include the activities of the candidates.
(3) Those petitioning for the office of secretary should be able to type, and those petitioning for the office of treasurer should have knowledge
Such a nominating committee would take the place of the present system of presenting petitions having a specified number of signers. The final decision on the report of the committee will be made at the
next meeting of the council.
Tucson, Ariz. Feb. 22—(UP) General John J. Pershing is in a "very dangerous condition" as the result of a "complication," which caused a relapse of a rheumatic aid disease, Dr. Roland Davis, said tonight.
Dr. Davison would not excuse the nature of the complication. He said the 77-year-old general's blood pressure rose "very high" last night but dropped today.
"General Pershing is resting as comfortably as can be expected but his condition is very serious," Dr Davison said.
The World War commander of the American Expeditionary Forces was taken by ambulance from his hotel to a cottage at the Desert sanitary
Lt.-Col. Shelly U. Marietta, chief of medical service at the Ft. Sam Houston (San Antonio, Texas) base hospital, left by plane for Tucson late today upon the orders of Gen. Joseph Giehig, chief of staff of the U. S. Army.
Lindley Views Present Art
Opinion That Beauty Is Replacing Utility Given By Chancellor
"From the curbstone, art has its place in the world in the fine art of living," said Chancellor E. H. Lindley last night in the second lecture of the series being presented by the department of adult education of the Museum of Science and Technology presented in the museum of Spooner-Thayer museum.
"The artist should reflect the life of his period. If the artist dissociates art from the life of the people, that are which he produces is likely to die young." Artists because because he painted life as it was.
Great Art Advance in Kansas
"It do not believe that we could have a great artist if he did not feel the surges of life; the dual wails of time," asserted Chancellor Lindley.
Contrasting the art to be found in Kansas in pioneer days with that now found, Chancellor Lindley said that the advance of fine arts to be found in Kansas is so tremendous that he chapters in the history of the country.
"Utility is no longer the goal," he said, "but beauty it. The competition in the auto industry is not utility, but the beauty of artistic design. Now the effusion of beauty can be had by an eye. It can be had at the 10-cent stores, while years ago only classes of the leisure had the money to have things of beauty."
A table was placed in a corner of the museum containing 10- cent articles which were designed so well that they couldn't have had them years ago.
Speaking in defense of the crazypatchwork art design and murals of American artists, the Chancellor believes that they reflect the new work of an artist who is breaking away from the old traditions, and is clicking.
Admitting that the art of contem-
pary Americans startled him when he first glanced at it, he said, "Some new trends deserve to live."
Prof. Raymond Eastwood of the department of painting and drawing will be the next speaker of the series. He will speak on "What's the Difference?"
Hold Two Kelly Suspects
Sheriff Roy A. Boat of Topeka announced yesterday that two men are being held for questioning in connection with the fatal beating last September of Russell Kelly, engineering student.
The pair of suspects were taken into custody in Arizona by Sheriff Boast, who, with Paul L. Harvey, Shawnee county attorney, returned the case to the extended through the southwest on an investigation of the case.
The Topeka office declined to give the names of the two captured but stated that they were also wanted elsewhere on highway 8 robbery charges. The police last night that deputies were out of the city investigation clues.
The Russel Kelly reward fund originated at the University after Kelly died in Watkins hospital as a result of an attack three and one-half miles west of Stuhl, on the road between Seaford and a minor automobile accident.
Student Leaders Go to Topeka Today
Eleven Representatives Drafted by Joint Committee Will Observe Action on Proposed Muir-Carper Resolution Which Will Be Considered by the Senate In Topeka Today
A committee of 11 leading University students will go to Topeka today to witness senate action on the proposed Muir-Carper resolution to investigate alleged communistic activities here.
They are as follows: Don Voorhees, Dori Stockwell, Quentin Grimes, Dorothy Trekell, Harry O'Riley, Kathi
he students were chosen yesterday by the Student's Emer- committee in a meeting in the Pine room.
A concert by the University Band will be broadcast over station KFKU this evening from 6 to 6.30 o'clock
The following numbers will be played: The Frescoes Suite consisting of Venetian Waltzes, The Sea Shanties, and Bystanders (Haydn Wood); Valle Lulse (Roberts) played as a solo by James Van Dyck, first bartone and assistant director of the band; Rhapsody in Rhumba (Bennett); and Children's March (Goldman).
Moritz Wins In Oratory
Voorhees Takes Second Kass Third, in Junior Senior Contest
Paul Moritz, c'39, was chosen best junior-senior orator in the annual contest in Fraser theater last night. Donald Voorhees, c'38, placed second, and third prize went to Irving Kass, c'39.
'Turn Us From War Forever'
Moritz' speech, "We Believed and Believe," treated of the power of propaganda. "You don't hate the Yellow Peril," he said, "but—you may. Did we remember 'the real character of the German people in the last war? Did we remember Beethoven and Goethe and our friend the German baker? No. We only heard one band music and the marched with us, already beading to lose sight of the true character of the Japanese people We believed in 1914-16. Will be believe again?"
"Via Hygrophilogy" was the title chosen by Donald Voorhees, who explained the necessity for propaganda for peace. "Now, for the first time," he pointed out, "the non-combatant world can see what war really is—in pictures. When the common soldier goes to war he has to go back a million years emotionally and in memory of Marvin Apari, a military madness only weapon is emotion. So when we lay our head on the block again, may the camera record such horror as will turn us from war forever."
"Our civilization has changed us from self-helpful to self-heless individuals," was the contention of Irving Kass, who spoke on "The Cave Man in the City." "Biologically we are the same as the cave man, but our environment restricts us. We need a better distribution of medical facilities and probably some birth control to prevent a degeneracy which sends 1 out of 22 to some kind of asylum at least seven years."
Protests Venereal Disease
All of the four other speakers were members of the junior class, David Angweine, in "An Answer to the Boycott," referring to the proposal of such action against Japan, declared: "Let America judge not that she be not judged. But her denied security bill will do what we intended this one to do." His topic was "Mama From Heaven."
C. H. Mullen protested against "condemning future generations to die of venereal diseases that are preventable." Kari 1 Ruppenthal, in "Death Drivers," asked a "vivid and sustained realization that when you put your foot on the gas, Death sits beside you."
Judges for the contest were John E. Hankins, associate professor of English; the Rev. Harold G. Barr, instructor in the school of religion; and Mrs. Jessica Crafton, wife of Professor Crafton, head of the department of speech and dramatic art. Chairman and master of ceremonies was Rolla Nuckles, instructor in the department of speech. Prizes awarded were 15, 10 and 5 dollars to the respective winners.
*erine Hurd, Clark Howerton,
O. J. Connell, Ted North, and
Martin Maloney.
Quentin Brown will act as chairman of the group.
Appointment of the group was made by the Joint Committee yesterday afternoon when members expressed the opinion that some authorized representatives of the student body should be selected. Selection was made upon recommendation of members of the Joint Committee. ---
"The purpose of the visit is merely to be present during the discussion of the resolution by the senate and to hear for ourselves specifically what the charges are against the University and other state educational institutions," according to a statement made last night by Chairman Brown, speaking for the committee.
Four of the delegates drafted were members of the Joint Committee.
Decision to send a student group followed word from Topeka that action by the senate committee of the whole would be taken today.
The delegates met last night in the Pine room to formulate plans for the trip.
W. S.G.A. in a meeting last night approved that action taken by student leaders which resulted in a letter of protest against the "red" investigation being sent to each senator in the legislature and to support the Committee of Thirteen in any future action.
Speech Contest Tomorrow Night
All entries for the extemporaneous speech contest must be in before 12 o'clock tomorrow, according to an announcement by Prof. E. C. Buehler of the department of speech and dramatic art.
Seven persons have entered the contest, which will be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Green hall. Their names have not been made
The first prize of $10 is offered by Martin Maloney, 37, instructor of English. Maloney and department of mathematics make to make the contest an annual affair.
Group To Discuss Situation in England
Sensing the critical situation in England, the World Co-operation Commission will discuss this topic at a meeting to be held this afternoon at 4:30 at Henley house. Ermer Lee Brewer, c39, chairman of the commission, will lead the discussion. A resource person for the faculty will be present to answer questions about the policies of Neville Chamberlain, prime minister of England, and Anthony Eden, who recently resigned from the position of foreign secretary.
Other questions of contemporary readiness will be discussed. This meeting is open to anyone who wishes to come.
King Leopold Entertains Former President Hoover
Brussels, Feb. 23 — (UP) – King Leopold III tonight was host at a dinner given at the royal palace for former President Herbert Hoover.
Sixty persons participated, including Prince Charles; the retiring American ambassador, Hugh Gibson; Premier Paul Emile Jansen, and other cabinet members and notables. There were no speeches.
Relays Committee Meeting
Relays Committee Meeting
A meeting of the Student
Committee for the Kansas Rel-
eys will be held on Saturday,
"K-2" Club room in
Robinson gym. All members are
urgent to be present.
James Gillispie. Senior Manager
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
。
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1935
≈
Comment
Sanity
In a Trying Situation
The Chancellor's attitude toward the proposed legislative investigation here at the University is calm, reasoned and judicious.
The University Daily Kansan wishes heartily to commend the Chancellor's stand in the matter, and to offer him its complete endorsement and co-operation. In so doing the Kansan feels it is endorsing the majority sentiment of the student body.
A mass meeting was held on the Hill Sunday, and a committee of twelve was named to co-operate with a previously formed committee composed of thirteen widely representative student-leaders, and in joint session these two committees endeavored to formulate a student policy.
The results seem quite in keeping with the tenets of good taste and judgment. There was no hysteria, no injudicious procedure, no jumping off the deep end in unconsidered reaction. Rather, there was a spirit of judicious reasoning.
These students—representing as widely as possible, under the circumstances, the whole student body—have insisted that the matter be treated as serious but not portentous and have requested the students they represent to consider it in that light.
The Kansei feels that these student-leaders are right and suggests that for the time, all persons connected with the University look at the matter through the same colored glasses.
The zoology department could purchase 2 electric ovens,1 high-power centrifuge, and 16 research microscopes (they possess but 9 of at least 25 needed, at present) — all much needed equipment for Besides this, they could offer six graduate assistantships—if they had $7,400.
Don Your Red Coats!
Topeka State Journal:
By Ted Weir
The Kansas senate soon will consider the house-approved resolution calling for a probe of communistic activities at state educational institutions. The house offered only four dissenting votes in its adoption of the resolution.
What the senate will do with the resolution is problematical. It may arouse lots of debate; it may be adopted without more than one or two speeches.
A suggested speech on the Red probe is offered herewith:
"Fellow Witch-hunters:
"I favor this probe of communistic activities at the University of Kansas. It's an entering wedge—a step in the right direction.
"When Kansas legalized the smoking of cigarettes in 1927, the state lost one of the best gaglines ever used in vaudeville houses. When ten years later, the legislature legalized 3.2 beer, another grand joke to advertise our state was lost for all time.
"This witch-hunt is exactly what we need. How many other states have had the foresight and advertising acumen to institute a large scale inquisition into the teaching of political sciences? What other state has foreseen the trend of the times and ordered a magnificent purge in the best Adolph Hitler manner?"
"The house has seen fit to appropriate a mere $7,500 for this merry chase. Our senate more correctly recognizes the advertising value and has suggested $15,000. I favor the latter amount. If we can find twenty Reds for $7,500, we can find sixty-five or seventy for twice that amount. My understanding is that the cost-per-Red decreases as the amount available increases.
"Following the unmasking and discharge of all professors who believe in mentioning anything other than democracy, we can start after the Socialists. Following a purge of that subversive class, we'll concentrate on Republicans. Then we'll have a true democracy for Democrats, and every Democrat a happy Democrat. We'll have a dictator to enforce the teaching of whatever he may choose, provided, of course, it doesn't conflict too much with the best Fascist theory."
theory.
"We need the advertising that this Red probe will bring to Kansas. We have no Sockle-less Jerry Simpson, no Carrie Nation, no Doctor Brinkley to lead us today. We must lead ourselves into the laugh-spot of the nation."
"Fellow senators, den your red coats! Sound the hunting horns. Mount your horses! Let the witch-hunt begin!"
The housing-committee seems potentially able to do a deal of good for the physical well-being of students of the University. Unfortunately it has been hampered by lack of funds. Yet it could operate between seven and ten years if someone would but endow it with seven or eight thousand dollars.
≈
Young Radicals
Fort Scott Tribune:
The excitement frequently engendered by alleged communistic and other radical movements among students of our state schools has never yet been justified by investigations made of them. The charges that now have members of the legislature excited enough to take time off from their study of social welfare to call for $7,500 to investigate subversive activities at Kansas University, are not new by any means, but the excitement will no doubt pass as it has before.
There are no doubt some students in the state university who are professed communists. So are there on every other university campus in the country. The same students played Indian and stick-up men when they were young, and they are still fired by the same youthful enthusiasm and imagination.
University students are still young enough to be radicals and not experienced enough to have their radicalism tempered out of them. The legislature may spend a lot of money to find that out but they ought to know that much about youth without having to make a formal investigation.
There is a pronounced shortage of instructors at the University. At the present rate of pay here, about four instructors could be hired for a year at a cost not greater than $7,500.
Campus Opinion
Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kanan. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited.
Solicit Your Support
Editor Dolle Konson
Eunice, Jerry, and Bob meet in the student meeting which was held in the Union lounge Sunday to discuss the beginnings of a new chapter in literature, and after sitting through a very interesting and participative session came out with the following comments:
there could be really something evil at the University here couldn't we depend upon our own facultynememember of you, Mr. Lindsay, to chair Chancellor Lindley to squash it? Chancellor Lindley we all know is a kind, lovable person with the interpersonal skills we need.
Upon what vast store of knowledge do the honorable and heroic alumni Mur and Carper base their claims? (Saturday evening papers). And upon what digests they do see fit to make their degrading remarks about KU. UD, and mind you, they are graduated this year from Mur. The students at Mur's Mur course may be able to name every building on the Campus, but I have a sneaking suspicion *dut our Chancellor*, who has been with us these many years, somehow knows more about the school and its student body than the aforementioned hostesses to say. Chancellor Lindley hasn't blown the roof off the Ad Building dashing wildly after some elusive "Reds."
Frankly, if anyone has the right to a course of action it is the student body. They have been accused and unjustly so; slandered viciously, also unjustly so. It is they who should write their legislators, both representatives and senators, and demand that the institutes be punished and the parties behind the shame be held accountable.
Now, if ever, is the time for the students to act if they are to prevent the name of Kansas University from being dragged through the mud. Let's kick about it.
Now, if ever, is the time for the students to show their appreciation and respect for the faculty by giving them p unanimous vote of confidence. You and I know that our teachers are not evil beings to mankind sent her with a baggage to paint our human beings on the contrary良, honest t.-good human beings with our interests at heart. But here's where the rub comes in. The people are being informed and as we know the real situation up to us has been made by truth. Our students and our help now. Students to the University of Kansas let us not fail them. K. W.
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceeding regular publication days and 11:00 a.m. on the next day.
Official University Bulletin
LE CERCLE FRANCAISE: Le Cercle Francis will meet at 4:30 the afternoon in 113 Frank强牢站. The prgram will be on chateaux of France. We welcome and urge all interested to come. Helen Cooper
Vol. 35 Wednesday, February 23, 1938 No. 100
JAY JANES. There will be an important meeting there, in the Pine room. Please be there. *Bright Cooke*.
A. I.Ch.E.: The American Institute of Chemical Engineers will meet at 8:15 this evening in the Chemistry building, Mr. George D. Walters, vice-president of the Lawrence National Bank, will speak -L. F. Ballard.
MATHEMATICS CLUB. There will be a meeting of the mathematics Club Thursday, Feb. 24, in 203 Frank Strong hall. Ernest Kembery will speak on Some Applications of Number Theory to Charles Richard, Charles Rickart, President.
MEDICAL APTITUDE TEST: A supplementary medical aptitude test will be given by the Association of American Medical Colleges on April 9, 1983. All premedical students are required to attend a medical school, are planning to enter a medical school, either at the University of Kansas or elsewhere, next fall, should take this test on April 9. Those who desire to take the test should notify DAVIS LINCOLN HALL (phone - KU-86), immediately - O. O. Stolland.
OFFICIAL STUDENT CORRESPONDENTS’ BUREAU. All correspondents are urged to make them available to the press on Friday, Feb. 24, in room 104 of the Journalism building at 4:30 p.m. Professor Olivia Oltmilp will speak on “2Nineteen: The Story of Women Journalists”
W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a W.S.G.A. tea this afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock in the lounge of Frank强尚杯. All University women are invited. —Bette Wasson, Secretary.
Meissner Mechanical Method For Mastering Most Music
Back in grade school, when you were black cotton stockings or maybe corduroy knickers, you probably had your first experience with piano lessons. Remember how you used to squirm, pounding out your "exercises" with one leg twined around the piano stool and one eye on the clock? Or may you practice willingly every day, with childish abandon and both eyes to the future--maybe. Anyway, the chances are ten to one that your text book was "The Melody Way."
By Agnes Mumert, c'40
ext book was "The Mercury Myth",
written by Prof. Otto Meissner, of
the department of public school music
of the University.
For Professor Meisner has definite ideas about teaching music to children, and most of them have proven surprisingly practical. One of them is that music teachers ought to impart "that inner, exotic feeling" to their students; that they should allow the children to enjoy music and leave the mechanics to machines. Maybe that accounts for the fact that Meisner, who is listed in "Who's Who" as composer, author, editor, and teacher, has invented at least five mechanical devices for simplifying the process of learning how to play the piano.
'Chord Finders' Help Beginner
If you were one to whom that process was particularly painful, your grappling with the key-board might have been less strenuous had you been introduced at that tender age to one of the professor's "Chord Finders." This invention, consisting of cardboard slide rules, enables you to find every possible chord; merely by placing it upon the keyboard, sliding it over the keys, and striking the unknown combination.
Professor Meissner says that this makes the learning of piano easier than anything he knows, and admits that it is an outgrowth of his learning music for himself by playing chords on a pedal organ as a child. "Melody Bella," another invention, is an instrument resembling the xyplayer used in the music core of the teaching of melody. The bars on the bell are cylindrical brass tubes with the whole and half notes of the scale. They are arranged on a sort of slide rule, so that if the child wants to play in any one key
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he slides out those notes which do not belong in the major scale. That way, he can't make a mistake.
THURSDAY
All-America's Hill-Billy Favorites. The One and Only--called the Uatusi, were found at Lake Kivu and the explorers described them as "the most beautiful race in Africa." All the men, the explorers say, have beautiful bodies, paint their faces and wear dresses. They keep harens and the women in them are attractive.
In Their First Screen Appearance
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Weaver Bros. and Elviry
"He learns by the most exciting method—that of discovery—just as the inventors of the marimba learned in the African jungles. Chilians knocked another when they can manipulate something," the inventor explains.
Other Inventions Important
So, in addition to these mechanical helps, there is the "Ryth-o-phone" which sounds out any desired rhythm and repeats it until it is forced into the consciousness of the listener; there is the "Phonosec" which is a device placed on a phonograph to tell the story of great music; there is the "harp piano" and the "Meisner Bay Upright" piano, which have revolutionized piano construction.
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The inventor, as mentioned, is also author of the most widely used public school music texts, standard in 6,000 cities. He is past-president of the national Music Supervisors' Conference. For nine years he was director of the School of Music at UCLA, where he helpedlege and for 10 years he served on the faculty of the Chicago Musical College.
SUNDAY
Judge Curbs Reckless Driving
GOLD
IS WHERE
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GEORGE BRENT
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AMERICAS
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Filmed in the Gorgeous New Technicolor!
One Kansas judge who believes that the highways should be made safer has a standard formula for drunken and reckless drivers who come before him. The drunken driver gets six months in jail and the reckless driver receives a 10-day sentence.
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PAT O'BRIEN
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SUNDAY!
The Comedy Riot of the Year!
WILLIAM POWELL
ANNABELLA
"The Baroness and The Butler"
Addis Ababa, Feb. 22—(UP)—Strange tales of African pygmies who hunt elephants by running under them and stabbing their stomacs open and who allow themselves to be hugged by giant gorillas in order to stab them are told by four Italian explorer who were found in Tanganyika, were described as being $3\mathrm{ft}$ high feet.
"When they first saw us they scammed into the trees," said one of the members of the exposition. "They inhabit the Itiuri forests and have a peculiar way of hunting. They kill elephants with spears from underneath and then let 6-foot gorillas hug them and then they stab the gorillas through the middle with a spear."
Giants, too, were encountered on the journey. Three huge tribesmen.
Law Limits Size of Vehicle
SUN. — Jane Withers "CHECKERS"
the explorers were Count Gigi Martinotti and Count Salvadego, of Brescia; Signor Gino Campello, of Rome, and a mechanic who looked after their two motor cars in which they trekked for six months.
The state law provides that the total outside width of any vehicle shall not exceed eight feet and the maximum height is $12\frac{1}{2}$ feet, yet the Kansas Highway Patrol finds quite a few vehicles which exceed these maximums. It is not unusual to encounter vehicles or loads 10 or 11 feet wide and 14 or 15 feet high.
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Till 7 then 15c
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A GLAD, MAD JAMBOREE of LOVE
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SUN. — "TARZAN'S REVENGE"
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29. 1938
1
UNIVERSITY DAILY/NANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
2
Here on the Hill
-an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON. c:40, Society Editor
Before 1 pm, KU1; after 5 pm, K270-39
Guests at the Phi Gamma Delta pig dinner, which was held Saturday at the chapter house, were:
Ernestine Swafford, fc38
Frances Harden, f41
Franzo Marge Spearing, c88
Lucile McVey, fc39
Jan Fitzgerald, c88
Hedley Ruddell, Wichita
Nayel Mcu, c8l
Virginia Lee Steeves, c19
Peggy Allerty, c40
Bender, Kansas City, Mo.
Margaret Wilson
Bilmer Miller
Jane Sanford, c18
Paul Preston
Elizabeth Carruth, c4p
Marie Forbes
Margorie J. Harbaugh, c18
Hoffman Hill, c8
Margarette Myer, fc38
Losta Woold
Sue Fowler, c18
Jeanne Wilkinson, f41
Hoffman Hill, fc38
Betty Ann Yankee, c41
Ruth Hurd, c4uncl
Jane Everett, c4uncl
Ellinore Shackley, cuncl
Lucille Springer, c38
Betty Ketter, f41
Huffman Hill, fc38
Losta Woold
Sue Fowler, c18
Jeanne Wilkinson, f41
Huffman Hill, fc38
Betty Ann Yankee, c41
Ruth Hurd, c4uncl
Jane Everett, c4uncl
Ellinore Shackley, cuncl
Lucille Springer, c38
Betty Ketter, f41
Huffman Hill, fc38
Betty Stephenson, c40
Leone Hoffman, c40
Woodley, c4uncl
Alice Kiney, c40
Maxine Maier, f41
Peggy Anne Landon, c88
Morrin, c48
Camilla Scott, c40
Mary Markham, f59
Naney Kwaker, f59
Mary Jane Haynes, c88
Anne Browning, c88
Julie Heimbrook, cuncl
Miriam McFarland, Topka
Virginia Appel, c41
Genievev, Gayley, c41
Mary In Connell, c8
∞
Chaperons were: Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Means, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Manley,
Mrs. Rowlands and Mother
Thomas.
The members of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity were guests of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at a smoker last night.
---
Luncheon guests at the Chi Omega sorority house yesterday were Jeanne January, c39; Louse Bowen, c40; Mason Bundel, bunc1; and Virginia Appell, c41.
Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women, and Miss Maria Miller entertained the honorary and alumnae members of Mortar Board Monday evening at the home of Miss Meguiar. After a talk with Mrs. Fidelda Melgiel读 a story of her Caribbean cruise that is written in verse.
University Daily Kansan
Prof. A. J. Mix and Mrs. Mix en
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER...DAVID E. PARTRIDG
MEMBER
KINOSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-IN-CHEEP TOM A. ELLEN
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MARTIN BINTSON AND
DRAKE W. ANGELINE
FEATURE EDITOR KENNY LEWIS
MANAGING EDITOR MARGIN GOELEN
CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER, GIORE CLAREN
NEWS EDITOR DOROTHY NETTLETON
SPORTS EDITOR ELON TORRESNE
MARUPK EDITORS MARY JOANNS AND
REWRITE EDITOR ... DICK MARTIN
TITLECHAPTER EDITOR ... HARRY HILL
SUNDAY EDITOR ... JANE FLOOD
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Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of Collegiale Digest
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College Publishers Representative
420 MADRID AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
CHICAGO • BOSTON • BAN FRANCISCO
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Entered as second-class matter, Sept. 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
tertained at dinner Monday evening at Evan's Hearth in honor of the birthday of Prof. W. C. Stevens. There were 14 guests present, all being members of the University botany faculty. The latter part of the evening was spent at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mix.
Women's Intramurals
--drills used for construction purposes
The new room is a large one, be-
ing as wide and almost as long as
the reserve reading room. It will
probably be used as an additional
stack-room, although definite plans
have not yet been completed.
Deck tennis—The schedule for tomorow is: 4:30, T.N.T. vs. E.T.C. 5:00, L.W.W. vs. I.N.D.
Deck tennis -Alpha Gamma Delta lost to Sigma Kappa, 3-0; and Kappa Kappa Gamma defeated Alpha Chi Omega, 3-0.
Breast stroke (form): Rowland, TN; Blaney, Kappa Alpha Theta; Fiske, Alpha Chi Omega; Lawrence, Alpha Chi Omega; Lattner, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Lowell, IND; Jen-Den Corbin, Kappa Gamma; Spiegel, Cornelian.
Two-length free-style: Lewis, Pitt
Kester, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Wilkina,
Gamma Beta; Hlohmer, Hlohmer
Gamma Delta; Edge-ton,企
Toren,企
Diving: Owens, Alpha Chi Omega,
Wilcuts, Alpha Delta Pi; Waring,
Kappa Kappa Gamma; Woods, P
Beta Phi; Norris, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Learnard, T.N.T.; Irwin,
Kappa Kappa Gamma; Dyer, Chi
Omega.
Backstake (race): Lewis, Pit Beta, Phl Lohmeier, Alpha Gamma Delta, Harrison, Hiltemann, Alpha Gamma, Edgeger, Elderman, Kester, Kanna Kanna Gamma.
Side-stroke (race); Learnard, T.
Miller; Lehmann; Gamma, Kappa
Woodbury; Kappa Kappa Gamma
Lohnney; Alpha Gamma Delta
Rarison; LW; WwM; Pt, Beta Pi
Crawl (form): Nelson, Kappa Alpha Theta; Learned, T.N.T.; Short, Pi Beta Phi; Owens, Alpha Chi Omega; Wilma, Gamma Phi Beta; Kester, Kappa Kappa Gamma War. Mirabilis, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Iwain, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Breathe-stroke (race): Woods, P.
Breaer, R.
Blarey, Kappa Alpha Theta, Wyatt
Kappa Kappa Gamma; Spearing
Kappa Kappa Montgomery;
Montgomery Kappa Alba Theta
Three-length free-style: Wulkin Kappa Gamma; Gowens Alpha, Omenge Phi; Edgerton P, Beta Phil; Bai Phi; Winkappa Kappa Gamma; Bailley, Kappa Gamma; Gowens, Alpha Ch
Women who did not participate in the elimination meets may make arrangements to take a qualification test before they can attend who cannot take part Thursday night should report to the office before tonight so that replacements may be
WAA-A-Those women who still have tickets and money from the show sponsored by WAA, should be treasurer by the end of this week.
Electric Drills
Ruin Sleep and Study
Of Students
Perhaps you are one of the many who, while studying in the library the past few weeks, have been rudely interrupted by a menacing and terrifying 140. You probably wondered what caused the tumult, where it came from, and why it was necessary. Probably 25 per cent of the students interrupted were actually trying to try to prove their Another 25 per cent were probably concentrating on something else; therefore, it seems that the questions concerning the source of the noise should be answered.
A new room has been under construction beneath the reserve reading room of the library the past few weeks. The work was done by the department of building and grounds under the direction of C. G. Bayles. The disturbing noises which bothered not a few strolling scholars were caused in most cases by electric drills used for construction purposes.
Phone K.U. 66
At any rate, it is no secret that the library needed additional space for book shelves. The grinding and hammering noises so disturbing to would-be students have served a definite purpose—a new room has been made toward another step he made toward the completion of Watson library.
Twenty-Year-Old Giant To Stop Growing
Allen, III, Feb. 22—(UP)—Robert Wadlow, tallest human in medical history, who observed his twentieth birthday today, is nearing the end of his phenomenal growth, according to physicians.
Air Guild Presents Skit
"Curtain Call" an incident in the life of an English actress was presented over KFKU last night by the direction of Rula Nuckles.
Oil Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed 50c
LOST: Camera, Kodak retake 3.1; German
make, marked in meters. Lost in library
saturday near 4:00 p.m. o'clock. Redow
return to John Ehloe. Fraser 102.
Records examined today showen that the youth's rate of growth in the past four years has diminished one-half inch each year. He grew from 7.6 inches in 199 and 12 he averaged from four to five inches of growth each year.
The one-act drama was written by Ernestine Hodge, c'unal, for special presentation by the "Little Theater" group.
Those in the car were: Rosamond Barr, c;38; Catherine Holmes, c;38; Brumbula Gorikovic, Jack Nelson, c;38; Dan Willett, c;38; and John Stratton, c;41.
Shampoo and Wave Set, dryed $ \mathrm{W_{n}} $
TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG
CLASSIFIED ADS
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
Prof. W. W. Davis, head of the department of history, spoke at a supper meeting of the Estes Co-organization Sunday at Henley house, on mountains that he has seen.
Measurements revealed Wadlow is 8 feet $ 8 \frac{1}{2} $ inches tall. He weighs 465 pounds.
Davis Speaks to Estes Group
THE ARGUS
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Candid Camera-ly Speaking
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Phone 41 In Hotel Eldridge Bldg.
66
Will Hold Debates Here This Week
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Finals of the Kansas high school debating tournament will be held at the University Friday and Saturday of this week, with ten or more teams entered in each of the three classes into which this year, for the first time, competition has been decided. The extremely extempore speech contest, which is to draw four or five contestants in each of the three classes.
IVA'S
Call 616 Free Pickup and Deliv
For 17 years the debates were held under the auspices of the Kansas High School Debating League, but this year, for the first time, the forensic program is under the direction of the Kansas State High School Activities Association. H. G. Ingham, of the University extension division, continues as administrative director of the debate activities.
Debates will be upon the adoption of the unicameral system of state legislatures, and the extemporaneous speeches will be on some phase of government regulation of advertis-
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12
In several instances, especially in classes A and B, rummers-up in the district meets have been invited to participate in the finals. Following are the entries, an asterisk (*) marking the added entries:
1319 Tennessee Street Lawrence, Kansas
---
12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50
Class B - Holton, *Hiwataa, Poola*, *Gaawatimac*, Fredonia, *Eureka* a *Neyney*, Abilene, *Elwisworth*, Sheridan County (Hoxley), Dodge City, Medi-
6 Breakfasts, 50c
Class C - Turner, Neosho Rapids,
*Reading*, Washington, Lebanon,
Caliption, Hateded, Courtney,
Oakley, Bucklin
colleagues are the entries for ex-
To Feature Class Reunions
Class A - District 2, Owen Barnes,
Wyndotte High; district 3, William
Black, Fort Scott; district 5, Louis
Brown, Fort Smith; district 6,
Stum, Fury Rubby, Davidson, El-
Doradea; district 10, Allan Conwil
Hutchinson. Added to class A will
be Jack Dunagin, Topela; district 2
will be Sam Van Scoope, Manhattan
district.
Class C - District 1. Norman Higgins, Turner; district 6. Leonard Suchand, Kensington; district 7. Vargia毛洛尼 Sylvan; Stephen White, Fretty Poinek; and disless H. III, Mercedes Ossnerey;
temporaneous speech:
Class B - District 1, Burton Hodgden, Holton; district 2, Keith Martin, Paula; district 5, Lou Anouer, Madison; district 6, Robert Plumb, Madison; district 7, Daniel Perry, a contentent, and Medicine Lodge, district 7, also will send a speaker.
Fred Elsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, expects this year's commencement, which will include all reunions, to be one of the best.
The largest probably will be that held by the class of 1913. This class held a meeting Sunday and elected two attendance promotion chairmen, three students, and a school of the University, and one for the different districts of Kansas.
Three attending the 50-year reunion, the principal one, will be given gold modules. The class of 1833 and the class of 1933 are considering reunions and the class of 1928 are holding the largest meeting in its history.
Dr. Dykstra, a former University professor and now the president of the University of Wisconsin, has been chosen as this year's commencement speaker. The commencements will be held June 4th, 5th, and 6th.
The faculty of the School of Education yesterday voted the degree of B.S. in education to the following who completed their work at the close of last semester: Myra Nansen Erkline, Myra McKinney Jackson. In addition these three also received the university teacher's diploma.
A rehearsal was held last night by the Lawrence Choral Union in Strong hall auditorium for the "Pilgrim's Progress," which is to be given with the University Symphony Orchestra on March 27.
Choral Union Rehearses For 'Pilgrim's Progress'
B.S. Degree in Education Voted to Three Graduate
Three students who were recently voted A.B. degree by the College of Liberal Arts, were voted teacher's diplomas. They were: Chesley Mildred James, Dorothy M a ble Jones, and Easher M a ble Holcker.
It was announced that Prof. Walter Allen Stults, bass-baritone, of the school of music of Northwestern University, will have one of the principal solo parts. Stults is well known in the musical world for his portrayal of character parts in numerous productions.
Extension Class Ends
Adult Education Course
Reports One Absence
In Four-Month Period
Prof. J. W. Twente of the School of Education has completed the teaching of his course in adult education, which is the first extension class to be finished this year. Out of the total group of students enrolled, only one absence was recorded for the entire period from Oct. 13 to Feb.
Each year the extension division to the University, through the bureau of extension classes, conducts extinemural classes in a number of cities other than Lawrence. Regular faculty members of the University are in charge of these classes, which usually start in October and offer two or three hours credit. Other two-hour courses will be completed within the next few weeks. Two-two-hour courses meet 10 times and three-courses meet 23 times, the latter will not be completed later in the spring.
Of those enrolled in Professor Twente's class, 10 were taking the work for graduate credit, 6 were undergraduates, 8 were not working toward a degree, and of those working for a degree 4 were working for advanced degrees. One was doing work toward a degree at Kansas City Teachers College, while 2 with master's degrees from the university were taking the work for universities, and a graduate of the University was working toward a master's in vocational education at the University of Wisconsin.
Several of the University graduates were taking additional work for personal benefit only; a few were taking the work merely to keep abreast of the times in the field of adult education; and one man who had a doctor's degree from the University of Wisconsin was attending because of his interest in the instructor.
Flood Isolates Arkansas Town
forman, Ark., Feb. 22—(UP)—The Little Red river broke through its levee in four places today, forced a thousand persons to flee from their homes, inundated 30,000 acres of land, and practically isolated this southwest Arkansas town of 2,500 residents.
A large section of Forman, 25 miles northwest of Texarkana and five miles from the Oklahoma line, was under several feet of water.
All highways into here were flooded. The Rock Island railroad was the only traffic outlet and its wooden bridge across the Little Red was endangered by the battering river.
Activity in a large section of the rich Smackwater oil field near El Dorado was stopped by the flood-swollen Ouchitia river and Smackwater creek, which spread over hundreds of wells.
Flood peaks were believed past danger points on other rivers in Arkansas, but the Red Cross said that approximately seven thousand refugees could not be to their homes in St. Ferdinand or St.Frankel. Black and small streams subsided.
crest of the Arkansas river passed Little Rock and reared Pine Bluff, where 1,700 Works Progress Administration workers had piled sand bags on a retaining wall to insure the city against being inundated.
Templin To Address
Templin To Address Student Correspondents Bureau
Middle Correspondents Bureau
Prof. Olin Templin will speak on
"Financial Assistance to Students"
at the next meeting of the Student
Correspondents Bureau tomorrow at
4:30 in room 104 of the Journalism
building. Anyone interested may attend
the meeting.
The Latest Fiction and Non-fiction Rental Library Greeting Cards Magazines and Magazine Subscriptions Modern Library Campus Maps Publishers' Specials (reprints)
You are always welcome to come in and brows
1021 Mass.
THE BOOK NOOK
Phone 666
Shanghai, Feb. 23 (Wednesday)—(UP) Japan moved on three fronts today to bring her undeleted war with China to a splicity, victory for Japan.
Militarily, he reinforced armies drove deeper into the heart of the Yangtze valley determined to occupy China's provisional capital, Hankow, and crush last vestiges of major organized Chinese armed resistance.
Digitally, the representatives, with the support of German Dictator Hitler, started a new under-cover peace offensive designed to split Gen. Chiang Kai-shek's all-China anti-Japanese front, and swing China into
the anti-Soviet Rome-Berlin-Tokyo triangle in world politics.
Administratly, broad plans were set in motion to strengthen the provisional pro-Japanese government established by the Japanese army in Peiping to rate 650,000 square miles of Chinese territory, with a normal population of more than one hundred million persons, which already has been conquered by the Japanese military machine.
Advertise your wants in Kanson Classified Ads.
Lieutenant-General Shumuko Haka,
new Japanese commander-in-chief in
the Yangtze valley area, assumed his
past in Shanghai succeeding Lieutenant-General Iwane Matsui, who returned to Tokyo.
Here's News---
MARCO BLAZZA
THURSDAY--FRIDAY--SATURDAY
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1938
Swimming Team Bows To Bears
New Pool Records Set
In 220 - yard Freestyle
And 200 - yard Breast
Stroke
The University of Kansas swimmers yesterday afternoon bowed to the Washington Bears of St. Louis in the Robinson gymnasium pool, 30 to 48, taking only two firsts in nine events.
Clair Staley starred for the Washington tankmen, setting a new pool record in the 220-yard freestyle, also beating his Missouri Valley record of 2:27.1. Staley also placed first in the 100-yard freestyle and the 440-yard freestyle. He missed the pool record in the 440-yard event by only 1 second. Another record was broken as Rudy Brand of St. Louis smashed the 200-yard breast-stroke mark with a time of 2:34.7 to better the 2:36.3 time of Baker of Texas, made in 1936.
Kansaas' two firsts were captured by White in the diving, and by P. Ritchie in the 50-yard freestyle. White had trouble in out-pointing Bohn of Washington in the diving but won by a small margin. Kansas also took second in the 50-yard freestyle. Davison came in close behind Ritchie.
Bill Kissling, Bear tank star,
came within 8 second of the pool
record for the 150-yard backstroke
of 1:45.5, which he set here last year.
Washington showed up especially
well in the two relays, with the
archer man in each case having a pool
to spare on the Kansas nautilus.
The summary:
300-yard medley relay—Won by Washington (L. Staley, Brurd, Burdick); second, Kansas (P. Ritchie, D.Brown, Mitchell). time: 3.20.1.
220-yard freestyle — Won by Ck
Kansas, third, Feester, Kansas
time, 2184. (A new pool record
was made of Nebraska, two weeks ago.)
Brassard, two weeks ago.)
50-yard freestyle—Won by P.
Ritchie, Kansas; second, Davidson,
Kansas; third, Toon, Washington time, :25.7.
Diving-Won by White, Kansas second, Bohn, Washington; third Clasquin, Washington.
100-yard freestyle—Won by C. Staley, Washington; second, Nowsinake, Kansas; third, Toon, Washington; ton: 57.6
150-ward backstroke — Won by Kiesling, Washington; second, P Ritchie, Kansas; third, D. Ritchie Kanas; time, 1:46.3
200-year breast-stroke—Won by ing, Washington;迪Brown, Kansas; time, 2:34.7 (New pool record 1983). 3 sets in 1858 by Baker of Texas.)
440-yard freestyle — Won by. C Staley, Washington; second. Fisher Kansas; third, Nowsinske, Kansas time, 5:18.7.
400-yard relay - Won by Washington (Toon, Burdick, Skimming), second, Kanaus (P, Hitchie, Darden, Horton and Mitchell); time 4:00.3.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
In an early intramural game last night the Sigma Nu quintet had little difficulty with the D.T.D. five, hold a 48-36 advantage at the final抢。
--had in winning high-point honors at Norman.
Stipp stole the scoring show for both teams with 20 points while Brouke picked the losers with 6 field goals. The Sigma Nu Juice caged 11 points.
Sigma No. (48) D.T.D. (36)
The box score:
Signal Name | g ft | g ft |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Ashley, f | 3 0 | 0 Brooke, f | 6 0 |
| Clark, f | 5 1 | 0 Cluster, f | 4 0 |
| Sipp, c | 9 2 | 3 M Mor, m | 2 0 |
| Page, g | 1 0 | 0 Loudon, g | 3 0 |
| swiggett | 0 1 | 1 Galloway, g | 2 0 |
2244
Official: Greene. Volley Ball
Kappa Sie easily defeated S.P.E two straight games, and Phi Gan used out Sigma Ch 2 to 1.
Music League Asks
Permission To Use Song
The Intercollegiate Music League, of Boston, is editing a folio containing representative songs of American colleges and universities and has invited alumni office to include a song representative of the University.
Kansas Meets Huskers Next
Jayhawkers Have Won 16 Games Out of 18 Starts
Sixteen victories against two defeats is the record of the University of Kansas basketball team which won 61-53. Cornhoppers at Lincoln Saturday.
Latest victim of the rampant Jayhawks was Iowa State which went down to a 31-2 defeat at Ames. Missouri lost to Oklahoma the same night, leaving only Kansas and Oklahoma for the Big Six championship.
If Kansas wins its remaining games with Nebraska and Missouri it will be the undisputed champion of the conference. If the Jayhawks win one of their remaining two games the worst they can get will be a tie for the title with Oklahoma. Here continue Good Work.
Dick Harp, sophomore Kansas guard, continued against Iowa State the outstanding work which he has been doing recently. Harp bagged 4 field goals to finish just behind Freale Praille, who scored 9 points. In Kansas' last five games Harp has collected 6.5, 5.8, and 8 points.
Harp Continues Good Work
The Jawhawks will have to play better basketball against Nebraska than they did at Ames to win Saturday. Kansas did not play the basketball in the game with Iowa State, which they did against Oklahoma.
Don Ehlong sprained an ankle in the first half of the game, but was able to play part of the second half. Don Ehlong said he would be ready to go on against Nebraska.
Sylvester Schmidt, senior center, came back into his own at Ames, with his best performance in recent games. Schmidt did not play in the second half of the game at Norman, but scored 6 points and played a good all-around game against Iowa State.
Schmidt Hit Stride at Ames
George Golay, junior forward,
counted 4 points against the Cylones,
but did not show up as well as he
Saturday's game will be the last game of the season for Nebraska and it is expected that the Huskers will put everything into it. Nebraska has had a disappointing season to date, but a victory Saturday over Kansas would make the season a successful one.
What's Doing in Sports
At Other Schools
By Newt Hoverstock
Cincinnati basketball fans were somewhat stirred up during a recent game at Dayton when the officials didn't blow the whistle as fast as thought proper on injuries. An investigation of the rules on the subject showed that the official may call time out immediately if the ball is in the possession of the team whose player is injured, but, if the ball is in the other team's possession, the official may not call time until he sees it play in the opponent's man's team has regained possession of the ball. This ruling is to prevent the faking of injuries to prevent the opponent from scoring. The rule makes it look bad when a man is left writhing on the floor while play goes on, but it seems a necessary precaution.
According to the Iowa State students, Coach Louis Menze, stopped from any Big Six championship ideas, made up his mind last week that the Cyclones be "Cage Giant Killers" in the conference cage race since they were to receive shots at both Kansas and Oklahoma this week at Ames. Having passed the Kansas part of the "killing," perhaps the Iowa State boys will make good on the Oklahoma end when the Sooners arrive there Saturday night. Missouri nearly proved itself as one of the first teams out on the game there Monday night, and may turn the trick on its home court when the Sooners meet them next Monday night. At any rate, neither Kansas nor Oklahoma has any bed of roses ahead of it yet.
Unusual Weather Hinders Trackmen In Practice
By Dale Heckendorn, c'39
Cold, snowy weather cast a disai-
mal atmosphere on the chances of Jawahier trackmen in their dual
towers at Columbia Saturday night.
The extreme cold has made track workouts a problem during the past week. Almost every member of the team has been handicapped by a severe cold or sore legs received while running on the damp, frigid indoor track. Because of these alliances Coach H. W. Hargis has been forced to call a halt in the stiff workouts to bring the men into even a fair planation for competition.
Indoor Track Damaged
Time trials over the weekend did not prove very satisfactory. Several men were not able to run and many who did turned in slow time. As the snow melts on the stadium floor, the team races a truck, forming large puddles and making running difficult. Slippery mud on the sharp curves at times is hazardous. Monday several buckets and even a wheelbarrow were recruited in an attempt to stem the flow where it was most abundant and a manageable condition, the entire squad be reported seven days a week.
Following in the footsteps of former Kansas teams the past few years, the present crew is pointing to the outdoor season. After poor indoor showings the Kansans have come back strong on the open air tracks in the spring to rank high in the conference and place in the upper few percent of the elites of the Midwest and South. Team Has Improved Little
Don Bird, co-holder of the Big Six outdoor championship in the pole vault last year and winner in the event in a dual team with Nebraska a week ago, is the only Jaya-hawker who shows any indication that his performance shows little improvement since their encounter with the Cornhuskers.
Harry Wiles, Paul Masoner, Kenneth Clark, and Marvin Cox have
been having considerable trouble with leg injuries.
The cindermen will leave Saturday morning by bus for Missouri They will tackle the strong Tigers night and will return Sunday day.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansas Sports Editor
Praille, Kansas' perennial all-Big Six guard, says we may quote him definitely to the effect that he will play with the Kansas City Healys in the National A.U.A. tournament to be held in Denver, March 13 to 19. It will give the Healys two former Kansas players on their squad when they go to the "mile high" city. Ray Noble has done a "noble" job at guard for the Kansas City team this season. One other all-Big Six player is a forward for the Healys. This is Frank Groves, who made a conference scoring record as center for Kansas State.
We see in a Wichita paper that the Wheatshakers are going east next fall to engage the Army on the gridid. While it seems they are stepping 'way out of their class, still it must be remembered that Washburn made the same trip in 1934 and surmised its most optimistic supporters by holding the West Point torch for years. We can say this for the Shockers: If they can make and take advantage of breaks as they did against the Jayhawkers last fall, the Army may be in for an uncomfortable afternoon.
News for hockey fans: Only four more home games remain for the Kansas City Grayhounds. Out of 20 that have been played this season on the Kansas City rink, the Grayhounds have won 15. The next game is Feb. 26, with the Wichita Skyhawks as the visiting team. The game is important as the Hounds will be playing to edge out Wichita for a place in the play-offs. Other games are against St. Paul on Sunday, March 6; Minneapolis, Wednesday, March 9; and Tulsa ends the season at the Pla-Mor ice palace on Saturday, March 12.
Blahnik Still Leads Scorers McNatt Is in Second Place; Prale Holds Down Third
Bob Blahnik, accurate shooting guard of Iowa state, remains at the top of the Big Six scoring heap, even though his average was cut by the tight Kansas defense, which he hld him to 8 points Monday night. Blahnik's average is now 11.11 for 9 games.
In second place is the "eatty" fimmy McNatt, sophomore sensation of the Sooner ball club. In 8 games, the Oklahomaan has averaged 9.1 points per game and alt-diag Big Sixer, is in third place with an average of 10.63 in 8 games.
Moving up to fourth place as a result of the scoring in Monday's game is Wesche, Kansas State center, who has taken Gove's place as high scoring center in the conference. Wesche has finished his conference play for this season, so his final average is 10.2 for 10 games.
In fifth place is Parsons, Nebraska, followed by Mesch, sophomore Sooner. In seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth are Harvey, Missouri; Walker, Oklahoma; Brown, Mississippi; and Martin, Oklahoma.
The next highest places held by Jayhawks are fifteenth and sixteenth, held by Ebling and Harp, respectively.
The ten high scorers, with the games played in, field goals, free throws, total points, and average points per game follow:
Scoring Summary
Blahnik, I.S. G gf ff tp avg. 11.11
Blahnik, I.S. G gf ff tp avg. 11.11
Pealeil, K. B 81 23 85 10.62
Pealeil, K. B 81 23 85 10.62
Wesche, K.* S. * 81 22 10.22
Parenson, M. M 37 14 80 10.03
Parenson, M. M 37 14 80 10.03
Harvey, M. M 8 34 119 9.88
Harvey, M. M 8 34 119 9.88
Brower, M. T 18 20 58 7.36
Brower, M. T 18 20 58 7.36
Martin, O. J 12 20 58 7.36
- Denotes season completed
The mock trials which were sched-
led to begin yesterday in Green
hall were postponed until tomorrow,
the witnesses was unable to
appear.
3 point landing
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When a plane lands on three wheels...that's perfect landing
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Weekly Radio Features
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Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
Orchestra Plays Serious Program
LAWRENCE KANSAS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1938
String Section Exhibits
Perfect Co-ordination
Under Krueger's Baton
Last Night
By Richard MacCann, c'40 and Larry Blair, c'40
University audience sometimes what more, alive to the brilliance of its playing in Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, under the direction of Karl Krueger, last night played a program notable for its seriousness. Included were three Wagnerian selec-tors a complete symphony by Sibelius.
Although hampered somewhat by a few flat notes from the brasses, the string section exhibited, as always, a perfection of co-ordination and feeling that is not too often heard.
Opening the program was the overture to "Cenereotela" (Rossini), an opera based on the famous story of Cinderella. Various instruments were displayed in intricate solo passages from the music of Giacomo Puccini's Symphony No. 2 Offers Contrast
The Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 43, by Jan Sibelius, often considered the most celebrated living composer, provided a contrasting note, which contained in itself contrasting moods. It was clear that the musicians "felt" their music in this composition of excellent melodic harmony, so typical of Sibelius there was almost perfect intonation.
According to the program, this symphony ended in a "sonorous apothesis." At least the conclusion served to arouse some who felt that listening attentively to a longer work was unconventional.
Following the intermission, The Andante from the Third Violin Sonata and the Prelude from the Sixth Violin Sonata, both by Bach were distinguished by a more flowing style and continuity of theme.
The first selection from Wagner included the Prelude and Finale in "Tristan and Isolde." The phrasing was at first so delicate that it was almost impossible to tell when the music started. Alternation of strings and reeds brought about a climax typical of Wagner in which Isolde pouns out her heart.
Program Varied
A variation in the character of the program was revealed in "Impressions from Nature," by Malipiero. The first part of the suite, depicting the garden-warrior, conveyed a distinctly pastoral mood. There were counter-melodies between the various reed instrumental sound of strings. Also depleted were a woodpecker and the owl.
A French horn solo, showing a precise and sure technique in its execution of the hunting theme, was a noticeable part of "Siegfried's Rhine Journey," from Wagner's "Gotterdammer." The hunting theme relieved the despondency which characterized the first part of the number, which ended in a triumphant flare by the brass.
The final scheduled number on the program was an unusual arrangement of the familiar "Tannhauser" overture, by Wagner. Fast-moving passages again displayed the perfect unison of the strings. This arrangement begins with the Bacchanale and progresses rapidly to the triumphant finale of the Pilgrim's Chorus, played by the trombones.
The Overture to "The Russian Easter" (Rimsky-Korakov), was presented by the orchestra as an encore.
HAY by WIRE
---
The "Spring Swing" cast is getting back into the swing of things after the play. Betty Smith, front row second from the left, received a fan letter from Blankarc, Mo., the other day as a result of a chorus picture appearing in the local newspaper there. The letter had an old fashioned script with old spelling. If the other gals bring them out of them than hills as well as Betty, the thing will be a sell-out.
The department of journalism has a new cat to catch rats and mice. Julie Heimbrook named "Dt Butch. Despite the state legislature's hints
The Southwest (Liberal) Daily Times Says--
The Grin Reaper
Southwest Daily Times (Liberal), by Bill Long:
Whether you'll grin with us or not, Dear Reader, is yet to be determined. But we're laughing. We refer to the new flare-up of the "Red Scare" at Kansas University.
Now the legislators have picked it up. Why shouldn't they? It's six bucks a day (or is it?) and something to view with alarm instead of going ahead and dealing with the real issues at hand in a way to which they could point with pride.
If Mr. and Mrs. Kansas' little boy Johnny is in any real danger from Red influence at the state U., we'd more quickly believe it was the influence of that red-headed Theta (or Pi Phi, if we have Theta readers) than of anything Russia might send over.
Of course Communism intrigues college students—as a subject for thought, not as a design for living—just as sex intrigues them, and for the same reason: it has always been "shushed" at home.
College students taken as an average, think, and realize they're thinking, for the first time. They become skeptical, because they discover that there is another point of view from the one always taken in the home circle. They become acquainted with agnostic or atheist professors or students, or read the philosophies of agnostic or atheist, and they doubt God—their parents think. Rather, they're recognizing sound points in the cases of the negative debaters, and are seeking rebellants more adequate than those they learned in Sunday School at the age of 14 or under.
Your college-going son or daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kansas, will study government and political history, and wonder why you always vote the Democratic ticket. He may even come to believe that Hoover wasn't the sole cause for the depression, or that the United States did not enter the World War only to save democracy and civilization. But the chances are a little better than even that he'll end up voting your ticket, and voting it straight.
And, quite naturally, he'll read about Communism. He may not get it quite straightened out in his mind, but if he's interested enough to cause you any alarm, Mr. Kansas, he'll be interested enough to go into it thoroughly. Communism—with everyone working for the state, and no capitalists and no serfs, and money and the material needs of life becoming of minor importance with a race concentrating on progress, the arts, scholarship! It will sound good. After all, isn't that just about what Christ taught?
But before he does anything about it, he'll trouble himself to investigate how it has worked out in countries where it has been tried. He'll learn of the difference between the ideal and the reality. And he'll decide that, after all, the good old United States brand of democracy is about as good as they're making these days.
He'll settle down in your tracks—too much so for his own good, perhaps—and he'll worry when his son goes to K.U., starts talking Communism 25 years from now. But if he's elected to the state legislature and starts an investigation of the state university as a "hot bed of Communism," his memory will have been proven even shorter than those of the 1938 brand of campaign-promise-forgetting legislators!
Hold Speech Contest Tonight
Noon today is the deadline for entries in the extemporaneous speech contest, which will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the Little theater of Green hall.
Persons entered in the contest, which is the first of its kind, will speak on the American political situation. One-half hour before the contest begins, each person will draw three sub-topics, choosing one of the three for a six-minute discussion. These sub-topics will be taken from the notes by the board by W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science.
Judges for the contest will be Willard N. Doan, assistant professor of journalism; G. N. Bebout, instructor in English; and the Rev. J. F. King, of the Congregational Church. Robert Sullivan, c'unel, will preside.
A.S.M.E. Meets Tonight
First prize of $10 is being offered by Martin Maloney, '37, instructor in English.
The American Society of Mechanical Engineers will meet at 8:15 this evening in room 110, Marvin hall. Prof. Raymond H. Wheeler of the psychology department will speak.
K. W. Willey, vice-chairman
At the meeting Tuesday of the Newman Club, an organization of Catholic young people, the following officers were elected: President, Joe Gover, c40; vice-president, Benedict P. Bagrowski, c40; treasurer, W. M. Tucker, c40; treasurer, Patricia Green, c40; apologist, Ambrose Dempsey, b39.
Newman Club Elects Year's New Officers
Kansas: More or less cloudiness today, with rising temperature in east and south portions; unsettled Thursday night and Friday.
The next meeting will be held on Tuesday, March 8, at 7:30 p.m.
WEATHER
The Kansas City Philharmonic found a slippery and uncertain welcome in Lawrence when its charter bus attempted to climb the Eleventh street hill late yesterday morning.
W. S.G.A. Carnival, Robinson gymnasium, 12 p.m.
Negro Student Varsity, Memorial Union, 2 a.m.
Friday, Feb. 25
Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Kappa Alpha, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Philharmonic Receives Slippery Lawrence Welcome
Sigma Chi, chapter house, 12 p.m.
Authorized Parties
Saturday, Feb. 26
Alpha Kappa Psi, I.O.O.F. hall,
12 p.m.
Award Degrees To Engineers
The "January Graduates," or those students who graduated from the School of Engineering and Architecture at the close of the last semester, have been announced. Each of these students received the degree of bachelor of science in his major department.
James Edward Busher, Daniel Citron, Leighton M. Harvey, Emilio Marcheo, George M. Pro, from the department of mechanical engineer-
The Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, under the direction of Karl Kruger, played to an audience of nearly a thousand school children yesterday afternoon. Mr. Kruger gained the confidence of his young listeners with his brief descriptions of selections to be played. The program was enthusiastically received.
The names of the graduates and their departments follow: Philip Brighton, Twyman K. J. Klager, Arthur H. Lippitt, John R. Shaw, and Burie F. Wobker from the department of chemical engineering.
The orchestra played two encores the second Intermezzo from "The Witch of Fara" and the Flight of the Bumblebee ("Rimsky-Korsakoff").
Perhaps the most interesting number was Bibelius' weird and descriptive "Valse Triste," in which the orchestra, with muted strings, depicted the death scene of a poor man. The program closed with a number demonstrating Strauss' genius for melodies, the overture to the "Bat."
Philharmonic Orchestra Presents Varied Concert To Young Listeners
NUMBER 101
The bus, with a large number of the men aboard, stopped on the hill between Ohio and Louisiana. After several unsuccessful attempts to climb the remaining few yards, more than half of the musicians got out of the bus and headed back toward the valley. Several carried violins and brief cases. The bus, with the other passengers, cautiously backed and slid down the hill.
Preston A. Cole, and George C. Lemon, from the department of mining engineering.
Krueger Plays For Children
ELIZABETH MEGUIAR,
Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
Raymond W. Kerfoot, from the department of architectural engineering.
Harry L. Hall, James P. Looney,
and Perry Clifford Sharp, from the department of civil engineering.
Lowry S. Lowe, bachelor of science from the department of industrial engineering.
Neal Roy Mannon, and Theodore Neyer, from the department of electrical engineering.
Dean Frederick Moreau of the School of Law has announced that a portrait photograph of the late Prof. Frederick Moreau was added to the law library collection.
Professor Higgins, who was a member of the Lawrence school board for several years, was made president of the Kansas Bar Association in 1918. He obtained his A.B. degree from the University in 1888 and in 1894 from the University of Law. After his graduation he practiced law in Kansas City until 1899, when he joined the University staff.
Higgins Portrait Added to Law Library
In 1913 he was granted a leave to go to England. His mission was to study the English court and make a report to the American Judiciature Society. He died in 1900. Miss Hirigane resides at 125 Onehst Street Lawrence.
Correspondents To Meet
The Student Correspondents Bureau will meet this afternoon in room 102 Journalism building. Chancellor Lindley will make a statement concerning the proposed investigation.
C. H. Mullen, chairman,
Correspondents Bureau
Joe Louis Knocks Out Nathan Mann
Champion Retains Title After Putting Opponent Away in Third Round Before 19,000 Fans
Madison Square Garden, New
York, Feb. 23 – (UP) - Heavyweight
hon Champion Joe Louis tonight knocked
u tathan Mann in the third round
f their scheduled 15-round title
game more than 19,000 fan-
ring fans.
The fight was the first time in the champion's career he ever cut loose with a murderous barrage of blasting. The amazing fury of his battered into virtual unconsciousness the bull-shouldered, dark-haired Italian who had dared match ounces with the champion.
Bomber Floors Mann Early
In the second and third rounds the Brown Bomber floored the challenger four times. Mam took the full count of ten on one knee at 1:56 of the third—after his fourth and last trip to the canvas.
Mann tried desperately to make a grand fight of it, but he didn't carry the heavy artillery to finish what he had started. He lacked power to put Leuin down when he had maddened the forehead-depanned Detroit Nero.
Mann's lashing hooks to Jolting oe's head early in the second session suddenly transformed the tail, eown's skimmed champion into a mashing machine to challenge the chalumene merge with explosive books and smash to the heads.
Mann Falls on Count of Ten
When Mann went down for the fourth time — knocked half a way through the ropes by a terrific right hook to the chin—his mouth and nose streaming blood —bounced on the ropes, lithered further to the canvas on his back, rolled over onto his stomach, and drew. He was Referee Arthur Donovan waved the count above his shaking bead.
Mann tried to rise, but his legs failed him and he fell back to one knee as "ten" was completed.
Just before that last trip to the resin, "Nailing Natie," who had hoped to become the youngest heavy-weight champion in history, was floored in a neutral corner with a left hook to the face for a count of three, and before that he had been struck with one for no count with another left back.
The first knockdown, which occurred in the second round, came after Joe had staggered Mann in an exchange, then stalked him across the ring and dropped him with a straight right for a count of nine.
Dilettante Commission To Discuss Religious Artists
Dilettante Commission
The Dilette Commission will meet tonight at 7:30 at Herley house. The subject of discussion will be the works and lives of great artists and musicians who excelled in religion, art and music which will be discussed and correlated.
Alice Russell, fa 39, chairman of the commission, will be in charge of the meeting.
Music Teachers To Convene
The thirteenth annual convention of the Kansas State Music Teachers' Association will 'convene at Emporia March 3-4.
Bulletin from the office of the School of Fine Arts announce a program of concerts, lectures, and masterclasses.
William Allen White; Dean Douglas, state supervisor of music in Missouri; Dr. Arnold Small, and Dr. Andrew Garland will be among the speakers.
Dalies Frantz, pianist, and Theodor Harrison, baritone, will appear in concerts. Frantz will also conduct three masterclasses in piano, and Harrison will conduct three masterclasses in voice.
A violin forum will be held under the direction of Dr. Arnold Small of the University of Iowa; and a public school concert with the U.S. Army will be hosted by Mia Cissera Streeve.
An elaborate a capella chair festival will be one highlight on the convention program. The Southwestern a capella chair, Bethany College a capella chair, the a capella chair of Salina, the a capella chair of Colleyville, the a capella chair, and the symphonic chorus of the Kansas State Teachers' College, Emporia, will combine in an elaborate festival of music.
Phi Sigma To Present Illustrated Lecture
The local chapter of Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity, will present J. E. Eckert in an illustrated lecture this evening at 7:30 in Snow hall. Mr. Eckert, who is dean of the College of Science at zoology at Kansas State College, has received considerable national fame in the field of parasitology.
Professor Eckert will speak on the "Influences of the Hookworm in America." In addition to his talk he will also discuss his expedition to the island of Trinidad. The lecture is open to the public and all wishing to attend are cordially invited.
Hitler Agrees Paper Says
Daily Express Reports
Fuehrer Is Favorable
To British Plan
London, Feb. 24 (Thursday)—(UP)-The Daily Express said today that Chancellor Adolf Hitler of Germany last night agreed to the withdrawal of his nuclear navy foreign troops from Spain. Italy had previously agreed.
London, Feb. 23.—(UP)-British labor leaders, supported by six million followers, demanded tonight that a general election be called to most Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain because of his "dishonorable surrender to the threats and bullying of Fascist states."
Despite the two-to-one House of Commons vote of confidence given him last night—approving his direct deals with Europe's dictators and a virtual repudiation of the League of Nations—the prime minister continued his program under heavy attacks from all sides.
The demand, contained in a manifiesta passed by united labor in a gigantic meeting at Transport House, as came Chamberlain fought attacks on his personal honor on the floor of the House of Commons.
Paris, Feb. 23.—(UP)—France's secret defense committee met today for the first time since the World War to organize an $855,400,000 arms expansion program and lay strategic plans for the defense of Czechoslovakia against any German invasion.
'Hello Kansas Program Tonight
Four German short-wave stations will broadcast an "Hello Kansas" program tonight from 6:30 to 7:15. You can Streamed Kansas' will come
St-Standpagen bather will open the 45-minute broadcast, according to a copy of the program received by the K.U. German Club.
John Coleman of Atchison, German exchange student at Freiburg this year, and Dr. Dietrich Zwicker, who was the German exchange student at the University two years ago, are speakers on the program.
"The Crimes and the Blue" will be played toward the end of the program, and a song of the earlier Gryphon is out. Out Their City's is the last number.
"The Legend of the Sunflower" will be told by Ernst Wilhem, not identified as a Kansan. Other numbers by chorus and orchestra include George Bowles "I'm a Jay," or Kate Stephens "Corn Stout."
German stations broadcasting the program are:
Station Wavelength Kilocycle
DJL 19.8 m. 15,110
DJB 19.74 m. 15,100
DJC 19.8 m. 11,770
DJE 26.03 m. 6,020
DJC 8.02 m. 4,030
In this part of the country stations DJB and DJD are usually considered the easiest to get.
Next Dramatic Club Play Will Be 'Cavalcade'
Noel Coward's "Cavalcade" be presented as the extra attraction of the Dramatic Club in May, instead of "The Taming of the Shrew." Rolla Nuckles, director, announced yesterday.
"Cavalcade" was chosen instead of a modern version of "The Taming of the Shrew" because it could include more members of the club. The change was made following a meeting of the Dramatic Club Tuesday.
Chem Club To Hear Grads
The Chemistry Club will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in room 201. Bailev chemical laboratory.
Lawrence Forman, gr, will speak on the "Metal Carbonyls" and Owen A. De Woody, gr will speak on "The Fight During the Last Fifteen Years."
'Red' Bill May Reach Senate Today
Committee Is Expected To Report Resolution Into Upper House This Afternoon
The senate is expected to act today on the proposed Muir-Carpier resolution to investigate "all subversive activities and propaganda in the state" and particularly at the University.
The resolution, which passed the house Saturday by a vote of 92 to 4, was read the second time before the senate immediately after r oll call yesterday afternoon. After the ways and means committee returns it to the senate, a vote will be taken. To Be Considered
The measure was referred to the senate ways and means committee yesterday. Senate leadership believed it would be reported on in the senate this afternoon following the meeting of the committee this morning.
Senate leaders believed last night that both resolutions would be considered simultaneously by the senate today.
Another resolution which was introduced in the senate at the same time the House resolution was introduced is also on the general order list of the senate for consideration. This resolution is the same as the house measure except that it proposes an examination of all appropriations for state educational institutions.
Student Committee Attends
A committee of 12 students from the University was in Topeka yesterday to ascertain the outcome of pending payments in the legislature.
The students met at the Hotel Kansas yesterday morning and then dispersed into groups to interview members of both houses of the legislature, speakers of the two bodies and the Governor.
Following the luncheon, the group attended the session of the senate. It returned to Lawrence last night.
The committee met for lunch with Senator Payne Ratter of Parsons and Senator Don Allen of Valley Falls. both university graduates.
The committee is meeting this morning in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building to decide on a resolution to vote on the resolution is passed by the senate.
Carper Declines To Discuss Charges
Rep. Clay C. Carper, Greenwood county, co-author of the resolution before the Kansas legislature proposing an investigation of subversive activities in the state, declined yesterday an invitation of the Student Committee to discuss a proposal before an open forum at the University.
In answer to a telegram sent him Sunday, Representative Carper sent the following letter to the committee:
"Please be advised that this resolution has not been adopted as yet and has not been approved by the governor of Kansas, nor do we know that it will be adopted and approved. I do not know who the members of this commission will be or what the committee will see fit to investigate. The purpose of this resolution is clearly stated within the resolution and I can see no occasion for any open forum discussion at Lawrence.
"It has been stated by certain parties that there is no occasion for this investigation if that be true, I can see no reason why you should be unduly alarmed. We have in our possession positive proof that conditions do exist, not only at the University, but in other institutions in Kansas. If and when this committee is named it will decide upon its own course of procedure.
"Yours very truly, Clay C. Carper."
Announce Scholarships For Jewish Graduates
The Graduate School for Jewish Social Work is offering scholarships and fellowships ranging from $150 to $500 for the academic year, to Jewish students who are to receive their bachelor's degrees this spring.
Dean R. A. Schwegler, of the School of Education, will recommend all such students to the school. Anyone who wishes to qualify for a college or fellowship may obtain a catalogue in Dean Schwegler's office.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1908
Mrs. Parker Mothers Money Making Men
By Kenny Lewis c'39
Recently the Kansan carried an article replete with facts and figures indicating the number of students who either partly or entirely support themselves while in attendance at University; how they do it; and pointing to the importance of the Men Student's Employment Bureau section of the Alumni Association, which helps to make this possible.
But perhaps, as Fred Ellsworth,
secretary of the association, points
out, those statistics are not the
important thing after all. Figures come
and go, giving little indication of the
in immense amount of personal con-
ference work and adjustments which
is necessary before figures can be
jotted down and added up to be published.
That is where Mrs. Frank Parker comes in. As secretary of the service, it is her duty to confer with each applicant regarding his needs and his qualifications for which he is best suited or trained Mrs. Parker Confidante to Many
Yet that is only the beginning. Once a job is secured, it is her duty to see that the student fulfills his part of the bargain, or that someone more suitable is substituted in his place. She is the sort of an older woman with whom college men feel "at home." Because of her kindly, inviting friendliness, she becomes the confidante of all "her boys." They tell her their troubles, and she continues to work as a fitting school schedules into outside working hours, changing to jobs which seem more profitable or suitable, and "getting along" with new employers. She remembers the name and history of each — his troubles and his joys.
It is she who is largely responsible for compiling the figures which were recently reprinted to show how the service has grown since it was taken over from the Y.M.C.A. But even those figures are not entirely complete. Once a man has received a position through the bureau, he reports this to the employment service voluntarily, though no great effort is ever made to track down each applicant and the work he is doing merely to add to the achievement records of the organization. "We proceed on the principle often laid down by George Foster, that a great deal of good can be done in this world if you don't worry about who gets the credit," says Mr. Ellsworth. Distributing Jobs a Problem
Nor is the securing of jobs the only responsibility of the bureau. There is also the problem of keeping people out of jobs who can get along financially without one. "It is not an uncommon sight," says Mr. Elsworth, "for a boy and his wealthy parents to drive up in a big new car and enter the office with the demand for cash." He is wrong, "we believe it would be good for him to have the discipline of outside work while he is settling his education."
"Although this might be true, the modern scholastic schedule is designed heavy enough to keep most students out of mischief caused by surplus time; and with the great number of students who would be unable to attend the University at all without supplementary emphasis, it seems we have to give away jobs for purely moral or disciplinary reasons."
The alumni secretary is also faced with the necessity of seeing that no student carries more outside work than he absolutely has to have.
"With the large number we are forced to turn away annually any way because of lack of employment, it is always important to be sure that a student could not get along with us," she said. "You also have a chance to go to school."
The biggest worry of both Mr. Ellsworth and Mrs. Parker is getting the newcomer started along the path toward making his own way. "Once he sees that he can make a go of it, he will be able to provide plenty of ways for continuing along the road to a higher education under his own steam," says Mrs. Parker.
Luenen Passion Play Presented in Topeka
The original Luenen Passion play, which is being presented at this time in the auditorium of the Topeka High School, is the world's oldest version of the Passion play spoken in English.
Josef Meier, world famous portrayer of Christ, is being supported in the Topeka production by a large cast of celebrated Passion players Mr. Meier comes directly from Germany.
The production, not a motion picture, has been endorsed by both clergy and educators. It will continue in Topeka through the twenty-sixth, with both matinees and evening performances.
Live and Learn
Lawrence Daily Journal-World:
University students, after planning to make known their reaction to the proposed legislative investigation by staging their own kind of high jinks, wisely decided to avoid an exhibition likely to be misinterpreted. Leaders of student organizations decided to model their attitude on that of the official university position, which is to throw no obstacles in the way of an investigation.
While it doubtless is better for the University to take no active part in the discussion until called upon, it is interesting to note that a good many persons on the outside are speaking up to say there is no necessity for an investigation.
The suggestion has been made, with some reason, that for a probe that could be expected to turn up rich and juicy findings, the investigation would come about a year too late.
It was about a year ago that the movement to implant radicalism in the colleges was at its peak. All over the country student groups were signing resolutions against the present social order and pledges to abstain from defending their country.
What Kansas Editors Say
Noteworthy is the fact that the action then taken did not stand. In the present school year many of the same groups have repealed and rescinded the resolutions of last year and refused to sanction the pledges against military service. Changes in the world situation had convinced them that the formula which last year seemed so pat simply would not fit present conditions.
That development within a year indicates that students think, observe and learn, and that nothing is to be feared from having them turn their attention to the problems that abound in the current scene.
Another Dayton
Emporia Gazette:
Tennessee was a decade living down the foolish witch-hunting spectacle that was staged at Dayton and climaxed in the death of William Jennings Bryan. The whole world smiled in pity at the ignorance of a state like Tennessee for having a law like that involved at Dayton against the young high school teacher who was teaching contemporary science to his pupils.
In Kansas we seem headed for exactly the same sad experience. The legislature has started out appropriating seven thousand dollars to stage another Dayton trial. Probably it will not be a seven-ring circus. Very likely the Faseists who are pushing it will try to conduct a star chamber investigation behind closed doors and that will create a national stink. Either way Kansas will be a laughing-stock.
Probably there are 15 or 20 young Communists in the university in a student body of 4,000. But the Communist party is a legal party. It could get on the ballot if it wanted to in Kansas. There is no law against it as a party. Communism is the quintessence of folly. It won't work. But neither did the AAA nor the NRA. But there has been no talk of witch-hunting for their sponsors. And the way to handle the young Communists in the university is to let them alone. Life will teach them, if they are teachable, the lesson of their folly.
But the thing these legislators will do will be to unearth the terrible fact that Kansas professors are teaching what is taught in other colleges in the way of psychology, sociology and economics, nothing more and nothing less. It is a shock to untutored minds to know what fairly intelligent people accept. When these men who know nothing about a college curriculum begin smelling out witches who are only teaching what well-educated people are expected to know, the world will laugh at Kansas. We will get a reputation of a backward state.
Isn't it possible some way for the intelligent members of the legislature to rise and protest against this miserable advertising that seems to be dooming the state of Kansas?
"Governor Huxman called the Kansas legislature into special session to consider revision of the social security law. Many of the legislators indicated a desire to consider that topic only and adjourn. The house has gone off on a tangent by favoring a $7,500 appropriation to finance a red hunt at the state university."
The Legislative Nose
We commend to the legislators the mature reasoning of a group of university student leaders who have signed a statement protesting the investigation. They state the obvious truth when they say a fair-minded committee would clear the university of charges that it is incubating communism. But this is not the point. As the student leaders go on to say, freedom and tolerance, "the absolute essentials of education," would be imperiled by the investigation. They deplore the shadow which the inquisitors would unnecessarily cast on the university.
The University of Kansas has a high standing among educational institutions of the country. The sponsors of the red hunt would smear
it with the label of a jerkwater institution to be raided at will by any legislator who saw goblins in his sleep.
The state has a right to hope that the legislators will calm themselves, dispose of the social security legislation, and amble along toward the depot. They will be properly warned when Moscow starts tunnelling Mount Oread.
Dr. Hutchins' Speech
St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
If there were a prize for the best speech of the year, the recent radio address by Robert Maynard Hutchins, president of Chicago University, might well be entered for it.
The University of Chicago has lately been under fire. The charge has been made that it had gone Red. Doctor Hutchins riddled that charge, sweetly and completely. He explained what a university should be—an institution devoted to the pursuit of truth. It exists, he said, "only to find and communicate the truth." When, for any reason, it cannot do that, it is finished. The ivy may still climb over its storied walls, fraternities may still flourish, co-eds may still be "divinely tall and most divinely fair," the football team may rule the gridiron with all-American supremacy, but the soul has fled the shell.
The Red professor, so far as Doctor Hutchins' observation goes, is like Gelette Burgess' purple cow. He has never seen one. That is, he has never met a member of a college faculty who advocated overthrow of the government by force. But Communism as a form of government, theoretically and practically, he regards as a proper subject for study by young men and women who are going to college for an education.
Somewhere along the course the students meet Lord Byron. Does that mean they've got to swim the Hellespont? Napoleon's affairs engage them. Must they, then brave the rigors of a Russian winter and stage a retreat from Moscow? Somewhere in their prep school tribulations they bump into the day that Caesar overcame the Nervii. Are we to understand that this malevolent teacher is conspiring to stand the luckless pupils at the base of Pompey's statue and carve them into ribbons on the Ides of March?
Let us be sensible. Let us shake off the jitters. Let each of us grapple freedom of speech to his bosom as with hoops of steel. That is what Doctor Hutchins pleads for. He pleads it unanswerably.
Investigation in Reverse
The Garden City Telegram:
When Representatives Muir and Carer introduced their resolution calling for an expenditure of $7,500 on a legislative investigation of Communism in Kansas, with particular attention being given to Communism at Kansas University, it was pointed out in these columns that the chances are there isn't $7,500 worth of Communism or any other "ism" in the entire state. And the fact the house of representatives has voted, 92 to 4, to conduct the investigation hasn't changed the estimate of the importance of "subversive influences" at work in the state one bit. It still stands.
Yes, it will be a different story then. Instead of a few students laughing at a couple of unofficial campus investigators, the whole state will be laughing at the legislature for having been frightened so easily. The state would laugh more heartily, however, were it not for the fact $7,500 is to be spent to discover something everybody knows already.
If the legislature wishes to investigate, that is its inalienable privilege. Proponents of the measure point out that the Board of Regents, attempting to investigate on Mount Oread, were unable to elicit any worth while testimony from anyone. "The students just laughed at them," Muir declared the other day, adding that the investigators should be given the power to subpoena witnesses and punish for contempt. "It will be a different story then," he shouted.
Undoubtedly the investigators will find there are a number of "crackpots" among the students and perhaps among the faculty members at K.U. The percentage of them probably will be no higher or no lower, however, than it is among the residents of Garden City or any other town or city in Kansas. This state always has had "crackpots" and always will have them. But never before have their babblings been mistaken for evidence of a trend toward Communism.
"If the committee is appointed for the investigation, we'll have some teachers resign and some will be fired. This is as it should be." Muir cleared the other day in the house.
launched indicates it won't actually be an investigation to determine facts, at all. Instead of starting with unbiased facts and working toward a conclusion Muir and Carper would start with the conclusion that subversive influences are at work and proceed by attempting to find enough evidence of wrong to justify discharging someone.
No doubt the committee, if it goes about its investigation with the assumption somebody must be fired, can find excuses for firing someone. The legislature then can settle back with a self-satisfied air and revel in the assumed glory of one who thinks he has just performed a great service.
S
But the spirit in which the investigation is
And for this, the state will spend $7,500.
Little as we appreciate the fine arts,we'd rather see the money contributed to the state-house murals fund.
As nearly as we've been able to discover, after a glance at a legislative resolution calling for an inquiry into communist activities at the University of Kansas, the chief crime of students attending classes on Mount Oread was the fact that they insisted on poking fun at first investigators visiting the campus. As a result, legislators are apparently determined now to use the good old hairbrush where it's most needed. Not that we care very much one way or another. In fact we wouldn't be surprised if it developed that there are any number of youngsters now attending the University who should have had their bottoms blistered years ago.
If the resolution for an investigation at the University wins approval of both houses of the legislature, we wish that it could be broadened to include an inquiry into present deplorable conditions now obtaining on the football squad too. We wouldn't be in the least surprised if it developed that some of those big 200-pounders had been on a sit-down strike for the last two years—Concordia Blade-Empire.
of the farmer members —Observation Tower in the Burlingame Enterprise-Chronicle.
I see they (the legislature) want a permanent investigation committee now. Well, isn't that just too ducky? The first thing they can investigate is the gasoline tax exemption slips
Suppose the investigating committee spends the hot months working and finds no Communists? Will their faces be red? -Topeka Daily Capital.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication day and 11:10 a.m. on the following days:
Wednesday, January 4th; Thursday, January 5th; Friday, January 6th; Saturday, January 7th; Sunday, January 8th; Monday, January 9th; Tuesday, January 10th; Wednesday, January 11th; Thursday, January 12th; Friday, January 13th; Saturday, January 14th; Sunday, January 15th; Monday, January 16th; Tuesday, January 17th; Wednesday, January 18th; Thursday, January 19th; Friday, January 20th; Saturday, January 21th; Sunday, January 22th; Monday, January 23rd; Tuesday, January 24th; Wednesday, January 25th; Thursday, January 26th; Friday, January 27th; Saturday, January 28th; Sunday, January 29th; Monday, January 30th; Tuesday, January 31st; Wednesday, January 32th; Thursday, January 33th; Friday, January 34th; Saturday, January 35th; Sunday, January 36th; Monday, January 37th; Tuesday, January 38th; Wednesday, January 39th; Thursday, January 40th; Friday, January 41th; Saturday, January 42th; Sunday, January 43th; Monday, January 44th; Tuesday, January 45th; Wednesday, January 46th; Thursday, January 47th; Friday, January 48th; Saturday, January 49th; Sunday, January 50th; Monday, January 51th; Tuesday, January 52th; Wednesday, January 53th; Thursday, January 54th; Friday, January 55th; Saturday, January 56th; Sunday, January 57th; Monday, January 58th; Tuesday, January 59th; Wednesday, January 60th; Thursday, January 61th; Friday, January 62th; Saturday, January 63th; Sunday, January 64th; Monday, January 65th; Tuesday, January 66th; Wednesday, January 67th; Thursday, January 68th; Friday, January 69th; Saturday, January 70th; Sunday, January 71th; Monday, January 72th; Tuesday, January 73th; Wednesday, January 74th; Thursday, January 75th; Friday, January 76th; Saturday, January 77th; Sunday, January 78th; Monday, January 79th; Tuesday, January 80th; Wednesday, January 81th; Thursday, January 82th; Friday, January 83th; Saturday, January 84th; Sunday, January 85th; Monday, January 86th; Tuesday, January 87th; Wednesday, January 88th; Thursday, January 89th; Friday, January 90th; Saturday, January 91th; 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Sunday, January 722th; Monday, January 723th; Tuesday, January 724th; Wednesday, January 725th; Thursday, January 726th; Friday, January 727th; Saturday, January 728th; Sunday, January 729th; Monday, January 730th; Tuesday, January 731th; Wednesday, January 732th; Thursday, January 733th; Friday, January 734th; Saturday, January 735th; Sunday, January 736th; Monday, January 737th; Tuesday, January 738th; Wednesday, Januar
Vol. 35 Thursday, February 24, 1938 No. 101
DILLETANTE COMMISSION: The Dilletante Commission will meet at 7 o'clock this evening at Henley house. We will talk about the masters of art who exerted great influence on our interests are interested—Annie Russell, chairman.
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOW-SHIPS: Applications for scholarships and fellowships in the Graduate School for the academic year 1938-39 are due at the Graduate office on Tuesday, March 1, 1938. Applicants blanks may be obtained at the graduate office, 225 Frank strong hall. - E. B. Stouffer, Dean.
MATHEMATICS CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Mathematics Club in 203 Frank强林 hall this evening. Ernest Heibertsen will speak on "Some Application of Math." Visitors are欢迎-Charles Rickart, president.
MEDICAL APTITUDE TEST: A supplementary medical antitilde test will be given by the Association of American Medical Colleges on April 9, 1938. All American students in the institution at December and are planning to enter a medical school, either at the University of Kansas or elsewhere, next fall, should take this test on April 9. Those who desire to take the test should notify Dr. O. Kernell, president of the hall (phone—KL 86), immediately —O. S. Stoland.
MENS, STUDENT COUNCIL: There will w11 be a room Moe Ritenon, 8 at 815 in the Pine Room. Moe Ritenon, Secretary.
OFFICIAL STUDENT CORRESPONDENTS’ BUILD
A team to help prepare for this afternoon in room 104, journalism building. All correspondents are urged to make every effort to attend. Professor Glan Templin will speak on “Financial
Matter” at the closing ceremony.
A Phenomenal Purchase Sale! Spring Suits Brand New $35 Suits Brand New $30 Suits Brand New $25 Suits SHOWN AND OFFERED FOR THE FIRST TIME TODAY AT
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This event was planned months ago. We bought when the prices were right, and had the clothes made to our own specifications. All specially selected fabrics. All specially styled garments. The finest clothes that you've ever seen for the money. Men's and Young Men's Models; Conservative Styles, too. If you want a Smart Suit at a Low Price, here your chance.
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The Palace
843 Mass.
1.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1988
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWREN CE, KANSAS
---
1
Here on the Hill
--an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHIERTON, c'40, Society Editor
Before 5 p.m., call K.U.21; after 5, call 2702-K3
--not been made up suggestions from either public school men or faculty members concerning the bulletin area welcome.
Betty McVey, 'cuncl, was a lunch- con guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Tuesday.
--not been made up suggestions from either public school men or faculty members concerning the bulletin area welcome.
Mrs. R. M. Nelson of Marion has been a guest at Watkins hall for the past week.
Watkins hall will hold open house this evening from 7 until 8 o'clock.
Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineer fraternity, announces the pledging of John Bilderback, e'41, of Olathe.
.
The University Club will entertain with an informal dinner this evening at 6:30, with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner as hosts. Chancellor E. H. Lindley will speak on "Mexico—From a Car Window." A short-wave radio set has been installed to re-communicate to Kansai for presentation to be broadcast on Genève and members are urged to be present by 6:51 c'clock.
Miss Elizabeth Meguiar and Miss Marie Miller entertained the honorary and alumnae members of Mortar Board Monday evening at the home of Miss Meguiar. After a short business meeting, Mrs. Waldemar Geltch read a story of her Caribbean cruise in verse.
Refreshments were served in the dining room, where coffee was served from a brass samovar. Mrs. C. P. Aul and Miss Irene Peabody presided at the table. Candlelight was used throughout the rooms.
Those present were:
ing:
Mrs. C. P. Ail
Mrs. L. E. Bice
Mrs. W. Wilder-Gelch
Mrs. J. J. Krisler
Mrs. J. M. Lehner
Mrs. F. Feldman
Mrs. Fred S. Montgomery
Mrs. C. F. Nelson
Mrs. Margaret Lynn
Miss Builah Morrison
Miss Irone Brophy
Miss Marie Miller
Miss Vera Leiln
Miss Martha Tillen
Miss Efrabeth Dunkel
Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity, hold formal initiation services at 5 o'clock last night at the Hotel Eldridge for the follow-
University Daily Kansan
Jack Allen Carlson, b19
Keith Deach, b19
Virgil Green, b19
Winged Green, c40
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
DAVID E. PARTRIDGE
MEMBER
KINSONS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-IN-CHEIF...TOM A. ELLIS
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: MARTIN BENTSON AND
WASHINGTON
FRATTER EDITOR KENNY LEE
MANAGING EDITOR MARTIN GORDON
CAMPUS EDITORS BELLE TYLL, GO CLAIM,
NEWS EDITOR BILT Fitzgerald
DORMER EDITOR DOWNARD
Sports EDITOR FLON TORNANCE
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Entered as second-class matter, Sept. 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
Jack Huttig, c'40
Jack H. T Jones, c'40
Jack M. Hamilton, b'19
Adelbert Kneale, b'19
William Wilson Seltz, b'29
Charles A. Neal, c'40
Jack A. Chadwick, b'29
Jack Newlin, b'29
Bill Waugh, c'40
Phil Nicholson, b'40
Following the initiation, the actives present entertained the initiates with dinner at the hotel. The actives were:
Harry Brown, c140
Martin Heber, b100
Bill Thompson, b138
Bill Thompson, b138
Hazlett Siegel, b128
Leland David, b128
Claude Craven, b138
Carl Peterson, c18
Jim Nelson, c490
Jim Clinger, c490
Tom Mangelsdorf, b159
Chester Jackson, b158
Oliver Burial, b138
After the dinner, the newly initiated members were entertained with a smoker in the grill room o
After the dinner, the newly initiated members were entertained with a smoker in the grill room of the Hotel Eldridge.
Dinner guests at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house Tuesday night were:
Jack Pickering, St. Louis
Bill Clauson, St. Louis
Cary Crockett, b'nul
Darrell Mathews, *4*
Marilee McWilliams, Hutchinson, is visiting the Kappa Kappa Gamma house.
The marriage of Miss Ruth Burkett to Robert R. Jones, both of Topeka, took place Saturday afternoon in Topeka. Mr. Jones is a graduate of the University School of Law and is a member of the Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity. At present he is practicing law in Topeka.
.
An informal reception honoring Miss Kate Stephens, a former member of the faculty and distinguished alumna, will be held Sunday from 3 to 5 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. The occasion is in honor of Miss Stephens's eight-fifth birthday. Her memory was sorely honored by her friends and alumni of the University. Miss Carrie Watson is in charge of the program.
'Compulsory Arbitration'
^
Last evening following the concert given by the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, Dean and Mrs. Donald M. Swarthworth informally entered in the room as the honored guest was Karl Krause, director of the orchestra.
The debates will conclude a group of forensic events that have been presented in the past month.
Is Subject for Debate March 1?
John Lintner, c38, and Paul Wilt bert, f38, will represent the University in a debate with two students of the University of Texas. Tuesday, he and his co-nounced Wednesday. The speakers will take the affirmative side of "Compulsory Arbitration."
Requests for commencement speakers are already coming to the extension division of the University.
Commencement Speakers Needed
The 1927 list of commencement speakers included 28 different speakers from the following divisions or departments: speech, physical education, journalism, English, extension division, engineering, business, geology, college, religion, astronomy, and fine arts.
Better to facilitate the contacts between the public schools and faculty members of the University, a list of those available as speakers for commencement programs is compiled by the extension division. By having a central clearing house for the requests of these special addresses it is possible so to arrange schedules that are a considerable saving in expense to the schools and in time for the speakers.
A list of the towns securing commencement speakers from the University last year includes: Lansing, Yates Center, Burlington, Osborne, Jarbale, Elwood, Edgerton, Mayetta, Horton, Turner, Clay Center, Powhatan, Eudora, Ionia, Glascar, Dodge City, St. John, Mpherson, Pila, Florence, Green, Harveyville, Parkerville, Winchester, Lacygne, Williamsburg, Lorraine, Russel, Huron, and Miller.
Y.W.C.A. Advisory Board Nominates New Members
Nomination of candidates to fill the vacancies of board members whose terms will expire next month, was the business of the Y.W.C.A. advisers in 1987 and 1988 at the home of Miss Anna McCracken, instructor in philosophy.
The Mathematics Club will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in room 213 of Frunk Strong hall. Ernest Ensen's Applications of Mathematics to Chemistry.
The terms of the following board members will expire in March: Mrs. Linda Mass McCrudden, Miss Rosemary Kernan, and Mrs. W. Baumgartner.
HAPPY
Kansas Soil Suitable For Rock Wool
Like the rest of our Arrows, the New Trump is Mittoa form-tit and Sanforo free if one ever shrinks free if one ever shrinks.
IN recent tests, the amazing new soft collar on Arrows' New Trump shirt still looked great after its fifteenth trip to the U.S., equal to two years of ordinary wear —which is some going for the collar of any shirt,
We have the Collar that wouldn't wear out
MARSHAL'S COLLECTION
Additional data regarding suit bility of Kansas sandstone and shale for the manufacture of rock weed, an insulating material, are contained in an appendix to last year's bulletin of the Kansas Geological Survey. The appendix, prepared by Norman Plummer, ceramil for the Survey, contains descriptions of last summer and given tests in the University laboratories last fall. The report has just come from the printers.
A score of samples were taken from widely separated places in Kansas, among them Atchison, Parsons, Chetopa, Coffeeville, Manhattan, Augusta, Newton, Little River (Bice county), Lorraine (Eilworth county), Russell, Wakefield, Scott city, and Garden City.
Detailed Report Shows
An Insulating Material
Possible From Sandstone
And Shale
ARROW NEW TRUMP
Previous to the construction of the commercial plant, a smaller furnace was constructed, through which were run test sets on mixtures ranging from himethane ppt. to nearly pure water and at temperatures running from 2450 F to 3000 F.
As a result of the publication of the original bulletin on rock-vessel possibilities in Kearns, the Verdigris Valley Virified Brick and Tile company installed a commercial plant south of Neodesha.
Charles Laird, superintendent of the brick plant, reported to the Survey that the 'present plant fuses the raw material, limestone and shale, in a reveratory, gas-fired furnace. The molten rock is bwn into wool by a blast of air at 100 pounds pressure. The furnace, which has a capacity of two tons of material at a charge, has shown a little difficulty in that the ordinary molten glass, but Mr. Laird expects to solve the problem with a slightly different refractory.
"Mr. Laird's experience has demonstrated very clearly" says the bulletin, "the advisability of this plant as an element of a commercial plant."
Ober's
HEAD TOFOOT OUTFITTERS
Tell your wants to University students through a Kansan Classified.
$2
ARROW SANFORIZED
Prof. Earl D. Hay of the School of Engineering and Architecture announced yesterday that any graduating senior student in mechanical and industrial engineering, if interested, will be added with the Burroughs Adding Machine company, is requested to make arrangements with Professor Hay for an interview with the company's representative. The interviews will be held at the office of Dean F. T. Burns of the School of Business on March 5.
Burroughs Representative
Vill Interview Engineers
Elect Wright President Of 'Y' Freshman Council
Prof. E. N. Doan, of the department of journalism, discussed propanda and its uses, at the regular meeting of the Y.M.C.A. Freshman Council last Tuesday evening in the Y.M.C. building. Talk there was an election of officers.
Charles Wright, c41, was elected president and Joe Weaver, c41, vice-president. Brent Campbell, c41, and Alvin Leonard, c41, were elected secretary and treasurer respectively. These officers will hold their positions for the remainder of the regester.
Plans were discussed for a joint meeting of the Y.M.C.A. and W.Y.C.A. Freshman Councils. A committee on faculty-student relationships was established, with the vice-president acting as chairman. Charles Wright, said that he expected some worthwhile results from this committee.
Havwire--
that the journalism building is in the pink, Butch is not red. He is black and brown with white and dirty yellow thrown in for good measure. The meat i diet didn't quite agree with Butch so Jean Bailey and Ruth Farris have been furnishing milk for a change in fare.
The new Hobnail Hop queen is called "Cookie" by her sisters. Maybe she is the Queen of Tarts we have read so much about.
The basketball boys report that a good time was had by all at Norman, but that the booing while they were trying to shoot free-throws didn't help any. Bruce Reid, Kansas center whom his teammates call "Coon Dog" because he comes from Arkansas City, was so tired after
SUNDAY
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We found in the Indiana Daily Student this little lament of a co-ed who didn't get a valentine. With a gift, they told me, "Why did I leave heaven?"
the game that the boys had to boost him into the upper berth.
Why did I change heaven
for all these earthly men?
What have I at Kansas
That I did not have then?
—Dora
Since I've been here
There's no room for doubt
All the men here
I could do without.
A
I am only human
But they are so much less—
Why did I leave heaven?
Dumb, I guess.
What brought me down so low?
What's here at Kansas
To value so?
ARROW SHIRTS
He was a bit shy, and after she had thrown her arms around him and kissed him for bringing her a bouquet, he arose and started to leave. "I'm sorry I offended you," she said.
A new shirt if one ever shrinks.
"Oh, I'm not offended," he replied "I'm just going after more flowers."
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Historical Mystery
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Latest News
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OPENING... A NEW WORLD OF THRILLS!
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GEORGE BRENT • OLIVIA
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RAINS • MARGARET LINSDAY
BARTON MALLE, JANOEL LEVEL, TOM HAWKES
Out of a Mighty Age—
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8 p. m. FRIDAY
---
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1938
Huskers Can Spoil Claim To Clear Title
A Kansas Loss Would Give Sooners a Chance To Tie for Big Six Championship
When the Kansas Jayhawkers tort out onto the court at Lincoln Saturday night to meet the fourth-place Nebraskans, they will be facing their last year's Waterloo, though in a slightly different position.
Last year's situation, with the league-leading Jayhawkers, holding 7 victories and 1 loss, facing the second-place Cornhuskers, with 6 wins and 2 losses, gave the Nebraskas a chance to pull into a first-plACE tie. They took full advantage of that chance, and in a rough-and-tumble game, pulled the Jayhawkers to their level. 37-32.
Kansas Meets Huskers and Tigers
The Jayhawks had lost an early-season tilt to Kansas State in an overtime upset, ushered in the Nebraska had dropped games to both Kansas and Oklahoma in early contests. Each team had a victory on the conference schedule, and Nebraska went on to trim Iowa State, while Kansas polished off on Missouri to end the conference race in a tie.
This season has a familiar appearance, as Kansas has this one game with the Nebraska co-champions to pass, and the final tilt with Missouri. Should the Jayhawks lose to Nebraska Saturday night, they will be dropped into a tie with Oklahoma and will need to beat Missouri to be assured of a co-championship with Oklahoma this year.
Since the beginning of the Big Si conference races in 1929, Nebraska and Kansas have been at each other's throats for first place in four of the 10 seasons of play. In 1931, II and 1936, Kansas ended up in the top stall, with Nebraska pressing at second position; and in the past season, Kansas and Nebraska ended in a deadlock for first place. This year, Kansas would be in competition for the first spot, but can do damage to the Jayhawks by bouncing them out of an undisputed championship.
Records in Favor of Kansas
In looking back over the past records since 1929, this seems to be Kansas' year to take both Nebraska titls, having already passed the first of this season. In 1929, Nebraska won both games, but in 1930, Kansas came back to take both games. From there, the uniform appearance seems like clockwork. In 1931, the games were split, 1 and 1; the next two years gave both to Kansas; and 1937 saw another split of the two games. If the records are not to change, give both titles to Kansas. In the 9% seasons of Kansas-Nebraska play, Kansas has won 14 to Nebraska's 5, and a victory Saturday night would give the Joyhawkers three-fourths of the games since the conference was initiated.
Kansas Geological Survey Issues Mineral Circular
Geology of Rawlins and Decatur counties, Kansas, with special reference to water resources, is the title of a mineral resources circular (No. 7), just issued by the Kansas Geological Survey from its headquarters at the University. The bulletin was written by his brother, who he left some months ago on a leave for special work in South America but has just come from the printer.
The bulletin points out that even in the drought of 1934 the water situation did not become critical in these northwestern Kansas counties, and adds that drilling has disclosed a considerable increase in depth. This deeper water, and in some parts of the two counties, water from shallower wells, is being used successfully for irrigation projects.
Along the Sideline
By Dale Heckendorn, c'39 Guest Conductor
Fred Praille again headlines this column, this time with mention of the first all-something or other honors that have come his way this season. The members of the Southwestern University team have selected their all-opponents team for the present season, and at one guard position is Praille. Praille's running mate at guard is Chet Mitchell, star of the Fort Hays State football team, and Arkansas, one of the outstanding players in the Southwest conference. The forward posts are held down by Keth, Warrensburg Teachers, and Krueger, Oklahoma A. and M.
In commenting on Pralea's selection the Winfield Courier has the following to say: "Fred Pralear, star KU, guard, is the other defensive player. Pralear is fine on defense, and is one of the leading scorers of the Big Six conference. He is one of the main cogs of Dr. F. C. Allen's University of Kansas team, leader in the Big Six race at the present."
Richard Pine, a former Kansas student who resides in New York City, was an interested spectator at the New York Athletic games last Saturday night. Pine, an acquaintance of Glenn Cunningham, sent the N.Y.A.C. game program back yesterday. He asserts that an error was made clocking in at 12 p.m., the relay in which Cunningham carried the baton under the colors of the New York Curb Exchange.
Some timers caught the Curb exchange fly in 0:50 flat, but Pine writes that a correction had been made and the accurate time was 0:49.6. In the feature Baxter Mile all three watches gave the same time of 4:08.6 which is unusual as many timers have difficulties in showing like times while clocking sprinters in the shorter races.
While deliving into past track events the British Empire games held at Sydney, Australia, are brought to mind. Many new Empire records were established and one recognized world mark was sur-passed two weeks ago as 30,000 cheering spectators were given a thrill of a life time by athletes from every part of the empire upon which the sun never sets. Australia placed first in the great cinder carnival while a strong Canadian team finished second.
Lavary, South African hurdle, stole the show as he swept home ahead of a fast field to win the 120-yard high hurdles in 41.4 flat to beat the recognized mark of 14.14 lift by oFrest Towns of Georgia. Lavary's time failed to equal Towns mark of 6.13.7 set at Olio, Norway, but O'Reilly of the University of Michigan has also been caught in 6.14 at the United States Western Conference Championships last May.
James Alford of Wales breezed through the mile in 41.6 to shatter Jack Lovebok's record of 4.128 established in 1934. The 440-yard dash was won by Bell Roberts of England and he recorded in the record-attempting smashing spree.
The pole vault and the shot put marks full far below the standard of United States weight men. In breaking the pole vault record of 12 feet, 9 inches, the winner cleared the bar with a jump of 38 feet. The champ tossed the iron ball 47 feet, 6 inches, while the second place man could only hit 45 feet, 9 inches.
Professor Nash Gives Out-of-Town Lectures
Prof. Bert A. Nash talked to the teachers of Manhattan on the "Problems of Reading." Tuesday after afternoon classes, he said a Co-operative Activity" today in independence at a dinner for teachers and parents.
Two of Best Games This Season Remain
Battle With Huskers Important in Big Six Race; Tiger Clash Is Traditionally 'Big'
Two of the best games of the season remain on the basketball schedule of the Jayhawkers. Nebraska's Cornhuskers will be played at Lincoln Saturday and next Thursday Missouri, the Jayhawks' traditional rival, will come to Lawrence for the final game of the season.
The game with Nebraska will be the most important of the two to the standpoint of conference standings. The 3-1 victory-Missouri game is "The Big Game."
The clash with the Tigers will be the 98th meeting of the two schools in basketball. Kansas has won 60 of the games and Missouri 37. The game will provide Jayhawk fans a final chance to see their league leading team in action, Kansas not having played at home since Feb. 7.
The ticket sale for the Missouri game is the best for any of the Kansas home games this year and the biggest crowd of the season is expected. At total of 1200 seats at 75 cents are on sale, but orders should be placed immediately to obtain the best seats, according to a statement by Earl Falkenstein, secretary of the athletic department.
Immediately ahead of the Jayhawk jaggers lies the tough game with Nebraska. The Cornhuskers downed Kansas at Lineback last year and will be out to repeat that performance. Beating B娜斯拉 on its own court is far different from beating her away from home.
This was demonstrated in the Huskers' games with Oklahoma several weeks ago. Nebraska took a 48-33 beat at the hands of Kansas at Lawrence, lost to Oklahoma at Norman and then four days later smashed Oklahoma 52-42 at Lincoln. Saturday's game will be the final game of the season for Nebraska and the last game of the college careers of four OL players: Bob Purson, for OL Fred Ehough and Elmer Dohrmann. It is expected that these four veterans will put everything into the game in an effort to make up for their disappointing showing to date.
Only two Jayhawks will be playing their last game against Nebraska, Fred Pralle, guard, and Sylvester Schmidt, center.
The biggest baseball revival in history is being staged in the ranks of the semi-pro, with 25,000 teams enrolling in the National Semi-Pro according to information in the National Semi-Pro Baseball Guide.
Big Baseball Revival Staged in Semi-Pro Ranks
Recently published, the Guide contains pictures of state champions, commissioners' lists, lists of other rules, rules, and much other pertinent information.
In a scoring race between West- ministers and the Gashue Gang in the imminent basketball league last week, Porteryers held a 45 to 37 advantage.
Men's Intramurals By Dale Heckendorn
Although a member of the losing team, Forman the Gashouse outfit with 9 goals from the court. Close by the score, he scored 13 points while his team mate, Narromere accounted for 12 points. The Rock Chalk, cages trimmed the Campus Raiders 24 to 14 and the team trained Teta Thu "F" 27 to 13.
--with on f4.5
Westminster (45) Gashouse G. f
Paris, i g 0 2 Forier, f g 1
Jacobs, f g 4 1 Amereine, f 2 1
Renko, c g 1 Letta, c g
Narram re,g 6 1 Clayton, g
Close, g 6 1 Hey, g 1
1 1 1 1 1 1
Wednesday game:
Westminster (45) Gashouse G. (37)
22 1 6
Official: Enna.
--with on f4.5
F.Sehmidt, f 4 0 0
B.Berner, f 2 0 0
B.And'sn,c 2 2 1
B.And'sn,g 3 2 1
L.Berner, g 0 0 0
Crouch 0 0 0
1736
Tuesday's games:
Rock Chalk (24) C. Raiders (14)
Brabison, g f f
Savely, f
Caskill, c 0 0 0
M'Am'n'g m 0 0 0
Devlin, g 2 0 0
Sieum, g 3 1 0
Official: Enna.
S.A.E. "C" (37)
g f lt
Wiblahc. f 10
Troeder. t 1
Srider. in c 10
Gail, g 10
Vaughn, g 0
Wyatt . g 0
g ft
V May, 0 0
Raymond, f 0 0
G May, c 0 0
E Morelde, l 0 0
Bloom 0 3
Morelde 0 3
Bloom 0 3
Theta Tau "B"(17)
18 1 9
Official: McDougall.
Louis Carmouche, e38, has been offered a position with the Dow Chemical company, Midland, Mich. This offer came about through a representative of the company who was at the University earlier in the semester interviewing June graduates in chemical engineering.
Engineer. Offered Position
6. 54
New York, Feb. 23. —(UP)—Baseball's armchair pilots sady predict that the pennant hopes of the Detroit Tigers rely on the doubtful return to form of pitcher Lynwood "Schoolboy" Rowe. But.-Manager Mickey Cochrane and company point to the 19 other pitchers listed on their roster for 1538, cross their numbers and chorus, "There's our flag."
HIXON STUDIO
Detroit Expects Pitching Staff To Be 'Tops'
PHONE K.U. 66
Taking Cochrane at his word, a survey of the present pitching lineup, with a nucleus of four veterans, shows that even if Rowe does fall, the Detroiters' hurling corps is strongest in the American League.
Gill turned in 11 victories to top the group and should be a potent factor in the Tiger drive, Polffenberger, who is already listed among the Tiger holdouts, won 10 and lost 2 after joining the club in June. His ultimately good work last year made him certain of a starting position.
Wade Upset Johnny Allen
Wade and Coffman each won 7 games. Wade's chief claim to fame is his one-hit, 1-0 victory over Johnny Allen in the last game of the season in 1937. Allen had won 15 straight and was attempting to
Bad Year for Bridges
Not grouped as established veterans but nevertheless among the more experienced hurriers are George Pottenberger and Jake Wade.
Kennedy, for whom Cochrane traded the popular Gerald Walker and subsequently weathered a storm of abuse from irate Dertoff fans, should easily be one of the pitchers in the loop. In his freshman yard with the White Sox, he won 11 games and during the next season—1936—was a sensation. He won 21 and lost 9, to finish second to
Righthanders Elden Auker and Roxie Lawson top the quartet on the basis of the averages. Auker, who won 17 and lost 9 last year, topped the staff in the earned run ratings with a mark of 38.8. Lawson, with 18 wins against 7 defeats, had the highest percentage with 720.
The slender veteran, Tommy Bridges, and Vern Kennedy, former ranking righthander of the Chicago White Sox, complete the Big Four. In 1937 Bridges had one win with his team and two with the Tigers. He won 15 and lost 12 and finished 18th in league earned run ratings.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
LOST! Camera, Kodak retake 3.5, German
make, marked in meters. Lost in library
saturday near 4:00 p.m. o'clock. Reward.
Return to John Ehlke, Fraser 302. -10
EARN EXTRA MONEY -- Student agents wanted to represent Old Hickory made-to-order fraternity paddles, dances, dance schools and clubs written Old Hickory Paddle C. Indianapolis, Ind.
Candid Camera-lly Speaking
See us for motion picture cameras and complete line of photographic supplies — all makes of paper, films, developers, tanks, tripods, filters and accessories.
"Candid Cameraing . . . It's the rage."
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PHONE K.U. 66
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--break the league's consecutive victory record when he was halted by Wade's brilliant effort.
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12 Dinners and Suppers, $2.50
Coffman, brought from Toledo,
shows definite starting ability but
will probably be assigned to relief
roles for another season.
Stanley Corbett, Woodrow Davis, Carl Doley, Harry Elsenstat, had a trial with the Brooklyn Dodgers and was named to Edward Selway and Paul Trout are the other recruits who will get a chance to earn regular berths.
Several rookies will be on hand at the Tigers' spring training camp, the most promising of whom appear to be: A Benton, a righthander from Memphis, with an earned run mark of 284, and Joe Rogalski, who won 17 games and turned in an earned run average of 288.
What's Doing in Sports
At Other Schools
By Newt Hoverstock
The Big Apple hasn't entirely disappeared as the University of Kansas dancers may have imagined. At a recent ice carnival at Princeton, after the more serious and colorful events had passed by, the students gathered club play on an exhibition of the Big Apple with shines by the more apt of the skaters. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs also appeared in one of the spectacles, with races between the Dwarfs.
Dana X. Bible has now received another kind of publicity as evidenced by the fact that the Daily Texan gave him a big write-up when he refused to play the part of the sultan in a recent campus production where his football team was cast in the role of a harem. Guess he's too busy with the 15 sections of the game he has didTexas in order frankly to dig up football prospects and sell them on the high ideals of the University of Texas. An alumnus is at the head of each section.
K-men at the University of Kansas would no doubt like to change places with the varsity lettermen at Michigan State. At the annual Varsity banquet, the Michigan Varsity club followed the oats with an event featuring a dance by Los Angeles Panico's trumpet, his blues singers, and the rest of the band. Of course there were probably some of the State beauties present to help
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Yale and Princeton sound like pretty big names to us boys back here on the desolate prairies of Kansas, and what athlete wouldn't give a little to be able to play for those b big names. However, the team doesn't seem to realize League doesn't seem to realize their importance, and has trampled the two teams down to the bottom of the league—Yale with two wins and seven losses, and Princeton with one in the victory column and four lost.
Basketball
Women's Intramurals
Freshmen (14) Sophomores (18)
In the tournament games played Tuesday night, the sophomores defeated the freshmen 18 to 14, while the juniors trimmed the seniors, 24
Lemoinne took scoring honors for the sophomores with 5 field goals, Wiley, first-year co-op ordew, made two saves in a game, Dresser, senile, and Willett, junior, each netted 13 points to share scoring laurels of the evening.
Juniors (24)
Seniors (15)
Fresenii t 3 f Soprimae t 4 f
Wiley, f . 3 t f Lemoire, f . 5 f g f 1
Grizzle, f . 2 10 Blaney, f . 3 0
Hays, f . 0 01 McVey, f . 1 00
Yeomans, g . 0 01 Wisler, g . 1 00
Yeomans, g . 0 01 Wisler, g . 1 00
Bell, g . 0 01 Ulm, g . 1 00
Parker, g . 0 00 Woods, g . 0 00
Jenkins, f . 1 00 Brown, g . 0 00
Bristes, g . 0 00 Morris, g . 0 00
Bristes, g . 0 00 Woodard, g . 0 00
James, g . 0 00
Wilkshire, g f1 f g ft
Caronf, f g f1 f Woody, f g ft
Gets, f 2 0 0 Dresser, f 0 1 f
Gels, f 2 0 0 Flood, f 0 1 f
Algen, g 2 0 0 Thompson, f 0 1
Stafford, g 0 0 Gilkeson, g 0 0
Paden, g 0 0 Moll, g 0 0
Totals 6 2 7 Totals 7 4 5
Score at the half: freshmen 10,
sophomores 9. Missed free throws:
3 sophomores 3. Official:
Ruth Baker.
Totals 11 2 8 Totals 6 3 7
Score at the hall: juniors 12; seniors 10. Missed free throws: Juniors 5. seniors 5. Officials: Moll, Bottom and Bottom.
The final swimming meet is tonight at 7:30.
Your Kansan Classified Ad will be read by the students on Mt. Oread.
SEE! HEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
CARL'S OFFER----
THURSDAY--FRIDAY--SATURDAY
ONE GROUP TOPCOATS----
ONE GROUP WOOL SUITS...
$16 65
ONE GROUP TOPCOATS----
$23 35
Better Buy
a Coat
or Suit
CARLS
GOOD CLOTTERS
Real Values
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d
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
}
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 102
VOLUME XXXV
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25. $ _{1000} $
High School Debaters Arrive
Finals Are To Be Belt Today and Tomorrow In Fraser Hall; Three Classes Represented
Debaters began to arrive last evening for the final debates of the Kansas high schools, to be held at the University this afternoon and tomorrow, and by noon there will be between 150 and 200 debaters and their coaches on the Campus. With them will come a score of extempore sportsmanship in preparation of this type of high school competition. The debate is on the subject of the unicameral system for state legislatures.
Debates will be in three classes, according to size of the high school, and will be arranged for three rounds in each class this afternoon and evening. After the close of the third round, reports of the judges will be opened and the semi-finalists determined.
Visiting debaters, coaches and sponsors, and extemporaneous speakers, will attend a luncheon at the Memorial Union this evening.
Will Attend Luncheon
Debates in Class B will be first to get under way. Participants will meet in Fraser theater at 12:30, to be assigned to rooms for the open session. Attendance is 1 o'clock. Following are the pairings for the first round of Class B:
Holton aff, vs. Osawatomie neg.
Osawatomie aff, vs. Junction City
neg.
Junction City aff. vs. Hays neg.
Hays aff. vs. Hoxie neg.
Hoxie aff. vs. Holton neg.
Hiwiatha aff. vs. Fredonia neg.
Fredonia aff. vs. Marysville, nig.
Marysville aff. vs. Dodge, nig.
Dodge aff. vs. Dodge, nig.
Dodge City aff. vs. Hiwiatha neg.
Schedules Are Staggered
Paola aff. vs. Eureka neg.
Eurcaff aff. vs. Wakeeye neg.
Wakeeye vs. Elsworth neg
W麓worth aff. vs. Medicine Lodge
Medicine Lodge aff. vs. Paola neg. In the second round, affirmative teams drop down one and negative teams drop down one in the listing. For the third round, negative teams drop down still another in the listing. In the same way, the schedules of Classes A and B are c scattered for three rounds.
Lawrence aff. vs. Independence neg.
Debaters of Classes A and C meet in Fraser theater at 1:40, and begin some debates at 2 o'clock, but the debate continues. Following is the Class A schedule:
Independence aff. vs. Russell neg.
Russell aff. vs. Wellington neg.
Wellington aff. vs. Newton neg.
Newton aff. vs. Lawrence neg.
Class C:
Topeka aff. vs. Coffeyville neg.
Coffeyville aff. vs. Salina neg.
Salina aff. vs. ElDorado neg.
ElDorado aff. vs. Wichita neg.
Wichita N. aff. vs. Topeka neg.
Following is the first round for
the Class 1.
Further off. aff. vs. Reading neg.
Reading neg. Johnson neg.
Johnson neg. Halstead off. aff. vs. Oakley neg.
Oakley neg. Bucklin neg.
Bucklin neg.
Neosho Rapids aff. vs. Washington
uff
Washington aff. vs. Cullison neg.
Cullison aff. vs. Canton neg.
Continued on page 3
HAY by WIRE
WIRE
--right way, now, right way! Hurry, hurry, hurry!
No—it's not the opening bars or that "Snake Charmer" record, o which you are all so tired. It's just a mild sample of what you'll hear this evening when the second WS-GA. carnival swings into action. From all reports they plan to swing high, too. Not on item h has been overlooked, from bellow barkers to pink lemonade.
The 14 or 15 boys at the A.T.O. house who are going through "H-week" had about as rough a time at the mid-week Wednesday as they ever had in their lives. The poor guys had to wear curbur underwear. The undercover attire ranged everywhere from fellow set the style by wearing checked burp. If any of these fellows attended the concert, he probably won the squirier's prize It's a rough deal.
The Independents are planning a three-hour dance for the near future. The theme of the dance has not been decided upon yet, but may be along the woods and in their dances are rapid-gaining patrons, with the dancers finding that an additional two feet of space is a great help. ...
Joe-K
Butch, the journalism cat, whispered this one to us! Two vultures
Continued on page 21
A. M. Landon Comments On Proposed Investigation
The Kansan recently wrote Alfred M. Landon requesting a statement on the nonsupported "red investigation" in the University.
The request: "Deeming you one of the best known and most influential men in the state, the Kansan would be grateful! for a general comment on the suggested 'red investigation' in the University and throughout the state."
Last night the Kansas received the following reply from Mr.
Landon:
Mr. Marvin Goebel
Managing Editor University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas
Dear Mr. Goebel:
In reply to your letter of February 20 I want to say that freedom of speech must permit a man to say what he thinks, although we may not agree with his views, and academic freedom is essential to free speech. The true test of our belief in freedom of speech comes when we listen to someone who expresses views which we abhor, and when we are willing to make the fight to permit the expression of such views. This is true whether it is in Kansas or New Jersey.
Of course, academic freedom cannot be stretched to permit a teacher, of all people, to go outside the bounds of decency and good taste. What might very properly be taught to an advanced class and in special subjects can be questioned if taught to a more general group. But, this does not apply to political and economic views. A frank discussion of theories of government should always be free and unrestricted.
There is a counter obligation if we are to enjoy freedom of speech. The teacher who seeks academic freedom must be the most tolerant of the views of others. Likewise, he must be tolerant of the views of the student, and should not expect to force his opinions upon students simply because he has the use of the classroom. Too many are inclined to attribute uterior motives to all who differ with them. They yell about academic freedom when they are pinched, but don't want to grant the other fellow the same privileges. Those who claim this privilege must exercise the greatest care not to misrepresent facts or the views of others who may differ with them.
I abhor communism. It cannot permit the freedom, privileges and tolerance which we enjoy under a representative democracy. But if we are to have democracy, we must not make the same mistake.
Doctor Landes pointed out, too, that the search for abundant supplies of underground water has changed much in recent years. Formerly there was a hit-or-miss method, including perhaps the use of clairvoyance or water witching; now it is realized that the occurrence of underground water is a geological problem.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) ALF M. LANDON
Doctor Landes suggested also that the study of geology might well be an avocation, through the added exploration, the edge of geology gave the traveler.
Senior students in the School of Business will be interviewed this morning by Wayne Clover, representative of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance company of Wichita, according to Dean Frank T. Stockton. Such interviews are conducted on the school, on the basis of student preferences. An already selected group of seniors will meet Mr. Clover today.
Lists Fields Open in Geology
"A comparatively recent field," said Doctor Landes, "is the application of geological knowledge to engineering problems. The strength of rock on which it is proposed to foot large bridges and enormously heavy dams are essentially geological features of the engineered systems of engineers to realize this in the past has led to some very disastrous failures of reservoirs, dams, and bridges."
Geology as a vocation was the theme of a radio talk by Dr. K. K. Landes, professor of geology at the University and assistant state geologist, delivered over the University's station, KFKU, yesterday afternoon as a part of a series especially for high school students.
After listing the more commonly known fields for the geologist—teaching, or serving as geologist for the federal or a state geological survey, Dr. Laudes said that mining companies in general have come to know the value of expert geological advice.
Dancers Attend Symposium Today
Dance symposiums have been a regular part of the dance activities of eastern colleges for six or seven years. The program is planned for any Kansas college.
About 20 members of Tau Sigma, women's honorary dance sorority, will attend a state dance symposium to be held at Manhattan today.
The symposium is not a professional show. A round table discussion, luncheon, and program give each group a chance to find out what is being done elsewhere in the state.
All colleges within a given area are invited to participate and each school prepares about a half-hour demonstration — a dance technique, composition, costuming or dance presentation — for a program.
Busy Senate Fails To Act On 'Red' Probe
Harlan Lanter, c'40, a member of the football team, underwent an appendicitis operation Wednesday in Mary hospital in Kansas City, Mo.
Negro Student Varsity, Memorial Union. 2 a.m.
Clara Seperius of Wichita, who has studied under V on Laban in Germany, will present a dance recital Saturday afternoon.
Friday, Feb. 25
Muir-Carper Resolution Is Passed by Ways and Means Committee After Amending
Undergoes Appendectomy
W. S.G.A. Carnival, Robinson gymnasium, 12 p.m.
Young People of Christian Church, Myers hall, 8-11 p.m.
By Harry 'Scoop' Hill, c'40. and Charles Alexander e'38
Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Kappa Alpha, Memorial Union, 12 p.m.
Authorized Parties
A sluggishly moving senate, impeded by lengthy debate and numerous amendments on a conservation bill, found no time yesterday to act upon the Muir-Carper house resolution to investigate subversive activities and propaganda in the state.
Saturday, Feb. 26
Alpha Kappa Psi, I.O.O.F. hall,
12 p.m.
Sigma Chi, chapter house, 12 p.m.
The committee on ways and means amended and passed the resolution yesterday following a public hearing at which three University students presented the school's viewpoint on the proposed investigation.
The committee had previously reported favorably on the Skoward-Warren senate resolution on the same subject. Both resolutions are on the senate calendar to be brought up before the committee of the whole senate. Differences between the measures are principally that $15,000 would be appropriated in the senate resolution while the house measure calls for $7,500 appropriation, and the senate resolution includes inspection of all appropriations to all state institutions.
Students who appeared before the ways and means committee were: Martin Maloney, gr, Quentin Brown, T38, and Do Voorhees, c'38.
ELIZABETH MEGUIAR.
Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
"We are interested primarily in shielding the University from unfair publicity," Brown told the committee. "We are not trying to block this bill; it's only that a great majority of students at the University would not be given a fair deal under this probe."
Appear Before Committee
Maloney said, "T'll admit that there is a relatively small group of these radical students. But I don't think that is particularly phenomenal in any school or any community. I can tell you 'nonestly' and without reservation that I have never had any instructor, either in class or privately, say anything either opposed to our form of government or in favor of any other form of government."
"We sincerely feel that an investigation is not the best thing for the University," Voorhees explained to the committee, "but at the same time we are confident we have nothing to fear. If the investigation is deemed advisable by the senate, I should like to tell you that our student group is anxious to co-operate in every possible way."
Clay C. Carper, co-author of the house resolution, explained h's viewpoint: "We believe there are ample grounds for some kind of an investigation, not only in the University of Kansas, but in other state universities, we believe in keeping America under the democratic form of government."
"Merchants of Lawrence," Edwin F. Albs, Douglas county representative in the house, informed the b committee, "interested in the University and in seeing that there is as large an attendance there as possible, want something done to re-continue." Continued on page 1).
Carper Explains Viewpoint
Continued on page >
San Luis Obisjo, Calif., Feb. 24.—(UP)—A cabin monoplane, groping for a landing on a fog-blanketed land, crashed on the San Simone ranch of William Randolph Hearst late today, killing two members of the English nobility and the pilot.
Baron Perence Conyngham-Plunket of England and his wife, the daughter of Fanny Ward, were burned to death when the plane caught fire as it struck the ground, nearly a mile short of the airport.
The pilot, P. J. Phillips, Burbank,
was thrown clear of the wreckage
but was dead when aid reached him
Three Killed
Three Killed In California Plane Crash
Will Welcome Investigation
Chancellor Lindley and Professor Templin Talk To Correspondents
"The University of Kansas belongs to the people of the state, and we will welcome any impartial investigation," said Chancellor Lindley in a brief talk yesterday afternoon to members of the Students Correspondents bureau at the University. A score or more students, who have arranged or met their home-office, attended the meeting, regularly scheduled for this time.
Prof. Olin Templin, secretary of the University Endowment Association, who was the scheduled speaker for the meeting, said he had been connected with the University for almost sixty years, and that previous flurries had not destroyed the University.
Chancellor Lindley spoke briefly, commending the correspondents for the fine letters they were writing home, and suggested that they continue, as they had all year, to report the events of the University as they occur. The Chancellor added writings, citing the high school debating tournament which opens today.
Professor Templin's talk was about the various prizes, loans and gift scholarships awarded at the University each year.
Grant Degrees In Education
The faculty of the School of Education approved three B.S. degrees in education and a d six University teacher's diplomas in their meeting Feb. 22. A new course, "Children's Literature," to be offered by the English department, was also also approved by the School of Education staff.
'Baby Shows' and 'Smokey Joe's Are Examples of Carnival Fun
This course of two hours credit is now required by the State Board of Education for the 60-hour elementary teacher's certificate.
Persons granted University teacher's diplomas are:
Myra Nannette Erskine, Rosetta Johnnie Jackson, Margorie Larin, Ester Mae Hollecker, Chesley Mildred James, and Dorothy Maleb Jones. The first three also received their B.S. in Education degrees.
Hope Blackburn, 37, is recovering from an attack of pneumonia She is a student nurse at Watkins Memorial hospital.
Hope Blackburn Recovering
By Bette Wasson, c'38
The various sororities and independent organizations are sponsoring the booths and they promise
The first carnival was held two years ago and was quite a history-making event, since it brought with it the idea of "dutch dating." The men yelled with glee and the women wept with woe. The outcome was as might be expected—the carnival was a successful one. (App) Last year the carnival was planned, but not held, since the women and the intramural directors couldn't "get together" on their dates. This year, however, it back with a bang, and so far "dutch dating" has not reared its ugly head. The various sororities and independent organizations are sponsors.
loads of fun and entertainment. For instance, if you've ever wondered what some of the Campus co-eds looked like many long years ago, just visit the Theta Baby Show and maybe you'll find out. Or if you are one of those fortunate individuals who is lucky at neither love nor cards, just drop in and you can m y win fame and fortune there. And if it's just good entertainment you o u are after, the Chi Omega's will try to give it to you at "Smoky Joe's." Of course there are many more booths.
There is a prize for the most original and clever booth-competition always lends that necessary something. The best thing is that admission to all these booths is just one nickel—5 pennies—or 50 mills. Think of it, people; all that fun for such a meager sum.
While all this fun and frivolity is going on upstairs, Red Blackburn will stimulate a little twinkleeting downstairs. While there isn't a prize for the best dancers, there will probably be plenty of fancy stepping So come one, come all, "Swing and Sway" with the W.S.G.A.
Kansas Title Hinges On Nebraska Game
Conference Standings Would Indicate an Easy Victory for Jayhawkers, But Unpredictability of The Eratic Cornhushers Nullifies All Dope; Scoring Duel Between Prale and Parsons Expected
By Elon Torrence
Kansan Sports Editor
BULLETIN
Conference performances would indicate a Kansas victory, but the Huskers have been an unpredictable aggregation this year. Picked to win the championship hands down, Coach Browne's veteran team was upset by Missouri in the opener at Lincoln, 27 to 18. In their second game, the Huskers displaced
Tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the University of Nebraska Coliseum at Lincoln, the Kansas Jayhawkers will square off with the erratic Cornhuskers in an effort to gain a victory and to cinch at least a tie for the conference title. A victory would mean also a chance for an undisputed Big Six crown.
Turson, Ariz. Feb. 24. —(UP) -Gen. John J. Perspared lapsed into unconsciousness tonight, attending physicians announced.
Moorhead Takes Contest
'Balancing the Budget'
Is Topic of Winning
Speech
Dean Moorehead, c'38, won the ex-temporaneous speech contest held last night in the Little theater of Green hall. Elijah Elliash C4', c'40 was runner-up, while David Angevine, c'39, was awarded third place.
Other contestants were Lela Siebert, c38; Andrew Hibbard, c39; Karl Ruppentin, c39; Earl Porter, c41; cernl Brantam Brand, c39; John Lintner, c39; Paul Moritz, c39; and Irving Kass, c39.
Moorhead's topic was "Balancing the Budget." One-half hour before the contest began, each contest drew three sub-topics. From these, he choice one for the subject of his speech, which lasted approximately 4 minutes.
Martin Maloney, 37, instructor in English, was instrumental in bringing about the contest last night, which was the first of its kind to be furnished a prize of $10 as an added impact to the first-place winner.
After the contest, Prof. E. C. Buhler of the department of speech and dramatic arts asked the audience of about forty-five whether it would be advisable to make the contest an annual affair. As the audience expressed its approval, the extemporaneous speech contest will be held yearly under the supervision of the department of speech.
In spite of the handicap of having very little time in which to arrange their arguments, most of the speakers presented well organized, consistent and logical viewpoints concerning their respective topics.
Robert Sullivan, c'uncl, was chairman of the contest, and announced the contestants and their topics. The judges were Edward N. Doan, assistant professor of journalism; G. N. Bebout, instructor in English; and the Rev. J. F. King, pastor of the Congregational Church.
Music Recitals Are Announced
The calendar of graduate and senior recitals for the coming weeks up to commencement time was announced yesterday from the School of Fine Arts office by Dean D. M. Swarthout.
Programs definitely schedured area:
Orene Yowell, pianist. Feb. 28.
Mary Jane Bruce, pianist. March 6.
Keith Davis, tenor, March 13. John Moore, pianist. March 29; Dorothy Rumbeck, organist. April 3.
Corinne Hine, pianist, and Helen Tibbets, pianist, in joint recital April 4; Ruth Rice, pianist, April 11; Lila LeVan, pianist, May 10; Carroll Nickels, violinist, May 12; Frances Ravelle, pianist, May 23.
All of these programs will be open to the public without charge. All will be held in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall with the exception of the recital by Dorothy Rumbeck, organist.
Receives Injury While Tumbling
Walden Hooper, ed41, a fresh man football player, received a slight concussion of the brain yesterday morning in a tumbling class. An accidental kick in the jaw made him unconscious for half an hour. He will be released from the hospital in a few days.
the form expected of them to down Kansas State 46 to 32.
IOWA State then held the towering Nebraskans to a 5-point margin at Ames to surprise observers again. The next game for the Huskers was the contest here, and the Jawhawks came through with surprising ease, 48, 33. Nebraska came back strong that weekend to score 48 points at Norman against the Sooners, who eked out a victory with 50 points. The following week at Lincoln found Coach Browne's team plastering a 52 to 42 defeat on Oklahoma. After reaching that high point, Nebraska dropped a second game to
NOTICE
In order to allow time for a short rally at noon today, 11:30 classes will end at 12:10 instead of the usual time.
All Dope Is Nullified
Chancellor E. H. Lindley
Missouri and in their latest disappointment, they were thoroughly trounced by Kansas State.
On the other hand the Jayhawkers, after dropping their conference opener to the "Boy Seats," have gone on to win 7 straight Big Six titls. This makes the Kansas队 "percentage" faction the most successful of Boone's rising to the heights it achieved against the Noonera nulls all dope.
The game will quite likely develop into a scoring battle between two fine guards. Pralle, all-Big Six for two years, and Parsons, all-conference last year, both scored 15 points in their first meeting this year. The two are leading the Big Six guards in scoring, with Pralle holding a slight edge with an average of 16.63 compared to Parsons' 10.33. If Pralle maintains both his average and his margin against the remaining Panthers, the star Kansas guard will set a new record for scoring by a guard in one season. There is also a strong possibility that he may win the individual scoring championship for this year.
Expected to aid Kraille in the scoring column for Kansas are Ehling, sophomore forward, and Harp, sophomore guard. For Nebraska, Amen and Ebaugh should prove to be the most potent.
Attendance May Reach 7,000
Four Huskers will be playing their final game in a Nebraska uniform. These are Bob Parsons, Paul Amen, Floyd Ebaugh and Elmer Dorbrmann. For Kanus, Frinkle and Terry Loehring, he is facing Nebraska for the last time.
The starting lineup for Kansas will probably consist of Don Ebbing and George Golay, forwards, and John Cummings, Prale and Dick Harn, guards.
For Nebraska, Amen and Kovanda are expected to start in the forward posts. Ebaugh will be at defense and Werner will be at guard.
The game should draw a large crowd, and with favorable weather the attendance may reach the 7,000 mark. Last year when the Huskers won the title, it led 7,500 turned out to witness the home team trump Kansas 37 to 12.
Prominent Attorney Speaks to Law Students
Austen M. Cowan, president of the Kansas State Bar Association and prominent Wichita attorney, spoke in a concession of the School of Law yesterday on "Reminiscences of 26 years of law practice."
Dean Frederick J. Moreau of the School of Law gave a luncheon for Mr. Crown, which was attended by 100 lawyers and several Lawrence attorneys.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWO
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1938
Kansas State College Faculty Adds Protest
}
(From Kansas City Star)
Manhattan, Kan., Feb. 24. Expressing fear that the proposed investigation of communism at the University of Kansas "would so discredit the institutions of higher learning as to cause competent educators to turn their backs upon our state for a generation to come," the Kansas State College chapter of the American Association of University Teachers today sent an appeal to executive and legislative officials at Topeka.
The association here wired an urgent petition to Gov. Walter A. Huxman and members of the senate and house of representatives to prevent passage of the measure. The resolution:
"Acting upon our own initiative a citizens and educators of Kansas, and aware of our stewardship to the people of Kansas, we urge you to pre-identify and abide by the tradition of free education in our commonwealth.
Protecion From Scorn
"We currently petition you to protect the name of Kansas from the scorn of free men and the fear of the proposed measure designed to set up a political committee to judge the qualifications of university institutions of higher learning, and to investigate these institutions for purposes called subyoutube influences in them.
"We feel that such a measure would be an unwarranted reflection upon our patriotism, an implied threat to our freedom as teachers, and gratuitous disparagement of our competence to which we have devoted our lives.
"Such a measure, we believe, would so discredit the institutions of higher education that educators to turn their backs upon our state for a generation to come."
"Furthermore, we feel that all self-researching educators now come from Kansas will leave the state at the first opportunity afforded them, if
"The official acts, and our work as educators, are an open book. We welcome examination and criticism from all sides, and we will with all the intensity of feeling bequeathed us with the previous heritage of a century and a half of free education."
Points to European Fate
"We who have dedicated our lives to the acquisition of knowledge, who have trained ourselves as teachers, to bring about a break from beating to succeed generations, are well aware that only in an atmosphere of direction can we carry on our work.
"Fear, suspicion and official coercion will destroy all we represent as a nation," said Dr. Cyril Koleva, a national leader of scholars in those unfortunate nations of Europe and Asia which have taken up the challenge.
"We cherish for the people of Kansas the reputation they have always borne zealous champions of education and we keep their reputation unatturbished."
Farmer's Poster
Sheeds No Light on
Care of Boats
"Do not leef Dore open bond nerms unlaitukit nor Riese any dead Memsits in any of te boards. If its Rulc or not lit hexta Jarches will be
Whether the farmer had a cold when he printed the sign has not been determined, but translated, it reads:
"Do not leave the doors open or beats unblocked nor throw any dead minims in any of the boats. If the boat is allowed, followed extra charges will be made."
University Daily Kausan
Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
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DAVID E. PARTRID
MEMBER
KANSAS
PRESS ASSOCIATION
EDITOR-IN-CHEFT...TOM A. FLEE
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Don't Get Excited
Editor's note: The following editorial was written especially for the University Daily Kansan by Mr. W. A. Baley, editor and manager of the Kansas City Kansan:
An investigation instigated by the State Legislature to determine the extent to which isms are discussed, indorsed, or fostered by faculty and students of the University of Kansas could accomplish no permanently helpful results but rather might prove farcal and harmful.
Imagine such a hand-picked committee in action! What a thrill for those summoned from classrooms for questioning to find themselves flash-lighted into fame, martyrs to the “new school of thought!” Skilled as these martyrs are in “shot-gun quizzes,” we discount in advance any results the probs might claim.
On the other hand one serious result which such an investigation might have would be its tendency toward the curtailment of academic freedom within the university. There is a feeling general among university faculties that by and large professors in privately endowed educational institutions can be much freer in their classroom discussions and research work than those professors in tax supported universities. In the training of youth and the search after truth professors should not be hampered by the threat of politicians or cowed by the fear of losing their jobs.
In these turbulent times it is easy to lose one's poise. The activity of world powers which have attained their dominance while championing political philosophies antagonistic to ours tends to make those responsible for our government easily susceptible to rumors. Legislators, both state and federal, have grave responsibilities. It is their duty to furnish leadership and programs of activity to guide us through these times.
We believe, however, that our state legislators do not need to get excited $7,500.00 worth about radicalism in our state university.
Legislative Idiocy
So the American Legion highly approves of the proposed legislative witch hunt at Kansas University. "And if we are to be saved from Communism by that potential instrument of Fascism," roars one Kansas Conservative, "I for one am willing to take chances with the reds."
Concordia Blade-Empire:
What Kansas Editors Say
In fact, nothing in years has been so heartening as the reaction among conservatives and new dealers alike against the recent idiocy at Topeka, when the house approved the investigation of Communism at KU. Of course, exasperated tax payers who are footing the bills for this extra session fail to realize that the legislators are on a spot and have been for three weeks. The solons don't know which is the more dangerous, to fly in the face of thousands of political bloodsuckers and oppose the governor's relief bill or to fly in the face of frightened property owners and farmers and support the governor's bill.
For three weeks they have hedged and stalled and played for time and cluttered the hopper with inconsequential bills. But in the back of their minds they have seen the inevitable hour of reckoning. In desperation they grabbed at the Lawrence scandal. I am not crediting the gentleman of the legislature with sufficient political acumen to suggest that they deliberately used the affair as a red herring. Rather they used it instinctively to postpone their doom and to advertise their patriotism during the停顿ment.
There is probably nothing very dangerous going on at Lawrence. A Kansas University boy killed in Spain because he had heard about communism and had given his heart to the cause. This is tragic as all such matrydom is tragic. And the boy's friends and family deserve every sympathy. But they have no right to ask that other boys and girls shall be prevented from hearing and reading about Communism as they do about any other form of government.
I suppose that Communism is analyzed and discussed in history and sociology and economics classes. If it isn't, then the university had better close its doors and-appropriations for faculty hire had better be applied to state schools for brick laying.
Perhaps some secret meetings have been held at K.U. It wouldn't surprise me. But if they hadn't been held in the name of Communism, they'd have been held in the name of something. Secret meetings are the messes of university life. And if you want to pull down a heap of very real trouble on your heads, just suppress the eruption.
To be sure there is a danger of Communism and a danger of Fascism abroad in the land. But the seat of the danger is not at the state universities. It is principally in the state legislatures and in congress. There is only one way to prevent Communism and that is through regard for rights of labor, sympathy for the problems of the underprivileged, and through a
fair and decent administration of relief. There is only one way to prevent Fascism and that is through regard for the rights of the salaried people, the shop keepers and small-propertied middle class, and through a knowledge of the limit of middle-class endurance in taxation.
The Kansas legislators will have their hands full if they steer a safe middle course between the dangers of a ruthless laissez faire system and the dangers of collectivism. They had better tend to their own knitting which right now happens to be one of the most perplexing tax problems in half a century. They would do well to leave clucking old maids and village gossips the job of going down to Lawrence every night and looking under dormitory beds for hobgoblins.
Kansas University Investigation
The Topeka State Journal:
Doubless there is some ground for the charge that within the student body at Kansas University are students who sympathize with what we call "subversive activities."
If the charge proves true, that young Don Henry fittered away his youth as the result of radical poison imbibed at the state University from association with other radical students, it will have little significance. If, on the other hand, the proposed investigation discloses that there are members of the faculty who deliberately inculcate in the class room, in lectures, or elsewhere, revolutionary doctrines, then the remedy is easily within the possession of the Board of Remegs.
This worry in reference to Kansas University has been accented by the unhappy fact that an outstanding student went to Spain in search of his Holy Grail. He perished fighting under the banner of the communistic Loyal cause.
It's the habit of youth to be radical and to possess a more eager appetite for change than for truth. Throughout the ages, this tendency of youth to proclaim reckless doctrines has kept conservative age worrying.
The thing that should be kept in balance is common sense and tolerance. You cannot crowd the minds of all the Kansas University students into one pattern. An attempt to discipline free speech at the University would provide the very bait which subversive agitators eagerly await everywhere.
A Hunt for Reds
Arkansas City Daily Traveler;
The Kansas house of representatives has voted for an investigation of Communism at the University of Kansas. We hope the house has a good time, and we anticipate a lot of fun when the investigating committee starts its hearings.
But we don't anticipate any disclosures that will rock the foundations of Kansas.
Radicalism will be found at the University. The chances are the committee will find long-haired young men and short-haired young women who espouse the cause of Moscow and look upon the United States government as the last refuge of capitalism. Some of the professors may be found to believe that all is not perfect in this land of ours, and some may even believe we might borrow a leaf or two from someone else.
This is true of nearly all universities. Youth is experimental by nature. New ideas gain more converts among the young than among the old. The young are discontented with the past, and look to the future. The older we become, the more contented we are with the past and the more we look with suspicion and fear upon the future.
We seriously doubt that the house committee will find a thing at Kansas University that any house committee for the last forty years could not have found. But, as we said earlier, the hearings will be a lot of fun.
Some K.U. Youngsters are just pulling the state's leg. Three of them, waving red flags and displaying the Communicistic insignia of the hammer and sickle, drove along Massachusetts street in Lawrence the other day. The sight created what is commonly known as a "furor." Addled paddle citizens rushed around tearing their hair and shirts and prated loudly of a "Red uprising." The reverberation reached Topica, where the august legislature is in special session (mostly twiddling its thumbs), and some brainy wonder suggested a $7,500 appropriation for a "legislative investigation." This, in face of the fact that a committee of regents is already at work studying rumors of radical activities in the state university.
A Pop Valve and a Leg Pull
The ElDorado Times;
Apparently the utterly silly proposal of legalistic meddling in the university's affairs has been squelched. Certainly it should be in that condition after a letter sent to state senators and signed by representatives of eleven students
organizations, had been made public. Among other statements, the letter said;
"... As students of the university we feel that this appropriation is not only unwarranted by the facts but is doing the university irreparable harm. Until now this rumored investigation has been a joke here . . . We cannot believe that the well-meaning legislators who are proposing this investigation realize the seriousness of such action . . . Every bantering word, every gesture, every innocent action will be scrutinized for its subversive meaning with a collection of misinterpretations the result. Calling people 'Reds' these days is common. The term has even been applied to the President of the United States and could as easily be applied here . . . From coast to coast this criticism will be hailed down upon Kansas for its threat to academic freedom—freedom for which Kansas has long been proud . . . We know that the student body has unanimous confidence in its faculty . . . Because we feel this bill will do nothing but blacken the name of the university and foster a feeling of distrust and fear among its faculty and students, we plead with all real friends of the university to prevent its passage."
That about tells the story. It's all a mountain from a mole hill. Maybe a few students have assimilated some radical leanings, but that's just natural steam blowing off. The rank and file of K.U. students are as level-headed as any body of them could be when the "great socialist state" is in the making—and mighty near made, if you ask us.
The most foolish move that could be made would be to dignify this incident with a "legislative investigation." Kansas should avoid this particular piece of asinity—already having a considerable program of that nature on its hands.
Campus Opinion
You Can't Find It Here
Edition: Dual Language
Editor. Daily Kansan:
I am decidedly against anything communistic, but I hate to have K.U. made the point of any more criticism, and believe that there are not enough "rvds" on the Hill to justify the so-called investigation.
B. M, G.
I hope you print this in your Campus Opinion.
A play in one act.
A play in the office
Character in the戏
they plan a coup, Redski.
year plan son, redskin!
Scene: Some people think all over the HILL;
Time: Supposedly the present. Opening scene:
Mr. Studentki is sitting with his feet up on a machine gun reading the pu-
mrs. Studentski is listening to the hit of the song "Bash It For Me" over the radio.
week. Diana A for her
Little Red Tedz is playing ten - pins using a
bomb for the ball.
and run
Mr. Studentki: Down with everything! The Topeka
was discovered, no bad intent
Mr. Studentskii Down with everything the twirps have discovered our hideout. They've finally noticed us at last! My how blind some people can be You would have thought they'd noticed this important place long before, with so many things needed them to go back and rack in. And the low salaries of some of the best professorskis in the world. New what was it Stalin said? What took these mortals be?
Mr. Studentski (calmly): Now, now dear, don't get excited. They won't find enough of us here to shake a bomb at Althouat at. They're betting $7,000 to a rubble that they sweep us from Karsa. And it
always reminded of Silber, who was
made up of his mouth): Mama, may I
go out and play?
Mrs. Studentski: Conradeski, how do you think it will end? all?
Mr. Studentskij: Well, dear. I wouldn't worry, I'd say that the Topeka boys will run true to form and sound the $750 "trotsking" around like a Japak with his head off.
What do you say, dear? Let's go bomb a factory.
(Little Reddik) goes out to practice the shot-put to help him train for his life's work.)
Mrs. Studentskiy, Yes, for a little while, but remember not to go near little Adolph Nazi. Remember the last time you played together he won all of your marbles—I mean bombs.
Let Them Have Their Fun
The first time I visited the state house to see how our government functioned, for example, they spent most of the morning discussing and adopting a result-based tax system that was highly laugable. And even then half of them went to sleep.
I believe that we University students are taking the legislature too seriously. After all, any one who has visited one of their sessions realizes that they are duller than a 1:30 lecture and they have to do something once in a while to keep up. Usually they want to be going to school with only themselves and taxes to listen to (o).
We must remember the Kansas constitution says, "... all persons may freely speak, write or publish their sentiments on all subjects ... and... the people have a right to pass themselves to personage manmade in the community to be common good ... and if the legislature wants to get together to investigate and talk about our communistic activities, that's all right. We might even help them. We could have a committee to point out to each other the needs of the schools and the sticks with which C.S. E.P. students cut grass in the spring. In the show case in Hawkholt hall is a show case with bottles labeled "T.N.T. and "dynamic". Of course they're fakes, but they are real and true. Of course their red socks and the披肩s and their red sweaters and the Pi's their red skirts. And we could point out the predominance of red roos on the Hill. They could lunch at Brick's and hear the waiters bowl "Bowl of Red." A look at the last vestige played by the player played by Joseph Furter" by Rinsky-Karolkoff.
Admittedly the $7,500 might be better spent on the hospital, or Dyche, or in sending 15 students to school a year, but everyone knows it's more fun to spend a nickle for candy than for what you need.
W
BB.
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Canceller's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular publication days and 11:00 a.m.
Vol. 35 Friday, February 25, 1938 No. 102
--don't need to carry money with you when you have a meal ticket
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION. The Creative Leisure Commission will meet Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at Henley house. Work will be continued on the movies. All interested are invited to attend..Ruth
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLWISHES. Applications for scholarships and fellowships in the Graduate School for the academic year 1938-39 are due at the Graduate office on Tuesday, March 25. Application forms may be sent to the Graduate office, 225 Frank Stouffer hall—E B. Stouffer, Dean.
MEDICAL APITUDE TEST. A supplementary medical aptitude test will be given by the Association of American Medical Colleges on April 9, 1838. All premedical students in the program are planning to enter a medical school, either at the University of Kansas or elsewhere, next fall, should take this test on Dr. Owen. Those who desire to take this test notify Dr. Owen in Strong hall (phil.-KU-86), immediately—O. O. Stoland.
MENS STUDENT COUNCIL: There will be a room—Moesh Ettenman, Secretary, at 815 in the Pine room. Moe Ettenman.
SEE! HEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
REINTERPRETATION OF RELIGION COMMISSION: The Y.W.-Y.M. Reinterpretation of Religion Commission will meet at Henley house at 4:30 this afternoon. The Rev. Joseph King will continue to lead the discussion on The Teachings of Jesus. This week, we will discuss this week. -Evyn Brubaker, Donald Deford.
VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council: law representative and president of the sophomore class. Petitions for the Men's Student Council or the secretary of the Men's Student Council on or before Monday, Feb. 28. Mott Eitten, Secretary.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1938
PAGE THREE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Hill Society
Dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house last night were:
Conard Gilham, c'41
Jackson Dekan, c'19
T. Follman, ph
Brandon Genison
Karl Metz and Sol Bobrow, members of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, were guests at the Alpha house Wednesday night.
Pledges of Sigma Kappa gave a "paddle" party for the actives Tuesday night.
Triangle fraternity held an hour dance last night from 7 to 8 p.m.
Line footnoting: We were guessed
Marcia Buellom, c'40
Betty Ann Wilkerson, c'41
Jennette Hardy, c'ucl
Jeffrey Moss, c'ucl
Nell Kimbrough, c'19
Skirley Sunk, c'ucl
Doris McDermand, ed'39
Phyllis Sikes, c'ucl
Virginia Hawkinson, fa'18
Nell Clark, c'40
Margaret Montgomery, fa'19
Virginia Rizzo
Acacia fraternity entertained the following with an hour of dancing at the chapter house last evening;
Darcych Caldwell, c18
Phyllus Foley, b'19
Pennington, c14
Virginia Gray, c41
Ardach Cable, cunel
France Kabler, cunel
Jean Browell, c41
Harper Goodwin, c39
Hugh Mason, c19
Roe McVey, c18
Elva Ottmann, c39
Edward W. Horn, c18
Dudley Armstrong III, c4
Mrs. Edith Martin, housemother of the Chi Omega sorority, was entertained by Mrs. M. M. Wolfe during the dancing.
♥
∞
Jerome Kesselman, instructor in economics, was a dinner guest at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity house last evening.
.
Arloune Goodjohn, fau ncel, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house.
--soared in the sky above the body of a dead sheep.
∞
The Seven-Points Club at 1400 Tennessee entertained with an hour dance last evening.
Upsilon chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha announces the pledging of William Foster, c'41, and Dewayne Williams, c'41.
∞
The fourth annual vanity of the Negro student was held in the Me. Music last night from 10 to 2 o'clock. Music was furnished by Tommie Douglas's orchestra.
Alex Izzard, '33, was a guest at the Alpha Kappa Psi house Wednesday.
Pi Delta Phi, French honorary fraternity, initiated the following students yesterday afternoon:
Helen Priscilla Cooper, c185
Josie Margaret Lemon, c185
Jaline Morne Regh, c185
Dorothy Stephen Johnson, c185
Havwire--
Continued from page 1
The first vulture turned to the other and said:
"Carrion, old boy, carrion!"
We know it stinks.
Wanted-One Goon
Mr. Schiller Shore, of the Shore Merit System, has compiled a new booklet listing all the Communists on the Hill and their salaries. The booklet is not of much value, however, because it is written too soon in good working order might be found for seven or eight thousand.
Anyone knowing the whereabouts or Alice or even Sadie, just keep it to himself.
We bought a little gadget the other day and after examining the trade mark we began to realize to what lengths the Japanese are going to beat the boycott. They have changed the name of one of their industrial towns to "Usa". Now when they manufacture something, they print on it "Made in USA", and then in every minute they write "Japan."
Dot leaving out the dots has dot to stop.
Pome
The moon was white,
The road was dark-
A perfect place
To work hard.
I gave a sigh,
I gave aanswer,
I gave a fate-
I was alone!
Will Consider Man For Presnell Vacancy
The name of a candidate to fill the position of backfield coach on the varsity football coaching staff will be considered by the athletic board at a time before classes close that afternoon in the Pine house of the Memorial Union building.
—Clipped.
The selection of a successor to Glenn Presnell, who recently resigned the position to accept a similar one at Nebraska, has been hung fire for some time. The choice of candidates in this department left largely to Ad Lindeney, and out of a number of applicants one has been selected.
Oil Terms
Juzzle Jury
In Mock Trial
"It's just like going out and asking someone for a complete threshing machine. He wouldn't know whether to throw in the pitchforks or not, but when he asks what "a complete oil and gas drilling rig" actually includes.
The problem of "a complete oil and gas drilling rig" came up in the mock trial of a civil suit held yesterday in Green hall. The jury failed to agree on a decision end was discharged.
One can see where there might be difficulty in determining whether the property in question "two 6¼ inch drilling bits, one 4-inch drilling stem, one o'Fairbanks - Morse water pump, two cant hooks, and one spirited level"—is a part of a complete drilling rig. The witnesses made this point only more obvious. The lawyers examined and cross-examined while the jury yawned and laughed.
It was truly an education in the oil-field custom, usage, and language, except that when it was over one no one understand what a "complete drilling rig" was. Or, rather, everybody seemed to know what it was. But they didn't agree. Hence, the jury has to decide.
Prof. P. W. Visselman of the School of Law, acted as judge, Lloyd Vliex, 138, was clerk of the court. Others participating were:
Attorneys for the plaintiff: Erick A. Roberts, 178; Alfred Kaiser, 138; Charles S. Dots, 128; and Samuel Minthorn, 178. Minthorn was in the hospital and unable to attend the trial.
Attorneys for the defendant: P. J. Farabi, '138; Kenneth W. Lieber, '138; Sol Weinstein, '138.
Jurmeen: Charles Cassel, Loe. Brenneisen, Alfred Anderson, Herbert L. Lodge, Donald Foss, Daniel Marshall, Jr., Leon Ernall Nellier, William C. Baisinger, Eugene Buchan, Charles H. Kimball, Hugh Phillips, all l'40, and d Edmund L. Page, l'anel.
Witnesses: Elmer Goering, 138; Jick A. Roberts, 138; Keith Bentz, 38; Theodore Tenney, 38; Norman Decks, 4c; Harold C. Cook, 199.
Y.W. Names Nominees
Nominies for offices of the Y.W.
C.A. in the election to be held Tuesday,
March 1, are as follows: President,
Jeanne Youngman and Eda Mia
Parke; vice-president, Ruth
Olive Brown and Harriet Stephens;
secretary, Margaret June Gray and
Betty Jean Van Deventer.
Miss Youman will be a senior next year and has had much experience in Y.W. conferences. She has been chairman of the "Laws" commission this year. Miss Parks will be a junior next year and has had much experience in chairmen of the Estes Commission this year.
Ruth Brown, a junior next year, is finance chairman this year. Harris Stephens is a sophomore and has been on several committees, representing the W.C.A. on the Student Christian Federation and serving as a Henley house hostess. Margaret Jane Gray and Betty Jean Van Deverenter are both freshmen. Miss Gray is program chairman of the Freshman Commission and Miss Van Deverenter is active on both the Freshman Commission and the World Cooperation Commission.
Dorothy Trekell and Anne Browne were named to serve on the election board by the nominating committee, which consisted of Eleonor Slaten, Jane Payne, Jane Roberta Dorothy Caldwell, Elizabeth Barbara Vucci, Vaucet, and Mrs. Joseph King vice-president of the advisory board.
The election polls will be open from 8 to 5 o'clock on Tuesday. March in the central rotunda of the W.C.A. are urged to vote. The W.C.A. are urged to vote.
Youngman a n d Parks
H e a d Ticket; Election
To Be Held March 1
Canton afs. vs. Valley center neg.
Valley center afs. vs. Valley nega.
Bulvane afs. vs. Neoslo Rapid
High School-than it incurred in the house.
Two senators, both University graduate, apparently will lead the fight against the investigation. They are Senator Don Allen, Jefferson county and Senator Patrice Carter, Liberty County.
Contests in the extemporaneous speaking will talk on some phase of government regulation of advertising. The exact topic will be assigned each contest 20 minutes ahead. Follow the contest.
Barnes, Wyndotte High Kansas City, Kan.; William Black, Fort Scott; Lanker Bank, Russell Zoe Strum, Winfield; Ruby David Boakes; Robert VanScoeve, Manhattan; and Allan Cornwell, Hutchinson
He wants you to see these suits while they are hot from the steam of the iron. He wants to give you some styling to remember that you won't be able to forget. He wants you to see patterns that will linger in your memory like a coil of golden hair.
Continued from page 1
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They're more for "seeing" than they are for sale. The fact is that if we don't sell a single Spring suit this month, it will be entirely satisfactory to the boss.
Continued from page 1
move one and for all the charges that there are communistic activities in the University. It gives the school much unfavorable publicity and we think a complete investigation would put a stop to that sort of thing."
The sponsors of the resolution presented photographic evidence and quoted rules of meetings of the Young Communists' league from the diary of Dion Henry.
Busy Senate-than it incurred in the house.
Two senators, both University graduate, apparently will lead the fight against the investigation. They are Senator Don Allen, Jefferson county and Senator Patrice Carter, Liberty County.
"Have you any proof that there is a professor or instructor teaching communicative doctrines in the University?" I asked, repectedly at the University's faculty."
Don Allen, senator from Jefferson county and a committee member, nominated Representative Carper;
Senator Questions Carper
"This committee hasn't had time to ascertain that," Carrier replied. "Then you have no evidence that the instructors have been teaching this?" Senator Allen inquired. "No."
Report of the ways and mean committee was read in the senate at the opening of the afternoon session. The meeting ordered senior orders on the calendar.
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That the resolution would be considered today was doubted by senate leaders. Five committee meetings scheduled for last night prevented a night session which might have seen action on the measure.
The Dacathlon Champion of the World
2. That the conservation bill, which is expected to draw a flood of debate and amendments, is scheduled for next week, after the senate convenes at noon.
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FABORG GIVEN Consideration
Possibility of consideration today
of the resolution is governed by the two
factors:
1. That the legislature, called in a special session to pass social security legislation and which already has been burdened with involved unrelated bills, is rushing through its work.
2. A possible adjournment Saturday night.
If the measure comes to a vote there doubtless will be more opposi-
3. That the amount of discussion which may be devoted to three other bills on general order preceding the ordinance cannot be predicted definitively, or unable to be predicted definitively.
There is the possibility, some senators believed, that, should the legislature adjourn Saturday, the house may not be acted upon by the senate.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY FEBRUARY 25.1938
Jayhawkers To Clash With Tigers
Hatgis Crew Given an Outside Chance To Win Against Missouri Team Tomorrow Night
The Kansas cinderdemers will clash with the Missouri Tigers at Brewer Field House in Columbia Saturday night at 7:45. This will be their first game since 1931, which was the last of a long series of meets that began in 1994.
The Jayhawkers are given only an outside chance for a victory over their greatest rival. More favorable pitching has allowed Missouri to decide advantage.
The Kansans have several men handicapped by leg injuries. Captain Harry Wiles, one of the most consistent point winners of last year's squad, is affected by a lingering leg aliment.
Don Bird, Kansas pole vault ace,
apparently is the only Jayhawk
who is a sure bet to pick up a first,
although several men are expected
to place high if not in the No. 1 position.
Ernest Klmann, Mt. Oread distance man, will have his hands full as he clashes with John Munski, break-reaching Tiger sophromore, in the mile run. Last Week, "Lonesome John" Munski, as his teammates know him because of his ability to run far out in front of the field, covered the mile distance in 4:23 in a dual meet with Katrina Kim. An Burrus, was caught in 9:444 in the two-mile run of the same meet but was disqualified for stepping in front of Mitchall, Wildcat runner.
Coach H. W. Hargiss today named the men to make the trip. The team will leave by bus at 9:30 a.m. to tomorrow, accompanied by Hargiss. Gwin Henry, athletic director, and Wade Green, trainer.
Following is a list of the men and the events in which they will probably compete:
60-yard dash: Foy, Clucas, Hardacre and Masoner.
acre and Masoner.
60-yard low hurdles: Foy, Clark
Cox, Masoner and Knight.
60-yard high hurdles; Clark, Cox
and Knight.
dash; Wiles, Williams,
Cluces and Heckendorn.
880-yard dash; Klamn, Heckendorn
和 Toberan.
Mile run; Klamn, Toberan or
Toberan.
Mile. relay: Wiles, Foy, Cox, Clu.
Ryan. Two-mile run: Ryan, Hepner and Toberan.
Mile relay: Wiles, Foy, Cox, Clucas, Williams and Heckenbach. Broad jump: Clucas, Richardson Bird, Repile and Billips.
Phone K.U. 66
Bird. Replogle and Billips.
.High jump. Cox. and Bird.
Along the Sideline
Shot put: Friedland and Turner. Pole vault: Bird and Lawrence.
Along the Sideline
Elon Torrence
Kansas Sports Editor
Ray Noble, ex Jayhawker star now playing with the Kansas City Healy's, recently broke his ankle in a game and will be out the rest of the season.
hopes to be in condition in time to compete in the National A.U.A. tournament. According to Ray, if he is able to compete at the tournament, he will be used at forward position and Pralle will be put in position.
Latest entries in the National College tournament to be held in Kansas City, the second week in March, according to Emil S. Liston, director of the tournament, are Roanoke College of Salem, Va., and New Mexico State College. Roanoke is purported to have one of the stronger teams in the Southeastern part of the country, and according to Liston has beaten many of the state schools of the South.
New Mexico State College is in the Border conference, the loop including the Universities of Arizona and New Mexico. New Mexico State is not only leading the Border conference, but also competing in conference play. By the way, the second team is only 6 games behind N.M.S.C.
We still wish that that "Phog" would consider entering the tournament . . .
See where Bill English is still harping about the referees who affiliated at the Kansas-Oklahoma game . . . Some Sooner fans call the "Boy Scatis" the "uncrowned champions" who win two rostration roles of the two teams, that is, points scored per opponent's point, would indicate Kansas to be ultimately superior, if the Oklahoma fans. won't take the decision of the game.
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Beyond those calculations, the result of the meet is rather uncertain, as both teams should be in better trim by this time as a result of further practice and dual competition. The Kansas team has yet to come through with the loss to Nebraska, 28-56 to Washington University of St. Louis, 36-48, and having tied the Kansas State thinly-clads.
Kansas University will be
300-yard medley relay—D Ritchie.
In the return meet of their home- and-home schedule with Kansas State, the Jayhawk swimmers will travel to Manhattan to swim against the Wildcat tankmen tomorrow afternoon. The earlier dual meet between the two squads ended in a 42-42 in the Jayhawker pool.
Tankmen Meet K-State
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Kansas was able to capture only four firsts of the nine events in the former meeting, being upset by what was considered a weaker State team as shown in the comparative standings against the Nebraska swim team. Proctor Ritchie, who won firsts in the 150-yard free-style and the 150-yard basketstroke, will likely repeat those victories, and Ve t.e Noseinake should have little trouble in racing home with the 440-yard free-style.
Jaybawks Will Splash
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220-yard free-style—Fisher, Feaster,
Mitchell
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Last Saturday was a gala day for the University of Wisconsin athletics, as they took conference tilt in three different sports all on the same day. The Badger swimming team captured a triangular meet by a fine margin from Purdue and Chicago, the clock soars up to Purdue and camp into at Lafayette, Indiana, while the Wisconsin wrestlers grunted out a 19-11 margin over the Northwestern Wildcats to add the third Big Ten victory.
What's Doing in Sports At Other Schools
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It seems we aren't doing right by our basketball players if we look at the example set up by the "homeowners" at Michigan State Monday night. Between halves of the Spartan-Notre Dame conflict, a representative of the residents of Howdy Kraft's home town, Niles, Mich., presented the star senior Michigan guard with a handsome watch. Perhaps they wished they had it back after Notre Dame went on to blast an 48-32 victory after having only 20-18 lead at half-time.
Then there's its subsidization.-The University of Cincinnati sport editor concurs across with the complaint that the university's schools are allowed to subsidize their
athletes. He says that colleges go away with taking out a four-year insurance policy on a high school graduate and letting him collect at the end of his college athletic career, but that when a college sees that a boy's mother is getting help from her parents, the boy is thrown out of conference competition although he received none of the money himself.
Exactly 13,003 persons jammed the Wisconsin field house last Saturday night to see the Purdue five down the Wisconsin Badgers, 46-39. This is the largest crowd to witness a basketball game outside of Madison Square Garden, as well as being a record for the Wisconsin field house. And to help with that, a team ship, can't run more than 2,500 attendance at a basketball game, and probably couldn't if it had facilities for more.
Women's Intramurals
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Aerial darts—Willetts won a semifinal game from Lemonie yesterday Willetts and Curd will play the fine game next week.
Deck tennis—E.T.C. lost to T.N.T.
2-0
2-6 Intramural managers should turn entries for ping pong singles in to the office by tonight.
Oklahoma's pan-hellenic council has voted to limit the size of sorority chapters in an attempt to "control larger groups and aid smaller ones."
Pi Phi's Win Swim Meet
Pi Beta Phi won the elimination swimming meet last night with 33 points. Kappa Kappa Gamma was second with for 25; and Gamma Pi Beta and T.N.T. tied for 23 place with 11 points each.
Bernice Humphrey was stairer and Hazel Cobb was clerk of the course. Timers and judges were Paul Masoner and Ed Hyatt.
Following is the summary events:
The
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Relay - Pi Phi, first; Kappa, second; Alpha Chii, third; Theta, fourth. (New meet record of 38 minutes. Old record. 38.3 minutes.)
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Breast stroke (race) — Woods, Pi Phi, first; Wyatt, Kappa, and Blaney, Theta, second.
Religion Commission Meets at Henley House
The newly united Reinterpretation of Religion commission of the Y.W.-C.A. will meet this afternoon at 4:30 at Henley house. The Rev. Joseph King of Plymouth Congregational Church in Lawrence will give the third in a series of discussions on the topic of Jesus' week will be the "Jewish Background of Jesus and Its Influence on His Teachings."
Phi, first; Kester, Kappa, second; Blaney, Theta, third; Waring, Kappa, fourth.
Three-length free-style — Wilkins, Gamma Pi, first; Edigerton, Pi Phi; second; Woods, Pi Phi; third, Owens, Alpha Chi, fourth.
At the next meeting of the commission Friday, March 4, Winifred Wygal, secretary for the religious program of the national Y.W.C.A., will lead a discussion on "The Radical Jesus."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
AWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1938
Young G.O.P.
Elects Two
K.U. Students
Representatives N am e Landon Vice-President Gr i mes on Executive Committee
NUMBER 103
Two University students were honored in the completion of the organization of the collegiate division of the Young Republican club yesterday afternoon in Topoca, where they met with prominent campuses over the state.
Peggy Ann Landon, c38, was elected vice-president of the statewide organization and Bain Grimes, c39, president of the University Young Republic club was serving on the executive committee.
The meeting yesterday completes the organization plans started during the Kansas Day gathering Jan 28, when the leaders of the college Republican clubs over the state first organize politically interested students.
Miss Landon, in charge of all Republican women's activities in the colleges of the state, emphasized one of the aims of the club. "A purpose of this organization is to secure representation for Kansas colleges in the biennial state Young Republican convention."
Grimes Explains Purposes
O'Riley at Meeting
The two officers chosen will represent the University club in the periodical meetings where the leaders of the club meet and plan the programs for the clubs.
"I believe this organization will have a very definite value. It should be an aid to our Republican organization at the University, and will be of value to the state Republican organization as a direct means of establishing clubs at other Kansas universities and colleges," Grimes said, explaining the motives and purposes of the organization.
Other officers elected are: Herb Stortts, Baker University, president; V. P. Tantz, Wichita University, second vice-president; Ralph Young, Washburn, secretary; C. R. Ferrell, Kansas State, treasurer.
Harry O'Riley, b38, and Quentin Brown, b38, past president of the University Young Republican club, were instrumental in the completion of the organization plans yesterday. The university's methods used at the University, which are to be followed by the various clubs over the state.
on the SHIN by Mitchell and Wire
So it's dirt you crave
You needn't deny it. We've heard you ask for it too many times.
Coleman—the first Owl editor to be rushed by the Pih Phi's—estimates that there are only three people on the Hill who do not want dirt. We wouldn't think of mentioning names, will they say they are to do trick.
So here it is!—H. W. and V.M
More carnival. Alice Marie Meyn's reedion of "Frankle and Johmine" in the Chi Omega's Smoky Joe Tawern had them calling for more. Word got around that there was a strip-
Dropped around at the Union ballroom Saturday a.m. to get a load of the specialty numbers for the coming all-Acampus musical, "Spring Swing." Found pantalooned starlet Til Fower asleep on two chairs. Comes a yawn! Bud Fork yelling for music and Ernie "Hot Foo Sanders ta-de-daing and looking beautiful. Come music back from all the hatter-improving music in the Bud" has a new tune in true Fink style. Then a rehearsal peep at what is going to be a swell duo-number tapped into college swing by Sanders and Fowler.
"Looky, looky, looky. Come see the Theta baby show, Hold a baby for a nickel. Kiss a baby for a nickel." By this time yokeles were six deep around the barkers at the carnival Friday night. The customers who were separated from their five cents usually found that the Theta babies were running around outside or dancing. There is something about a nurse in white that we like better anyway.
Continued on page 4
Reception Today Honors Octogenarian, Class of '75
By Frederic Fleming, c'40
Miss Kate Stephens paused, regarding the young man thoughtfully, and smiled as she said, "I have been thinking of contemporary life and my thoughts bring to mind a meeting of mine in the library at Columbia University with James Huhe Canfield. He jokingly exclaimed, I believe you take life seriously. What did you say to you?" He answered me with a prolonged 'No,' and a son of his fingers."
With this anecdote, Miss Stephens, the 85-year-old former University professor, who will be honored at a reception this afternoon, dismissed
The reception will be held in the men's lounge of the Union building at 3 o'clock, and is in honor of the birthday of Miss Stephens, who was born 85 years ago today in the town of Moravia, New York. She was brought to Kansas at an early age by her ailing father, who was seeking a healthful place in which to settle. The cultured family gave the youthful Kate the best of education at the University. As a major in Greek, she was a graduated in '75 and, receiving a professorship, she
Students who plan to apply for scholarships (gift or loan) for 1038-1339 should file their applications before March 1 with Miss Persis Cook, executive secretary of the Committee on Scholarships, room 1, Frank Hall.
U. G. Mitchell, Chairman.
300 Attend Carnival
'Smokey Joe's Bar' Gets First Place; 'Believe It Or Not' Next
Receipts from the W.S.G.A. carri-
val held Friday night in Robinson
tymmarium totaled $310.80.
A jovial crowd of some eight hundred students congregated on the second floor of the gym for one of the best all-school parties of th six year. Fourteen booths, each representing the work and fun of an organized house, made available for games and approval On the first floor Red Blackburn's orchestra furnished music for dancing.
Before the evening's fun ended a committee of judges, composed of Miss Beulah Morrison, Eleanor Sharer, c'38, and Eni Willeenke, c'38 visited each bath in an effort to discover which w as to receive first prize.
Chi Omega sorority, with "Snowie Joe's Bar," won first prize, which was a silver serving tray. The team won second prize and execution of theme and detail.
first honorable mention went to Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Their booth was "Bellee It or Not, by Bob Z. Zipley." Alpha Delta Pi sorority received second honorable mention from the entire honoree's honorable mention went to Watkins hall for their "Matrimonial Labor-story."
The money from the carnival is to be used for a scholarship fund for women students.
The first in the spring series of senior and graduate recitals of the School of Fine Arts will be presented tomorrow evening, when Orene Yowell, fa38, pianist, will appear in a solo program in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall at 10clock.
Yowell To Play In Spring Recital
Miss Yowell, who comes from Kansas City, Kan., did her piano work at the University in the studio of Miss Ruth Orcutt. She completed her work for the public school music degree last spring and will receive her bachelor of music degree from the University of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical oratory, and is this year's president of the local chapter.
Prelude and Fugue in E Minor Mendolsselo
Fantasia in C major, Op. 15
She will interpret compositions (from Mendelssohn, Schubert, Sibelius, Liszt, and Strauss in the following program:
Elevation Harmless, No. XI) Liszt
dental Etdus, Piano and Orchest-
Burleske, Piano and Orchest-
Strauss
(Orchestral parts on second piano by Miss Orcutt)
Schubert The Birch, Op. 75, No. 4. Sibelius Evening Harmonies (Trancen-
taught this subject from 79 to 85. Then leaving the University, Miss Stephens went to Boston and New York before he retired until her retirement a few years ago.
Miss Stephens has always shown a “strength of character” and an “emphasis of opinion,” to quote one of her reviewers. To the man of today this really means she was a woman, but now she confine her writings entirely to the classical subjects. She organized and campaigned from 88 until the legislators gave the University an appropriation for Corbin hall. Her famous battles of books are still relevant, and the world because she always won them.
Miss Stephens' works are notable for their phrasing, fictive diction, and clear themes. Among the better known of her profile writings are: "Delphic Kansas," 1911; "The Greek Spirit," 1915; "Workfellows on Social Progression," 1915; and "Times at Laurel Town," 1928; "It is a college Miss Stephens that saved Lawrence told truthfully as it is possible." Her fame does not rest alone upon books but also upon her contributions to
Continued on page 2
Musicians Go to Topeka Capital City Will Hea University B and Play Tomorrow Evening
The University of Kansas band, under the direction of Russell Wiley will present a concert at Topeka in the high school auditorium 8 o'clock tomorrow evening. The complete band, some 90 pieces, will make the trip by bus leaving the Campus at 2:30 morning afternoon.
The Staff band of the Chicago Salvation Army, under the direction of Harold Bachman, will open the evening concert with a 30-minute program. The University band will follow with another 30-minute program. The third part of the concert will consist of numbers by a massed orchestra conducted by conductors will be Harold Bachman, Russell Wiley, and David T. Lawson, director of the Topeka high school band.
The five groups composing the massed band will be the staff band of the Chicago Salvation Army, the University band, the Topeka high school band, Marshal's band of Tofeca, and the Santa Fe band of Tofeca.
A massed band rehearsal will be held in the auditorium of Topeka high school from 3:30 until 5:30 in the afternoon. Members of the University band will be guests of the Topeka high school band at dinner in the evening and will return to Lawrence following the concert.
A musical vespers sponsored by Fhi Mu Alpha, the musical fraternity better known as Sinifina, will perform in Hoeh auditorium at New York University.
Sinfonia
Gives Vespers
Today
The recently composed sonata for violin and piano by Professor Preyer will be played by Professor Küter-Umrich, the composer himself at the piano.
Twenty-four active members will have part in the program. They will be assisted by Frank Cunkle, Kai Kleuerstein, Carl Prayer, Raymond Stubl, and Dean D.M. Searndon, members of the School of Fine Arts.
A male chorus of 24 singers from the chapter, known as the Sinifinon chorus, will appear in two selection auditions. It is not the personnel of the chorus is:
Bartione: Rex Conner, fa38; Joseph McAnarry, fa40; Charles Neiswerd, b9; Douglas Tarbet, fa40 Ronald Tate, c38; Donald Wood
First tenor: Robert Briggs, fa38
Jack Happy, fa'uml; Wendell Plank
fa'40; Warren Wilson, fa38
Second tenor; Chamber Breslin, e'40;
Russell Chambers, fa'41; Robert Forman, fa'41; Charles Novotny,
b';航Carr Nickels, fa'38; Bert Shoemaker, fa'41; Louis Maser, fa'mul.
Bass: Lewis Copeland, f4; 40: Vernon Landon, f39; 49: George Drew, f40; Robert Moose, f41; Harold Chapin, f50; Wells, b3; 88: Charles Hopkins, f41.
High School Debaters End Tourney
Newton, D o d e g *City*
And Bucklin T e a m s
Take Honors in Their
Class Divisions
Newton in Class A, Dodge City in Class B, and Bucklin in Class C von first places in the finals of the debating contest held here under the auspices of the Kansas High School Activities Association. Second place in the respective districts went to Wellington, Abilene and Canton, Class B had a triangular final in which the third team was from Hoxie.
Thirty-seven teams were entered in the three classes into which competition was this year divided for the first time. The contest lasted three days, the qualifying rounds being debated Friday, the semifinals Saturday morning, and the finals Saturday afternoon.
Verne Birney, a member of the victorious Bucklin high school team, is a younger brother of Lawrence Birney, University of Kansas student who is prominent in campus activities.
The unicameral system for state legislatures was the subject of debate for all entries.
Newton; Mary M. Willis, Richard Oliver, William Staeter, Robert Lair. Alternates: Joanne Frankie and William Hertzler.
Dodge City: David Hunt, Alvin Cain, Virginia Furhish and Robert Bonthick.
Bucklin; Harold McCarty, Merla Bailey, Berne Birney, and Richard Powell.
Members of the winning teams were:
Owen Barnes, Wyndgate high school representative, won the class A extemporaneous speaking contest held yesterday afternoon following the state high school debate meet. Burton Hodgson, Herton, won the class B extemporaneous debate meet. a sophomore from Turner, engaged victorious in class C.
Wyandotte Wins Extemp Contest
Runners-up in the respective divisions were Allen Connell, Hutchinson; Mary Walker, Oberlin; and Virginia Lusy Snyder, Cullison.
The topics discussed by the field of 18 contestants were all concerned with some phase of advertising. The entrants drew their subjects early in the afternoon. Each contestant was allowed one 3-by-5 card for purpose of memoranda and talked between 5 and 7 minutes.
H. D. Ingham, director of the extension division, who supervised the debate and speaking contests, to tie the extemoparous speakers that hereafter he hoped to hold the speaking contests and the debate tournament separately. Under the present plan the number of some of them is badly congested, as some of them are competing in both events.
“Conservation of gains” as distinguished from conservation of oil or conservation of any other natural resource, was suggested by the director who were addressed briefly at their dinner Friday evening by Cabellier Lindsley
'Shun Dumping Mind.' Says Chancellor Lindley To Visiting Debaters
The Chancellor said he was amazed at the improvement in the spoken voice of recent years. Not only has widespread training in music aided in improving the speaking voice of the American, but also his analysis of subjects, and his presentation of ideas in spoken words.
"Don't have a 'dumping mind," said the Chancellor, who explained that a "dumping mind" is one that forgets entirely all the information that for a time had appeared important. Some lawyers, complete masters of a subject during a trial, forget all about it soon afterward.
"My suggestion to you is that, when the stress of debate is over, you sit down calmly and analyze what you have learned about your subject. Ask yourself what are your definite conviction(s) in this, which you will have conserved ideas that will be a great vain to you as a thinking person."
Hooper Released From Hospital
Warren Hooper, ed'41, who was injured in a tumbling class last week, was released from the student hospital Friday evening.
Running Score
2 Schmunt 28 Kovanda
2 Parsons 27 Harp
4 Amen 30 Wolverine
4 Parsons 9 Praille
6 Parsons 10 Praille
7 Amen Second Half
8 Dohmann 31 Harp
9 Harp 32 Parsons
1 Ebling 33 Amen
10 Parsons 35 Kovanda
12 Ebling 36 Ebaugh
13 Harp 33 Ebaugh
13 Harp 35 Prale
1 Pralle 37 Schmidt
13 Kovanda 39 Ebling
14 Parsons 40 Prale
16 Dohrmann 37 Amen
17 Pralle 39 Kovanda
18 Kovanda 42 41 Kovanda
20 Reid 43 Amen
20 Amen 45 Amen
24 Pralle 43 Golay
24 Ebling 44 Golay
22 Amen 46 Ebaugh
24 Amen 46 Harp
25 Schmidt 48 Golay
25 Ebling 48 Golay
Cunningham Lowers Mark
Clips 1.5 Seconds Off
World Indoor Record
In A.A.U. Meet
New York, Feb. 26—(UP) -Glenn Cunningham, the least tired Kanan, tonight run the second fastest 1500-meter race in history, clipping 1.5 seconds off the indoor world record and making eight hours of a second of the outdoor mark.
Cunningham was clocked in 3:48.4 as he raced to victory in the feature event of the sixteenth national A.A.U. indoor track and field championship before a cheering crowd of 15,000 at Madison Square Garden.
The former indoor mark of 3.4.99 was set in 1936 by Geneveks of the NY.AA, who was second to the great Glenn tonight. The world outdoor record is 3.47.8 set by Jack Perry in 1962 and the 1966 Olympic games at Berlin.
Cunningham's record was the most remarkable of an evening that produced new world markets in the 600-meter run and 65-meter high performance and bookelling the performance by Ben Johnson in the 600-meter sprint.
Almost as remarkable as Cunningham's run was the failure of San Romani of Emporia, Kan., to do better. He was. He was nosed out on the last lap.
Cunningham never ran better than he did tonight. Had he received a sterner opposition — Venske never was closer to him than 10 yards—on the last lap he might have shattered Lovelock's outdoor mark because he was comparatively young, and that turned the first quarter in 61.6 seconds, the half in 2.04.8, and the third quarter in 3.05.2.
March 11 Is Date For Junior Prom
The Junior Prom, only formal all-school party of the year, with Mal Hallett and his recording and radio band furnishing the music, will be held the evening of March 11 from 10 until 2 a.m., in the Memorial Union ballroom, instead of March 4 as previously announced.
Paul Kihm, varsity dance manager, says of Hallett: "Although he has never played much in the Middle West, Hallett is rated by Metronome and Downbeat critics as one of the foremost dance bands in the country. We're paying more for him than we have for any other band this year, so we can promise an outstanding attraction."
Last summer Hellett and his band alternated with Glen Gray at the Steel Pier in Atlantic City. He has played for a number of college par-
Don. Wood, F'39, explains that authorities on the subject rank Hallett's orchestra among the best in the country.
To Discuss Hospital Training
Senior women interested in graduate hospital training are invited to meet at the home of Dr. Cora M. Downs this afternoon at 30th Grad. Graduation for a new student will be subject of a discussion, which will be followed by an early supper.
Applications for Watkins hall and Miller hall residence scholarships for 1938-1939, or for the renewal of such scholarships now held, must be made by March 1, 1938, with Miss Elizabeth Megua, chairman of general scholarship committee, room 220, Frank Strong hall. Committee on Aide and
Applications Due
nittee on Aids and Awards,
U. G. Mitchell, Chairman.
Jayhawks Cinch Tie By Clipping Huskers
Kansas Spurts in Second Half To Nose Out Nebraska. 50-47; Victory Assures a Title Draw With Oklahoma; Pralle a n d Kovanda Lead Teams in Points Scored
By Elon Torrence, c'39 Kansan Sports Editor
Income Tax Bill Delays Senate Action on Red Resolution Until Monday
The Jayhawkers rallied in the last five minutes to take the tilt. With Nebraska leading 45-42, Golay was fouled by Parsons
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 26—(Special) The Kansas Jayhawkers assured themselves of at least a tie for the Big Six basketball title tonight by taking a thrilling game from Nebraska's Cornhuskers, 50 to 47, before 7,000 spectators. Kansas was one point behind at the half, 29-30.
Fred Pralle, Jayhawker guard, scored 6 field goals and 2 free throws for 14 points and a tie with Kovanda and Amen of Nebraska for shooting honors.
The authority for this prediction is Senator Claude Bradney, Columbus, president pro-tem of the senate and Republican floor leader.
Discussion of the income tax bill backed the Muir-Carper joint house resolution off the senate calendar again yesterday, but the investigation of state institutions definitely will be acted on tomorrow.
it," Senator Bradenay told a Kansan reporter, "your resolution will definitely be brought up Monday."
After lengthy debating, the tax bill was passed by a vote of 33 to 3, along with amendments suggested by the committee on taxation. But it was too late then to drive into subversive activities.
Clock-room rumors indicated that voting on the proposed "red" investigation will be close, with heated debate from both sides. Senator Richard Sanders was to lead the opposition along with Senator Don Allen, Valley Falls.
Senators Warren of Fort Scott and Skovgard of Washington are expected to present arguments in favor of the resolution, as they are calling for a more serious resolution which is also on the calendar for general order.
Just how strongly Senator Warren favors such an investigation is not known, however, for his bill calls for a probe only of appropriations and expenditures for state schools. The senate measure, calling for a $15,000 appropriation as compared to $7,500 proposed by the house, may not come up in the Senate during the special session adamantive debate on the measure for Tuesday night, which would leave a two-day calendar that probably will not include the Warren-Skogvard resolution.
The senate convenes for a short session tomorrow morning, at which time the investigation may be discussed, although it is probable that the measure will not be aired until afternoon.
Will Hold Tryouts For 'Winterset' Tomorrow
Froel. Allen Crafton, of the department of speech and dramatic art, has stated that there is still time to try out for parts in the play "Winterst" as the cast has not yet been announced. Tryouts for both "Winterst" and the Dramatic Club will begin at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon.
Y.M.C.A. Representatives Speak at Farmers' Meeting
As part of a program of "traveling forums," three representatives of the University Y.M.C.A. spoke to students meeting in Olive Lake night.
The subject of the forum was the new farm bill or Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1838. Gorges Thomas, c30, discussed the provisions of the act, with especial reference to the wheat farmer.
Affirmative and negative sides of the crop control provisions were presented, with Richard MacCam c'40, upholding them, and Virgil Mitchell, CB25. Mitchell was a discussion was held afterward. Fresh meals were served, in the form of some thirty home-made pies.
John L. Hunt, Y.M.C.A. secretary acted as chairman of the meeting.
Postnone Band Concert
Postpone Band Concert
The spring concert of the University band, which was to have been presented tomorrow evening, has been postponed one week. The program will be held Monday evening, March 7, in Hoch auditorium.
*while attempting a basket and made good on both his tries.
Schmidt Opens Scoring
Ebaugh added a gift throw on Harp's personal to make the score 46-44 in favor of Nebraska. Then Harp swished a long shot through the basket and Golay made good on another long one from side court. Amen scored a free throw, at Ebbing's expense to whittle the lead to a single point with only a minute to play.
Not satisfied with this slim margin,
and the decision proved fruitful
when Golay put the game on ice by
making the score 50 to 47, when he
same batsman in both teams played good ball and during the first half neither team would miss the basket. Schmidt
Standings of the Teams
W L W. l. Pet. Pts. OP.
Kansas 8 1 891 689 352 293
Oklahoma 7 2 778 401 349 233
Osawara 7 4 789 401 349 233
*Nyackua 8 4 400 400 388 38
*Kansas State 3 7 .300 348 308
*Iowa State 3 7 .300 348 308
Season completed Resembling Comes
Feb. 28-Missouri vs. Oklahoma at Columbia.
March 3-Kansas vs. Missouri at Lawrence.
opened the scoring with a field goal for the Jayhaws but Parsons came back with a goal to tie the game up. Amen then put the Huskers ahead with a field goal and Reid tied the game up again at 4-all.
Parsons made another goal and Amen and Dohrmann sank free throws when fouled by Schmidt and Ebling to give Nebraska the lead again. Harp and Ebling came back with baskets to even the score again at 8-all with only 4½ minutes of the game gone.
Parsons scored a basket for the Cornhuskers and Ebling scored one for Kansas to put the game at a tie again. Prainle then made two baskets and Harp a free throw to give the Jayhawks a five-point lead, but Kovanda, Parsons and Doelmann sank field goals in rapid succession to make the score 16-15, Nebraska. Huskers Lead at Half
Huskers Lead at Half
Praille drove in for another basket and was fouled by Ehaugh on the try. Praille also made good his free kick. Kovanna made a basket to even the score once again, this time at 13-all. Reid made good on a goal for Kansas and Parsons put another through the hoop for Nebraska.
Pralle and Ebling came through for the Jayhawkers but the score was tied again at 24-all when Amen made a couple of his shots good.
Schmidt was fouled by Parsons and tallied on his free throw. Then Parsons, Kovanda and Werner hit the basket for Nebraska while Harp hit again for Kansas to give the home team a 30-27 lead. With only a few seconds remaining in the game, he did not swaited through the net as the half ended. The score at this point was 30-29. Nebraska.
Harp opened the second half score by tipping in a basket. Nebraska staged a scoring spree that t gave them a 36-31 lead. Then Prahl and Bactor Allen got placed and wasyet added a riot and got the crowd screeled out.
Missouri Here Thursday
Golay, Praille, Schmidt, and Ebling made good on tries at the hoop, which, added to Praille's free throw, gave the Jayhawkers a 40 to 36 lead. Kovanda put two through the basket and Amen further added to the Husker cause by duplicating the foot as well as adding an extra step. It was at this point of the game that the Jayhawkers stared their rally.
Both Oklahoma and Kansas have yet to play Missouri. The Sooners
Congrated on page 4
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1938
Behavior Is Correlated With Climate
Bv Muriel Mykland. c'39
Whether they have taken courses in geography or not, most University students have heard at some time or another, the statement that there is a definite relationship between the attitudes and behavior as evinced in civilization.
Prof. R. H. Wheeler, head of the University department of psychology, has recently contrived support to this theory in an article entitled "Climate and Human Behavior" published in the February issue of *Progress in Kaucasus*, the official press release of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce.
Professor Wheeler has been directing an elaborate investigation in the department, which may be held in a story with a psychological approach.
Colder, Drier Era Indicated
In discussing man's progress as based on science, Doctor Wheeler makes the point that the early worldwide fluctuations of climate, which resulted in geological formations, are repeated now in historic times on a greatly reduced scale, both in length and intensity.
He cites the example of the ancient civilizations of Crete, Asia Minor and India to support his belief that climatic changes "affect" humanity profoundly. He also shows that the great civilizations and prosperous eras came with a "congenial" climate. Although he does not define "congenital," we take it to mean a time when the climate was lower than the of the congenual climate was from 1900 to 1933 or 1834, and sigms now point to a possible long drought era with lowered annual temperatures.
Forecasts Individualistic Trend
The effect of severe climates on man is taken up, with the statement that they induce tolerance of mind, democratic spirit, and romanticism in literature, art and music. Individualism and economic systems are also born during cold-dry times. The reaction of man to climatic changes is sharply drawn, with examples and illustrations.
A trend toward the individualistic extreme again is forecast—as our existing over-centralization breaks down. "Communism gets worse during warm times, and individualism worse during cold times in history."
Doctor Wheeler's hope is that if "climate will be accommodating enough to sift down to a middle-of-the-road position for a while perhaps man will then be able to control his ambitions, his philosophy his temperament - in short, his whole personality - and resolve resolving psychological contradictions that go with extreme contradictions in climate."
magazines and her editorial work.
Reception Today-magazines and her forthcoming work. Her comments on the changes in the University Campus were combined with a satirical title of the student. Fifty-three years ago the average student was an idealist, absorbed in his studies. She finds the modern streamlined model a materialist, considering only how his studies will aid him in the "bread and butter way."
Continued from page 1
She has given innumerable gifts to the University in service, books, objects of art, historical documents, and pictures, and now it seems fitting that she be honored on this, her eighty-fifth birthday.
University Daily Kansar
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PUBLISHER DAVID F. PARTHII
MEMBER
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College Radicalism Is Just a 'Pale Pink'
Far removed from the University's red scare, and yet pertinent in every sense come the words of Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, president of the University of Michigan speaking to alumni of that school at a meeting in New York City this week.
"It is probably the prevailing conservatism of our colleges and universities," to quote him, "which is in a large part responsible for their reputation for radicalism. Far from being red, or even liberal, they are, on the whole, the strongholds of conservatism and important agencies for maintaining the status quo.
"Even more these institutions tend with age to become crystallized by tradition, regulations and departmentalism," he continued, "until with them the term 'liberal education' is a travesty, and they function as molds into which the students are poured to emerge either as a uniform product or as rejects from the process.
"Thus any evidence of unorthodox thinking, the slightest tinge of pink, becomes conspicuous as a departure from the norm and causes a spasm of hysteria in the timid souls who are fearful of being disturbed."
Much in the same vein, the John Dewey society held this week that academic freedom was being curtailed by "pressure groups," and that this constituted in their view "one of the most vital issues of the day."
The society pointed out that noted historians as David S. Muzzey had been forced to delete or rewrite certain passages of their books because they clashed with local prejudices.
Such organizations, progressive or conservative, which seek to hamper school teachers or hamstring them with rules and regulations, are denounced by the society as "enemies of democracy." Such organizations attack anybody as "dangerous" who even disagrees with them.
Jewish organizations, it is pointed out, have banned Shakespeare's "Merchant of Venice" and one Irish community refused to allow one of Louis Untemeyer's anthologies because "one poem contained a phrase offensive to them."
Emnoria Gazette:
The Truth About It
The society wonders what, essentially, is the difference between this method and that of the Nazi and Fascist states which dictate what the student shall and shall not be taught?
The Independence Reporter is the only daily paper in Kansas which seems to believe there is anything to the red scare witch hunt at K.U. The Independence Reporter is always excited about Communists, sees them in every bush and makes a wide curve at every alley for fear they will jump out and bite it. The Independence paper is sure the lad, Don Henry, who died in Spain, had been "insidiously taught not to fight in the defense of his country to but give his life to international Bolshevism," and that he was "hustled off to Spain" and that his diary furnishes "links of evidence that bear tell-tale stories of one of the most insidious pieces of red work ever carried on before what are supposed to be enlightened eyes!"
Charles F. Scott will now take the stand. Charles F. Scott of the Iola Register is well qualified as witness, (a) by being the leading conservative editor of Kansas, (b) by being member of the committee appointed by the Kansas Board of Regents to investigate radical activities in the University of Kansas, (c) by service as regent of K.U., president of the alumni association, for thirty years a college trustee and two years as acting president of the College of Emporia, and (d) by being a scholar, a Republican and a gentleman who never was called a red. Mr. Scott, who officially knows all the evidence, who has as an examiner looked at the diary, who has heard the story of this "insidious propaganda," writes that the committee "will probably discover that the young man was an extremist when he went to the university, that he soon became the leader of a very small group of political radicals, that he was much more likely to have induced others to go to Spain than to have been induced by others to take that step." And Mr. Scott, who has before him all the evidence that this legislative committee can possibly find, writes that the committee will discover "that instead of there being several hundred of these political extremists among the student body, there are probably not to exceed a score, and they have no following and little influence." Mr. Scott discounts and denies that "the faculty at Kansas University is honeycombed with Communists and radicals."
What Kansas Editors Say
Now if Charles F. Scott, being what he is, he careful, conscientious, highly intelligent conservative, and knowing what he does as member of the committee officially appointed go into the whole matter, concludes there is nothing to it, we are going to sleep tonight. The act that the Independence Reporter, which cows nothing of the charges and which is a confirmed addict to the doctrine that the raw
head and bloody bones of Bolshevism are ready to swallow us whole—all these things will not haunt our dreams. We are not bothered that the Independence Reporter is scared out of a year's growth.
Reds at $15 a Head Kansas City Journal-Post:
The Kansas legislature is about to contribute $7,500 to the publicity fund of the Communist party. The house has passed and a senate committee has recommended for passage an appropriation of that amount to investigate red activities at the state educational institutions.
The reds are of course eagerly waiting final approval of the bill. For them it is the biggest break they have received in Kansas in many years.
The Communists did not go to the trouble of putting their ticket on the Kansas ballot in 1936, but they did in Iowa, which gave them 559 votes. The population of Iowa is considerably greater than that of Kansas, so it may be assumed that in Kansas there are 500 persons who would have voted the Communist ticket if they had had the chance. The legislature plans to spend $7,500—or $115 per head—in advertising these 500 as a corrupting menace to the state's population of 1,850,000.
Is it any wonder that the reeds welcome these legislative investigations? In them their influence and numerical strength are magnified out of all proportion to the facts. A forlorn fragment of a lost cause, they can sit up and take notice when a legislature spends $7,500 to establish them as a powerful, insidious influence.
Have the house and senate committees received anonymous letters urging the investigation? The authors should be traced. Moscow may have been pulling the legislative leg.
A Passing Fancy
Syracuse Journal:
Our state legalature, which was sent to Topeka to do something about the social welfare problem, has gone off on a tangent chasing communists at the University of Kansas. They are spending a part of the public's money foolishly, to prove something that doesn't matter one way or the other. Communism, like pimples, is an affliction in the life of young men. It only an adolescent characteristic which in maturity is generally outgrown. Only a few radicals continue to be unable to differentiate between a theory of political science and its practical application. Personally we see no harm in allowing students to study communism. They are sent to school to learn.
The danger lies in trying to suppress knowledge. Right now, this suppression is directed against a political theory which in this country has long been used to frighten people who do not know what it is. By the exercise of the same un-American principle, however, it may be directed against the Democrats, the Republicans, or any other clique whose teachings the legislators oppose.
Legislative Frittering
Factiones members of the Kansas legislature recently introduced a bill proposing to create a "State Department of Frittering" intended of course, to imply that the principal governmental activity now-a days is to think up means of getting rid of public funds.
But what really makes us disgusted, is the proposal to "prosecute the student editorial writer and fire a teacher in the department of journalism" because the instigator of the investigation does not like a recent editorial published in the student newspaper. We read the editorial, and don't think it was well thought through, but if the practice of arresting the writer of every third rate editorial and firing his boss were carried into commercial journalism we soon would have to enlarge our jails and depend on government news releases for our information.
A recent move by the house of representatives, however, would indicate that the legislature is ready to act itself as a very proficient department of frittering. Latest plan is to frittier away $7,500 in an investigation of alleged Communistic activities at the University of Kansas. The house adopted a resolution authorizing such an investigation by a vote of 92 to 4.
College students normally, and fortunately, are liberal, and in every university student body there is a little group perhaps a few dozen who fancy themselves Communists. The proposed K.U. probe got its incentive from the death of such a student, Don Henry, who was killed fighting in the government forces in the Spanish Civil War. Red inflexions brought to bear on him at the University, so the story goes, induced him to go to Spain and enlist in the Loyalist army.
Garnett Review:
the university, that he soon became the leader of a very small group of political radicals, that he was much more likely to have induced others to go to Spain than to have been induced by others to take this step."
As Charles Scott of the Iola Register points out, "It probably will be discovered that the young man was an extremist when he went to
A Faculty Member Writes Editor Daily Kansan:
To the many excellent articles from Kansas newspapers upon the proposed legislative probe of communism at the University, it should like to submit a response. The faculty of our faculty. In the debate which stamped the house of representatives into adoption of this measure, we were told by the professor, senior of journalism for allowing the Daily Kansas to print an article against war propaganda; and (2) an article against abnormal psychology for allegedly teaching free love.
Representative Carper, in his discussion of a Kanan editorial concerning the Panay incident, assumed that student editors would not have printed "such stuff" unless they had been taught it in their journalism classes. He did not recognize the possibility that such work had been written independently, without faculty dictation or interference.
While he named no specific professor, we may illustrate the attitude of the journalism faculty by a simple statement. Two years ago, when the Kauken University of Hawaii lost a number of pointed attacks upon the R.O.T.C., the head of our department of journalism, Prof. L. N. Pflint, had in the university a son who was an enthusiastic member of
If a student editor is merely the tame mouthpiece of authority in college, he will be the tame mouthpiece of authority after he gets out. If he is encouraged to express independent and honest views in his student days, he is more likely to express such views in this context, though such means is freedom of the press preserved.
The father approved of his son's enlistment and felt that he derived benefit from his military training. Why then did not Professor Flint use his authority to suppress attacks upon the R.O.F.C?! Simply because he and his staff felt that the exercise of independence is most important in the training of a journalist.
It follows that the Kansan editors are sometimes mistaken; they sometimes fail to represent the majority opinion of the student body; they occasionally put the University in a bad light before the people of North Carolina. This is why we pay for strengthening the honesty and integrity of the newspaper profession through our graduates.
The second attack was made upon a professor of abnormal psychology, an obvious reference to Prof. J. F. Brown of our faculty. He is accused of teaching free love. Here he a不安 fortune ambiguity enters. Does "teaching communism" or "teaching free love" advocating or merely talking about these subjects?
Surely the very title of Professor Brown's course, "Abnormal Psychology," suggests that he deals with the abnormalities and irregularities of human conduct, but rather of understanding and remedying them.
Anyone with an elementary knowledge of Sgmund Freud and the science of psychiatry which he initiated will realize how absurd his theories are, how impasses and their effects on human conduct. If the legislators doubt this, they may profitfully consult Dr. Karl Meninger of Topica, an eminent psychiatrist who can enlighten them on this
It is possible that Professor Brown's lectures have offended some of his students; yet in all fairness we should recognize that his subject is particularly difficult. He might not be a professor, no matter how innocuous his subject, occasionally finds that he has shocked some student's sense of propriety. That such offense is not generally felt by Professor Brown's students is attested by his election several years ago as the University's most populous.
🏆
His subject is one that requires a degree of frankness not customary in ordinary conversation. It is to be expected that some of the students at the medical school occasionally blast at the intimate details of an annotation; but an instructor cannot afford to omit essential feature of his course to covid such temporary embarrassment.
The action of our legislature has strengthened the conviction of many people in this state that the need to protect citizens from "the worst of Communists," as a Douglas county farmer expressed it to not make the sober thought would show up.
One would naturally look for an interest in communism in those departments concerned with science
of government—the departments of political science and economics. For several years the head of our political science department, Prof. F. H. Guild has been Director of Research for the Legislative Council of Kansas, and his advice is sought in determining the content of the laws passed by the legislature itself.
Furthermore, the state government has "regularly employed the services of our department of economics. In deviding plans of taxation, in reorganizing the banks and the securities industries, in giving of civil service examinations, the state has employed members of that department in responsible positions, and their actions are a matter of public rec-
Even Professor Ise, perhaps the most publicized liberal of the department, does not devote his time to muleholding youth in secret communicative meetings; he does not take time to attend before chambers of commerce and gatherings of business men. This record does not seem to be one of man or dangerous practices on the part of our faculty.
Perhaps the legislature does not realize what it is doing to the University. William Allen White and the faculty of Kansas State College see the danger clearly enough, as their comments show.
Kansas is on its way toward establishing a similar unfavorable environment for the trucking industry that it may pay higher salaries to attract less able men. Whatever the result of the investigation, in purchasing talent the Kansas taxpayer's dollar will be lower than expected.
The tradition of academic freedom is something highly prized by the teaching profession. While paying attention to this tradition, we know that University has been able to secure and to hold good teachers because of the fine academic tradition which they discovered here. She has retained a lifelong curiosity about universities, while other institutions with higher salary scales could not qualify for such membership. I know one teacher who offered an offer from another institution at almost three times his salary here, laurately because it was known that he suffered from interference with academic freedom.
The greatest strength of a university lies not in its wealth, its equipment, or its faculty, but in the product of all these, its good name. Why are some of our citizens so thoughtlessly intent on tearing down buildings, to build them and put them into structured? In the words of Charles Lamb, "How shall they build it up again?"
John E. Hankins, Associate Professor of English.
Official University Bulletin
---
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular office hours from 10 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Sunday for daytime or Tuesday for evening.
Vol. 35 Sunday, February 27, 1938 No. 16
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular weekly meeting will be held Tuesday afternoon in room C, Myers hall. All students and faculty members interested are invited to attend—Jack Dalley,
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION. The Creative Leisure Commission will meet at 2:30 t's afternoon at Henley house. Work will be continued on the committee and interested are invited - Ruth Fong, Creative Yeahmens.
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS AND FELLOW-SHIPS. Applications for scholarships and fellowships in the Graduate School for the academic year 1938-39 are due at the Graduate office on Tuesday, March 1, 1938. Application blanks in a y are obtained at the college, 225 Frank strong hill. E. B. Stuffer, Dean.
MEDICAL APTITUDE TEST: A supplementary medical antitude test will be given by the Association of American Medical Colleges on April 9, 1888. A premedical student who has passed an exam planning to enter a medical school, either at the University of Kansas or elsewhere, next fall, should take this test on April 9. Those who desire to take the test should notify Dr. O. Kucy, medical director (phone—KU 86), immediately—O. O. Stoland.
MENS STUDENT COUNCIL. There will be a
meeting on Thursday, at 8:15 in the Fine
Room. Michele Elemerson, Secretary
VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL
Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council: law representative and president of the sophomore class. Petitions for the men's student council will be sent to the secretary of the Men's Student Council on or before Monday noon, Feb. 28. Moe Etterson, Secretary.
Announcing---
JUNIOR
PROM
With
MAL
HALLETT
and his
Famous Recording and Radio Orchestra
"THE ONLY FORMAL PARTY THIS YEAR"
Tickets Now Selling at-- Bell's, Union Bldg., Bus. Off. $2 Advance — $2.25 at Door
Four Smooth Dancing Hours From 10 'til 2 a.m.
FRIDAY, MARCH 11th
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27. 1938
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
DOROTHY NETHERTON, c.40, Society Editor
Before 1 a.m.; Call K.13; after 2. 15; call 2702-81
--is a pupil of Miss Ruth Orcutt. She is the first of the seniors to give her graduating recital this semester.
Miss Betty Sterling, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Sterling, 734 Flora, St. Louis, Mo., became the bride of John J. Miller, Jr., son of John J. Miller at Atwood, at a candel-light ceremony performed last night at 8 o'clock at the Maple Avenue Method Episcopal Church in St. Louis. The Rev. John W. Meredith officiated.
Miss Virginia Sterling attended her sister as maid of honor. The bridesmaids were Miss Dorothy McGregor of St. Louis, Miss Barbara Hille of Wakeeye, and Miss Mary Dewep of Wichita.
Mr. Miller was attended by Carl Barnhart of Denver, who was best man. Ushers were William Pratt, of Fredonia, Diane Bridges and Frank Beckett of Kansas City, Mo., Frank Peck and Leo Peck of St. Louis.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Gatesworth hotel. After a wedding trip to New York City and Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. Miller will make their home in Schenectady, N.Y.
The bride attended Lindenwood College, and is a graduate of the University, where she was president of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. She is also a member of the University, and is a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity.
--is a pupil of Miss Ruth Orcutt. She is the first of the seniors to give her graduating recital this semester.
Guests at the Sigma Chi "Ruff Johnson" party last night were;
Johnson'' party last night were:
Daffy Holm, c18
Hloen Molem, c18
Pati Ateman, Kansas City, Mo.
Pat Iateman, c40
Maxine Laughlin, f3/8
Bettie Buch, f4/1
Jennette Dane, c41
Yale Cate, c41
Marguerite Myers, f5/8
Catherine Heinlein, b1/39
Jody Skewart, c40
Wardman, c40
Dorothy Noble, c41
Jolie Hembrook, c41
Roamond Barr, c28
Frye Birch, c28
Dorothy Jones, c41
Bette Gee Sayles, c40
Patricia Arnold, Lawrence
Grayle, c41
Jon Waring, c41
Maurine Aydelotte, Kansas City, M
Mary Fitz-Gerald, c40
Kathrin Seybold, c49
Carmell Gull, c41
Clara Margaret Gille, c4un
Dorothy Ann Ull, Manhattan
Betty Lou McFarland, c18
Catherine Hardy, c18
Julia Henry, ed uncle
Delwo Wood, c40
Maxine Almon, c40
Hayes Spagnuolo, c40
Leone Hoffman, c40
Betty An Yankee, c41
Betty Jane Patton, c4un
Bette Jenner, c41
Catherine Dankel, ed 38
Barbara Bonham, c4un
Mary Nool, c4un
Martha Morgan, c41
Merrill Illini, c41
Betty Butcher, c41
Margaret Wilson, c4un
Gonda Junghall, c4un
Anna Young, ed uncle
Jay Taylor, c41
Virginia O'Connor, c4un
Ruth Hushin, kuna
Margaret Stovker, f4 uncle
--is a pupil of Miss Ruth Orcutt. She is the first of the seniors to give her graduating recital this semester.
∞
Ex-governor Alf M. Landon was the principal speaker at the annual stag "pig" dinner of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at the chapter house last night. C. E. Sowers of Kansas City, Kan., presided.
Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary music sorority, will give a formal reception in honor of the senior members in applied music tomorrow evening at the Yowell recital piano recital by Orene Yowell. Miss Yowell is president of the group and
Join The Crowd at the
BLUE MILL
BRICK'S
"ON THE HILL"
SUNDAY MENU
ROAST CHICKEN
With Dressing
Tempting Home Made
Pastries
The patronesses, Mrs. F. E. Kester,
Mrs. L. H. Houston and Mrs. Carl
A. Prycer, will pour.
Kappa Alpha Theta held initiation services yesterday at the chapter house. Immediately following the services a banquet was held at which Ms. Myrna Daley, Chili-Hawkins, served. Fritz, can serve as tomatiline.
Betty Burcher, c'41
Alice Ann Jones, c'41
Jen Robertson, c'41
Noel Robert, c'41
Jean Stouffer, c'41
Nancy Kafer, c'41
Bettie Lou Cunlery, c'41
Karen Kane, c'41
Dana Simons, c'41
Jane Mongomery, c'41
Ginola Englerth, c'41
Louise Taylor, c'41
Tramblay, c'41
Josephine Stevens, c'41
Roberta Walker, c'41
Margaret Stookey, fa'41
Felyne Meade, c'41
Trammell, c'41
Ruth Hudson, b'41
Sally Harris, c'41
Weekend guests at the Chi Omega house are:
Mrs. H, B. Wasson, Tulsa, Ola.
Arlene Wasson, Tulsa, Ola.
Percia Start, Hays
Dinner guests at the Delta Up-
silon house last Thursday night
were:
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Young, Lawrence
Betty Jane Patton, c'uncel
Mary K. Rutherford, fa'39
Weekend guests at the Acacia house are:
Don Schultz, Oskaloosa
Carrild Freeman, Kansas City, Mo.
Boli Anderson, Manhattan
Mrs. Wilson Hollings, Owla, Okla,
and Robert Plumb, Hays, were
luncheon guests at the Chi Omega
house yesterday.
Mrs. Ernest K. Lindley and Miss Thelma McKelvey of Washington, D.C., arrived last night to be guests
The Summerfield scholars held a dinner meeting last night at the Colonial tea room.
H. Lindley and Mrs. Lindley.
Mr. and Mrs. Lindley entertained with a dinner fast night, and will entertain with a tea from 7 to 7-
over the weekend of Chancellor E. H. Lindley and Mrs. Lindley.
∞
Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu
barson, Andres, sony
Prof. E, F. Ingel and Mrs. Engel
Mr. and Mrs. Harry, Frazee, Lawrence
Harry Frazee, Jr., Lawrence
Miss Marie Stevens, Nortonville,
The weekend guests at the Alph
All Ohio colleges are:
Virginia Tech, Cawarthon
Lake Erie, Allegheny
Ethical Parsons, Wakeney
Virginia Wallace, Kansas City, Mo.
The K. U. Dames bridge group will meet tomorrow evening at the home of Mrs. George Carter, 1841 Tennessee street.
Liam at the Sigma Nu house f
the weekend
Jeown Kearns, Washington, Kan.
Elizabeth Eling, Haitelo
Forest Park, Halifax
~
Arthur Lippitt, Meadville, Mo is a weekend guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house.
Mrs. C. S. Grunwald was a dinner guest at the Sigma Kappa house Friday night.
James Tayler, an attorney at Sharon Springs, visited Friday evening at the home of Prof. W. A. Dill and Mrs. Dill.
.
Lois Lippitt and Mrs. Lippitt,
Meadville, Mo., were weekend
guests at the Alpha Omicron Pi
house.
What's Happening This Week
On the Campus:
It will be our pleasure to demonstrate these ranges
William S. Hilst, Preston, is a weekend guest at the Triangle house.
∞
SUNDAY—Reception for Miss Kate Stephens, menn's lounge, Memorial
Hall, bdmin's lounge, pmn's lounge, independent music in Price room 3260
MONDAY—Open House
GRANADA-Sunday through Wednesday: 'Gold Is Where You Find IT' with George Brent and Olivin de Havilland. * Thursday through Saturday: 'Love is a Headache' with Francht Tone, Gladys Agee, Mickey Roeney, Ralph Morgan, Ted Healy and
At the Theaters:
The Pi Beta Phi alumnae association held a luncheon meeting yesterday at the Colonial tea room.
Arthur Foster, Topeka, is a week- end guest at the Alpha Tau Omega house.
The University Women's Club will hold its March tea Thursday after-
Bell's Music Store
• Spring Swing chorus rehearsal, ballroom, p.m.
TIBO • WEDNESDAY - mid-week in ballroom, 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY- Eldridge Study Club dinner, 6:30 p.m.
SATURDAY-November
THURSDAY—Basketball, Missouri here. **Alpha Phi Omega** in Pine Room, 9 p.m. **League of Women Veters meet** in Pine room.
3. The price of electric ranges is within the reach of moderate incomes.
1. The modern electric range combines economy, beauty, and convenience to indicate that it will be the cooking medium of the future.
DICKINSON—Sunday through Wednesday: "The Barness and the Butter" with William Powell and Annabella. $\bullet$ Thursday through Saturday: "Til I tell Romance" with Grace Moore and Melvyn Doyleux.
2. Westinghouse stands for highest quality in electrical goods.
Westinghouse Electric Ranges
sunday, Monday and Tuesday; "Tarzan's Revenge" with
the Rockies; "Lady Larry," with the Rangers; Stuart Erwin and Una Merkel (both first-runs). · Wednesday
and Thursday; "Sing Baby," Sing with Alice Foye, Adolph Menjou,
and John Larson; "The Star-Spirit Petuniael" with Leslie Howard. · Friday
mance of the Rockies* with Tom Keenan; and "Thank You Mr.
Moto* with Peter Lorre, John Carrhead and Thomas Beech (both
We have taken the Westinghouse franchise because we believe:
PATTEE: Sunday through Wednesday; "Holl Divers" with Clark Gable
● Thursday through Saturday; "Tarpee to Die" with Boh Holstie;
● Thursday through Saturday; "Tarpee to Die" with Boh Holstie.
- Thursday through Saturday: Fathered Tree with Joe Sheehan and "Ever Since Eve" with Robert Montgomery and Patsy Kelly.
noon, March 3, at 3 o'clock, in the
Memorial Union building. Mrs. John
Blecker is in charge of the arrangements.
Mrs. Ray Dillon, '21, has been appointed to the Department of the Oklahoma City University evening college as a teacher of religious education.
Graduate Appointed to Faculty Of Oklahoma City University
Miss. Dillon is the wife of Roy Dillon, O.C.U. professor of psychology and geology. They moved to Oklahoma City last August from Kansas City, Kan., where they were directors of religious education for the Washington Avenue Methodist Church.
XIX
One Examination That Nobody Flunks----If Clothed by-- OBER'S
Wherever you go, you'll find the boys and girls giving your clothes a more critical exam than the toughest prof on your schedule. Ober-clad men always pass with flying colors.
Ober's
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Screenland Puts the Finger on the Underworld
TODAY Continuous from 2
LEE TRACY
NEWS - NOVELTY
No.1
"Crashing Hollywood"
Decathlon Champion of the World---
Glenn Morris
Olympic Swimmer--
Eleanor Holm Jarrett
"TARZAN'S
REVENGE"
TODAY GRANADA
No. 2
Another First Run
Jane Withers
Una Merkle
Stuart Erwin
CHECKERS
Continuous from 2:30
Wed.—"Scorlet Pimpernel"
Stuart Erwin "CHECKERS"
4 Great Days
Roaring Out of the Gold Hills of California Comes This Lusty Brawling Saga of the Builders of the West and Their Lust for Gold!
(1)
THRILL TO THE DRAMA of Titans hating, loving, fighting their riotous way through the glorious golden West!
GOLD
IS WHERE YOU
FIND IT
GEORGE BRENT
OLIVIA De HAVILLAND
CLAUDE RAINS
MARGARET LINDSAY
BARTON MacLane • JOHN LITEL
TIM HOLT • WILLIE BEST
Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ
Music by Max Schneir
A Friar National Figure
A COSMOPOLITAN PRODUCTION
The West of ye Aderyear
in the full glory of today's
TECHNIICOLOR!
X-TRA SPECIAL —
MICKEY MOUSE AND HIS GANG
Jan Rabini and His Band — Late It News
THEY ARE ON THEIR TWAY — WATCH FOR DATES — Robert Taylor — "A Yank at Oxford" Disney's— "Snow White" Walter Huston in "Of Human Hearts" "Bringing Up Baby"
Lawrence's De Luxe Theatre — We Show the Best and Leave the Rest!
Continuous Shows TODAY DICKINSON Sunday Prices, 10c - 35c
So perfectly sensational together . . .
IT'S THE LAUGH-RIPPLING, ROMANTIC COMEDY
SENSATION OF THE YEAR!
THE HILARIOUS SUCCESSOR TO "MY MAN GODFREY"!
NELLA E MARIA CERES
Dohaian Bill
and the girl
whose beauty
and fire you
glimpsed in
"Wings of the
Morning" ...
souring to her
been inches in
her first American
made picture!
William POWELL and ANNABELLA in "The BARONESS and the BUTLER"
A 20th Century Fox Picture with HELEN WESTLEY • HENRY STEPHENSON JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT • NIGEL BRUCE J. EDWARD BROMBERG • LYNN BARI
THURSDAY!
XTRA! POREYE CARTOON BAND ACT Pictorial - Fox News
Grace Moore, Melvyn Douglas "I'LL TAKE ROMANCE"
NEXT WEEK!
Gladys Swarthout
"ROMANCE IN THE DARK"
PAGE FOUR
---
---
P
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1938
4.
Missouri Takes Track Meet.65-39
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Kansas Cindermen Win In Only Four Events as Tigers Complete Sweep Opponents Dealer Service
Or Thaoor Dud School
Columbia, Pa. 268 (UF) The
University of Florida completed an undefended indoor dural track meet tonight with a 65-39 victory over the Kansas Jayhawkers.
John Muski, Tiger miler, crept another notch closer to the Brewer field house record of 4 minutes 20.3 seconds held by Gleim Cunningham of Kansas when he finished the two-mile run in 4 minutes 22.1 seconds.
The summary:
Mile run-Won by Munski, Mi-
souri; Clam, Missouri; second,
Missouri; third. Tine 4 min
22.1 sec.
Shot put—Won by Ellis, Missouri Friedland, Kansas, second; Ering Missouri, third. Distance, 45 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ in.
60-yard dash—Won by Foy, Kan sa; Dixon, Missouri, second; Pries meyer, Missouri, third. Time, 6. seconds.
seccbus:
440-yard dash—Won by Bep
Missouri; Gee, Missouri; second
Priestley, Missouri; third. Time
f13. seconds
140 secounds
High jump—Won by Cox, Kansas
Miller, Missouri; second; Bird, Kansas
sthird. Height 6 feet 2 inches
High hurdles-Won by White Missouri, Knight, Kansas, second; Welsh, Missouri, third. Time, 7.7 seconds.
Pole vault "Won by Bird, Kansas Wager, Missouri, second; Gordon Missouri, third. Height, 13 feet, % inch.
Two-mile run-Won by Whaley Missouri; Burns, Missouri, second Toberin, Kansas, third. Time, 10 minutes.
60-yard low hurdles—Won by White, Missouri; Foy, Kansas, second; Masoner, Kansas, third. Time 7.2 seconds.
Broad jump- Won by irick, Missouri; Clauses, Kansas, second; Clam Missouri, third. Distance, 23 feet $^3$/ inch.
889-yard run-Won by Klarn
Kansas; Fritz, Missouri, second
Heckendorn, Kansas, third. Time,
min. 58.8 sec.
Mile relay—Won by Missouri Time 3 min. 317 sec.
Oklahoma Defeats Iowa State. 35-32
Ames, Iowa, Feb. 26—(UP) The University of Oklahoma climbed second place in the Big Six basket-holding teams and lifted Iowa State College 35 to 32.
The Cyclones threatened only twice, once during the opening minutes of the game and again early in the second half. The result placed State at the bottom of Big Six wins, two victories, and eight defeats.
Martin led the attack for Oklahoma in the first half but was slowed down in the latter period. He was not injured until his own field goals and four free throws.
Pralle To Healey's:
Four New Track Heaters
The athletic board Friday approved the action of Gwin Henry, director of athletics, in granting the request of Fred Pralle, star jersey player for the Kansas City Healesy in the nation A.A.U. basketball tournament.
Pralle's decision to forsake baseball competition here to join the Healy team required approval of Henry under the Big Six rules.
The board voted to install four large heaters for the indoor track under the stadium at a cost of about $1,000. A test model has been in use there for some time and the machine equipment it can be possible to maintain a temperature between 40 and 50 degrees in zero weather, it was said.
Sweater awards for all freshmen in four major sports were approved by the board. This includes men competing in yearling football, baseball, basketball and track.
Kansas State College last night won the final event to edge out Kansas 41 to 34 in a swimming meet in the Wildcat pool.
Aggies Win Swim Meet Kansas State Captures Final Relay. Deciding a Close Meet 41-34
The Jayhawkers led the Agile tanken by one point before the 400-yard free-style relay, but lost this event and with it the meet.
Proteor Ritchie and Fisher led the Jayhawk scorers with 10 points each. Together with Nowsinseki, who placed second in two events, this pair scored 26 points of the Kansas total.
No new poor replay. In a previous meet, the teams tied when the Wildcats captured the final relay to erase a Kansas lead.
No new pool records were set.
220-yard free-style — Won by Fisher, Kansas; Nowosimis, Kansas; second, Furtick, Kansas State, third, Tirun, 2 min. 44 sec.
40-yard, free-style. Won by, P. Ritchie, Kansas, Brown, Kansas State, second; Wherry, Kansas State, third. Time, 21.6 sec.
300-yard medley relay—Won by Kansas State (Erickson, Carl and Ward). Time, 3 min. 38.3 sec.
100 - yard free - style — Won by
Brown, Kansas State; Nowsinis
Kansas, second; Mitchell, Kansas
nird. Time, 1 min. 1 sec.
third. First to three.
Diving-Won by Pattison, Kansas
State; White, Kansas, second; Stipp
Kansas, third.
150-yard backstroke> By W. P. Ritchie, Kansas; Ericon, Kansas State, second; D. Ritchie, Kansas, third. Time, 1 min. 51.7 sec.
200-yard breast-stroke—Won by
Ir. Kansas State; Carl, Kansas State;
second; Brown, Kansas, third.
Time 2 min. 59 sec.
The summary:
440-yard free-style — Won by Fisher, Kansas; Ingraham, Kansas State, second; Nowosinske, Kansas, third. Time, 6 min. 3.7 sec.
400-yard free-style relay - Won by Kansas State (Brown, Erickson, Ward and Furtick). Time, 4 min. 16.2 sec.
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EARN EXTRA MONEY — Student agents wanted to represent Old Hickory made-to-order fraternity paddles, plaques, dances, games. But two particuliers write, Old Hickory Paddle Co., Indiana-polis, Ind.
Phone K.U. 66
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With his coaching staff completed by the naming of Dick Crayer, former University of Iowa star, as backfield coach, Coach Ad Lindey announced yesterday that spring practice would open tomorrow afternoon.
Spring Football Opens Tomorrow
Cravey, the new backfield coach,
played three years at Iowa and was
the Hawkeye captain and all-Bligh
Ten fullback his senior year. He
has played professional football for
the Brooklyn Dodgers the past two
years. He performed with the Iowa
trained team in the Kansas Relays in
Crayne was named Friday by the athletic board to fill the vacancy in the Kansas grid staff created when Glenn Presnell resigned to accept Ryder Peterson. Crayne was signed for one year at an unannounced figure.
Lindsey is calling for all lettermen, former squad members, freshman numeral winners and all others interested in football to attend the game. He said he hope to have 100 men report for active practice at once.
It is certain that Getto, who is consistently associated with rumors of departure from Kansas, will continue here. Conger will assist in the spring workout until he takes up his baseball coaching duties.
With the exception of Crayne, the Jayhawker coaching staff is the same as last year. Along with Lindsey, who remains as a head coach, there will be Mike Getto, line coach, Bill Hargiss, chief scout and end coach, and R. L. Conger, freshman mentor.
Coach Lindsey said he expected to have thirty practices during the spring training period, five days a week over six weeks.
LOST: Gold bracelet with horsehoe and lowhot knotmuseum. Lost. Wednesday night after concert. Reward. Annabelle Rock, Cochrane Hall. Phone 860-103
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IVA'S
Passing To Be Developed
"We want to get a good line on what material is available this spring," he said. "There won't be time in the fall for more than preliminary workouts. We'll hardly get the soreness out in the two weeks between the official start of practice and the Texas game here."
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Landsey said he planned for more scrimming this spring in an effort to develop a passing attack. Enkei suggested a more open type of play, he said.
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"One of the biggest jobs will be the developing of a fullback, and a d that is right in line with the experience of our new backfield coach. Dick Crayne will be with us from the start, and I am counting on him."
Max Temple, 2nd1, was admitted to the student hospital yesterday morning with a bad cold.
Ripley Calls Cunningham World's Greatest Miler
Max Temple in Hospital
Glenn Cunningham, former Jayhawker distance star, last night appeared on Robert Ripley's "Believe It or Not" radio series prior to his race in Madison Square Garden. The Ripley cast dramatized Glena's early life, when the miler was burned seriously in a schoolhouse fire and for a time wore a tie to walk the hardwoods. Cunningham overcame in his rise to fame on the cinder track and, in ending the interview, characterized his guest as "the world's greatest miler."
Jayhawks-meet the Tigers at Columbia tomorrow night and Kansas meets the Tigers here Thursday. A defeat to the Sooners or a Kansas win Thursday night will give the Kansas team 'he undisputed title.'
Continued from page 1
The box score:
the box 500,00.
Kansas (30)
G G FT PF
4 0 2
Reid, f 2 0 1
Golay, f 4 2 1
Schmidt, f 1 1 1
Hawkins, f 4 4 1
Pruille, g 6 2 2
Netska (47) 12
Nebraska (47) F FT FF
Kovada, f 7 4 1
Kovada, f 7 0 3
Ebaugh, c 0 2 1
Dohmann, g 1 0 3
Werger, g 6 0 3
Werger, g 1 0 3
Totals ... 22 6 8
Totals...20 7 12
AT THE VARSITY
AT THE GRANADA
THE FOLKS IN THE TROOP
100 YEARS OLD
AT THE DICKINSON
Jane Withers, Una Morkel and Stuart Ewing gain together to promote fun and excitement in "Checkers", now at the Varsity Theatre.
On the Shin---artist's touch, camerman Bob Hoffman has rented a garet studio over Bell's music store. It has moss on the walls and a skylight... Gals gabbling cheeseburgers in the Union Fountain convince us that spring will reveal bigger and better curves. ...Wonder how much fun the law school's Four Horsesmen Jr. Dickinson, Tommie Ise, Gene Haughly,
William Powell and Annabella co-star in 'The Borrowers and the Butler' a romantic comic now showing at the Dickinson Theatre.
M. H. WALKER AND BERNARD CARTNER IN A WEDDING PRODUCTION
THE AGE OF INFINITY
A scene from "Gold Is When You Find It" with George Brent, Olivia DeHaviland, Claude Rousse, Margaret Lindsay. The entire production is filmed in the new life-like technicolor and opens today at the Granada for 4 days.
Continued from page 1.
Continued from page 74.
teacher groomed us as nothing to do but go find out. We found a young lady in her bear skin (coat).
After a little mining about she threw away hat, coat, horn-trimmed glasses, house-slips, and went into a nice taup dress. The manager presented, for a fraudulent advertising.
The boys in Red Blackburd's band just about gave out after playing a couple of hours at the taxi舞 speed with which the affair was handled. The rough gym floor gave the dancers wash-board feet.
Ton late to classify…Colored kids Harlemizing the “Dixie Dive” at their classy interview Friday night…. “Tis rumored that Loutie Kubb's an island in the bay and is on the way to join income tax bands in the hot spots….To acquire the
I
Harrison Smith) are having at the Mardi Gras down creole way?
From publicity director Joe Cochrane we learn that the Monte Carlo party staged by A.T.O. and Pi K. A last night was a wow. Crap, Black jack, chuckaluck—and it even cost 10 bucks to dance with the squabs. All of the $185,000 paper money was phoney—but the party wasn't
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A few years ago it took seven minutes (average)
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Z 229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Dr. Sutton Will Speak Tonight
Noted as an Explorer
A and Author. Lecturer
W a s Former Professor
At University
Dr. Richard Sutton, nationally known dermatologist, explorer, and author, will speak tonight at 8:20 o'clock in Hoch auditorium, on the university community lecture series. He will speak on the subject, *Shots Around the Pacific* and will illuminate slides from Samoa, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia, Guinea, Bali, Borneo, Celebes, China, and Japan.
Dr. Sutton, formerly professor o dermatology at the University headed an Arctic expedition in 1929-30 as representative of the University department of natural history. As a representative of the department's natural history at the University of California, he headed an African expedition in 1923, and an Indo-China and Indian expedition in 1925-26.
Dr. Sutton, who has appeared on the Campus as a lecturer on various occasions, will show a number of his accomplishments, including that was doing big-game fishing in Australian waters. Dr. Sutton has done considerable deep-sea fishing with Chancellor Lindley Chancellor Cunwell and Dr. Sutton mounted in his office.
Dr. Sutton first established a national reputation as a dermatologist, but is now known as a writer of adventure books, textbooks, and magazine articles; a traveler; sportsman; and lecturer.
Activity tickets will admit University students to the lecture. Reserved seats are being sold for 50 per student. The full admission is 25 cents, plus tax.
on the SHIN by Don Hays
Shinater has received another letter from a boy who seems to have the idea that "On the Shin" is a matrimonial column. Far surpassing the former letter, which inquired about "Spaniel" Springer, this latest masterpiece asks the name of the "little red-headed girl who was being carved up by the owner of a shoulder last Saturday night after the rally." The request also goes on to state that "the reason I did not sign this is because I go steadly, but if I knew who that girl was, I would quit my steady." Evidently the girl in question has it "it." If any of your gentle readers can find the object of the young man's affection, please send him an agony, or cabbage on to her yourself and let us know the date of the marriage.
NUMBER 42
Doris Johnson has at last made the grade! Not satisfied with the 10 year type of boy found in the modern colleges and universities. Doris has at last elevated herself to the range of the high school boys and was seen at the Country Club last Friday night. However, particulars are unavailable and perhaps she was there in the capacity of chaperon.
Instead of the customary "Blackface Act," Betty Cole pulled the "Whiteface Act" the other evening at the Theta blockhouse when she asked her boss to bring with powdered sugar and got a decided backfire. Rumor has it that she had to take her glasses off and clean them before she could find the piece of pie again. We've heard she did the same before, but now we've seen one.
+ + +
It was a big weekend, but none of the gigantic events can compare with the pin-hanging between Granny Wilhelm and Virginia Sheldon. However, they have a diet, good ole Granny has decided (of course with the Sheldon permission) that the gals should have packages of chewing gum m rather than the traditional, stuffy chocolate. They are trained to supply the brothies with guest-size bottles of tomato juices in place of cigars.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937
After seeing the Nebraska-Kansas Continued on page 3
Men's Glee Club To Broadcast Tonight
Under the direction of Joseph F. Wilkina, the University Men's Glee Club will give its first radio broadcast at 8 p.m. on KFKU this evening at 6 o'clock.
the club will sing the "Alma Mater," "Tm A Jayhawk," "Street Fair"—Manning, and "Land Sighting"—Greig. The first two numbers will be directed by Jack Lafler, e39, student director of the club.
In addition to the numbers by the club Claude Dorsely, c38. will sing "How Deep in Love Ame" - Hughes
Voorhees Wins Contest
Oratorical Victory I's Second in Succession For M.S.C. President
Winning first prize in the Campus problems speaking contest for the second successive time. Dion Voroehner, c38, president of the MSC.I. University Board, being up by the Forensic Council last night at Fraser theater.
His speech, entitled "Eight Cylinder Mythology," death with the half-truths and false impressions of the University of Kansas which students themselves should attempt to correct.
Awarded second place, Irving Kass, c39, spoke on "Mans Mortal Enemy," and Richard MacMann came up with the idea of a "Riding Off in All Directions."
Judges of the speech tourney were Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor, Harold G. Wheatley, professor of division; and William D. Warwood, professor of chemistry. Following the judges' accolades, Martin Maloney, chairman of the thirteenth contest, presented the cup to the
Out of 14 students who tried out at Thursday night in the Little heater of Green hall, eight speakers were chosen to appear on the program last night. Speakers who participated and the subjects discussed were Kevin Harter, Lintner, c.29; "Students on the Altar"; George Thomas, c.39; "Bargain-Day Professors"; Clem Fairchild, buncel, "Pocket-Sized Politicians"; Richard MacCann, c.40; "Riding in All Directions"; Karl Rupenthal, c.39; "False Impressions"; Bertram Brendt, c.uneil; "Rooms for Boys"; Harvey Meers, c.38; "With Cold Builders."
Red Cross Drive Progresses
"The Red Cross campain here on the Campus is progressing splendidly," said Dorothy Fink, e38, and Elijah Cole, 40 m, a combined statement yesterday evening. Miss Fink and Cole are directors of solicitation among the women and men respectively.
All of the women outside organization houses are being contacted personally by Miss Fink and her company. They have their contributions in the Administration building, where tables have been set up for that purpose.
It is the policy of the National Red Cross that the minimum membership lee is $1,
and all students
who can afford it
are being urged to
give up members.
However, all contributions
JOIN
he work of the organization, according to those in charge of the campaign.
REDCROSS
Women now assisting in the drive
for Virginia Lee Porter, *c*;uncl.
tuy Lemonys, *c*;41 Susan Maloney,
*c*;39. Cleojeanne Smith, *c*;uncl.
teame Leiland Martha Pimee, *c*;
30 Dorothy Howe, *c*;41. Jean Doody
*c*;41 Delma Delyon, *c*;40. Heiler
Grant, *c*;38 and Thelma Yole, *c*;40
Miss Twente Will Speak At Commissioners' Meeting
Miss Etheri E. Twente, of the department of sociology will present a paper entitled "Selecting County Social Welfare Personnel" at the annual meeting of the Kansas Department of Social Welfare Nov. 16. The meeting will be held in the hall of the house of representatives at the State House in Topeka.
Plan Tuberculosis Seal Drive
Members of the Douglas Count Tuberculosis and Health Association lunched yesterday noon in the building and discussed plans for the sale of Christmas seals to begin the day after Thanksgiving. In this annual campaign, funds are raised to tuberculosis throughout the nation.
Douglas County Health Association Announces Date of Opening Sales Camion
"The Tuberculosis Association has won the confidence of a wide public," Chancellor Lindley said yesterday in a message to the association members. "Because of this confidence it has been able to finance its operations without entailing heavy burdens on any one person."
“In the amazing conquest of the ‘great white plague,’ the society deserves an enormous share of credit” the Chancellor concluded in his
Makes Plans for Drive
Presided over by Mrs. Seba Eldridge, executive secretary of the Douglas County Tuberculosis and Health Association, accomplishments of the society during the past year were reviewed and plans made for the drive for funds in Douglas county. Following the luncheon Dr. C. Herrig, executive secretary of the Kannan State Tuberculosis and Health Association, told 302 people out of 100,000 died from tuberculosis. Only 55 death result from the disease out of the same number of people.
He said that several years ago a quarter-million lives were lost annually in the United States from the disease. In 1935, the number of deaths had been reduced to two-thirds of that number. As a result, it is hard to believe that there is every reason to believe that the disease can be eradicated.
K.U. Students Protected
Noting that University students are protected from tuberculosis better than any other group in Kansas, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of the student health service, said that until 1953 diagnosis was made on physical examination only. As only the advanced stages of tuberculosis could be detected by this method, tuberculin test was instituted in 1953.
More than 6,100 students have passed through the clinic until this car. One of every three students has positive reactions to the test.
Prior to 1938, for two years, the Douglas county association aided in the expense of the tests. Special chest clinics and X-rays were provided. Or else a year is financed by the organization on the Hill.
Mrs. Ethel Lynn, Lynn, nurse, gave a case study of "follow-up work" which she does in tuberculosis cases discovered in Lawrence.
Local Children Treated
Other phases of the work were explained by Mia Electa Kindleberger, city school nurse, who told of the four Lawrence children and their families. The American Legion preventator at Independence, Kan, She also told about the work being carried on in the Lawrence schools for the determination of students needing observation as possible tuberculosis
Miss Ruby Fairbairn, county Red Cross nurse, spoke concerning the clinic consulted here on the first Monday of each month by Dr. C.F. Taylor of Norton. She also explained that the Douglas County Association supports monthly chest X-ray procedures by Doctor Jones. Other benefits derived by tuberculosis patients provided by the local organization, include needed codiver oil and milk for tuberculosis patient here.
Conducting the Christmas Seal drive on the Hill are Katherine Holmes, c'28, and Harold Dyer; m'40
The World Co-operation committee of the Y.W.C.A. will meet this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock at Henley house. Erma Lee Brower is in charge of the program, which will consist partly of a news event quiz, and partly of a discussion of current events. All members of this group who are interested in attending are invited.
Y.W.C.A. Committee To Discuss Current Events
Y.W.C.A. Committee
Enthusiasm of University students reached a new high over the success of their football team Monday evening when about fifteen hundred or more jammed the walks and street in front of the Granada theater before the free show, scheduled for 11:15 o'clock.
Those who were unable to find cats refused to leave, but deposited themselves in the aisles, three breast, from the front to the back of the theater. Side aisles and the ane across the back of the theater were jammed with standing observers.
Riotious Students Jam Free Owl' Show In Noisy Rally
After the show was over, cheer leaders stood at the exits with tin buckets to receive contributions for damaging the damaged door and glass.
Excitement increased as it grew nearer to the scheduled time for the doors to open. The crowd surged forward, pouring through the four doors opening on the street. In the rush to get into the theater, one of the north doors was snapped in two, as many pressed against it, and glass in the box office was shattered when someone was shoved into it.
At the Dickinson theater last night, a free show was also staged for University students. No demo student is present.
ration was reported, however.
Missouri Rally Will Be Heard Over Mutual
National Network Will Broadcast Game, Dance. And Pre-Game Activities On the Campus
A whirlwind climax to the Homecoming celebration Nov. 25 will be staged in the Memorial Union ballroom immediately preceding the Missouri game when a one-hour hour rally and dance will be held a d broadcast over the Mutual Broadcasting System.
Because of previous commercial commitments the Mutual system will be unable to carry the rally over its entire chain, but some 25 stations will in-operate in broadcasting what has been called the 'Mutual rally of its kind to take the air.
The Mutual system, through WHB of Kansas City, will broadcast a play-by-play description of the Kansas-Missouri football game over a coast-to-coast network, and in order to portray what it believes to be college spirit in the modern manner the WHB staff will also broadcast the final rally, over a partial network that will include stations in Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and on the Pacific coast.
The Puff Pant Prom, the annual all-women dance sponsored by the W.S.G.A. will be held Friday night in the Memorial Union ballroom.
Many of the Hill's musical and pep groups are co-operating in staging the milly, called by a WHB executive ("the band"), or "the nationalizer," and it is expected that nearly all students who remain in Lawrence for the game will attend the rally to generate one final burst of enthusiasm. Pep bands put Kansa on the radio map.
"All men seen with dates before 11 o'clock Friday night should be socially ostracized," is almost an ultimatum by the prom committee. "You shall shiver shivering in your sheets while the girl friend borrow your pants to go puffing to the Puff Pan Prom."
The dance will be ended in time for students to move to the stadium for the kickoff, then removing fears of being knocked out as a parter of the Turkey Day contest.
Males Barred From Co-ed Hop
Four contest will be staged during the ovening. Prizes will be awarded to the best dressed man, best dressed woman, best dressed couple, and to the best dancing couple.
Clyde Bysom's band, which made its initial appearance on the Hill at the last mid-week, will provide inspiration to "swing out."
Tickets for the Prom are now on sale at Robinson gymnasium.
Ramsey
MacDonald
Dies
Former Prime Minister Of Great Britain Was Noted as a Leader of Laborists
London, Nov. 9. — (UIP) — James Ramsey Macdonald, who came from the highlands of Scotland to serve three times as prime minister of Great Britain during some of the most eventful years in world history; died tonight aboard a liner carriage to South America for his health.
The 71-year-old statesman, a rugged crusader against war and the causes of war, died of heart trouble at 8:55 p.m. aboard the Liner Renna del Pacífico—less than six months after his retirement from public life.
More than once a political outcast because of his hatred of war, Ramsey MacDonald died as the vessel steamed west of the Azores.
The body will be returned to England from Bermuda, where the Retina del Pacific is due to arrive Monday. McDonald, who was born in a two-row cottage in Lissoumie, England, rose to the highest position within the grasst of the British commer-
Laborite Leader
Long the leader of the British Laborites, MacDonald was prime minister in 1924, and from June, 1929, to June 1933, Stanley Baldwin into power.
In poor health for several years and suffering from serious eye trouble which necessitated two or three delicate operations, he quit public life last May 28, resigning as lord-president of the council. He politely refused King George VT's offer to elevate him to peerage.
A Laborite to the last, a man of the people, he explained that he did not want to bequeath a title to his son, Dominion Secretary Malcolm川汉章. He haman hamper the latter's political career. Another son, Alister, is an architect.
Although Donald's political followers were a negligible force in voting strength, his personal prestige and strong personality carried immense weight in all England as he was considered, even by the conservative government, as one of the empire's best assets.
His favorite daughter, Isabel, was attempting late tonight to reach the other members of the family, participate in her travel is traveling in the north of England.
Doctor McKinnon, a son-in-law,
said he was informed that the former
prime minister "passed away peacefully." "We assume that it was a heart attack," the doctor said, "because he had not been well for some time."
Display American Work At Spooner-Thayer
A collection of drawings by American artists is on display in the north gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum. The drawings are from the John Hatch collection, and were secured for exhibition at University through the American Federation of Arts in Washington, D.C.
Included in the group are drawings by Winslow Homer, Whistler, Pennell, and Boardman Robinson. Other selections of note are "Samson and the Seven Deadly Sins" by Jacob Epstein, outstanding contemporary artist, and a "Study of Washington Crossing the Delaware," by Leutze. An interesting characterization of the exhibition is of Charles Eliot, president of Harvard University, by Robinson.
These drawings replace the exhibit of Chinese prints which has occupied the gallery for the past two weeks.
Estes Reunion Picnic Is Planned
A joint Estes reunion picnic will be held near Toppea Saturday evening for the Washburn College and University of Kansas delegations, according to an announcement made by the university. Parks, C4, 00 co-chairman of the Setsepco, co-operative venture of K.U.estes delegates.
Students will leave Lawrence im-
mediately following the K.U.-Kansas
State football game in cars provided
by a security guard. The cost will be 25 cents.
Anyone who has attended the Easter conference of the Rocky Mountain Student Christian movement and who is interested is urged to
communicate with Miss Parks.
Optical properties of lenses com-
rised the main portion of the thair
of a series of photographic lectures
presented last night by Oren Bingi-
guan, University photographer, in the
fourthary building.
Mr. Bingham discussed the defects of various forms of leases, the methods employed to remedy these defects, and the various items that should be considered in the purchase of a lens.
After the lecture proper, an informal discussion was held in which Mr. Bingham answered questions that were brought up.
Sororities
Dine Together
Four Hundred Ten
Women Attend First
Pan-Hellenic Dinner
Four hundred ten sorority women gathered last evening in the Memorial Union ballroom for a dinner to be held on this Campus.
The Greek letter pina flashed horribly as representatives from her sorely arm sit side by side. Roberta Mitchell heightened the feeling of congeniality by leading the group in a few short,ppy songs.
Katherine Hurd, fa 38, president of Women's Pan-hellenic, acted as the chief legal advisor to the guaju, adviser to women, met unanimous approval when she suggested
out Women's Pan-hellenic present a scholarship cup each year to the sorority attaining the highest scholastic standing. She further recommended that if any sorority should have the highest scholastic standing, she consecutive years in the cup would become its permanent possession.
The guests of honor were Mrs. E. H. Lindley; Mrs. William Dehn, grand president of Gamma Phi Beta; and Miss Mary Clay Williams, grand president of Chi Omega. Each was asked to say a few words of greeting.
Mrs. Dehn expressed a desire that the need for sororites on the college campus be recognized as being more than to provide places for girls to stay. Miss Williams expressed her happiness in seeing so many girls gathered together who were striving for the same purposes.
Special numbers on the program were a dance by Maxine Pendleton 'uncl', and a vocal solo by Betty Loe, Meech. fa 39.
At the close of the banquet the women voted to make the gathering an annual event.
Sour Owl
To Appear Friday
The Sour Owl's third issue will appear on the Campus Friday morning instead of tomorrow as prelaunch is announced, the staff stated yesterday.
The magazine was originally intended to appear on Friday, but the date was changed to tomorrow at the time it was believed that Hobo Day would be held this week. Now a reveral of Donecester has to Nov. 24 makes it possible for the Owl to observe its original plans.
It will be an enlarged Owl that appears Friday, as a new financial management has made it possible to store more photographs, and more gossip.
"We have so much Hill gossip we almost had to enlarge," said Editor James Coleman. c'38.
A new plan of circulation for the Owl will be tried with this issue, and fraternity freshmen will take over the distribution, it was announced by Bill Grant, c39, business manager. A prize will be given to the fraternity whose freshmen sell the most Owls, in an effort to benefit both the Owl and the various organizations.
As was the practice begun with the October issue, the November Sour Owl will be sold on the Kansas-Kansas State game Saturday if any copies remain after sales on the Hill Friday.
Owl Society To Meet
The Owl Society will meet in the Pine Room of the Memorial Unio building tomorrow night at 9 o'clock in the room. C38, secretary of the organization.
WEATHER
Kansas: Generally fair wed-
nesday and Thursday, except
cloudy and unsettled in south
and west; somewhat
colder Thursday.
University Will Be Host To Editors
University Will Be Host To Editors Hugh Baillie Will Speak To State Newspapermen Saturday Morning in Fraser Theater
More than 300 Kansas newspaper editors will meet in the Journalism building Saturday at 9 a.m., for the discussions, anables, an event went here annually.
Raillie To Sneak
Roundtable sessions will be held for both daily and weekly newspaper editors. These sessions will end at 10:45 a.m. to allow the editors time to meet in Fraser theater for an address to be given at 11 a.m. by Mr. Hugh Baille of New York, president of the United Press Association and honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi journal fraternity.
No arrangements have been made for a formal luncheon, but the editors will be the guests of the University of Kansas State game in the afternoon.
After an address of welcome by Chancellor E. P. Lindsley, Mr. Bailie will apologize on the subject of "President-day Newshering Throughout the World—The Most Tremendous Task of All Time." Delegates to the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi in Topiake will come here to join the editors in listening to Mr. Bailie and Chancellor Lindley.
All journalism classes held Friday will be presided over by Kansas editors in the absence of the faculty, who will go to Topeka for the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi.
Editors To Teach
W. A. Bailie, published of the *Kansas City Kansan*, will be head of the department. Other Kansas editors who will teach classes include: 8:30 - Editorial II. W. T. Beek, Holt Recorder; Anas Converse, Wells Fargo; Jeffrey H. Paul; Stafford Carrier; Walt Neibarger, *Ponquainx Mirror*.
9:30- History of American Journalism, (Subject for the day, "Kansas Editors"), Mr. Converse; L. F. Valentine, Clay Center Times, Reporting, Mr. Neelbarger; Earl Fiekert; Peabody Gazette.
1130- Editorial I, Mr. Valentine;
Mr. Hemerwien; Newspaper Administration;
Mr. Brooks; Emmond;
Mr. Cooke; Writing Mr. McKeever;
Mr. Converse; Mr. Hemerwien.
10-30 - Advertising, R. G. Hemeney,
Minnesota Messenger, B. P.
Weeks, Marshall County News; Ad-
vertising Copy, Harold A. Hammond.
C. Cald w'all Daily Messenger; Mr.
Fickert, M. Fickert; Neil
Melbauer.
Don Mayfield, euncl, was elected to the student council of the School of Engineering and Architecture yesterday afternoon in a special meeting of the council, announced Edward Safford, c. 38. Mayfield will be the representative for the division if petroleum engineering.
New Man to Council
Initiate New W.S.G.A. Members
New members of the WSGA were initiated into the council last night at a regular meeting held on Wednesday of the Union building at 12.30 o'clock.
Those initiated were Jeanette January, replacing Catherine Holmes as point system manager; Marie Norton, replacing Margaret Charles as sophomore vice-president; and Betty Kimble and Lenora Grizzell, freshman vice-president and secretary, respectively.
Grace Valentine was appointed to work with representatives of the Men's Student Council, K Club and the Jayanes in making preparations for Hobo Day, which will be held on September 28. The K.U.M. foot-ball team.
W. S.G.A. members will assist in the registration for Homecoming in the Pine room Wednesday and Thursday, Nov. 24-25.
The council voted to change the meeting time from 7:30 to 7 p.m.
'Dilletantes' Group To Study Finger Painting
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 10, 1997
≈
Comment
Wanted--
Dead or Alive
The Men's Student Council recently voted to push the prosecution of and pay a $20 reward for the apprehension and conviction of any individual or individuals who paint or otherwise disfigure the statue of "Uncle Jimmy" Green or the pioneer statue.
This action is to be commended, and it will probably have the desired result of curbing the all-too-frequent depredations of beautiful and valuable objects of art on the Campus.
It should be pointed out, however, that this resolution is not designed specifically as a measure against over-zealous students from rival schools who admitted have in the past violated University property including the two mentioned statues. The painting of "Uncle Jimmy" and the decoration of the Pioneer is perhaps more often perpetrated by local students or townpeople with a warped sense of humor.
Every time "Uncle Jimmy" is meared, $15 must be appropriated to restore him to normal, and students and visitors alike are impressed with the discordant note cast on the University Campus as a whole by the untidy appearance of what normally is an outstanding work of art.
Perhaps the threat of criminal prosecution in the courts of the state of Kansas and a $50 price on their heads will convince these unsocial individuals that they would best confine their painting to houses and their vandalistic urges to the Hallowe'en tipping-over of small buildings.
Friend Freshman Does Some Hoping
Friend Freshman noticed that while 4500 adult, able-bodied, experienced and efficiently guided Kansas teachers were in convention on the Hill, neat little signs were placed in front of each of the buildings in the University, labeling those buildings.
Friend Freshman remembered with a sigh a hectic week or two not so long ago during which such signs would have been of untold service to him and many of his brothers and sisters.
Friend Freshman hapes for the sake of future crops of his kind that someone in authority will see that those little signs are up at the beginning of the second semester and at the beginning of next year.
The most ardent admirer of oneself is nine time out of ten oneself.
Feedin' Spuds to Hogs--
Announcement was made this week that the Agricultural Adjustment Administration of the federal government will pay $1,500,000 to farmers in eight states for feeding surplus potatoes to livestock. Payment will be made on the basis of 15 cents a bushel for potatoes grading one and two by U.S. standards.
Citing an estimated increase of 47,000,000 bushels in this year's crop over 1936 production, the AAA said it hopes to dispose of 10-000,000 bushels of potatoes through livestock consumption. Production in 1937 is expected to exceed, by 25,000,000 bushels, the average production in the seasons from 1928 to 1932, regarded as normal in America. In discussing the program, F. R. Wileco, director of the AAA's division of marketing, expressed the belief that "relieving the pressure upon regular markets will permit orderly marketing and lessen wide price fluctuations."
The average price paid for potatoes in this region during the 1937 buying season, early last summer, ran from 85 cents to $1 a bushel. Imagine, if you can, how a farmer must feel when he is forced to sell the products of a year's labor at less than a fifth of that price. But even that is not the worst. Offertimes in recent years, farmers have been forced to sell produce at even greater losses.
No adverse criticism can be leveled at the decision of the AAA in this case. It is doing the best thing possible under the circumstances. The fault lies in the system—dominating our entire economy—which dictates that commodities shall be produced, not for use, but for profit. The potato farmer in this case is the victim of circumstances beyond his control. He has performed his proper function in producing a good crop. he knows that a great need for his product exists. And it is not his fault when the market value of that product sinks to nothing long before the need is satisfied.
We have the potatoes; and we have hungry mouths—plenty of them—eager to eat those potatoes. What, then, is to be done? Feeding the potatoes to the hogs, even at 15 cents a bushel, is an expensive way of sidestepting the issue. The solution must be found in some sort of system assuring effective distribution of commodities up to the extreme limit of consumption ability. And this does not apply to potatoes alone. Absence of such a system is the big stumbling-block before our whole industrial economy, as well. It is in fact, the great problem of the twentieth century. And we must solve it.
There was a time, a friend recalls, when funny papers were funny.
Help Direct But Not Run the Show
The striking difference in the political success of labor as represented by the American Labor Party in New York and the C.I.O. in Detroit gives rise to conjectures as to the role and influence of labor in American politics in the next decade.
In New York the American Labor Party threw its support behind the LaGuardia ticket, which ran on a platform featuring good, nonpartisan government. There the labor party and its allies won a decisive victory and the party cast a larger proportion of the vote than ever before.
In Detroit the C.I.O. entered the field as a political party with a labor platform. The C.I.O. suffered a decisive defeat.
It is evident that labor has its part in politics as a strong faction capable of swinging the balance of power, of influencing candidates. As such it has a legitimate political function. But the problem of labor represents a too-narrow phase of our wider problems to merit the existence of a party based purely on the needs of a labor organization and campaigning on a platform paramountly concerned with those needs.
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chelsea's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 1:30 a.m. on Tuesday, May 24.
Vol. 25 Wednesday, November 10, 1937 No. 45
--the most hilarious romance that ever came out of Hollywood
GERMAN LANGUAGE TABLE. The German Language Table will meet in the lounge of the Union building on Monday, March 18th to speak German or to improve their knowledge of speaking are invited to come. There is no further obligation at this time.
JAY JANES: There will be a meeting at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine room—Roberta Cook, President.
MATHEMATICS CLUB. There will be a meeting of the mathematics Club on Thursday, Nov. 11, in 213 Ad. James B. Edson will speak on "Some Remarkable Calculations in Astronomy" Vastors are welcome—
QUACK CLUB: There will be a meeting of Quack Club for攻窜 for activists and pledges - Bette Jane Heisman.
**STUDENT FORUM.** There will be an important
session Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the Pine Room—Dean
Williams.
**WORLD CO-OPERATION COMMISSION:** The World Co-operation Commission will meet this afternoon at 4:30 at Henley house. Please bring pencil and a notebook to class for use during current events - Ernie Lee Burry, Chairman.
W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a W.S.G.A. tea this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock in the lounge of the Administration building. All University women are invited—Bette Wasson, Secretary.
University Daily Kansan
Official Station Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANASA
LAWRENCE, KANASA
J. Howard Rusco
PUBLISHER
KANSAS PRESS
MEMBER 1937
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EDITOR-IN-CHEF
ANNOTATE EDITORS: JOHN TYE AND David Anguelini
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News Staff
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Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kane.
First Homecoming Was Celebrated In Halcyon Days Before the War
Homecoming, an event looked forward to and back on by both students and graduates, made its first appearance on the FFA's 1915, alma mater.
By Louis R. Fockele
This first celebration seemed for awhile to be the last, since the advent of the World war shortly after placed national spirit above school loyalty and directed students' minds toward realism. It was on which they had been following.
In 1919, after the war, it was decided that something should be done to restore that old bond between alumni and the University, and plans were made for the second Home-coming celebration, which was the actual beginning of the present tradition.
Originated by H. B. Hungerford
This Homecoming was planne and directed by H. B. Hungerford of the department of entomology, who acted as chairman of the program committee. To this game were invited all the old-timers among the athletes and other alumni. Then, as now, the outstanding feature of the day was the Thanksgiving game on the old McCook athletic field.
Doctor Yak also came into being in the year of this celebration, distributing his peppy potions to arouse spirit in students. This old character was founded by C. C. Carl and Robert Rowland, who also organise that year for the purpose of instilling more peep into the student body.
First Hobo Day Held in 1894
Although Hobo Day was first held in 1894 in the form of a "a beer bust" in Kansas City, the first celebration in the present form took place in the same year the stadium was deded. A hobo dance was special cationation, a hobo dance, and special costuming.
Celebrations were held in 1920 and 1921, but are overshadowed in importance by the one of 1822, for that year the new Memorial stadium was dedicated. In honor of the occasion, a special program was broadcast by radio station WDAF in Kansas City.
First Hobo Day Held in 1894
"Beat Mizzou," the popular shout to so many of our Homecomings, was introduced in 1925, when the custom of the regular annual foot-room dance was introduced. Activities for the following year included the decoration of or-
DICKINSON The House of Hits
The Home of the Jayhawk
NOW SHOWING
Leslie Joan
HOWARD BLONDELL
In
The most hilarious romance
"STAND IN"
PLUS
'Slong Ken--Topela is lucky to get you. Thanks again for your grand music, tongue twisters, laughs and parades.
ADDED SHORT TREATS
KEN GRIFFITH'S
Farewell Program
THE WORLD'S NEWEST DELIGHT!
100 MEN and a GIRL
SUNDAY
=
COMING 500N
K.U.'s Own
BUDDY ROGERS in
'THIS WAY PLEASE'
guests by various departments.
The usual feeling of happiness at the time of Homecoming was dampened slightly in the year 1928 by the death of "Chalkie," the mascot of the University. But Chalkie's dead body was replaced by a bit of stuffing and his bright plumage remained, although his spirit did not.
ganized houses and the display of
Since 1929, Homecomings have retained a striking similarity to the one held in that year. But each year students have donned their old clothes, rallied to the call of Hobo Day, and shouted themselves into a state of enthusiasm for the game to come the next day. This year, as the homecoming season has died, mouse races, rallies, and the cry "Beat Mizzou!"
Armistice Parade To Feature University Band
Tomorrow's Armistice day parade will feature the University band and R.O.T.C. it was announced last night. Those participating will be excused from classes from 11:30 until the parade is over. R.O.T.C. men who are also members of the band are instructed to march with the band.
Cadets will be credited with one drill period, probably the last of the semester. Col Karl F. Baldwin said yesterday. They will assemble in uniform at Fowler Shops promptly at 12:45. Rifles will be carried.
The parade will also serve as a reunion celebration for the "Rainbow Division," the third of which is from Kansas to Missouri in the World War.
PATEE
WEEK 10c Till '7
DAYS Then 15c
ENDS TONITE
JEAN MUIR
"White Bondage"
FERNAND GRAVET JOAN BLONDELL "The King and the Chorus Girl"
THURSDAY
3 Days
2 SMASH HITS
REX BELL
"Too Much Beef"
AND
PATSY KELLY "Nobody's Baby"
GRANADA
-ENDS TONITE-
The Perfect Entertainment.
Same Author - Same Hilarity.
Same Tithe. As 'I'll Hago-
mething One Night.'
ERROL FLYNN
JOAN BLONDELL
"THE PERFECT
SPECIMEN"
Hugh Herbert
Edw. Everett Horton
Allen Jenkins
Plus—March of Time
Color Cartoon — News
THURSDAY
3 Days
Hia Royal Highness of Roars and Hilarity JOE E. BROWN
ARMISTICE DAY SPECIAL
"FIT FOR A KING"
HELEN MACK
PAUL KELLY
X-TRA "Sunday Night at the Trocadero" Cartoon - Latest News
SUNDAY
Since Films Began--
None Can Equal It!
CHAS. BOYER
GRETA GARBO
'CONQUEST'
The romance that staggered empires while a frail beauty enthralled Napoleon.
Senior Laws Bandy Words In Mock Trial
"I object," rice Donald Hansen, attorney for the defense. "This discussion of the effect that walking causes is under consideration."
"You'll pay, and play plenty to my client," shouts Dale Shannon of the counsel for the plaintiff. "I've never heard of a more dastardly trick! Willfully ejecting this poor old man, I know it was to mind his own business."
"Order in the court," roars Judge Vieuseman. "Objection overruled." It may look like a real court scene, but it's only the "laws" trying one of their practice cases again. The civil suit of Devering vs. the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific railroad opened Monday afternoon in the courtroom. A judge made up of 12 freshmen members of the School of Law is bearing the case. The evidence being used, however, is taken from an actual case tried before the Kansas courts nearly thirty years ago.
Although this is only a mock trial, the practice court room resembles as nearly as possible an actual "hall of justice." Complete with attorneys, the plaintiff, gentleness of the jury, witnesses and spectators, the presiding judge calls the court to order and the battle of words is on.
Members of the counsel for the
plaintiff are Charles Stough, Paul Wilbert, Cyrus Wade, J. and Dale Shannon. The counsel for the defense consists of Donald Humesen, John Rush, and Ben Salahel. All are third-year students in the School of Law.
Tryouts for Debate Squad To Be Held Tomorrow Night
OUR SPECIALS:
Hot Fudge
and
Hot Butterscotch
Sundaes
BRICK'S "ON THE HILL"
Annual tryouts for the varsity debate squad will be held in the Little theater of Green Hall, Thursday at 7:30 p.m., under the direction of Prof. E. C. Buehler, varsity debate coach
15c
This trucre is open to all University, students. The judges will be Professor Bucher, John Hankins, associate professor of Englah, and Prof. W. J. Brockellbunk of the School of Law.
By
Noted author-sportsman-traveler
Around the Pacific
When you lose something, find something, have something to buy or ell, reach the student body through Cansan Classified Ads.
TODAY AND TOMORROW
Second Number, Community Lecture Course
Identification Cards Admit
First Pictures
K.U. vs. N.U.
Football Game!
Dr. R.L.Sutton
— No. 1 —
A Dramatic Revelation of
Rapturous First Love!
TONIGHT--8:20 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
BEHIND WALLS
BARRED TO MEN
...LIFE TEACHES
WHAT THE RULES
FORBID!
HERBERT
MARSHALL
RUTH
CHATTERTON
in
GIRLS'
DORMITORY
Introducing
SIMONE
SIMON
A TRAVEL LECTURE (illustrated with 300 slides)
Friday - Saturday
Smith Bailow - Cecilia Parker
"Roll Along Cowboy"
"West Bound Limited"
I
The Show Value of Lawrence
ARSITY Home of the Jyhawks
Shows 2:30-7:00-9:30
2 SWELL 10c Any Seat HITS Any Time
— No. 2 —
Who Was the 'Scarlet Pimpernel'?
TRAPPED BY LOVE!
"TRAPPED BY LOVE,
would she be my this man to whom
thousands, what their lives?"
THE MAN IN THE CITY
Leslie HOWARD Merie. OBERON
THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL
on ALEXANDER KORDA
production
Broadcast by UNITED ARTISTS
Sunday! In Technicolor!
DIETRICH - BOYER
"The Garden of Allah"
"Hopalong Rides Again"
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS
RV
PAGE THREE
Here on the Hill --an account of Mt. Oread Society
M. JEAN CASKEY, Society Editor
Before A.tom.call K.U.23; after A.call 2702.KA
BETWEEN 7 JUNE AND 13 NOVEMBER
Dinner guests Sunday at Miller hall were:
Louffred Hoskinson, Oklahoma
Edith Tennyke, Emporia
Caroline Reed, Emporia
Charlie Murray, Harte City
Carrie Meredew Dawley, Harte
Roberta Brant, Toppea
Elinor Field, Salina
Betty Lou Carwin, Salina
Talian Tadler, Tadler
Jane Howe, C18
Doris Scherrman, c18
Walter Schellenberg, c19
Jacques Laine, Gene Gommy, Jack
John Laidon, c41
☆ ☆ ☆
Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the engagement of Virginia Sheldon, c40 to Grandville Willett. Mr. Kappa is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Weekend guests at the Sigma Kappa sorority house were: Droothy Zimmerman) Clara Farrik, Kamanu Zimmerman) Dana Pappas, Droothy Dorothy M孝Cullough, Paula
Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, announces the pledging of Orrin Armstrong, b39.
Dinner guests Sunday at the Phi Alpha Mu house were Miss Baira Davey of Goff, and Dick Howard b'uncl.
Alpha Delta Pi announces the engagement of Muriel Manning, 37, to Mr. Elbert Youngstrom, 33, Mr. Youngstrom is a member of Theta Tau, honorary engineering fraternity.
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Gamma Delta will entertain at the W.S.G.A. tea tomorrow from 3 to 5 clock in central Administration building.
Members of the Pan-Hellenic Council entertained last evening with a dinner at the Memorial Union building for all sorority members.
George Souk was a dinner guest at the Delta Chi house Monday evening.
Mrs. William Deln, Seattle, Wash. was a weekend guest at the Gammi Phi Beta sorority house.
Daisy Hoffman, c38, was a lunch- con guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Tuesday.
The Pi Lambda Theta theory will hold the "Ceremony for Conferring the Key" to initiate new members, tomorrow at 5.30 o'clock at Evans's
The service will be followed by a Founder's day banquet at 8:30 o'clock. Mrs. T. D. Prentice will speak.
The organization is a nation honor society for women in education.
Gamma Phi Beta sorority entered with a tea on Monday afternoon in honor of Mrs. William Dehn, Sehra. Wash., grand national president of Gamma Phi Beta. Guests in the tea were secrecy and fraternity housemothers of the Campus.
Library Receives New Supply of Books
Phone
K. U.
6 6
On the Shin-shove-around game. Shinster believed he had seen the ultimate in rough-housing until he attended the jam session caused when about 700 students attempted to gain entrance into a gymnasium. Monday night. Stan Schwann just loves to have the "kiddies" around, but it sorta hurts him in the pocket-book when one part of the crowd jams a guy into the ticket-booth plate glass and breaks it, while another man pours water on one of the wooden doors to the picture palace. A last-minute collection on the part of three well-meaning souls netted $1 from the crowd, but it hardly covers the $60.
Watson library has recently received copies of new books, particularly of interest to those students who enjoy reading for relaxation. The books have been added to the collection on the second floor of the library. Among the books added to the collection is a recent novel by Elinor Wyle, "Mt. Hodge and Mr. Hazard." There is also a review of Americans by Irene and Allen Clecaton, entitled "Books and Battles."
Divorce Ideas Upset
WAVE, new styles, any style 250 dried
We can't remember exactly when, but we must have, as a school, stepped on the tender Agie tees at some time in the past. Every new issue of the Kansas State Collegiate accuses Kansas of having "Hose Bowl" aspirations for its football team or otherwise cracks woe (?) about us. We beginning to feel vaguely disappointed—all I see is a lousy, lowest-to-goodness Cow College and it turns up bawling like a whole slew of calves whose dear old "mommies" have been slut in the next pasture.
REFARD for return of lady's yellow gold
Elegn win watch with gorganib grain ribbon
band, but at the Granda theatre during
night. Valued at a girl's gift. 2197M
2397M
FOR SALE; Size 17 double-breasted tux edo. Call 125 after 7 p.m. -4-
CLASSIFIED ADS
Coquille, Ore—(UP)—It may be fairly easy to secure marital ties nowadays, but not so easy as one woman thought. Going to the office of the clerk of the circuit court here, the woman asked, "Is this the place where you live?" When informed it was, she replied, "Well, I want one."
Continued from page 1
9272 Massachusetts, over
Rumsey-Allison Flower Shop
SHAMPOO and WAVE, 32c dried
Economy prices on other beauty
work also.
END CURVE, IQ, inquire
7 Experienced Users
New Equipment Added
IVAN'S BEAUTY SHOP
941½ Mass. St.
Phone 513
Next door Keeler Book Store
"The New York Tribune Since the Civil War," by Harry W. Bass, Jr., and "Sumpapers of Baltimore," by G. W. Johnston, Frank R. Kert, and William D. Frost, with contributions of journalism. A new biography of Aaron Burt by Holmes Alexander should interest many, especially those who still hold him as a great friend. In "The World," by Samuel H. Williams, should also prove interesting.
Phone K. U. 6 6
Mation Rice Dance Studio
Learn Modern halfway dancin':
Truckin', Big Apple, College Shun,
Walt, Fox Trot, and Tango. We teach both men and women.
Music: Allison Fayler Shop
T A X I
Call 2-800
UNION CAB CO.
"Originators of 1c5 cabs!"
LOST: K.A., fraternity pin somewhere between Emery Apartments, 1423 Ohio and Friar Hall. Call, Rallim 1699. -47
LOST: Two fontain pees together. One red-eyed red mottled Sheaffer, and one black Parker. Finder call 11414. Reward.
RFWARD for return of Kappa Kappa
Gamma key with name on base. Cal
Ruth Patterson, phone 718. -44
WAVO BEAUTY SHOP
Shampoos ...
Finger Waves
Oil Permanent
25c up 25g (dried)
Fine Art Students Entertain Rotarians
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and
With a varied musical program,
students of the School of Fine Arts
entertained Rotarians yesterday noon
regular regular meeting in the Hotel
Eldridge.
Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St.
Wave, dried, soe
End Curls $1.00 up. Complete
PERMANENTS, Any Style
$1.00, $1.50 up, complete
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
7321/2 Mass. Phone 2353
Graduate School Offers New Ph.D
Twenty-five words or less one inscription, 75c; three inscriptions, 160; six inscriptions, 75c; contract rates, not more than 215 words, 92 per month fat. Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANSAN Business Office.
The second fall concert of the University Symphony Orchestra will be presented tomorrow night in Hoch auditorium at 8 p.m.
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
A new degree, that of doctor of education, on the Ph.D. level, has been authorized by the Kansas Board of Regents, and will be offered by the University Graduate School at once.
Candidates for the degree must spend the equivalent of at least three full academic years in resident graduate school. Candidates must be at the University of Kansas, and before being admitted to the preliminary examination the candidate must show three years of successful college work and the field of professional education.
Two vocal solists, a string trio,
and three numbers by a cornet trio
were included on the program. Dr.
Susan Kearney joined the school
school music, presented the students.
The orchestra will be under the direction of Karl Kuenteenier, who will be assisted by Carroll Nickels and Homer Dodge Caine, violinists.
"The reputation of the K.U. School of Fine Arts is held very high by musicians all the way from the Atlantic to the Pacific and I am convinced there is no finer school of music in country," he said in his introduction.
The organization now consists of more than seventy-five pieces. The program which will be presented will be a variety which should be of interest to the audience, in music. A selection of overtures, marches, rhappodies and symphonies will be included in the evening's presentation. The time required for the presentation of the program will be an hour, with a short intermission.
Fall Concert To Be Presented
The candidate must have the usual qualifications for such a degree by having a reading knowledge of a foreign language, ability to use statistics, and computer skills to evaluate the results of educational tests; ability to evaluate educational documents, and a specialized knowledge of some field of educational practice of particular interest; and experience of high character also is required.
Owing to the individual supervision by Director Karl Kuehrsteiner and his assistants, it has become possible that he is presented this early in the season.
The concert will be open to the public, which will make it possible for anyone who chooses to attend the second fall concert of this nature to be presented in 35 years. There have been so few concerts presented in the fall because of the fact that it is difficult for the organization to pack sufficient numbers to present this concert early in the school year.
A memorial service dedicated to "We Who Are About To Die" will be presented Armistice Day, Thursday, in Fraser theater at 4:30 o'clock through the co-operation of the "campus 'Ys.'"
A meeting was held last night of students interested in the formation of a social organization for independent students. The purpose of the organization, which has not yet been fully organized, is to give the independent student social contacts and an opportunity to attend social functions along the lines of those given by the organized houses.
Y's' Present Memorial Service
Students To Form
Martin Maloney, assistant instructor in the department of English and Richard McCann, c 40, will present the history of two phones, one a conscientious objector in the next war, and the other a soldier killed in battle. Willing and Unwilling students will matize the fate of today's college students who will participate both in and out of the next war.
The script for "We Who Are About To Die" has been written by Mary Piercey, c40, and Rosemose Born, c41; with the assistance of a committee which includes John L Hunt and Ellen Payne, general secretaries of the two 'Y', and Paul Wilson, gt. Era Sethamn, c41; and Catherine Holmes, c38; who represent the MSC-W.C. formae board.
In an informal talk on William Blake, his poetry and art, Wm. D Paden, instructor in English, will illustrate his lecture with several print Blake books tenure afternoon at 2:30 in Spooner-Taylor museum.
The Rev. Carver Harrison, rector of the Trinity Episcopal Church, will open the meeting The Y.M.C.A. quartet, directed by LeRoy Fujit, c9. 30 will present special music at the memorial service.
An hour dance will be held in the near future. The date has not been definitely decided upon. Permission has been obtained for the use of the room and ballroom, if arrangements can be made with the building manager.
Paden To Give Lecture On Rare Blake Books
Representatives from eight or ten semi-organized houses attended last night's meeting. Plans were made for discussion, dinner, gift baskets, and formal parties for independent students. Those who are now active in the organization are planning to contact all semi-organized houses, and all other independent students in the University. Students who are interested in their discussion of plans will be held next week. The date will be announced in the Kanan. All semi-organized houses are invited to send representatives, and any independent student not living in one of these houses is also invited. The board has been elected as yet, and Susan Maloney, c.30, is acting as temporary chairman.
$400 Gem Sold for 25 Cents
Hamilton, Ont., Nov. 9—(UP)—A stolen diamond ring, valued at $400, was sold here for 25 cents, according to detectives. One of two men e-charged with receiving the ring said that he found it on the city dump.
At the same time other members of the department of English will exhibit a number of rare books, Professor William Johnson, chairman of the department of English for three day. These books, used in English research, are being contributed to the display by Miss Helen Rhodes Hoopes, assistant professor of English; Hoover Jordan, instructor in English; David H. Jenkins, instructor in English.
Graduate students and majors in the department of English as well as the public are invited to attend the lecture and view both displays. The room will be open tomorrow from 10 o'clock in the morning till 5 p.m.
Advertise your wants in the Classified Ads of the University Daily Kansan.
Men's Intramurals
An alert, championship-gunning Phi Kappa P队 played heads up in softball and indeed the Kappa Sigma of 12 defeat it in tussle cup yesterday. From the opening kick-off, with Phi Kappa P team at full pace, the Kappa Sigma team was outplayed in the same game as the champions-of division II.
Paul Wilbert, Phi Psi right gun, gave the Phi Pi季队 a lead that was never threatened on Giants' kick-off on Kappa Sigma. Wilbert rushed down the field and recovered the ball because of goal line for an easy touchdown.
The demoralized Kappa Sig's put up a fight for the rest of the game. He was not one to push himself from pushing another touchdown, which put the game on ice. He was one to individual star of the game. He was easily assisted by two backdowns, and Allen, who played a good game in the backfield, helped down, and Allen, who played a good game in the backfield, helped down. The defeat leaves the Kappa 8-2.
The defent leaves the Kappa Sig's as runners-up in division II.
Filia Della Co-champions
and the Chicago Giants and the Phil Chi's, which almost turned into an upset, was finally over. The Giants after the lead had charged hands
Phi Gamma Delta, now co-champions of division I, drew first blood by scoring a safety against the Phi Gamma Delta in outfield, came back and pushed across a touchdown to take a 6 to 2 and it looked through the way. Gamma Delta
But the Phi Gam, with a wish for a co-championship of division I, put on the pressure and scored two wins. But he got Kell's passing paying the way for the Phi Gam team, victory was pulled from the fire. A long heave to Lemoine accounted for one of the touch-downs and a short pass to Me-
Kell and Morris were outstanding for the Phi Gam aggregation. Elliot scored the Phi Chi touchdown.
Sigma Alpha Epalion took second place in division III by defeating Delta Upsala, I2a 0.0 The Sig Alp II and Nourse received—keeping the Sig Alp II and Nourse also played an aggressive game for the Sig Alp team. Nourse and Nourse were defeated.
Triangle completed its schedule by winning its second game of the season, defeating Delta Tau Delta, 6 to 1. Delta scored the touch-down.
In spite of the defeat, the Delta Tau Delta team, with McCoy's pass receiving playing the leading role, the aggressor throughout the game.
A touch football game between the Six Horsemen and the Whit-
akers is scheduled for today.
Tomorrow's schedule follows: field 1, Phi "P" *E* 'B'; vs. Sig *E* 'B'; field 2, Sigma *Nu* vs. Sigma *Phi* Epialogy; field 5, Phi "D" *Bt* 's vs. Pik *A* 'K'; field 6, there are not buses, but horsecars matches scheduled for today.
Curfew for Firemen Asked
Derby, Crown—(UP) A 10:30 p.m. curfew has been proposed for all volunteer fire fighters to prevent fire clubs from becoming club houses. The suggestion was
made after a fireman fell from a second-story window at 3 a.m. and suffered serious injuries.
Ox Whipping Costs Eye
Jdehecken, Hungary.—(UP) Alexander Boconnat, a farm laborer, paid with his eye for whipping an ox. While being whipped, the tied animal swung its tail in such a manner that it flung the whip-stock into the tormenter's eye, gouging it.
Store Closes at Noon Thursday—Armistice Day
BUSINESS
To The Man Who Is Thinking Of Going Out Of Town
Dear Sir:
The big city newspapers sound good and we know that far fields are green . . . but why not do this . . . why not shop the town before you leave town . . . why not see what your friends can show you in a Fall suit before you stand in front of a stranger's mirror.
All the clothiers in Lawrence will welcome this comparison and when you are thru, we think you'll欢迎 our suggestion.
Speaking of our own styles and values . . .
they speak louder than linotypes . . . and
all it takes is one look before you leave to
make you glad you stayed home.
Fall Suits and Obercoats - - -
$25 - $29.50 - $34.50
Ober's
HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS
TOM MICHAEL BARNES
A Winning Line-up MERICAN FASHIONS
A Win
ALL AMERICA
"Lucl
Store closed
Thursday Afternoon
for Armistice Day
Buy Your
"Lucky" Fur Coat
?
at
WEAVER'S
Wear one of Weaver's "Lucky" fur coats to the game Saturday. You will feel so dressed up and keep so warm that you'll really cheer the team to victory. All styles and types of fur coats from $69.50.
M
Caracal
Pony
Lapin
Hudson Seal
Squirrel
Northern Seal
Muskrat
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Ready-to-Wear
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10.1937
Jayhawkers In Determined Drive
Coaches Are Not Afraid Of Overconfidence as Tilt With Kansas State Draws Near
The game Saturday with the Kansas State Wildcats will be a crucial test for the Kansas Jayhawks, now in the midst of their most determined drive for the Big Six team that secured, in winning the title.
A defeat for the Jayhawkers would throw Nebraska into the lead and make them almost certain to win the championship, an exclusive championship. On the other hand, if Coach Ad Lindsay can keep his squad from letting down, Kansas would need only a tie with Missouri to be certain of at least sharing the win.
Keep Players Keyed Up With such importance attached to Saturday's fray, the coaching staff realizes that the job cut out for them is to keep the players keyed to the game against the mighty Cmuchkens.
Overconfidence is not fearful, for every Kansas rooter realizes that the Aggies are going to be plenty tough, and perhaps no one realizes it more than the players themselves. Reports all season have indicated that the K-Staters have some of the best material in the conference and that their mediocre showing so far has resulted from a failure of this experiment, which will be expected. Chances are that the Wildcats will find their spark this week and will play the game they are capable of doing.
If this happens, and if the Jay-hawkers maintain the pace they set last week, the Memorial stadium will be the scene of a real battle, such as the one two years ago when Kansas managed to hold a 3 to 2 lead up to the last of the game and then scored a touchdown in the final moments to increase the margin to 9 to 2.
That year the Agnies were led by their great fullback, "Red" Elder. This year they will be headed by Howard Cleveland, hard-running, shifty quarterback, who is termed by many the best backfield man in the Big Six this year. Seconding Cleveland will be a new Kansas State star, sophomore fullback Hackney, appropriately called the "Mustang," who has shown such promise as to make the most avid Wildcat fans forget the past feats of "Rambling Ralph" Graham and "Red" Elder.
Sauad in Fair Shape
Squad in Fair Shape Kansas will be led by the line that played such a splendid game against Nebraska, and by Replogle, triple-threat Jayhawk backfield star, amply aided by
the hard erasing
CLARENCE DOUGLASS
JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
27
1937
DOUGLASS
Douglas, leading
Six score
Ambrose DOBELVAC
Army
A threat will
Sullivan, Amerine and Divens.
Stevie Rothenburg
Workouts for the second this week
are designed of drill on fundamentals.
Charging, blocking,
passing, and pass defense occupied
most of the time at the practice session last night.
Right now the squad is in the best physical shape it has been in since the first game of the season, and the coaches hope to be able to take full advantage of this fact Saturday. Chitwood turned his ankle in last night's drill but should be ready to go by Saturday.
The squand is in good shape, with only Hardcure and Boisleave being absent from practice last night. Boisleave is expected to return to uniform this afternoon, and it is possible will be out older later in the week.
Used Car Figures Amazing
Indianapolis—(UP) — Two-thirds of the motorists in the United States have never purchased a new car. There are 25,000,000 car owners in the United States, yet only 9,000,000 have bought new cars.
Have You Tried Our Famous Recipe
CHILI
10c Bowl 10c
UNION FOUNTAIN
Memorial Union Sub-Basement
Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansas Sports Editor
The Kansas-Nebraska tie showed he Huskers out of the first ten teams in the nation, the Associated Press press showed yesterday. Nebraska dropped to number eleven position in comparison with the sixth-ranked Oklahoma team.
The number one and two teams changed places as Pitt took over the top position and California dropped to second as a result of their scoreless tie with Washington. Alabama is in third place with Fordham in fourth. Right now it looks like Pitt or Alabama, and California in the Rose Bowl, but a lot can happen (probably will) in the next two weeks.
Baylor took the biggest drop. When Dana Bible's downrodden Texas team upset the previously unbaten Bears they skidded from four place all the way down to thirteenth place. He skidded alone for a week or two, now that he has disposed of the Bears. (Some joke, eh followers!)
Saturday should produce some fancy cavorting on Memorial field with such backs as Howard Cleveland, Elmer Hackney and others from Manhattan doing their tricks along with Max Replogle, Clarence Doughton and company. In fact, Cleveland's cavorting could be very serious, as he described during a game at Manhattan. The Agnieszka had a Roman holiday that day and will certainly be trying to repeat Saturday.
There really seems to be little reason why they shouldn't repeat. The Kansas team will be almost the same as the one that couldn't catch Cleveland last year, and Howard hasn't slowed down or the Jayhawkers haven't speeded up much. The answer lies in the new spirit the
Kansas team has been displaying the Lindsay charges haven't been laying back and letting their opponents pin their ears back without an argument. The Jayhawkers have even done quite a lot of ear pinning on their own hook. Last year the players did that, but what thing and that what they got. Saturday they will be looking for a scrap and that's what Kansas is going to put up. The answer seems to lie in whether Howard Cleveland has a enough on the ball to run wild anyway. If he has, the Jayhawkers will not be in a place where he's game one. One thing is certain, Kansas will be facing a more versatile back than they last weekend.
Jayhawk Jolts: The announcement of the death of Robert Ardrey, former track star, was a blow to his many friends here on the Hill. In Ardrey and Roy Noble, Kansas had two of the top-notch pole vaulters in the Big Six two years ago. Ardrey death followed a prolonged illness.
High Blood Pressure Leads to More Deaths
St. Louis, norm. 9.-(UP)-Degen creative heart disease is increasing in the United States, according to Dt. Fred M. Smith, of the University of Iowa School of Medicine, but the cause of the disease is unknown.
"We also know the disease in some instances is hereditary." Dr. Smith told the International Medical Assembly here.
"Hypertension—high blood pressure—overworks the heart, imposes upon it an extra load, produces a breakdown of the arteries, and an ultimate collapse of the heart." Dr. Fletcher's conclusion is cause of hypertension is unknown.
Basketball Drills Start
Varsity and Freshmen
Start Practice Monday
Under Coach Allen
Treatment of high blood pressure, Dr. Smith said, involves plenty of rest and sleep and "keeping the patient's mind off his aliment."
More than twenty players have been reporting to Dr. Forrest C. Allen for basketball practice. Official practice started Monday and there is a scheduled game between the varsity and fresh, Dec. 3.
More players will report for practice when the football season is over and a team with a dash and drive will face the prospect for Kansas this year.
One Regular Available
Only one regular from last year was squad, Fred Palle, will be available this year. Praile also was a regular on the 1836 team. Other lettermen who have reported are Sylvester Schmidt, Lyman Corlis, Lester Kappelman, Fenlon Durand, and George Golay. Schmidt alternated with Roy Hollandy on the first team last year.
Squad members of last year report this season are LaRoy Fugt, George Bowles, and Paul Hormuth.
New Varsity Turns Out
Fourteen men who turned out for practice Monday afternoon are new to the varsity squad. They are Sanford Dietrich, Loren Florell, Lewis Hanthorn, Richard Harpold, Robert Hunt, Carl Johnson, Harold Johnson, Frank Komatz, Kirk Owen, Bruce Reed, Gerald Robinson, Nelson Sullivan, Bruce Voran, and Ed Wieneck.
Jay Plumely, who will be freshman coach again this year, had a large number of players on hand for practice session Monday evening.
Plumley contains the following names:
Robert Allen, William Beaven, Victor Breen, Joe Clark, Barclay Cunningham, Ernie Eberhart, Howard Engleman, John Fogel, Russell Hatthey, Michael Hatt, Hattie Hatt, William Hoghen, P. B. Hunter, Maurice Jackson, John Kline, William McKinley, Kenneth Messner, Ralph Miller, Jack Kenshue, Joe Shoer, James Shupsi, Raymond Smith, William Southern, and Edward Weiford.
Twenty-four New Men A preliminary list compiled by
The varity is to practice five after-
terions a week, and the freshmen,
under Plumley, four evenings each
week.
--ave.
Ulm. (cup). L. Wisler, J. Blainey,
D. Loremine, D. Woods, J. Irisn-
lift, H. Hoffman, F. Cowles, J. Edil-
mire, M. Irwin, E. Chestnut, M. Ve-
cy, M. Irwin, and E. Chestnut.
Women's Intramurals Helen Wilkerson
With only one more game to be played in the women's intramural volleyball tournament, the players were chosen from all of the teams. The members of the teams were chosen from all of the women entering in the intramural contest, and each team was selected by them considered best as a result of the games between the different classes. Each player will be required to play for participation in the conti
The members of the freshman team are:
Grizzell, (capt), V. Bell, M. Parker, D. Shull, L. Owens, B. Berkley, A. Rochester, B. Berkley, D. Hannon, M. Leech, H. Hayes, M. James, and B. Allen.
D. J. Willecuts, M. K. Lattner, A Paden, (pcen), G. Roe, G. Ross, H. Rose, G. King, G. Detler, J. Montgomery, H. Hickers, L. Bismuth, P. Ghorbanyl, B. Stumson, and P. Ghorbanyl.
1. Moll, M. Rowland, R. Baker,
(capt.), M. Erskine, M. Woody, M.
The members of the senior squad are:
Dresses, L. Spring, L. Bottom, F. Karlan, E. Gikesen, D. Hoffman, E. Johnson, J. Flood, and A. Armstrong. the schedule for these games has
also been posted and is as follows:
Thursday, Nov. 11, 7 p.m. Freshman vs. junior. Sophomore vs. senior.
Monday, Nov. 15, 7:30 p.m. Freshman vs. senior. Sophomore vs. junior.
Wednesday, Nov. 17, 8:15 p.m.
Freshman vs. sophomore, Junior vs.
senior.
The final volley ball game to determine the intramural championship will be played off this evening between T.M.T. and Corbin hall. In the horseshoe tournament the team that scores most runs off with the finals scheduled to follow immediately after.
Dynamite Worries Town
Winnipeg, Man, Nov 9- (UP)—Unsee ly the heads of residents of a suburb here at night, for twenty days. A dynamite disappeared from a shack.
"Gosh A'mighty—Everybody Out"
Granpappy just shot at 11 "Wildcats" and missed—Let's get the "Cats" Saturday.
ZING
In the clothes game you can shoot anytime and you can't miss in Carl's Good Clothes — a "Bull's Eye" every time.
Varsity Town Suits Top Coats
$25 up $25 up
Wear a new Suit and Tropical to the game Saturday
and you'll win along with Kansas.
Wool Mufflers
CARL'S
GOOD CLOTHING
Store closes at noon Thursday
Dress Gloves
as Welcome
as mail from home...
Anchored 47 miles off shore, the Nantucket Lightship guides traffic on the Atlantic Coast. Mail and supplies come aboard once a month—one of the most welcome arrivals is the supply of Chesterfields.
Chesterfields give more pleasure to smokers wherever they are...
On land or sea or in the air Chest-erfields satisfy millions all over the world. They’re refreshingly milder . . . They’re different and better.
Chesterfield
NANTUCKET
Copyright 1937, LEGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
DV1E2 04' 17
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Z 229
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 46
Attentive Crowd Hears Sutton
Globe-Trotter's Review Of Travels in Far East And Oceania Entertains Audience at Lecture
With his audience expectantly awaiting the next sidelight remark Dr. Richard L. Sutton 'tast night at UConn's sports show" Shots Around the Pacific" in Hoch auditorium. Dr. Sutton, a nationally-known determatologist, explorer, and author, spoke to an at-ten student from university students and faculty members.
Dr. Sutton, in his many tours of the world, has taken pictures to illustrate the mode of living of various peoples throughout the world. He has taken pictures of a lecture last night, after being introduced by Chancellor E. H. Lindley a close friend of the speaker. Chancellor Lindley has taken fishing trips with Dr. Sutton on occasions when he is sailing in the ocean or 300 pounds have been caught.
For the most part, Dr. Sutton used New Zealand for his topic of discussion. He said that he had lived in all parts of the world, but that he would rather live in New Zealand than any other countries of the world which he has visited.
In presenting his slides, which took up the major part of the time Dr. Sutton used for his lecture, he made remarks concerning the natives of the different countries and their mannersisms that kept a ripple of laughter surging throughout the audience.
Prefers New Zealand
LAWRENCE, KANSAS,THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1937
According to Dr. Sutton, the New Zealanders are very intelligent. They are courteous, hospitable, and obedient of law and order. He mentioned an incident in which a native asked him why the people in this country used armored cars to transport their valuables. The native said that in New Zealand they had a horse with a helmet on their backs through the town without even as much as a police escort.
Dr. Sutton told of many of his fishing experiences in the ocean waters around New Zealand. The ocean is full of sword fish and sharks of many types, he said. In catching a sword fish, the speaker informed me that there is a quantity of line which would reach from here to Kansas City in order that the fish be handled properly. The bait used for this type of fishing is in the form of 8- to 10-pound fish. When the large sword鱼 are hooked, they will break water many times, and it is not infrequent that the fish fight to "shark" the fish for several hours before it is possible to land it.
Describes Natives
In speaking of the natives of the various countries which the speaker discussed, he said that the natives of New Guinea are religious and ate seafood for many times a day and generally work when they please. Borneo natives are crude and of low intelligence. They spend their time for the most part "head hunting" usually drying up the forests of enemies which they capture.
"The Japanese," he said, "are excellent people. They have a fine governmental system and are law abiding in their nature." He said that in his many trips to Japan he has seen but few beggars. "While in Paris they were laimed, they are different. Beggars and leprosy are prevalent, and the people are more backward than the natives of Japan."
Unable To Take Pictures
NO RIFLE PRACTICE
De. Sutton reviewed the industries, of the various countries of which he spoke, as well as the mode of living and living conditions in general. The countries he covered last night include New Zealand, New Guinea, Australia, Bali, Borneo, China, and Japan.
In Japan it was not possible for the traveler to take pictures of any military establishments whatsoever. The authorities sealed his camera when he went into the military encampment, and made certain that the seal was not broken until he left the scene of military activities.
Signed.
There will be no rifle practice Thursday afternoon from 1:30 to 2:30
MAJOR EDWARDS.
Correspondents Needed For Home Town Papers
Anyone interested in becoming a correspondent for his home town paper is asked to inquire at the al-Quaidiyah office or send correspondents for the following counties: Atchison, Hodgeman, Kingman, Lincoln, Linch, Mitchell, Morris, Pattawatamia, Rocks, Scott, Medridian, Treo Wallace, and Finney.
C. H. Mullen, who has charge of the student correspondent bureau, urges those who already have assignments to send their articles to their home town papers without being to be contacted by the editors.
The alumni office will assist any correspondent who is having difficulty with his assignments.
Symphony Plays Tonight
Occhestra Will Give Fall Concert in Hoech Auditorium
Tonight in Heoch auditorium the University Symphony orchestra will present its second fall concert in 32 years. The organization will be under the direction of Karl Kuerstein, conductor. Carroll Nickels and Homer Dodge Cain, violinists, will assist the conductor.
The program will include "Swedish Coronation March," by Svendsen; overture to "Die Meistersinger," by Wagner. This overture not only gives a musical "bird's eye view" of the opera which follows, but it is a classic achievement of contrapuntal writing. Every measure is full of melody. At one point, the band presents five themes are heard simultaneously. This is followed by the allegro finale from the "Concerto in D-minor for Two Violins and Stringed Orchestra," by Bach, presented by Mr. Caine and Mr. Nickels; "Second Hungarian Rhapsody," by Liszt; and Techakowsky's Symphony Number Six, "Pathetique," which includes the movements "adagio—allegro mon troppo"; "allegro con grazia"; "allegro molto vivace"; and "finale" (adagio lamentoso).
Play Tschaikowsky's Work
This last work more than any other expresses the complete Tchaikowski. It was written and given its first performance wholly within the last year of the composer's life. He himself conducted its premiere. Ten days later he died. It would seem that Tchaikowski had to exaggerate the completion of his "Symphony Pathetique" when he wrote, "Without exaggeration, I have put my whole soul into this work."
"Adagio—allegro non troppo.
The symphony begins with a gloomy theme that symbolizes the "Pasture character of the complete work.
"Allegro con gracia," a translation of this tempo indication offers a perfect introduction to this move, as much as cheer and grace prevail.
Ends with Slow Movement
"Allegro moto vivace." In this third movement, Techalkowki succeeds in running the gamut of exuberant, rugish hilarity. The march theme is heard in part after the opening few measures and is played in turn by obes, trombones, French horns, and trumpets. In spite of the repeated motives, with listeners almost constantly until the end of the movement.
"Finale" (adagio lamentoso);
Never before had a recognized composer concluded a symphony with a mournful movement such as this.
The instrumentation of the orchestra is made up of over seventy-five students of the School of Fine Arts, and only through the talent of these students and the special instruction given them it is possible for the organization to present this fall concert.
The University of Kansas station, KFKU, however, will broadcast a play-by-play description of the game.
WDAF Cancels Broadcast:
Will Be Handled by KFKU
Cancellation of the proposed broadcast of the Kansas University-Kansas State football game Saturday by station WDAF, Kansas City, was announced yesterday by the athletic office.
THE WEATHER
Kansas; Fair Thursday and Friday;
warmer in northwest portion
Tuesday and in southeast Frid-
day; cooler in northwest Friday afternoon.
Baillie To Address Editors
Head of United Press To Speak at Newspaper Roundtable Here; Over 300 Are Expected
Hugh Baille of New York, presid. of the United Press association, will address the Kansas newspaper roundtable here Saturday.
More than three hundred Kansas editors are expected to attend the roundtable sessions in the Journalism building
Mr. Baillie, who is also honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi, journalism fraternity, will speak at 11 a.m. in Fraser theater on "Present-day Newsletter Throughout the Day of All Time." His address will follow an address of welcome by Chancellor E. H. Lindley.
Roundtable sessions for both weekly and daily newspaper editors will be held at 9 a.m. in the Journalism building. Although no arrangements have been made for a formal luncheon, the editors will be guests at the Kansas-Kansas State football game in the afternoon.
The Ballistic address will be heard also by delegates to the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, which will be held concurrently in Tooneka.
Will Hold Discussions
In the absence of the regular faculty, who will attend the Sigma Delta Chi convention, journalism classes on Friday will be taught by visiting editors. W. A. Bailey, publisher of the Kansas City Kansan will act as head of the department. Editors To Substitute
Other editors who will substitute as instructors are:
8. 30-Editorial II, W. T. Besk. Hallock Recorder; Asa Consoe. Wellerville Globe; Reporting, E. A Brieles Stafford Counter; Wall Nehberger
9. 30—History of American Journalism (subject for the day: "Kansas Editors"). Mr. Converse, L. F Valentine, Clay Center Times; Reporting, Neh尔宾er, Earl Fickert, Poobh Gazette.
10:30- Advertising, R. G. Hemeen-
mina, Minnesota Messenger; B. P
Wekes, Marshall County News
Advertising copy, Harold A. Ham-
mond, Coldwell Daily Messenger
in reporting to Mr. Fickett
Mr. Nebraskar
11-230. Editorial I, Mr. Valentine
Mr. Hemmey; newspaper administration;
Mr. Beck; Mr. Hammond
Mr. Hemmey; newspaper administration;
Mr. Converse; Mr. Hemmey
Franco Convinced
St. Jean Deluz, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Nov. 10—(UF) - Nationalist Generalissimo Francisco France is determined to end extremists in Spain but will have nothing to do with the Italian-German-Japanese economic alliance, his office spokesman told the United Press to night.
Of Victory Before December
Explaining that France is convinced that his Insurgent forces will win complete victory in a major offensive planned for the end of November, the spokesman said that the nationalist leader desires to establish a government that will command the good will of all powers opposed to joining any bleo or adherence to any political axis.
A pop rally will be held on the varisity practice field this afternoon at 4:30. Although the hand will not play, a cheerleader will be on hand to lead the yelling. All students, especially Ku Ku's and Jay Janes, are urged to attend the rally.
"I think that when you devote two-thirds of your time to business, the other one-third should be given to yourself. Consequently, I reserve a time for recreation." The doctor back in his chair and continued.
Rally!
Renowned Lecturer and Sportsman
Tells Reporter About Various Trips
"People wonder why I go on off so many long trips, and I am always frank with them—I'm running away from the telephone." Thus spoke Dr. Richard L. Sutton last night in a backstage interview a few minutes before he addressed the crowd assembled in Hoeh auditorium.
Nebraska, now the Aggies.
Is Enthusiastie Fisherman
D. Sutton, noted doctor, author,
traveler, and lecturer from Kansas
City, smiled genially and promptly
started an informal conversation.
Dr. Sutton was plainly the enthusiastic fisherman as he related stories of the various catches of swordfish he had made on his two previous trips to New Zealand in 1935 and 1937, and of the success which he had in catching tarpon on his recent visit to Texas. "This summer I sailed for Mexico and had one fish that pulled out its 36-foot boat for 16 hours, and then he go away.
In the address, Morgentheau asked for the co-operation of all factions of the country in enabling a reduction of 700 millions in federal expenditures in the next fiscal year.
"The next vacation will be a fishing trip to New Zealand. I am planning to leave in January and to spend seven weeks there by my parents' side, unfailable in the waters thence, and I expect to catch at least one hundred."
New York and Washington placed the most emphasis on government's withdrawal from business "pump priming" with private capital resuming the responsibility that the state had taken to operate at the office at start of the depression
Morgenthau Plans Balance Of Budget
Chairman Marriner S. Eccles of the Federal Reserve board, who took part in the White House conference, stressed the fact that the proposed housing program will not cause additional expenditures.
The announcement was interprete, as a move on the part of President Roosevelt to combat the recent business recession by inspiring the confidence of industrial leaders in the second New Deal.
Secretary of Treasury
Gives Assurance Th at
Government Will Re-duce Spending
Washington, Nov. 10, (UP)-Secretary of the Treasury Henry forgeganen in an address before he Academy of Political Science in new York; tonight announced that he 1838-39 federal budget will be balanced by reduced government pending and without new taxes.
Besides the prize for the best dressed "man," awards will be given to the best dressed woman, the best dressed couple, and to the couple winning the dancing contest. Every organized house has been requested to select a couple to enter the dancing contest.
Puff Pant Prom Is Friday Night
Shortly before Secretary Morgenthau spoke, President Rosewell had discussed a nation-wide policy to industrialize one government officials.
duce Spending
The costumes, not required, may be anything from riding costumes to formal apparel.
Women will wear the pants Friday—and the one who wears them best will be awarded a prize. From 8 until 11 p.m., the males will be the "forgotten men" while their girl friends, in feminine company will wear the music of Clyde Byson and his wife the annual W.S.G.A. Puff Pant Prom in the Memorial Union ballroom.
Tickets are 75 cents for both couples and stags.
Glassboro, N. J., Nov. 10—(U1,
State highway engineers are watching
carefully tests of the durability
of the new type "cotton" highway
fabric on canvas; cut in long,
wide strips, is used over gravel-surface roads.
"As you grow older," said Dr. Sutton rather philosophically, "you care less about hunting and killing and find more pleasure in fishing. When a fish has been landed, it is thrown back."
"Cotton" Highway Studied
Discusses Next Trip
The lecturer, coming back to the topic of the proposed trip to New Zealand, praised the country highly. Most people, he said, have a mistaken idea in regard to this land about which we hear so little. New Zealand, in his estimation, probably has more college graduates in proportion to its population than any other country.
Delegates To Be Guests At Game
Many Members of the Journalism Fraternity Will Attend Meeting Of Editors Also
Members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, attending the national convention at Topoka, will be guests of the University at the annual football game between Kansas and Kansas State football at the university. They will also meet with the Kansas edition Saturday morning.
Chancellor Lindley will give the speech of welcome at the Saturday morning meeting of the Kansas editors, which will be held at 10:45. Hugh Baille, president of the United Press and national honorary head of Sigma Delta Chi, will give the principal address.
Following the game, the convention delegates will return to Topeka for the high point of the meeting—to the roost of the hawk hotel. The speakers will be Henry J. Allen, editor of the Topeka State Journal and former United States statesman; Irving Brant, editor of the Louis St. Times, and Mr. Bailie.
Local chapter members will attend the convention tomorrow afternoon. Faculty members of the de-
legation journalism will go to Topka Friday.
The program for the convention follows:
4 to 6 p.m.—Registration, convention headquarters, Jayhawk hotel.
7 p.m.-Smoker, open to all Sigma Delta Chi members. Topoka Press Club and Topeka alumni chapter of hosts hosts Topeka Press Club clubrooms.
9 p.m.-Executive council meeting, attended by national officers and councillors, and delegates and advisers who wish to attend.
8 a.m.-Business session. Jayhawk
hotel. Convention to order by
President Tully Nettleton. Roll call
Appointment of credentials commit-
Fridav
9—Address of welcome, Herbert G Barrett, mayor of Topeka. Response by President Nettleton
9:30—Reading of minutes of 1936 convention.
9:45—Reports of national officer and chairmen of standing committees.
10. 30-Report of committee on credentials; appointment of convention committees; outline of convention work.
11-45 - Executive council hearing—open to delegates and advisers. 12.15 p.m.-Luncheon. Committee will meet at lunchon to discuss their work.
115-Discussion session. Round- table activities; undergraduate, chapter activities, employment aids; discussion of alumni organization, program (to run through the summer); discussion, and to be attended by all alumni delegates and members, and to be attended by alumni representatives.
3.20-Papers by undergraduate
3.30-Business session. Jayhawk has
report of special conference on
reorganization, followed by discussion.
7-Dinner, roof garden, Jayhawk hotel. Complimentary dinner, and entertainment by Topea Daily Capital and Toneka State Journal.
8 a.m.—Business session, Jayhawk hotel, Committee reports.
10—Trip to Lawrence. Entire convention party will go by chartered busses.
intial and Topeka State Journal.
9—Executive council meeting.
10:45—Joint meeting with Kansas editors, on University Campus. Address of welcome, Dr. E. H. Lindley Chancellor. Address Hugh Ballie president of United Press and naiad secretary-president of Sigma Delta Chi.
12:15 p.m.—Lunch Doogates free to lunch at will and visit points of interest on Campus.
2 - Football game, Kansas vs. Kansas State, Memorial stadium, Delegates and other members registered at convention will be guests of UniMilieu
5:15-Return trip to Topeka. The entire convention party will return to the Jayhawk hotel, Topeka, by chartered bus.
6:30—Model initiation, Jayhawk hotel. National officers will conduct model initiation for associate air
Salt Lake City Alumni Dine and 'Rally' Friday
Continued on page 3
Kansas State College and University of Kansas alummi living in an around Salt Lake City will have a college degree, rarely in Salt Lake City Friday night.
Lila Cananam, '19, who also attended Kansas State College in '29, is chairman of the committee on arrangements. She has written requesting copies of the song, "Roll on, Kansas State," the new song written by Professors Lyle Downey and Richard Jesson.
University Students Renew Campus Feud
Seven Are Apprehended While Smearing Aggieville Campus With Red Paint Tuesday Night; Angry Students Fail To Overtake Them To Administer Head-Shaving Treatment
Five University men students and two non-student men gave rise to a stormy special session of the Men's Student Council yesterday afternoon. The men were apprehended while painting on the Kansas State campus Tuesday night and were returned to Lawrence after spending a night in the Manhattan jail. They were set free with the understanding that they would be properly punished here.
Post Kelly Circulars
Highway Patrol Still
Investigating Kelly
Assault
Japanese Open Fire on Shanghai
Unable to determine the license plates on the car, Kelly and Miss Edlin both testified that the assailant and his companion were driving what appeared to be a 1954 Nash seater with a grey body and black 'enders'
Members of the faculty, University students, and citizens of Lawrence and Topka contributed to the re-creation of a field in Kansas with a donation of $500.
The five students are: Herman Janzen, c'38; Darrell Mayer,
tunc: Chern May, c'39; Thomas Devilin, c'28; and John M.
Shanghai, Thursday, Nov. 11.—(UP) Japanese seek to annihilate thousands of Chinese troops trapped in the ancient Chinese walled section of Shanghai, opened fire with their biggest guns today in the heaviest bombardment of the second Shanghai battle.
From the air and by land, the Japanese were carrying out their announced plan to blast Nankan to attack an Chinese resistance continued.
The bombardment began just at dawn while American and other foreign warships unfurled flags to celebrate Armistice Day.
Nine hundred fifty dollars will be offered as a reward for information leading to the apprehension of the slayer of Russell Kelly, a University student, the Kansas Highway Patrol announced yesterday.
The Japanese apparently moved up their heaviest guns during the night into positions directly west of Nanko to avoid shelling over the international settlement and French concessions, as happened today.
Returning from Topeka with Miss Lela Edin, Sept. 24, Kelly was involved in a minor accident with another driver on the road near Stull. He was slugged and kicked by the police in Waskins Memorial Hospital Oct. 1.
Chinese troops replied stolically and ineffectively with trench mortars the only artillery they had in the area.
To College in Trailer
Chinese officials reported that the Japanese had landed nearly 50,000 reinforcements near Kwan-Hai-Wei, and expected mass attack on China's "Hindenburg line," which protects the central capital in Nanking.
Circulars containing the information will be carried to filling stations and stores, which might not otherwise be reached, by truck drivers auditors, and salesmen from the Topeka office of the Standard Oil company. Kelly's father is employed by the company at that place.
Thursday, Nov. 1
Ruston, La., Nov. 10, (UP) — Through college in a trailer, the road to education taken this year by Delmer Johnson and Earl Hilton
Authorized Parties
Puff-Pant Prom, Memorial Union cellroom, 11 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 11
Phi Gamma Delta, pieric, 8 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 12
Limited Date
Delta Tau Delta, Country Club.
Saturday, Nov. 13
Aggie Varsity Dance, Memorial
Union ballroom, 12 p.m.
Kappa Sigma, dance, chapter house.
Kappa Sigma, dance, chapter house 2pm
ELIZABETH MEGUIAR
Adviser to Women, for
the Joint Committee on
Student Affairs.
Evoy, c'41. The other two, Charles Fleming and Gerald W. Walrafren, who accompanied them, are not students in the University.
They were accosted by a special campus watchman, deputized for the period preceding the Kansas-Kansas State football game, while spreading paint on the campus of the Manhattan school. The masrauters were taken to jail, where they spent the night.
In the morning, they were sent to Dean Holtz, dean of men at the state college, who telephoned Mr. Werner at the University. The result of their conversation was the return of the youths to Lawrence on condition he would be dealt with satisfactorily by the University student court.
Escape to Lawrence
The seven were returned to Lawrence by motor car, accompanied by the shoal and six Aggie pop club members. Several in load of angry students tried in vain to overtake her as she headed up a head-shovel to the culprits.
In accordance with a pact made between the student councils of the two schools in 1920, the council was authorized to oversee to the student court for judgment, and recommended that the court and the prosecutor investigate such cases of vandalism and mute witnesses were punishment to the offenders.
The pact between the councils is:
"AN AGREEMENT entered into by
University of Kansas,
University of Kansas, and the
Student Council of Kansas State Agricultural College, on the behalf of
their respective student bodies, to
organize a number of school
fights and pre-game activities
between the two schools.
"WHEREAS, These fights and activities have grown to such proportions in the last few years that the friendly relations of the two institutions are in danger; that unpleasant publicity results to each school; that misappropriation of personal injuries and that much property is damaged and ruined.
"WHEREAS: To avoid such serious results the above named Men's Student Councils covenant and agree on the part of each institution that shall constitute a formal treaty, calling to a close all such fights and activities, to be in effect henceforth and forever, and binding all Student Councils in the future to recognize and enforce the said treaty.
WHEREAS: If from time to time, various members of either student in violation attempt to carry out acts that violate the activities, the Student Council of the institution the said students represent agrees to mee out serious punishment for such violations, that this document may be preserved."
To Present Damage Bills
The student court is now short two members and the council instructed the two Hill parties to submit nominees for the positions to the council in its next meeting Monday night. The two new members and two old members will elect a chief justice and a prosecutor and action will probably be taken on this case next week.
The council also voted to send letters of apology to the president of Kansas State College and to the governor of the student council there.
Mr. Wernier said that two bills for damages would soon be presented from Manhattan: one from the sheriff's office for $2, covering cost of returning the students to Lawrence, and expenses incurred during the time they were in custody of the sheriff; and another which is being prepared, estimating damage done to the grounds of the college. "This
Continued on page 2
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
A
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1937
≈
Comment
Today Brothers Are Killing
EXHIBIT NOTE: Perhaps no more moving comment could be made on Armitage day then is conceived in this paper, which was published last summer by Prof. Otto Spinner of the department of German. It was written by the Germy by M. M. Woll, a student in German I in 1967.
By HEINRICH LUESCH
BROTHERS
A dead man lay before us, out near the tangled wire,
The dews and the night winds cooled him, the sun
carmed him with fire.
warmed him with fire.
And looking at him daily, I could not help but see, And ever felt more strongly, he must my brother be.
I looked upon him hourly, as time brought no release.
Lead upon him hourly, as time brought no release. And seemed to hear him speaking from happy days of peace.
You are not told him speaking from happy days of peace.
Official definition.
Oft in the night a-weeping, that troubled sore my sleep,
"My Brother, dearest Brother, your love can I not keep?"
keep?
Until, in spite of bullets, at night I crawled quite near.
And brought him back and buried a stranger-friend so dear.
My eyes had been mistaken, my heart the truth had known.
known;
the face of every dead min, it is my brother's own
Legislation By Judiciary—in Kansas
The most violent condemnations of our judicially have arisen, not from the legislature nor the executive, but from the courts themselves. The minority opinions of the United States supreme court have for years contained more scathing criticism of the usurpation of legislative powers by the court than Senators Norris and Borah and, more recently, President Roosevelt have been able to call forth. A decision rendered last Saturday by the Kansas state supreme court is a case in point.
McPerson, desiring to extend electric power lines from its municipal owned plants to the city of Moundridge, was enjoined from so doing by the ninth district court. The injunction was brought by the Kansas Gas & Electric company, which had served Moundridge before that city decided to purchase current from the municipal plant in McPerson. The company's plea was based on the grounds that the city of McPerson had failed to secure a certificate of convenience and necessity from the state corporation commission before proceeding with construction of its transmission lines, a practice which is required of privately owned electric companies. Judge J. G. Somers, in granting the injunction, stated that in the opinion of the court it was only fair that municipal electric plants should abide by the same considerations required of private companies.
The supreme court, in dissolving the injunction, criticized the lower court for "legislation on the part of the judiciary." Regardless of whether or not the inferior court felt the law to be equitable or just, the supreme court opined, the duty of the court was to judge the law and not to make it.
It Might Be One Way of Collecting
In the current issue of The New Republic, Bruce Bliven points out that the persecution of racial minorities in Germany is enriched our own collective life by bringing to America a group of emigrants unlike any the world has ever seen before. Individuals of such distinction who under ordinary circumstances would never dream of transplanting themselves are coming to America to escape the wrath of der Fuehrer and his cohorts.
The list is long. It is headed by Dr. Albert Einstein, world-famed mathematician and physicist, and Thomas Mann, one of the great literary figures of the world. It includes Heinrich Bruneng, former Chancellor of Germany; Ernst Toller, playwright and poet; Max Reinhardt, theatrical producer. In fields of art there are Otto Klempner, conductor; Elisabeth Bergner, actress; and George Grosz, painter.
This new emigration is composed of scientists, creative artists, musicians, and philosophers, all with a culture as great as can be found in the world. Already they have contributed to the enhancement of our civilization; however, what they have done thus far is certainly unimportant compared with the great promise that stretches forward through the years.
The list can be continued for pages. In every field—medicine, medical research, economies, sociology, and history—names that are known throughout the world can be found.
In speculating on the valuation that might be put on the services of these refugees, Mr. Bliven believes that the average scholar has an "investment value" to the United States of
≈
$200,000, which would go a long way toward paying Germany's defaulted post-war debt. In the words of Bliven. "For this and for many other things that he does not understand and never will, we owe a debt of gratitude to the Führer. Hitler, thank you."
Tied to
The Lion's Tail
Recent acts and utterances of British subjects, who, whether they will or no, are representing the British government in the eyes of America, have lent weight to the belief that "England expects every American to do his duty."
Frank recognition by H. G. Wells, speaking in Kansas City Nov. 1, that this belief is a prevalent and a guiding principle of British diplomacy does not mitigate the danger to America. Lord Marley, deputy speaker of the House of Lords, addressing 4,500 Kansas teachers in Hoch auditorium Friday evening, called upon the English-speaking nations to stand together in an anti-fascist bloc.
Neville Chamberlain, British prime minister, has been using soft soap on America, calling her "the most powerful nation in the world," ever since Roosevelt's Chicago speech, in the hope that Uncle Sam will pull Britain's Asiatic chestnuts from the fire. The United Press believes that the visit of Wallie & Eddie to America was cancelled by the British foreign office to avoid tangling with labor and thereby straining Anglo-American relations.
Whether these items are merely coincidental or the deliberate fruit of the British foreign office is immaterial. Seasoning of such acts and utterances with a dash of understanding of true motives will do much to avoid following John Bull into the next war.
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Carcerillo's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular hours from 10 a.m. to 4 o.m.
For Sunday's tournay in San Francisco
Vol. 35 Thursday, November 11, 1937 No.46
--he continued,
up a campus
of rooms is still of high
re. He ought to grow
your own State Col-
lege on no different from
mother's silver."
DILLETANTE COMMISSION: The Dillette Commission will meet at 7 o'clock at the Henley house. We will take up finger painting as another form of make-up and artistic expression—Alice Russell, Chairman.
ESTES RALLY: The Walshburn Estes group has invited those from K.U. interested in Estes to a rally at Walshburn on Sat at 8 p.m. Cars will be at Walshburn at about 5 o'clock. Interested, call Corrine Martin at 950 - Elda May Park.
MATHEMATICS CLUB: There will be a meeting of f the Mathematics Club this afternoon in 213 Ad. James E. Edson will speak on "Some Remarkable Calculus" and "Visitors are welcome— Charles E. Rickert, President."
QUILL CLUB: Sooh Rune will meet tonight in the Green room of Fraser hall at 7.30. Professor Raymond Lawrence will speak on "Transition - Its Antecedents and Implication." - "Agnes Mummert."
SOCIAL DANCING CLASS. The social dancing class will meet at 1 cocktail tonight in the Union ballroom.
STUDENT FORUM BOARD: There will be an important meeting of the Student Forum board at 3:30 this afternoon in the Pine room—Dean Moorhead, Chairman.
University Daily Kansar
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE
PUBLISHER
J. Howard Rusco
EDITOR-IN-CHEF
ASSOCIATE EDITORS: JOHN TYE and DAVID ANGELYNE
KANSAS PRESS
MEMBER 1937
ASSOCIATION
Editorial Staff
MANAGING EDITOR
CAMPUS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SOCIETY EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
TELIGENCE EDITOR
HARRIS EDITOR
REWARD EDITOR
SUNDAY EDITOR
NEW STAGE
JOE CONSTANZ
CAMPUS EDITORS
CHARLES ALEXANDER AND MARTIN GOWELL
NEWS EDITOR
M. JEAN CAESN
SPORTS EDITOR
WILLIAM FitzGordon
TELIGENCE EDITOR
WILLIAM TURNER
HARRIS EDITOR
LAUBA RENA and ARDIE CAUDER
REWARD EDITOR
HARRIER AND HADRIAN
ELTON J.E.CARTER
LOUIS FOCKLEY
News Staff
Kansan Board Members
FEATURE EDITOR
ALEX HADIMMAN-JULIUS
J. WHORED RUNO
E. E. PATRONE
KRIENNETT MORIN
GRAACE VALENTINE
JON GUERREAU
F. QUNTYN BROWN
WILEMIP Fitzgibbon
M. MCLEAN
EDWARD BRANNET
MARTIN BRENTSON
MARVIN GOEBEL
MORIS THOMPION
MORIS THOMPION
CANDID DURST
ELIA E. CARLE
ELIA E. CARLE
ALAN AMHER
AGREED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
Kennedy Associates
240 MADISON AVE.
BUTTON, BOSTON, MA 02238
BASQUE AND GAMBAR
SENIOR AGENTS
Business Staff
BUSINESS MANAGER EMMY HAY F. QUENTYN BROWN
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press
Distributor of Collegiate Digest
Entered as second-class matter, September 12, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, KY.
Trace Kansas Roundtable Session Back to Eventful Pioneering Stage
Editors from all parts of the state will convene here this weekend to discuss journalism. From its beginning, Kansas newspaper business has grown by 67 dailies and 455 weeklies. Like the nucleus of all other great undertakings, the pioneering stage of the State" was turbulent and eventful.
Edited Beneath Elm Tree
The first Kansas paper could scarcely be called a newspaper. It was published in the Shawnee language by the Rev. Jolham Meeker on March 1, 1853. The Shauwi-wou-Kesauthwai, (Shawnewa Sum), was printed on a hand press which the Rev. Mr. Meeker had brought into the territory in 1833. Before this time, he had印ed several books in the Shawnee language, using type which would phonetically express the words in his book. In this manner he taught us the Indian words. In the Idians, to read, before he印ed paper—a unique task for a Kansas publisher.
Newspapers appeared in this territory as soon after the advent of white settlers, as the press and type could be obtained. Frequently the early numbers of a paper would be printed in the eastern states, the matter being written and local news compiled in the territory.
The first newspaper to be issued was the Kansas Weekly Herald. The first number was set up and printed under an elm tree near what is now Cherokee street, Leavenworth. The paper was torn repeatedly in pollen.
The second paper of the territory was a vigorous free-state paper called the Kansas Pioneer. It was first issued Oct. 15, 1854 in Lawrence. The paper was later printed in Ohio. The editors were John and Joseph Spear. With the second issue which came three months later the name was changed to the Kansas Tribune. Under this name the paper became known as the Kansas Free-state papers in the territory during the troublous times of 1855-1856.
The reason for the change in name was the appearance of the Kickapoo Pioneer, a pronounced pro-slavery
Democrate paper. This paper appeared in November, 1854, at Connountville, Crawford Penis, it was issued from Wilkon. The second number was issued from Chaney. The paper was unimaginatively true but more conservative than its contemporaries.
Becomes Free-State Power.
The Squatter Sovereign, a pro-slavery paper, was shaken at Atkinson, Feb. 5, 1835, by Robert Kelley and John H. Strasburg II, continued as the slave court border-rules law rule to Eddy Lilly the office was sold to John A. Tin. Its name was changed to the Champion, and under the administrative management of Robert McMullen and Frank I. Adams it became the Court. In January, 1855, the Free State was issued in Lawrence, by Robert G. Elliott and John Miller. It was its own name implied, a free-cast prison.
These all newspaper uses only papers published in Istanbul prior to the spring of 1844. As front runners of modern journals, they played in metropolitan race in the world for the current writer. These newspapers also field of amalgam newspapers introduced to Kenanmu know.
Choral Union Elects Andrews President
Andrew's President
John, Andrew, formal,
elected president of the Cres-
tain Union at a referral of the couse.
Tuesday night in the high noon
adultium. Mr. Kevin Deary
was elected secretary-treasurer.
He was elected by a unanimous vote
elected by aIMmunity organization of singers and bering more than three hundred
No further enrollment will be permitted except by special permission from the director, Dr. C. Mielsen, according to a report by the Fine Axis office yesterday oniring.
It is the plan of the president,
cording to the report, to expound an
email executive council, which will
be meeting the mayor every Tuesday evening.
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George Hunter, Prop.
5
supus Feud-he continued,
up a campus
of rooms is still of high
re. He ought to grow
your own State Col-
lege on no different from
mother's silver."
Compiled from par4 1
read1.txt" and Mr. Werner, "anywhere
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they said. The whole party, sheriff, men's adviser, Wildest student and culpido had lunch together downstairs, as the teacher discussed in Mr. Wermer's office.
Mr. Werner expressed deep regret because University students had not observed the pact which now stands between the two schools "the gag," he said, "has been disregarded because it was a mistake." The agreement was made not to motivate one another's campus before football games, there has been very little disturbance between the two schools." He said that the pact has not yet proved publicity, as the students involved said they had never heard of it.
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/
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1957
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREET
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
M. JEAN CASKEY, Society Editor
Below $1, join call K.U.2 (after $1, call 2702-K3)
☆ ☆ ☆
Watkins hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock.
Prof. R, W. Warner was a dinner guest of Kappa Ena Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, last Monday evening.
The K. U. Dames Study Club will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the women's lounge of the Administration building.
The study this year is to be opera with "Rigoletto" the first under consideration.
Mrs. Morris Teplitz is the leader. ☆ ☆ ☆
The K. U. Dames spelling groom will meet this afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Delbert Miller, hostess, at 941 Tennessee street.
Dr. R. Lee Hoffman, Kansas City, Mo., and Dr. W. E. Hoffman, Nevada, Mo., were dinner guests at the Phi Delta Theta house last evening.
The Alpha Gamma Delta sorority will entertain the Phi Delta Theta fraternity with an hour dance this evening.
Jack Loaputter, Kansas City, Mo.
was a dinner guest at the Phi Delta
Theta house last evening.
Joe Brow, Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house last night.
Otis Walker, Kansas City, Mo visited the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house yesterday.
Jean Wyatt, c'40, Kappa Kappa Gamma, will be a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house tonight.
Alumni Board Director
Will Be Host Here Saturd
Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, announces the pledging of Otto Stelzner, c'uncul.
The board of directors of the Alumni Association will meet Saturday and has invited the directors of the Kansas State College alumni to attend the meeting at the Memorial Union cafeteria. Any alumnus, whether from the University or of Kansas State, wishing to attend must make reservations at the Alumni office not later than tomorrows. The lunch tickets are 60 cents.
The board of directors consists of:
Chester Woodward, 96, *Topeka*
president; Robert T. Price, 27, *Osage
city vice-president; Fred Lewishorn,
34, *Broomfield*; Dan Hooda,
28, *Rhoeha朵es*, 13, *Lawrence; Clem
Lamborn, 07, *Kansas City*; Ma,
4, *George March, 08, Lawrence; Marin
Slade May, 16, *Tachion; T, J*
Strickler, 06, *Kansas City*; Mo, *Myra
Little Ritsz, 32, *Kansas City*; Mo,
5, *Davis*; John Hooker, 14, *Pepeka;
Bruce Hurd, 14, *Topeka; and
John E. Boyer, 28, *Wichita.*
Phone
K. U.
6 6
Graduate Receives Appointment
SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty work also.
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Marion Rice Dance Studio Learn modern hallroom dancing; dance techniques to the Tap Shang, Woo Kee Treset and Tango Shang we teach both men and women.
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Next door Keeler Book Store
REWARD for return to lady's yellow gold
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band, lion at the Granda theater during
night. Vaulted at a gift of $475.
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Rumsey-Allison Flower Shop
END CURLS, $1 up, inquire
7 Experienced Operators
New Equipment Added
WAN SHOP
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John G. Shaw, 30, has recently been appointed junior entomologist for the bureau of entomology and plant quarantine in the department of agriculture. He will work on the efforts of city fly investigations in Mexico City.
Delegates-undergraduate membership candidates.
CLASSIFIED ADS
Mr. Shaw previously worked on the Mexican bean beetle in New the mexican bean beetle in N ew Mexico under the federal bureau of
North Wilkesboro, N.C.-UP)—North Carolina's reputedly tall man—and no one has challenged his claim—amazed citizens here today. He is Judd H. Scott, Grassy Creek, Ashe county, who stands 7 feet, 3 inches high, and weighs 290 pounds. He wears a number 17 shoe.
Professional members, who had not practiced journalism for three years or more, would be given an associate membership, and would be eligible to return to professional standing, however, after engaging in journalistic activities, fellow memberships would be granted by the organization to either men or women. Women, however, who receive the honor, would not be entitled to full membership privileges. The word, "society", in place of "the press," is the suggested change in name.
Journalists To Attempt Reorganization at Meet
8 a.m.-Business session; committee reports, election of officers, service of remembrance.
730-Banquet, Jayhawk hotel Speakers: Henry J. Allen, editor Tom Riggs, Daniel McNeil, United States senator; Irvant Brang, editorial writer. St. Louis StarTimes: Mugh Bajaj Presence of achievement contest trophies.
T A X I
Call 2-800
UNION CAB CO.
"Originators of 15c Cabs"
1.30 p.m. — Executive council meeting
Newly elected officers and council
members, and new committee
members. Open to delegates and ad-
visers.
Re-organization of Sigma Delta Chi, national journal fraternity, which will include a change of name will be proposed at the national convention of the organization meeting 'omorrow in Topeka.
Junior memberships would include those of collegiate standing, and professional memberships would be given those who have engaged in journalistic work for a beaut two years after application to membership.
Prepared by a special committee, the proposal divides membership in the organization into four different classifications. These are junior, middle and professional members; associate members; and fellow members.
Phone
K. U.
6 6
LOST: K.A. fraternity pin somewhere between Emery Apartments, 1421 Ohio and Fraler Hall. Reward. Call 1199. -45.
FOR SALE: Size 37 double-breasted tux
edo, Call 125 after 7 p.m. -4
REWARD for return of Kappa Kappa Gamma key with name on base. Call Ruth Patterson, phone 718. -46
OST. Two fountain pens together, one grey-red mottled Shearer, and one black 'arker. Finder call 1114W. Reward .
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...
University Men's Glee Club
Gives Program Over KFKU
The University of Kanane Men's
Glee Club, directed by Joseph Wilkinson, professor of voice and last night over KFKU from 6 to 1:55.
The program was: "I'm a Jay-hawk," school song, "Street Fail" by Kathleen Lockhart Manning; "How Deep in Love Am I" by herer Hughes (Claude Dorsely, burtone); "Land Silly" by Finke.
on the SHIN by Don Hays
If the spring weather doesn't soon cease, all of the usual spring romances will be underway here in the middle of winter. Just when we think we've had a plague linking would be the climax of the winter romances, we were informed that Romeo Art Wolfe of Beta fame and palmine skin Barbara were entering into "steady" fashion. But now, because he's power to the kiddies—it's been a long time since we've seen a Theta-Beta pin merger.
May the Shin do its utmost to combat the "Vieni, Vieni" plague which is taking the Kansas Campus by storm. We offer our column into the ranks of the Society for the Advancement of Science and the Vieni Vieni. As a first step in the campaign, we submit the following lyric (borrowed, incidentally).
We are sick and we are tired.
We've had more than we desired
And we're just about to make a
many rounds in
Why, we'll rant and tear our
Why? I'll just give you three
thoughts.
tresses.
Why? I'll just give you the
GEEZ! The orchestra is playing
"Piano." "Violin."
Members of the above mentioned society are opening a "dont speak to Burn Hall, Kappa pledge, week." She insists that one of her favorite pastimes is 'to sing "Vieni, Vieni" on a "vieni" roast!'
At least seven local Jayhawk cutups are regretting a recent journey to the cow college. After giving the K.S.C. farm a good painting, the local lads got into a tussle with a deputy sheriff and finally ended by spending the night in the Riley county cooler.
Social warning. Shinster wishes to warn the boys of the Hill who dig out names of some of the activities in the various sororities, since mid-semester grade reports have caused most of the real “interesting” girls to be camped. The acts may be slightly ruined due to nine weeks concerning the plaques being cam-pused. “It’s an ill wind that blows nobody good; tonight I go to the mid-week.”
Volunteer Firemen Irked
Shows, and what they remind us of: "Vogues of 1938—Jane Reid: Queen!; Betty Butcher; "... (censored!) "Women and Horses"—the Delta Tau's: Trouble Trout; Dick Martin, ye old Shuster, and the Aggies; The Perfect Specimen"—Jimmy Gillispe; "They Won't Go Out"—The Reid—Toast of New York; "Eleanor Murray: End-Die Edric Rilee; Wee Wille Winkie; the Beta's again; Disney's Academy Award Review"—Alpha Delta Fils; "Hundred Men and A Girl"; Helen Johnson and her mouth's dates; "Souls at Sea"—the SIG Alph's; "Men Are Not Gods"—The Red Back—the Chi Omega's; "Live, Love, and Learn" John Zimmerman and Frances Jones; "King of the Damned; Langworthy; "Every Saturday Night"—Terry and Beverly; "It Had to Happen"—Wilhelm and Sheldon; "Green Pastures"—don't you know? "The Seleniners"—the K-Aggie Kampus paint company, Humphrey and Springer; "We Went To College." Fred Harris and Giancarlo.
Copenhagen—(UP)—No dust will be able to enter a new university library, which will be opened here shortly. A special apperatus will suck into the building clean and dry. It will be kept at such a high pressure that even when windows are opened, outside air cannot come in.
Greybull, Wyo.—(UP)—The volunteer fire department of Greybull answered an alarm by rushing to their fire house to get their engines, but the blaze destroyed a residence broken into the fire hall and siphoned all the gasoline out of the fire engine tanks.
Library To Be Dustless
To Observe 'Start of Day'
Observatory Will Hold Open House, Nov. 14. To See Sun Spots
"The second in a series of open
houses at the university observatory
of the University of Chicago."
The theme of the lecture for the program will be "Star of the Day," an explanation of the sun and its phenomena. Along with the lecture, visitors will be permitted to view the sun through one of the observatory's windows on the surface of the sun, which are numerous on the surface of the sun at the present time.
In the practical exhibit will be a working model of the sun-earth-moon interface the minute inter- relations existing among these heavenly bodies.
Answer Questions
"What did you like best?" was a answered in the following manner: the lecture, by 23 percent; the teleconference, by 24 percent; and the exhibit, by 21 percent.
Since the first "Sky Night," the results of a questionnaire given visitors have been compiled and the following information has been acquired: To the question "Why did y ou come?" 19 percent answered tha l'auto was convenient for curiosity's sake; and 47 percent to be instructed.
On the questionnaire was the question, "Who are you?" Thirteen percent were adult Lawrence residents, 30 percent out of town visitors, 28 percent were Lawrence high school students, and 29 percent were University students and faculty members.
James Edson, one of the graduate students responsible for the introduction of "Sky Night" at the observatory, said: "We hope to get the reaction of our visitors, and improve our knowledge by a maximum number of visitors."
Will Improve Show
"Our prime purpose," he continued, "was to furnish an evening of entertainment for visitors, and it was therefore quite surprising to see so many write on the questionnaire that they came to be instructed."
Hold Debate Tryouts Tonight
The talk for the "Star of the Day" program is being prepared by Stan Alexander, assistant instructor in the department of physics.
Tryouts for membership on the varsity debate squail will be hold tonight at 7:30 in the Little theater of Green hall. The tryouts are open to any University student. There will be no limit to the number of students chosen from those who participate.
Judges for the tryouts will be Will E. C. Buchler, variably debrief coach, John Macleish, associate professor of John Macklin, Brookhaven Bank, School of Law.
The first scheduled debate of the newly chosen members will be their participation in the debate broadcast Friday at 2:30 over KFKU with the regular varsity squad and the freshman squad.
The debate question will be relative to the position of the CIO in the American labor situation.
Paul Masonier, one of the mla's reasons why the University is leading the Big Six, will have a special reason for playing a good game Saturday at Kansas State, as Paul Survey, 28, his summertime employer and president of the Haydrate company at Kansas City, Mo., is bringing 36 employees up for the game.
PATEE
WEEK 10c Til '7
DAYS Then 15c
Paul Masoner To Play His Best
Hard Riding Fast Shooting
REX BELL
2 ACTION HITS
"Too Much Beef"
AND
TODAY ENDS
SATURDAY
The Big Laugh, Music and Dancing Show PATSY KELLY LYDA ROBERTI
"Nobody's Baby"
Senior Engineers Will Make Trip
SERIAL - CARTOON
Seventy-five senior chemical, electrical, and mechanical engineers of the School of Engineering and Architecture will make their annual inspection trip, beginning Saturday night and extending to Sunday,
A party of electrical and mechanical engineers will leave on the Santa Fe Saturday evening, going directly to Chicago, where they will spend a day sightseeing and impetuously plan a planetarium, and Field Museum.
From Chicago, they will journey to Milwaukee to visit the Allis-Chalmers company's electrical manufacturing plant, the factory of the Allen-Bradley company, and Lakeside power plant of the Milwaukee Electric Railway and Lighting company.
Will Visit Companies
The chemical engineers will leave Lawrence by bus Sunday morning at 8 o'clock for St. Louis, where they will attend the annual convention of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. In St. Louis, they will visit Monato Chemical company and Anheuser-Busch company. The party will arrive in Chicago Wednesday.
With the Morrison hotel as head quarters, the entire party of engineers will inspect the Inland Steel company at Indiana Harbor, Ind, and the Westland Electric company at Michigan. The electrical and mechanical engineers will visit the State Line power plant, which contains the largest electrical generating unit in the world; Rosenwald Industrial Arts Museum, the Marshall Field Museum, the National Broadcasting公司
The mechanical engineers alone will visit the factory of the International Harvester company; the electrical engineers the Chicago Lighting Institute, and the substations of the Commonwealth Edison公司. Chemical engineers will visit the chemical department of E. I. Leonard de Nemours and company, Liquid Chemical and the Shearwint-Williams company.
The trip, an annual one for engineering seniors, is required for graduation. Professors E. D. Hay, R. W. Rarner, and I. H. Marshall of the School of Engineering and Architecture will supervis the trip.
James B. Edison, gr, will be guest speaker at the regular meeting of the Mathematics Club tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in room 213 Administrature. His subject will be "Some Remarkable Calculations in Astronomy."
Edson Addresses Math Club
Courtesy Is Our Watchword
DICKINSON The House of Hits
NOW SHOWING
STUPENDOUS!
COLOSSAL!
SUPER-GIGANTIC!
LESLIE HOWARD
JOAN BLONDELL
JOAN BLONDELL
"STAND IN"
in
PLUS
PLUS
KEN GRIFFITH'S
Farewell Program
Also Short Treats
Also Short Treats
THE WORLD'S NEWEST DELIGHT!
THE WORLD'S
NEWEST DELIGHT!
100 MEN
and a GIRL
COMING SOON
"THIS WAY PLEASE"
K. U.'s Own BUDDY ROGERS in
With a cast that will slay you all.
STUDENT CHRISTIAN
FEDERATION
WESTMINSTER FOUNDATION
There will be a hike for all young people, Friday evening, which will leave Westminster hall at 4:30 Sunday morning at 9:45. Dr. Naismith's and Mrs. Cameron's Sunday School classes will meet.
Speakers at Forum, Sunday evening at 7:30, in Westminster hall, will be Mr. and Mrs. Chesler G. Fuson, who have been missionaries in Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Fuson will discuss "China Today," and will show some of their Chinese curios.
Y.W.C.A.
Thursday, 4:30. Fraser theater Y.M.-Y.W. Armistice Assembly. Memorial service for those who will die in the next war.
FIRESIDE FORUM
Sunday, 2 to 5. Creative leisure workshop open. Basement, Henley house.
A taffy puld and dance will be held tomorrow evening from 8 to 12 p.m. in the parish house of Plymouth Conregregual church.
Thursday, 7 to 8 p.m. Dilettantes.
"Finger-painting." Expressing music with the hands.
Friday, 4:30, Pine room: "Ology"
Commission, "What Religion Means to Me" a discussion of Kirby Page's talk.
ROGER WILLIAMS FOUNDATION
The Chorus choir and Mrs. Andre Gronicka will sing at the 11 o'clock worship service.
George J. Metcalf, assistant professor of Germanic languages and literature, will discuss "Backgrounds for Conflict in Modern Germany" at 7 p.m. Sunday, in the parish house of Plymouth Congregational church.
The Roger Williams Foundation, First Baptist church, Eighth and Kentucky Streets, announces the t subject, "Science and Religion," for the University class, Sunday at 9:45 a.m. The university, led by L y N Houldle will play
Dean R. A. Schwager will speak the subject, "Am I getting an Education?" at the Young People's 6:30 m. service. This will be preceded
Varsity Leads—Always the Best
VARSITY
Home of the joyhawks
A
Shows 2:30-7:00-9:30 Last Times Today
2 Big 10c TO ALL HITS
Herbert Marshall Simone Simon
'GIRLS'
DORMITORY'
RUTH CHATTERTON
ROTH CHATTERTON
— AND —
Leslie Howard
Merle Oberon
TOMORROW
And Saturday
2 First Run Hits!
Radio's Greatest
Singing Cowboy
SMITH BALLEW
in Zone Grey's
Roll Along,
Cowboy
STORY BY
CECILIA PARKER
STANLEY FIELDS
PRODUCTION EDITOR
BARRY ROGERS
MARK HOLLINS
"West Bound Limited"
Luke Talbot - Polly Roaks
AND
Fiery Drama and Death at Express Speed
SUNDAY
Charles Marlene
BOYER DIETRICH
"The Garden Of Allah" in Technicolor
And WILLIAM BOYD "Nopalong Rides Again"
at 6 o'clock by a social half-hour with Zeke Cole in charge.
YOUNG PEOPLE'S FORUM OF CHRISTIAN CHURCH
This Sunday evening the young people of the Christian church are having a "G.O.'s banquet in honor of Jesus Christ" and are active workers with young people in the Christian church and friends of his and of the church are welcome. The banquet will begin at 6 o'clock. Tickets are $25 and may be secured from Miss Opal Dulany in College any time during the day.
WESLEY FOUNDATION AND FIRST M. E. CHURCH
Will Interview Senior Engineers
"Whither Abad of Ust" is the subject upon which Prof. W. E. Sondelius, of the department of political science, will speak at Wesley University on Tuesday and Sunday evening. This discussion will be the second in the series begun last Sunday upon the general theme, "Religion in Action". The service will be followed by a fellowship sing beginning at 5:45 with Bailyn Winton, c. 38, in charge.
Ross I. Parker, manager of the central states department of the General Electric company, with offices in Chicago, tomorrow morning he will graduate from the school and will be graduated in January, in Marvin hall, room 115.
Mr. Parker, a University of Kansas graduate, has shown great interest in the future of University engineers. Other representatives will interview, late in the year, those students being graduated in June.
GRANADA
Shows Continuous Today from 2:30 Armistice Day Specta
NOW!
THRU SATURDAY
IT'S THE TOPS!
ROARS REIGV
SITE
JOE E. BROWN
THE FIT FOR A KING
with HELEN MACK
PAUL KELLY
— AND —
BIG STAGE SHOW
TONITE ONLY
AT 9
TUNITE ONLY AT 9
Featuring K.U.'s Cleverest Talent
Estella Emery
Warren Littlejohn
in their own arrangement of
THE BIG APPLE
— And —
GEORGE LUFERP
Juggler Extraordinary
ALSO
Truckin' at the Troc-
Hollywood's Hot Spot
SUNDAY
The true and stranger than fiction romance of the beauty whose smile made Napoleon forget his empires—and Josephine.
CHAS. BOYER
And a new and captivating GRETA GARBO
'CONQUEST'
No picture can equal it
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1937
Kansas State
To Be Strong
Football Foe
Wildcats Are Being
Groomed for Gridiron
Match With Jayhawks
Saturday Afternoon
The Kansas State football team is being grown this week in anticipation of o'ring to Lawrence Saturday and upsetting the dope by defeating the Jayhawk eleven. Kansas State was favored to win this game, which will be the famed Nebraska Cornhuskers at Lincoln last week.
The game will be the thirty-fifth annual renewal of the series, in which the Jayhwakers have emerged victorious 21 times to the Aggies 10. Three of the games were tied. The Kansas teams have amassed a total of 401 points while the Aggies have made a total of 178.
Since the formation of the Big Six in 1928, Kansas State has succeeded in holding an edge. They have won 5 games to the Jayhawks' 4, and have made 66 points to the Kansas teams' 55.
Kansas State has had a rather poor season this year, having won only three games and all of these non-conference tulls. The Aggies have lost both of their Big Six starts as the two teams have been Doble's Boston College eleven.
Poor Season for Aggies
The games marked up in the win column are victories over Marquette, 12 to 1; Creighton, 15 to 7; and Wishburn, 20 to 7. The losses are defeats by Boston College, 7 to 21; Ohio, 7 to 14; and Oklahoma, 10 to 1.
Kansas started the season off right by beating Washburn 25 to 2, then took a turn for the worse and dropped an 18 to 7 game to Wichita. They opened the Big Six conference by defeating Iowa State 14 to 6, and Oklahoma 6, 3 to 5, and then took a 16 to 0 loss from Michigan State. They then scored the impossible, getting around the Nebraska hurdle by tying the Huskers 13 to 13, to maintain a lead.
Odds Are for Kansas
The contest Saturday looms up with Kansas on the favored side. The big question is whether or not the Jayhawkers will let down after their hard game with Nebraska, which will see them face the game of the year. Kansas had pointed for the game with the Cornhuskers and a naturallet-down is feared. On the other hand, the Wildlands have a great offense, and keeping that off
Howard Cleveland, Kansas State quarterback, is probably one of the best backfield men in the conference and he will receive able assistance before he plays. He falls backhalf, and Paul Fagler, speedy halfback. Other backfield men on the Asgie squad who are almost certain to see action in the coming tilt are Spper, Speer, and Klimek, halfbacks; Balkoff, fullback, and Sims quarterback.
Little Difference in Weight
Backs on the Jayhawk squad who can advance the ball in no uncertain manner are Sultant, Replogle, Divens, Americano, and Canaday.
Neither team will enjoy a ver, large weight advantage in the backfield, but the Jawahayers have a heavier列. Ward, 198-pounder, and Riddell, 150-pounder, more, will be outweighed by the Wildcat tackles. Curiously enough, the four ends scheduled to start the game all weigh 180 pounds. They are Dave Shirk and Mike Sihland. Doe Zingerman and Doe Crumbaker of Kansas State.
The Kansas weight advantage is increased at guard because the Wildcats' Augustus Cardarelli weighs only 170 pounds. The centers, Charles Northrum and Kyle Nordrum of Kansas State beat weigh about 180 pounds.
Allen Speaks Before NYA Job-Counseling Institute
Dr. F. C. Allen, professor of physical education, spoke to NYA workers Tuesday evening at the NYA center. This is the first of three job-counseling institutes for all NYA workers.
Speaking on health hints, Dr. Al-Jen cited several hints which one should remember in applying for a job. He also discussed the subjects of the newly developed physical education at the University.
4
TONY KRUEGER
K-State Tackle
Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, e'39 Kansan Sports Editor
Two years ago on Memorial field the Kansas Jayhawkers went into the game with K-State, very much the underdogs. The Wildcats that year were featuring a human catapult named Elder, who was aby assisted by Leo Amyres, finely quarterback. However, both Elder and Amyres were odd told that by the scrappy Kansas line composed of such stalwarts as Rutherford Hayes, Wade Green, Dean Neemish, Tommy McCall, Ed Phelps, and Dick Skaer.
The Aigie star that day was Howard Cleveland, a comparatively unknown substitute for Ayers. Cleveland kept Kansas fans on edge all the way up the pitch and edge off by running all over the Jayhawkers. Can Kansas make the third year the charm, or will the swivel-hipped Aigie star repeat? If you can answer this question, your team will be toward picking Saturday's winner.
A new Kansas star was also instrumental in winning the game that day. Bill Decker, Coffeyville, quarterback, subbed for Hapgood during part of the game, and sparked a run with a triple. Triumph, Decker, who is now writing sports on a Miami, Fla., newspaper, threw the pass to Wienecoe that led to a Kansas victory. He also hold the ball for McCall's place kick, and on another occasion galley adged six yards through the entire play to have the play called back because one of his teammates was offside.
Dope means very little when these two state schools get together. K-State has come through with victories when the dope was all on the line. And now, in beaten the Angles when nobody figured it had an outside chance.
The outcome of the game this year won't be much of a surprise either way. Three weeks ago, even people who were born wild-eyed if they were have been wild-eyed if you were hold the Wildeats to a tie. Now, oddly enough, the rooters (?) who didn't think we had a prayer at the first of the season, don't like it if anyone even suggests that we might lose people are certainly funny animals.
Wes Fry was quoted in yesterday's papers as saying K-State had only an outside chance. But don't let Fry fool you. What he really meant was that he is surprised at what K.U. has been doing, and probably won't be looking for an easy game.
Yearlings Show Promise
Philadelphia, Nov. 10. —(UP) — Some sort of long distance bank record may be claimed by T. S. Eatew, a U. S. Marina. Eatew opened an account at the Northwestern National Bank a year ago. Later he was sent to China, and has sent his deposits from Peiping.
Bank Deposits Cross Ocean
Several New Freshmen Will Strengthen Varsity For Next Year's Team
Toledo, Nov. 10—(UP) —The commercial loans of Toledo banks show a gain of about 17 percent in the last 12 months. Bankers look for continued gain in deposits and also in buying during the final month of this year.
Toledo Bank Loans Up
Outstanding material on the freshman squad this year shows promising prospects for future grid machines.
The yearlings have come a long way since their 32 to 0 defeat at the hands of the varsity squad only a few weeks ago, and they started. Each night the frosr mimage with the varsity reserves on about even terms. When the yearlings have had a shot at the first, they have made a good showing.
Three of the men who are doing fine work on the freshman team played together in high school at Pittsburg. The trifo consists of Kenden Nire, center; Jack Morgan, hallback, and Al Simonec, fullback. Other members of the squad who played at Pitt include Pierce, Don Kaul, Ralph Miller, Ed Hall, Steve Renko, Frank Bukaty, and Bill Bunsen.
The freshman squad was taken to Lincoln on the special train to see the Kansas-Nebraska game, and witnessed the Jayhawk team put on one of its best exhibitions of football in the last ten years.
Women's Intramurals Helen Wilkerson
IRELAND
--less than a year to run, would make a nationwide address by radio at 8 p.m.
The University women's hockey, team drove to Topeka yesterday to face the St. Louis portation was furnished by members of the team having cars. The Uni-
tion lost to Bottom, Lattner, Willcuta,
Cleave, Bottom, Lattner, Willcuta,
ackman, Nelson, Anderson, Baker,
King, Rowland, Bell, Moll, Paden,
Grizedal, Eskinon, McDermott.
The intramural volleyball series ended yesterday with the NIT and Corbin hall. The inter-class games being played are 7 o'clock with two games, freshmen vs. juniors, and a tournament will be continued next Monday when the freshmen will play the seniors, and the sophomores will play
The second round in the intramural golf tournament is posted. These games are to be played off and the scores are to be turned in by Nov 14. Aaron Stansbury, vs. B. Stephenson, Kappa, vs. K. Stephenson, Phi, Pi, or J. Wyatt, Kappa; Waring, Kappa, vs. Coolenhurst; Duffy, Theria, Theta, vs. Erskine, Corbin
Handball
The next round of the handball games has been announced, and Andy Foster will be playing Nov. 13. These players are: Barckman, Corbin, or Wilse, Erskine, Corbin; Wisler, Ind., or Cannon, Alpha Gam; Wilson, Ind., or Cannon, Alpha Gam; and Gels, Kappa, vs. Willecuts, Corbin. The results of these games are being played off.
Six students of the School of Fine Arts will present a recital this afternoon in the auditorium in central Administration building.
The Fine Arts office has received a letter of interest to all Fine Arts students, that will be read at the recital this afternoon.
Fine Arts Students Will Present Recital
The program that will be played by the students this afternoon will include four piano numbers, one violin and one voice number. The piano numbers are: " Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring," by Bash-Hess, played by D. Braun; " E B Minor," by MacDowell, played by Hazel Haynes, fa 41'; " A Wattete Paysage" by Godowsky, and "Ritual Fire Dance" by De Fella, played by William Zimmerman, fa 38'; "Caprice Espagol" by Mozkowski, played by Marion Reed, fa 41'. The violin number will be " Concerto G Miner", by Bruch, played by Homer Dodge from " The Barber of Seville" from " The Barber of Seville" by Rossini, will be sung by Charles D Neiswender, b'38.
Dr. Loren Eisley, assistant professor of sociology, will speak on "The Origins of Living Man" at a night of Phi Sigma tomorrow night.
BOB BRIGGS K-State Fullback
The meeting will be held in room 206 Snow hall at 7.15 p.m. It will be open to the public and all interested are urged to attend.
Eiscley Addresses Phi Sigma
Organize Intramural Group
With the three men by Prof. E. R. Elbel yesterday, and the addition of three men selected previously by the Panhellenic Council, the newly-formed Intramural Council was organized yesterday.
Men selected for the council were:
Stanley Bloom, Theta Tau; John Hocevar, Delta Upsilon; Keith Swainheart, SIGma Cis; John Ziegel-Wiener, Alpha Spiasi; Bert Berrum and Howard Traitani, no fraternity men.
A short meeting of the newly-formed council will be held at 7:15 o'clock this evening. Plans for intramural basketball will be dis
The object of the council is to act as a co-ordinating group for intramural activities, a need that Ebel, and others of intramural athletics, had long felt.
In memorial of those to be killed in the next war, the University of Kansas Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. will assemble for an Armistice Day meeting this afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Clarser theater.
The invocation and principal address will be delivered by the Rev. Carter Harrison, of the Lawrence Episcopal Church. Dramatization of the fates of the conscientious objector and the soldier in the trenches was performed by Aaron Loney, assistant instructor in English, and Richard McCann. c'40.
'Y' Groups To Hold Armistice Day Meeting
A quartet, directed by LeRoy Fugitt, c39, will sing "Who Goes There" by Thomas Curtis Clark. A musician, David Miles, by Miss Mary Jane梁霞, fa38.
Brussels, Nov. 10. — (UP) The leading powers of the Far-Eastern peace conference, including the United States, are considering a plan to provide China with arms and munitions on credit if Japan refuses to enter into peace negotiations, it was reliably learned tonight.
With the touch football-schedule almost completed, eight teams were selected yesterday to compete in the play-offs that will begin this afternoon to decide the intramural champion.
Men's Intramurals
Peace Conference Considers Chinese Plan
The plan, still in an embryonic state pending Japan's formal reply to the conference's invitation for her to discuss an armament, was the sub-council's major deliberations among delegates of the United Nations, Great Britain and France.
Division I and III will be represented by three teams each, while division II will have two teams in the play-offs. Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Theta, teams that tied for first place, and Kappa Alpha, runner-up, will battle to uphold the prestige of division I.
The Phi Pa's and Kappa Sig's will be compared with the Chi Psi, Pi, the team that compiled the best winning average during the course of the season. The Alph's and Delta Tau Deltas' will be compared.
SEE! HEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
Beta Theta Pi and Phi Kappa Psi, each with a record of five games won and one game tied, will be the winner of the trumanral championship. Stiff competition will be offered by the Phi Gams' Phi Delt's, and Sig Alph's. The spirit is expected to win the championship. Very little difference will be detected between the offensive teams or merits of the respective teams.
None of the leading powers has yet found itself ready to accept the proposal to provide China with war supplies on credit, but it appeared certain the United States, Britain, France, Russia, and several other powers would give it more thorough consideration if Tokyo persists in rejecting the Brussels peace overtures.
Following are the drawings, Phi Kappa vs. Pi Kappa.
silation : Pi Kappa. Alpha vs. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Kappa Psi vs.
Kappa Sigma. Delta Tau Delta vs.
The rest of the touch football field is occupied by Sigma Ph Epsilon "E" on field one; field two, Sigma Nu vs. Sigma Ph Epsilon; field one, Digit Phe! Dieh
Two games are scheduled to begin the play-offs today. They are: Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Gi Gamma Delta Beta vs. Beta Delta Pi on field four. Both games are scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Tomorrow's schedule sees Phi Delta the game up against Signa Ai Avda. The Gi Kappa Paila engaging Kappa Sigma.
A tennis match between Beta
and Alpha Tau Omega is
scheduled for January 5.
Phi Gamma Delta are scheduled for
a handball match, horses
and golf. Signs will be up.
Epsilon vs. Delta Tau Delta; Acacia vs. Kappa Sigma.
The touch football standings follow:
Division I (final) W T L P.et.
Phi Delta Theta 7 0 1.833
Phi Gamma Delta 5 0 1.833
Pi Kappa Alpha 1 0 1.50
Phi Chi 2 2 1.50
Phi Chi 2 2 1.50
Hell Hounds 1 1 4.250
Y.M.C.A. 1 1 4.250
Division II W T L Pct.
Phi Kappa Psi 4 2 0 .833
Kappa Sigma 4 2 0 .833
Acec 3 1 0 .883
Sigma Chi 3 1 0 .583
Delta Chi 2 2 2 .500
Phi Nu Epsilon 2 1 0 .983
Phi Nu Phi 0 2 0 .983
Six-man division W T L Pct.
430 engineers 5 0 1 833
Berkshire 5 0 1 760
Kappa Eta Kappa 3 1 1 700
Whitakers 2 0 3 400
Six Housesmen 1 0 2 333
Red Rock 1 0 2 333
Westminsters 1 0 5 983
Division II (final) W 1 T L P. tic1
Beta Theta P. 1 0 0 .916
Sigma Alpha Iota 4 1 0 .833
Alpha Delta 4 1 0 .833
Delta Upsilon 1 0 3 .500
Alpha Tau Omega 1 1 4 .250
Alpha Tau Epsilon 1 1 4 .250
Hell's Angels 0 1 0 .000
**"B" Division** W T L P.ct.
Beta Theta Pti . 5 0 1.000
Sigma Phi Epsilon 4 0 1.000
Sigma Phi Alpha 3 0 1.000
Pi Kappa Psi 3 1 0.750
Pi Kappa Chi 3 1 0.750
Sigma Chi 2 0 3.400
Pi Kappa Alpha 1 0 3.250
Sigma Nu 1 0 4.200
Kappa Mu 1 0 4.200
Y.M.C.A. 0 0 6.000
Virtual Dictatorship Is Established in Brazil
The announcement was made by Minister of Justice Francisco Campos, who announced that the president, whose second term of office has
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Nov. 10- (UP) Virtual dictatorship was established in Brazil today when Pres. Gettar Zulgos ordered dissolution of the federal senate and chamber of deputies as well as all state legislatures and municipal councils, and promulgated a new constitution.
Foreign Minister Pimentel Bran-dao told the United Press there would be no change in Brazilian foreign policies. He also declared that reports that this country may adhere to the German-Japanese-Italian anti-communist pact were "without foundation."
Read the account of the Kansas- State game in Sunday's paper.
Here's Socks that are socks---
MUSICIAN'S TREASURES
INTERWOVEN
6x3 Rib
That gives you a tight fit over the ankle. Extra solo and toe for long wear. Correct style—yes sit!
Green
Tan
Blue
Black
Marson
55c pair
Try a pair of 6x3 rib,
You'll like 'em
CARLS
GOOD CLOTHES
Join the Well-Informed University Crowd!
Read the DAILY KANSAN Regularly for Authentic Campus News. . .
- United Press
- Collegiate Digest
- "On the Shin"
- Campus News
- Student Editorials
- Chancellor's Bulletin
- "The Roving Reporter"
- Informative Advertising
You need your own daily copy of the official student newspaper. Come to the Kansan Business office, east of Watson Library, or call K.U. 66 and ask that your paper be started.
The University Daily Kansan
(Delivered five mornings each week by carrier)
Only $2.75 for the remainder of the 1937-38 school year
---
Let's "BEAT THE AGGIES" — Then CELEBRATE at the
"AGGIE VARSITY DANCE
"Louie" KUHN'S BAND
SATURDAY. November 13
---
Stag and Dates — 75c
---
Z229
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
Editors To Instruct Today
State Newspaper Me en
Will Give First-Hand
Instruction; Professors
Take Back Seat
Students in the department of journalism will receive first-hand instruction in the art of running a newspaper today, when editors of Kansas newspapers replace the regular faculty.
Several prominent editors here attending the annual newspaper roundtables sponsored by the University, have accepted invitations to teach the classes in journalism for the day.
Faculty Retires
a faculty members will take back seats while the men who are daily confronted with the problems of publishing a Kansas newspaper give their views. The faculty feels that the actual first-hand information about the issues close insight into the problems of publishing a newspaper.
Mr. McLaughlin will lecture before the 9:30 reporting and 10:30 advertising classes. Mr. Shore will help teach the 1:30 feature writing class and Mr. Cain the 10:30 advertising copy class.
Three late additions to the "faculty" are Drew McLaughlin, publisher of the Miami County Republic, Paola; Chester Shore of the Augusta Gazette; and J. Byron Cair of the Belle Plaine News.
Today's Schedule
8:30- Reporting, room 102, E. 4 Briles, Stafford Court; Walt Neibarger, Tonganoxie Mirror; editorial II, room 107, W. T. Bell, Holton Recorder, and Asa F. Converse, Wellsville Globe.
The schedule of classes and the faculty is as follows:
9:30-Reporting, room 107, Mr. Beck and Drew McLaughlin, Miami County Republican. History of American journalism, room 102, (subject for the day, "Kansas Editors") F. Valentine Cleray. F. L. Valentine Clay Center Times.
1:20 - Feature writing, Mr. Converse,
Mr. Henneyen, and Chester
Shore, Augusta Daily Gazette.
11:30- Editorial 1, room 107, Mr Hammond, Mr. Heinemway, and Mr Valentine. Newspaper administration, room 4, Mr Cain and Mr Fick
10-30- Advertising, room 102. H. A. Hammond, Caldwell Daily Messenger; R. G. Hemmenway, Minneapolis Messenger; and M. McLaughlin, advertising copy, room 4. Mr. Briiles and J. Byron Cain, Beiler Reporting, Supporting Earl Fickett, Posthush Gazette, and Mr. Neibarmer.
on the SHIN by Don Hays
★★★
The Theta's, Kappa's, and Gamma Phi's are taking a back seat in the matter of attendance at the hour dances, as can easily be seen most any Sigma Kappa—A. O. Pi hour dance night. Maybe the Theta's Kappa's, and Gamma Phi's lay too much stress on being a good Dancer.
Speaking of rallies, there's one girl rally every afternoon at the varsity practice. If the Kappa's Theta's, Gamma Phi's, Alpha Chi's Omega's, A. O. Pi's, A. D. Pis and Sigma Kappa's don't get busy someone is going to beat someone out of the Football Queen.
It is time the Shin column declared an Anti-Coats-Wear. Since this little lassie has been the Campus "How are you, Sport?" pepper-upper, we feel that we should desire for a boy of reading about the Pi Phi's. How about the bouquets Theta's?
Remember that old piece, "I Wonder Who She Kissing Her Now?" -Page 74. Rock Noble, erstwhile basketball player, for his little soulmate has been seen laterly with a Topicks shirt and a baby headband on her little playmate for sometime. Shinster wonders if Noble works too hard in the city?
Foreign Students Do Outstanding Work In Extension School
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937
Two extension students, who are gleaning their knowledge through the bureau of correspondence, are the instructors of Ruth of Bethi, Nikas, Belgian Congo.
Their father, Dr. C. L. Trout, who is located with the African Inland Mission as a medical missionary, desired that his children continue their education after finishing a high school course at the Rethi Academy in Kenya and remain in the University Extension bureau. This was in December of 1935.
After finishing one course in English Literature 10, and beginning a course in rhetoric 1, they became interested in science, and took up the study of ontology. Letters showing a keen interest in this course resulted, and specimens of various insects were sent to the Congo were sent here to the department of ontology. Now they are searching for unusual specimens of insects unknown to North America. Since the mail between the United States and the Congo takes five to six weeks to be delivered, the five-hour course was finished in two weeks, and their work is continuing with their rhetoric and after this year's work will finish the course in ontology.
They are now attending school in Jatesburg, S. C.
Men 'Fade Out'
As Female Prom
Approaches
The opportunity to step out minus the usual impediments of teresu-pao roar entertainment, the male escort, will present itself to Campus co-ed tonight, when the annual Puff Pant Prom will be held in the hallroom of the Memorial Union building. Only males made premiere on the premises will be Bryan and his orchestra which will furnish the necessary rhythm.
Anything goes for costumes. Part of the women, it is expected, will borrow their "genmulman" friend's best suit and be the masculine escorts for those who choose to remain feminine.
Prizes will be awarded to the best dressed couple, the best dressed "man," and the best dressed woman. There will also be a prize for the couple winning the dancing contest. Dancing will begin at 8 p.m., and continue until 11, and that hour, all loyal University women will abandon the Hill males for "dancing for dancing's sake."
The W.S.G.A. is sponsoring the Puff Prom Prom for all University women. Tickets may be secured at the gymnasium for 72 cents a couple.
Fifteen women were initiated into Pi Lambda Theta, honorary educational fraternity, yesterday evening "The Ceremony for Conferring the Key" was held at 5:20 o'clock at Evans Hearth.
Pi Lambda Theta Initiates Fifteen
Those senior women 'initiated were Dorothy Alexander, Margaret Babcock, Dorothy Caldwell, Alice Coolbaugh, Rosemary Delap, Mary Elizabeth Dunlap, Kathryn Goldsmith, Robert Hackman, Thelma Page,莉莉 Rehg, Lacise Roach, Gerald Den Sutton, Dorothy Trekell, Elizabeth Wiggins, and Dorothe Weingartner.
The annual Founder's day banquet followed the initiation service. Mrs T, D. Prentice, president of the Lawrence League of Women Voters spoke on "The Relation of A Woman to Her Community."
Miss Ruth Lichen was in charge orrangements for the banquet.
Prof. Raymond Lawrence of the department of journalism spoke at a meeting of Quill Club last night on "The Magazine called Transition." While Professor Lawrence was in France, this magazine was published by a group of exiles, chiefly American newspaper men.
FRESHMAN COMMISSION
Reviews Book for Journal
Lawrence Speaks to Quill Clut
The freshman commission of the Y.W.C.A. will meet Monday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock at Henley house. The commission is headed by President — Jean Robertson, president.
Prof. Seba Eldridge of the department of sociology, reviewed Charles Edward Merriam's "The Role of Politics in Social Change" for a recent number of the Journal of Social Philosophy.
Rooters To Use Cards at Game
Actions will speak louder than words at the Kansas State-Kansas football game Saturday when the University cheering section waves the colors of both schools. This custom, which is observed at most universities, has not been followed here for a number of years.
The display will be given between halves by the students who sit in the first 17 rows across the regular side
Cheerleaders point out that it will be absolutely essential that all students in the section which participates, remain in their seats between halves if the display is to be a success.
R.O.T.C.
Unit Lauded
Marching of Military
Students in Armistice
Parade Praised
Marching in parade for the first time this fall, the R.O.T.C. unit of the University participated yesterday afternoon in the Armistice Day parade downtown which was a feature of the annual reunion of the Thirty-fifth division.
The University R.O.T.C. unit elicited very favorable comment from the officials and veterans on the reviewing stand, remocked officers of the department of military science who were in the stand.
The University band was another part of the parade, which also included other bands and several National Guard units.
The attractiveness of the University unit's uniform, which was especially designed for this unit, also brought favorable comment.
"The performance of the unit was commendable in spite of the fact that more than half the men were recruits and had not shouldered a rife in drill periods until two weeks ago," the unit infantry staff member commented.
Two platoons of the R.O.T.C. caves a honor escort during ceremonies in which the colors of the Thirty-fifth division of World War days were transferred to the National board units which make up the present - day Thirty-fifth division. The ceremonies were held between November 19 and Haskell football game at the Haskell stadium. The Thirty-fifth division crashed the Hindeburg line north of Verdun, Sept. 26, 1918, with heavy loss of life. The drive was part of the Menase-Argonne offensive.
Laws Offer Shrine Exhibit
A shrine, including the official reproduction of the Constitution of the United States of America, Declaration of Independence, and photographs of the signers of the Constitution has been placed in the law library.
"The greatest beauty of the shrine, however," said Prof. James B. Smith, of the law faculty, "is that which it symbolizes in the great precepts of free people under a representative 'emocracy.'"
A program of celebration was designed to extend over the period represented by the interval between the adoption of the Constitution and the inauguration of President Washington.
Hutchinson, Kan., Nov. 11—(UP)
It cost Reno county $6.90 to hold its first auction of confiscated cigarettes seized in raids. Proceeds netted $5.97 the cigarettes selling to highest bidder in a pack. The cigarettes were taken because they did not bear state tax stamps.
In the last session of congress, joint action was taken to celebrate the adoption of the Constitution and the creation of the present system of government. To carry forward the program, a joint committee known as the National Commission for Civil Criminal Commission was formed. That program was put into effect through an official proclamation of the President of the United States.
Loses in Cigarette Auction
For many years the original document was kept in the custody of the secretary of state and not available for public inspection. Recently it been pieced on exhibition in a marble shrine in the Library of Congress.
Everyone is invited to visit the law library and observe this official shrine to the Constitution.
The cards will be tacked to the seats with small instruction cards. These are to be held until the half. At signals from the cheerleaders, such as "Ready," 1., 2., 3., raise; students are to hold the cards up. When they say "1., 2., 3., down," they are to be lowered out of sight.
sections. Students are asked to cooperate with cheerleaders to make the display a success.
First blue and white cards will be held up to the form 'the K.S.C.' This will be followed by a gigantic Jeyhach to represent K.U. Next the word "Wildcat" will be spelled out with cards.
Pick Five New Debaters
Members of the squad will meet from 7 until 8 o'clock Tuesday evening. Nov. 16, in the Little theater in Green hall.
Additional Mem bers
To Squad Chosen at
Truouts Last Night
Other members of the debate squad are James Molyb, 138; Martin Maloney, gr; Paul Wilbert, 138; Donald Voorhees, c; 138; John Lintern, c; 139; Omer Voss, 139; Earl Stuckenburger, c; 139; Umi Fairchild, b; bunel Richard Jones, 128; Elden Smith, 128; Robert Lange, 128; Tin Hammen, 128; Bob McKay, c; 140; Irving Kass, c; 140; Philip Raup, c; and Dean Moorehead, c.
Hail ye! Hail ye! The Puff-Pant Prom isn't the only no-men-allowed "get-up". Today's Kansan, be as it is, boasts of an all-female staff. While the men are convening at the Sigma Delta Chi conference at Topeka, the work has to be done—and just as man has turned to woman for help since "way back when," so has the men's journ-alism fraternity called upon them. They are politicalists for the publication of today's paper. Thus, the staff positions are substituted as follows—for the "Kansan must go on."
Feminine Staff Puts Out Kansan
Editor-in-chief Grace Valentine Associate Editor: Maxine Fisher
Managing Editor Jane Flood
Campus Editors Ruth Timpe and
Elizabeth Carruth
News Editor Elizabeth Deming
Society Editor Louise Peyton
Senior Vice President
Telegraph Editor Bob Caskee
Makeup Editor Laura Banks
Rewrite Editor Agnes Skolo
News Staff
The creative leisure commission of the W.Y.C.A. will meet this Sunday, from 3 to 5 p.m., at Henley house. Arvid Jacobson, of the department of design, will give instructions in linoleum block cutting for Christmas cards, and will also help with sketching and drawing. Linoleum blocks will be provided at Henley house for all interested in this work. Both men and women students are invited to attend.
Y.W.C.A. Creative Leisure Will More Sunday at Henley
NUMBER 47
Authorized Parties
Delta Tau Delta, Country Club 12 p.m.
Aggie Varsity Dance, Memoria Union ballroom, 12 p.m.
Puff-Pant Prom, Memorial Union ballroom, 11 p.m.
Kappa Sigma, dance, chapter house 12 n.m.
Saturday, Nov. 13 Limited Date
Friday, Nov. 12
Limited Date
JEWTHMECUARI Adviser to Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs.
LIBRARY TO CLOSE
The University library will close Saturday, Nov. 12, at 12 o'clock, in order that the student assistants may witness the football game with Kansas State College.
C. M. BAKER.
Aggie Game Viewed As Toss-up
Director of libraries.
Big Six Record Shows Kansas as the Favorites; However, an Upset Is Possible
As game time nears for the annual Kansas football classic, Kansas versus Kansas State, the content assent and more the aspect of a sport of
Kansas, in view of its conference record, might be expected to rank as the favorite, but results of games of past years in this ancient rivalry remind the Jayhawks only too fearless: are the things most to be expected.
Bosilevac Ready To Play
The Jayahawks have won two games and tied one in their three conference starts, while Kansas State beat them 7-0 and lost both. This does not alter
The probable starting lineups
KANAS S
**KANAS S STATE**
Lt LT LT Leu Leu Leu
Officials. E. C. Quogley, St. Marys,提军;
Ted O'Mallany, Nassau, umpatee;
John Walderd, Missouri, field judge. E. J.
Imperia, Tampa Bay, lead assessor.
the fact, however, that the Wildcats are in a good spot to turn in a victory, having coached through their game with Washburn last week, but not enough to win everything they had into their 13-13 tie with Nebraska. The Jahyawk coaches fear a let-down Saturday, although there is no overconfidence ahead.
Injuries will keep Forrest Hard-ace, senior left end, on the bench, but the rest of the squad is in good shape. Fibros Boslieva, regular左肋 tackle, will be ready to play part of t.h.e game, although Dh Raule, sophomore tackle, will probably start in his place.
Brilliant Game Expected
A brilliant game, which will give the customers more than their money's worth, is expected Saturday. Both teams have failed to crack kick clocks.
accurate passers, and crack kickers. Up until last Saturday Kansas State was thought to have a better chance of the showing Kansas made against the powerful Cornhill muscle, sent Jay-hawk stock booming. Kansas backs ripped and tore through the N-e-braska forward wall with abandon and combined with the balls-eye passing of Max Replogle to score more points on the Huskers that Minnesota, Indiana, or Oklahoma has been able to, previously this year.
Kansas places its hopes for victory
Saturday mainly on the ball carry-
ing of Mitttos Sullivan, Max Replogle
and Clarence Doughan; the passing
of Replegate and Layman Divens, and
a comeback in offensive play has sparkled all season.
Cleveland Wildcats' Hope
Kansas State is counting in the brilliant play of triple-treater Howard Cleveland to raise have with the Joyhawk defense. Cleveland is probably the best ball carrier in the league, difference and it also an accurate passer.
Backing him up will be E lmer Hackey, star sophomore fullback of the Wildcats, who has won quite a reputation for himself already. Hackey is a hard plunging fullback which should make for a great hit. Hackey, a D douglas, the Jayhaws' star full-back.
Six Senior Aggies
Kansas State will have the edge with experience, boasting six seniors in its first string lineup as compared to three among the Jayhawk regulars. Lewis Ward, tackle, George Stapleton, guard, and Clarence Douglass, fullback, will be the three Kansas seniors.
Wildcat seniors are Ray Ellis, end,
Tony Kruger, tackle; Augustus
Cardelli, guard; Doe Beeler, guard;
Erik McNamara, backback, and
Ed. Kilnuck, half back.
In previous games this year, Kansas State has started its second team backfield and then run in its first stringers before long. It is expected that this will be done again Saturday.
Petrified Forest, Ariz., Nov. 11—(UP) A total of 105,396 persons visited the Petrified Forest national monument in the last 11 months.
American Art
American Art Is Displayed in Museum
The department of drawing and painting is exhibiting in the north gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum, a collection of forty original drawings by American painters. The exposition runs from April 20 through the American Federation of Arts.
The collection presents a survey of the development of American artists over a century and a half, which of interest in giving the lower of pictures an insight into their Methods, since drawing is fundamental, not only in painting and sculpture, but in all design and handcrafts. Here can be seen the often rough beginnings of the pictorial idea which from the hardy sketch or more meticulous detail may reveal many changes until it reaches completion upon the painter's canvas. A study of such work as this can lead eventually to a proper appreciation of the painted picture.
The collection will be on view in the museum until the end of this month.
The exhibition comprises work by thirty-five American-born painters from the eighteenth century down to the present day. Among the artists represented are Benjamin West, who was court painter to George III, and succeeded Sir Joshua Reynolds as president of the Royal Academy; Thomas Sally; William Morris Hunt; Whistler; Winlow Holmer. E. A Abyb; Kenyon Cox; Joseph Pennell; Gearbone Bellows; and Jacob Epstein
Economists Hold Session
College Teachers H a v v Conference: Sponsored By University
Teachers of economics and business in Kansas colleges and junior colleges, will begin today at 3:30 p.m. a two-day conference sponsored by the University. This will be the group's thirteenth annual meeting
Conferences on labor and accounting will be the features this afternoon. Prof. H. W. Guest of Baker University will preside at the labor conference. Prof. Vane Smith of the University of Wichita at those on accounting
Featured at the labor session will be a talk on the "Present Position of Organized Labor," by Prof. Domenica Gagliardi of the University department of economies. William A Murphy, director of the Kansas Unemployment Compensation division will also speak.
The group on labor will meet in room 213 in the Administration building, and that on accounting in room 210 of the same building.
The Saturday morning session will begin at 9:30 o'clock, with E. R. McCarthy of Kansas State College at Hays presided. Dean C. T. Cithern of the School of Business Administration of the University of Arkansas will present a paper on "The U.S. Treasury's Position."
Tonight at 7 o'clock, a complimentary dinner for the visitors will be given at the cafeteria in the Memorial Union building.
Red Cross Fund Shows Progress
"The Campus drive for Red Cross funds is progressing nicely," Eliah Cole, c'40, one of the directors of the solicitation, said last night. Cole, who, with Dorothy Fink, c'38, in charge of the drive on the Campus, has been tasked to ensure suits have been obtained yet because no check has been made.
The use of tables in the Administration building, which were set up for contributions from the men students, has been discontinued. Plans to replace them have not yet been made. Miss Fink is making a personal solicitation of all women outside of the organized houses.
All students who can afford it are being urged to pay the minimum membership fee of the Red Cross, which is $1. However, all contributions are welcomed and will help to carry on the work of the organization, say those in charge of the solicitation.
RALLY
There will be a rally this morning at 12:30 in front of Robinson gymnasium. Don Voorhees, preface the M.S.C. and George Staplen, captain of Saturday's game, will give short talks. Jay Gage will talk and K.K. Gage will hand to help cheer. Students are urged to take the time between classes to do their share of cheering.
Journalists Open Meeting At Topeka
Two Hundred Delegates Attend Annual Sessions Opening With Smoker Last Night
The program for today calls for a business session this morning, an address of welcome by Mayor Herbert G. Barrett of Topeka, and a response by Tully Nettleton, president of Delta Chi. Reports of committees give group meetings fill the remainder of the day. Dinner at Jayhawker
Two hundred delegates attending the Sigon Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, convention in Topeka, opened the annual meeting with a smoker in the clubrooms of the Tooneka Press Club last night.
A complimentary dinner for the convention delegates is to be given this evening on the roof garden of the Jayhawk hotel by the Topena Annelina and Topena State Journal. An executive council meeting follows.
Faculty members of the department of journalism will attend the convention 'to day, as Kansas editors meeting here fill their teaching positions for the day. Members of the department will go to Topeka this afternoon.
Tomorrow the delegates come to Lawrence to meet with the Kansas editors. Chancellor Lindley will welcome the group. Hugh Ballie, president of the United Press and national honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi, will address the combined conventions.
Guests Attend Game
The University will be host to the delegates and where registered at the convention will go, guests at the conference football game Saturday afternoon.
Tonorrhea night the convention returns to Topaka for the convention banquet at the Jaya wk hotel. Henry J. Allen editor on the Topaka State Journal, and former United States senator; Irving Brant, editorial writer for the St. Louis Star-Times; and Mr. Ballillite be the speakers.
The convention adjourns Sunday afternoon with a meeting of the newly-elected members of the executive council.
Sour Owl
Out Today
A display of legs in the light of true art will be one of the main features of the Sour Owl as it is distributed by social fraternity freshmen baby, according to a republican. The Sour Owl office last evening
An entire page of pictures of legs of both sexes will make its appearance in the pages of the enlarged magazine. Pictures are featured in this issue because it is the opinion of the staff that the readers of the magazine would much rather "look" than read
In this issue of the Owl, the reader will find much space devoted to scandal around the Hill. According to the magazine, there has been more scandal in for this one issue than there ha' been for the last three. Every fraternity and sorority represented in the scandal pages.
Gene Lloyd has invented for his science page a new gadget which should be conceptual to all students who migrate to out-of-town football and a feature of this device will also be a feature of the issue coming out today.
This issue will be enlarged due to the fact that the financial success of the organization has been sufficient to merit the addition of several more pages to the magazine. Another significant addition is the Owl; it is the original work of J. T. Keper, fa'39, Dick Harwood, fa'39, and Carol Johnson, fa'38.
Beer Choose Right Deadline
Frankfort, N. Y. Nov. 10—(UP)—Three deer were reported placially grazing with cattle in Frank W. Hausner's pasture while just a few miles to the deer hunters' school through the woods. The deer were safe, however, because Frankfort on the south bank of the Mohawk river and deer hunting is prohibited south of the river.
WEATHER
Kansas: Increasing cloudiness;
somewhat colder in northeast portion
Friday; Saturday generally fair
colder.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1937
Comment
What Are We-- Men or Monsters?
Paint on "Unele Jimmy" Green . . . Paint on the Kansas State campus . . . rumored extensive damage to Lincoln hostelries . . . $78 worth of damage to a local theater. . . It reads like the record of an invading army or a group of gorillas at large. But strangely enough, most of it can be traced to the student body of the University or to persons operating under those colors.
The latest, of course, is the visit to the Kansas State campus with the ensuing difficulties, involving quite an expense to the University and possible serious penalties for those participating. Some mellowing effect might be cast on the case by the consideration that student enthusiasm has long been repressed by the Kansas athletic fortunes, but that does not give respectability to vandalism and rowdyism. Furthermore, the student body is bound by action of the Men's Student Council in a concoction with the governing body at Kansas State to refrain from all such depreditions. The treaty binds the council to severe action against the offenders.
Out of respect for the council, the University, and for themselves as individuals, students must refrain from such assinine escapades.
Also among the recent blots on the department record of the student body is the episode in which a local theater was damaged to the extent of $78 while offering a free show to students in celebration of the tie with Nebraska. It is possible that insurance will cover the losses. However, if it does not, the money will have to come from University sources.
In spite of this the downtown show has offered another free show if the Jayhawks beat Kansas State. The Men's Student Council, facing a possible damage bill for the last free show, has appealed to the Ku Ku's, the "K" men and to the Lawrence police force for aid in keeping the crowd within bounds.
It would seems, however, that students in the state University would prefer to be restrained by their own conception of such a student's proper conduct, their own respect for property, and, to a slight degree, by the possibility that free shows and rally opportunities will not long be offered if individual and collective actions continue to be as they have been.
The Women Need A New Gymnasium
Back in the days when calisthenics and dumbbells were the only physical education opportunities open to women, Robinson gymnasium was large enough. Classes of 80 or 90 could be accommodated easily. But today, with specialized elective courses offering a greater variety of subjects, classes are small and require more space. Intramural activity, which have grown from four teams in 1920 to 16 or 18 in 1937, need still more room. Games must now be played at night because desirable daytime hours are taken.
The swimming pool is shared by men and women. The men's varsity of course takes precedence, so the Quack Club meets at night with great inconvenience to its members.
For these reasons, the women are asking for a new women's gymnasium. If only indoor space were equal to the excellent equipment and outdoor layout, the situation would be ideal. Winter activities are curtailed because of this lack in indoor facilities.
The new women's gymnasium would have adequate rest rooms for lounging and studying. There would be recreation rooms for bowling and ping pong. A dance studio hung with curtains and radiating the correct atmosphere, bocker space to take the place of the baskets now in use, and enough showers to eliminate waiting; these are the requirements.
Will they get them?
Despicable or Heroic,
MacDonald Was Great
"James Ramsey ("Judas Iscariot") MacDonald, the creator and destroyer of the labor party, despicable or heroic as you choose, a man of Olympian or Stygian loneliness. .." This is the description with which John Gunner starts his chapter on the great Englishman.
In contrast there is the story about MacDonald's crossing the Atlantic to visit this country. The day before landing he wired the foreign office in England to find out what to wear when he disembarked from the liner to meet the critical eyes of America. The foreign office wired back that he should not wear leather leggings, that a top hat and morning coat would serve the occasion.
From these two extremes you may deduce the fact that MacDonald was truly a great man to be both so big and so helpless. In any light
you look at him he was great. His rise in public and private life parallels that of our greatest self-made Americans. He was born in poverty, quit school at 14 to earn a living for himself and dependents. He was a paistic, a liar, a politician, a social climber, and a diplomat. He hated the Nazi movement because Hitler had executed two beautiful women spies. He was lonely after the death of his wife and in his later years thought mostly of his own comfort and convenience, much to the consternation of the governmental officials.
He retired from public life after the Golden Jubilee of the ruling family. His retirement came partly because of ill health and a most thorough defeat at the hands of English voters. An asset to the world, a hangover in England, was this very human man who died at the age of 71.
The women who introduced Wally to Simpson will soon become Simpson's wife. . . Gertrude is now wondering who introduced her to Edward. . .
Campus Opinion
Page the S.P.C.A.
The manifestations of school spirit at KU, have been becoming less barbarous the last few years. The introduction of animal acts into Hobe Day is an exception to this trend.
It is to be hoped that it is merely a rumor that some of the mice entered into the race last year were in jetted with adrenaline to make them more excitable i.e. they could go faster than the rumor that after the duck race students attempted b throwing stones to drive hose fowl remaining in th pond, to shore. The missiles did not always omit wounding the birds. It was hit during the writer's brief stay upon the scene. It was his privilege to witness the highly eligible specie of a duck paddling feely through the water while jumping from one neckade a brilliant stride across its white feathers.
Cruelty to animals is not a very civilized form of behavior that us eliminate in our programs or the student body. Thompson
Official University Bulletin
Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceding
regular lunch at the University on Tuesday at
1 a.m. on Sunday for lunch.
Vol. 35 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937 No.47
CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION The Creative Leisure will meet Saturday afternoon, Nov. 14, from 3 until 5 cclock at Henley house. Mr.avid Jacobson, of the department of design, will help anyone interested in starting limelime blocks for Christmas and other activities—Ruth Kengel, Charles Coolbaugh.
ESTES RALLY: The Washerburn Estes group has invited those from KU. interested in Estes to a rally at Washerburn on Saturday, Nov. 13, at 6 p.m. Cars will be displayed. Carry items for the rally, call Corrine Martin at 980 - Eda May Parks.
KAPPA PHI: There will be a picnic this evening,
prior meet at the Union building at 3.30 shorth - Avnir
Village.
NEWMAN CLUB. The Newman Club will receive Communion in a body at the first Mass this Sunday. All regular members not intending to come to the breakfast afterwards will please notify Margaret Montgomery of their absence. Copies of the Newman News will be distributed at the meeting following breakfast—T. C. Lawrence.
"OLOGY" COMMISSION. The "Ology" Commission will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine Room—eventually.
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Piti Delta Kappa will meet
the team of the University of Oklahoma in
study hall of Oredre Training School—Raid Hemphill.
J. HOWARD RUSCO
Audience Receives Fine Concert
Editorial Staff
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FUTOR-IN-CHEP
ASSOCIATE ELECTOR: JOHN TYNE AND DAVID ANGLIVINE
MANAGING EDITOR JOE COCHRANE
CAMPUS EDITOR CHARLES ALEXANDER AND MARVIN GOULLEH
REWITED BY CAREERS BRIAN HAYES
SOCIETY EDITOR M. JEAN CARNEY
SPORTS EDITOR WILMAN Fitzgerald
ELECTRONIC EDITOR WILMAN Fitzgerald
MAKEUP EDITOR LAURA BARKS AND ARCADE CAULT
REWRITE EDITOR HAROLD ABIDENTON
RELEASE EDITOR JAMIE CALIFORNIA
News Staff
PUBLISHER
University Symphony Shows Much Talent And Co-operation in Early Concert
Kansan Board Members
KANSAS PRESS
MEMBER 1937
ASSOCIATION
FEATURE EDITOR
The first number of the program was Swedenski's "Swedish Coronation March." In the interpretation of the march by the conductor and his instrumentation, the members of the percussion, tympani, and string ensemble went on in being chosen to occupy chairs in an orchestra of this type.
an overture to "The Meisteringers of Nurnberg," by Wagner, was the second part of the program. The solo work which was outstanding in the woodwind section, gave conclusive evidence of fine technique on this part and made the more touch of the conductor's baton, it seemed that a well interpreted crescendo or diminutive resulted in which the strings took an important part. In the presentation of this overture the group of artists were divided into sections of melody. At one point, in the middle section, as many as five tunes are noticeable simultaneously. The first violins announced the familiar Prize Song theme about a third through the work. The woodwinds followed with a distinct development of the mocking paradox of the Meisteringers' theme.
J. HEARD HAIDEMAN-JULIUS
A. JOHN RUSGO
J. ERIE PAGE MARTIN
KENNETH MOIRIS
GRACE VALENTINE
JOE CORDERLAND
F. QUENSTON BROWN
WILLIAM FEGIZARDO
EDWARD BRANNETT
MARTIN BURTON
MARY GREEN
JAMES FLOPE
MIGRIA THOMPSON
JOE CORDERLAND
F. QUENSTON BROWN
WILLIAM FEGIZARDO
ALAN AMBER
1937 Member 1938
Associated Collegiate Press
REPRESENTATION FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. Publishes Representatives 202-428 MAPS BUILDING NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO BUILTON BAN FRANCISCO REPRESENTATIVE
Business Staff
F. QUENTIN BROWN
Business Staff
In presenting the second fall concert in 32 years the University Symphony orchestra under the direction of Karl Kuehrkeer kept the members of its audience under a musical spell throughout the entire concert which was presented last night in Hoch auditorium.
Distributor of Collegiate Digest
Russell Wiley, director of the University band, said in an interview after the concert last night that the orchestra was at its best throughout
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan.
the entirety of the program presented. He worked on to say that the orchestra was to be recommended for its saxophone work this early in the fall, and that only by different work and co-operation could the task be achieved in such a short period of rehearsal.
Presentation Outstanding
BUSINESS MANAGER
Carroll Nichols, fa29, and Homer Dodee Caine, fa39, violins, headed the string orchestra in its conception of Bach's "Alarne Flute from concerto" in *D-minor* for Two violins and Stringed Orchestra. The pitch and tone prevail in the work were unassumped in any undergraduate work portrayed for some time here at the University. The artistry became more complex as the role of a great organ with the conductor executing the staff and animals with great ease and precision. The execution and tone quality of the two men were outstanding in the presentation of Bach's work.
Liat's "Second Hospitian Phantasy" gave many sessions an opportunity to show their talent, and every section called upon by the conductor, Karl Koretzstein, rose to the occasion without failure. Several short codices of the charioted, Zeichnoth Pewter, celtic, dissected and fine woodcut, were used in other sections. Other pieces outstanding in this part of the program were violin section, cello and bass section, and the French horn.
Tschalkowsky's Last Work
After a short interval, the audience once again recalled its attentive spirit and received Technikowsky's stilt symphony "Patience." At points throughout the presentation of this work, it is clear in which the orchestra took several grand passes, it would have been possible to have band a pin drop in the tumb-like silence. This sixth symphony, in the manner in which, was breathtaking in its variation. There the 25 minute it was, was even more dramatic. It evident that the entire orchestra was at all times holding something in reserve, and the audience was very much aware of the fact. At times, when the orchestra gave up bit by bit parts of its reserve, the audience seemed to be surprised at the extra amount of ability, execution mellowness, and tone displayed throughout the symphony.
Sections doing outstanding work in this, the last of works presented, included: bassoon, percussion, first violin, oboe, clarinet, flutes, clooses, and string basses.
Shaws Find Brothers
Meeting Brothers
In Barber Chairs
Way back in 1961 "Phog" Allen go to shave.
Nothing so unusual about the K.U. basketball coach getting a shave, that early in life. But it happened that on that day in 1901, Hiller also got a shave. Allen, his brothers of the now Dr. Forrest C. Allen, also not shaves.
To make it more uncommon, another set of four brothers, Herbert, Edgar, the mayor, were the barriers who showed up in the brothers. It happened in Independence, Mo., where the four major brothers were operating a barrier
The "Believe It or Not" incident came to light recently when a reporter interviewed Herbert Major, now dean of barbers in Independence.
Nazi's Close Jewish Agency
Nazi's Close Jewish Agency
Berlin, Nov. 11—(UP) The Nazi
secret police have closed the Berlin
office of the Jewish Telegraph
agency, incorporated under German
law for the purpose of distributing
"news of foreign origin," it was dis-
closed tonight.
Stalin Arrests Ambassadors
Moscow, Nov. 11—(UP)—The Soviet Russian Ambassadors to Germany and Turkey were reported tonight to be under arrest, supposedly in connection with the Alba's "purge" that has taken more than 1200 lives in the last 15 months.
AND
"Too Much Beef"
The Big Laugh, Music and Dancing Show PATSY KELLY LYDA ROBERTI "Nobody's Baby"
A top coat, two suits of clothing,
a wrist watch, an electric razor, and
$12 in cash were taken evidently between 10 and 10:30 Tuesday morning when a thief entered through an unlocked door.
PATEE
WEEK 10c Til '7
DAYS Thon 15e
Owners of the articles stolen were Thomas Devilin, *e*39; Darrell, *c'onec*; Archie Grapengater, *c*41; and Dale Harris, *ph'uncl*. All four men, who live together in the same apartment, are from Newton.
"Nobody's Baby"
2 ACTION HITS
Hard Riding
Fast Shooting
REX BELL
FOR THE GAME---at 11:15 Will Be
SERIAL - CARTOON
TODAY ENDS
SATURDAY
Hats
No further developments have been reported in the theft of personal effects valued at $125 stolen Tuesday morning from four university students living in the Oread apartments, 1293 Oread avenue.
Talented in the University Master as you want to.
Top Coats
$25
Suits
$25
Sweaters
Bush Jackets
Leather Coats
Hooded Sweat Shirts
Tux Suits
$25
Necklaces
Gloves
Shirts
Bells
Mufflers
Slip Surfaces
"Let's get the Cats Saturday"
No New Development On Student Robbery
DICKINSON
The House of Hits
Tonite Thru Saturday
Continuous 2:20 on
CARLS
GOOD CLOTHES
D
The House That Pleases
Hilarys from Indiana find the Hollywood stencils by Mr. Decs' help and set up comedy love story.
JESSIE HOWARD
from BLONDELL
Stand-in
with HUMBURY BOSTON
Released thru United Artists
GRAND FUN AND ROMANCE
LAUREN
HOWARD
Joan
BLONDELL
Stand-in
with
MARCO L. ROBERTS AND JENNIE MAYER
KEN GRIFFITH at the Organ Added Short Treats
SUNDAY!
100 MEN and a GIRL
WATCH FOR
THE WORLD'S NEWEST DELIGHT!
WATCH FOR
"THIS WAY PLEASE"
MARY LIVINGSTONE
Saturday Nite
A 11-15 WILL R.
Your FREE SHOW
BEAT THE AGGIES
"THEY WENT TO COLLEGE"
JUST ONE MORE DAY
GRANADA
TODAY AND SATURDAY
FITNESS AIRING
ALSO
Trailer! at the TPC
with the screen's big shots
"Sunday Night at
the Trocodero"
Pete Smith Novelty
Latest News Events
SUNDAY
Since Films Began---- None Can Equal It!
SHE KNILED THE HEART OF THE MIGHTIEST DIVISION WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN
GREA
GARBO
CHARLES
BOYER
CONQUEST
JOHNINA OWEN
BARRY MARBELL
CARL RIGSON
A Greatest Bond Production
and Saturday Continuous Shows Saturday
TODAY
I
Admission Never Over 15c
Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:30
A N.
SMITH BALLEW
in
Roll Along,
Cowboy
with
CECILIA PARKER
STANLEY FIELDS
Produced by Baldwin
Directed by Gus Mayer
A Produced Production
Renewed by ZEN Cinema.
ARSITY
Home of the Jayhawk
ENTERTAINMENT in the Modern Mannor!
He's A Rootin', Tootin' Singin' Foo!!
ELVIS PRESLEY
And Fiery Drama and Death at Express Speed!
WEST BOUND
LIMITED
A NEW
UNIVERSAL PICTURE
with LYLE TALBOT POLLY ROWLES
Continuous Shows
Continuous Shows
SUNDAY!
Charles BOYER
Magnificent as its Desert Setting; Stirring as only the story of a Great Love Can Be!
Marlene DIETRICH
"The Garden of Allah"
In Technicolor with Basil Rathbone And—Back Again! William Boyd "Hopalong Rides Again"
Soon!—"Ramona" - "Talks of the Devil"
2
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Here on the Hill an account of Mt. Oread Society
M. JEAN CASKEY, Society Editor Before 3 pm, call KU.251 after 5, call 2702-K3
Gamma Phi Beta
Gamma Tln Beta Celebrates Founder's Day
Sigma chapter of Gamma Phi. Beta held its annual Founders' Day dinner last night at Evans Hearth. The occasion was in commemoration of the sixty-third anniversary of the sorority. Mrs. William Deln, Seattle, grand president of Gamma Phi Beta, served as president. Ms. Mina Isabel Gilmore, 16, Kansas City, Mo., first president of the University chapter.
Other guests attending the dinner were:
Mary Feudel, Missouri University
Margaret Crane, Missouri University
Louise Beecham, Missouri University
Ann Lloyd, Missouri University
Mrs. Albert Fouchan, Pratt
Mrs. Albert Fouchan, Pratt
Mrs. Marry Ruth Wuthering Law,
Mrs. Weber Hatton, Lawrence
Mrs. Hovey Hanna, Lawrence
Mrs. Robert Davis, Lawrence
Mrs. Raymond Schneider, Lawrence
Mrs. Fred Ellworth, Lawrence
Mrs. Helen Rhoda Hoopes
Mrs. Paul Kemp, Kansas City, Mo
Mrs. Ruth Levergat, 375, Kansas City, MO
Moy Mary Jane Roby, Kansas City,
Mo.
Miss Cora Queen Barber, Kansas City, Mo.
PAGE THREE
Mrs. P. H. Hawes, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. R. H. Hawes, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Anabel Waters, Roma City, Mo.
Mrs. Anabel Waters, Roma City, Mo.
Miss Mary Katherine Dorrone57, Kansas
Miss Emily M. Allen, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Harriet Shildon, Kansas City, Mo.
Mrs. Fleid Taegert, Tooeila
Phone
K. U.
6 6
Alpha Omicron Pi serology entertained with a formal dinner dinner last night. The guests were Miss Beulah Morrison, Prof. and Mrs, Leonard H. Axe, and Prof. and Mrs, Jens P. Jensen.
WANT to make some money? Quire at Jawahrae Office, Union building, afterward from 1:30 to 3:30 concerning selling office equipment. Jawahrae Magazine commission basis.
Sigma Kappa sorority entertained
Kappa Sigma fraternity with an hour
dance last night.
732 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 2353
CLASSIFIED ADS
Alpha Delta Pi sorority entertained
Sigma Nu fraternity with an hour
dance last night.
SHAMPOO and 25e WAVE dried
RlWARD for return of lady's yellow gold
Elgin wrist watch with garnish ribbon
band, loot at the Granda theater during
night. Nightfall, valid as a gift, G47
2197M.
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity entertained the pledges of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and the house-mother, Mrs. Rachel Butler, with a buffet supper and hour dance last night.
Mrs. DEREK Allen, Topeka
Mrs. JEAN A., Dickinson
Miss Virginia Griffin,
Miss Clarice Saum, Topeka
SHAMPOO and 25c WAVE, dye
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End Curls $10.00 up. Complete
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MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP
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Luncheon guests at the Pi Betts
Pi computer, done without a program
Marion Rice Dance Studio
Learn Modern ballroom dancing:
Truckhill, Big Apple, College Shuang,
Walton Fox Tox, New York Dance
School and women.
Delta Tau Delta, will entertain with a formal party tonight at the Country Club. Louie Kahn and his orchestra will furnish the music Chaperson will be Mrs. C. H. Landez, Mrs. Margaret Perkins, Elid Charles, and Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg.
Luncheon guests at the Pi Bih
pi sorority house yesterday we
lois Wilson, c'41
Helen Hum, c'40
Davis Bourger, c'41
Jen Ferry, c'40
Narman Naramore, f'40
9271/2 Massachusetts, over
Rumsey-Alison Flower Shop
T A X I
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"Originators of 15c Cabs"
Phone
K. U.
6 6
FOR SALE: Size 17 double-breasted tuxedo. Call 125 after 7 pm. +47
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LOST: Two fountain pens together. One red-greyed mottled Sheffler, and one black Parker. Finder call 1314W. Reward.
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Gorgeous Big Ones to make her thrill of the game complete.
RHINSBY Flower Shops ALLISON
WAVE, new styles, any style 250 dried
Shampoos ... 25c up
Finger Waves ... 25c (dried)
Oil Permanents ... $2.50 up
CHRYSANTHEMUMS
Phone 95 - 921 Miss. St.
SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty
Dinner guests at the Alpha Omni Pirorio siitehouse tonight will be Sue Fowler, 28, and Mary Ellen Dedotte, c. 38, Kappa Alpha Theta.
N N N N N N N
END CURLS, $1 up, inquire
7 Experienced Operators
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IVAS BEAUTY SHOP
941'1 Mass. St., Phone 333
Twenty-five words or less one insertion, 216 three insertions, 196 six insertions,
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Business Office.
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920 - 22 Mass.
Phone
12
941½ Mass. St. Phone 533
Next door Keeler Book Store
Where the quality is best and the selection always the largest
For the
AGGIE
Game
N N N N N
PHONE
363
Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi sorority house lust right were Miss Gertrude Glimore and Miss Zcriteria Johnston.
Weekend guests at the Alfa Omnicron Psi sorority house will be Arne Louise Larson, Kansu City Clerk and Margaret Anne Cochrane, Hosleton.
Kathleen Burner, *eunck*, and Betty Clover, c40, were luncheon guests yesterday at the Gamma Phi house.
Manlou Miller, in 41, was a bimacre guest yesterday at the Alpha Chi Omega sorority house.
Mary Pitz-Gerald, e 40, was a luncheon guest yesterday at the Chi Omega sorority house.
Mrs. Swafford of Ft. Scott is a guest at the Chi Omega sorority house.
Mary Nicholson, Ellis, is a weekend guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority house.
Mrs. W. H. White, jr., of Council Grove, was a guest yesterday at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house.
Bill Blecha, '37, Wichita, is a guest at the Kappa Sigma fraternity house.
Alpha Kappa Psi, business freerelivery, announces the pledging of Robert Wimow. b38
Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Frank Yaussi, c'41.
Dinner guests at the Delta Upsilor
Betty Blake, c.1onl.
Betsy Rathbury, d.1onl.
Betty Burke, c.1onl.
Betty Burch, a.4'4
Jane Cardwell, c.1onl.
Marian Cuney, c.1onl.
Mary Margaret Parsons
Mr. and Mrs. B.C. Rains of Perry were guests of Acacia fraternity last night.
☆ ☆ ☆
Dr. Robert Taft and Dr. G. W. Stratton were dinner guests at the Alpha Chi Sigma house last night.
Publisher Attacks 'Isms' Journalists
The University fencing team will meet at 10:30 Saturday morning in Robinsburg gymnasium. All members are requested to attend.
Fencing Team To Meet
Regular Meals
Plate Lunches
Quality Beverages
Steamed Fried Eggs
WE SERVE
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Speaking Over KFKU.
Journal-World H e a d
Stresses Patriotism
KIRKENDALL'S Collegiate Boots Well, you just need a pair for football games and such
Men's $8.50
Women's $7.85
Black or Tan
1
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SHOE STORE
Haynes & Keene 819 Mass. St.
W. C. Simons of the Lawrence Journal-World, speaking as a tax-payer on the *e*ducation week series offered by the University of Kansas radio station KPKU, and he was asked by a professor to preach the political "lim" of Europe on the plea that he was informing the student of their dangers, then there would be to have a teacher inject rattlesnake poison into the mouth of pupils in order to show them that咬腿s lies should be avoided.
"The people of the state expect that its University will teach the students the lessons of patriotism.
"Teach them of the sturdy manhood of the pioneers; of the faith in God, which no matter how far we have straymed from it, was a real part in of the warp and wool of our government," he said.
"Familiarize the students with the Declaration of Independence; with the struggles of the colonists against British rule and with the constitution of the United States."
"Let them know the facts concerning conditions elsewhere.
"Crops have not been good it Kansas in every line the recent years, but we have not heard of Kaw valley farmers who have been lined against the wall and shot because they could not harvest 100 bushels of potatoes when the ground was producing only 75 to the acre."
Iola Education Conference
Professors Attend
Prof. J, W. Twente, Prof. A. H. Turney, and Prof. C. B. Althaus, members of the faculty of the School of Education, went to Iola yesterday morning at the request of the Iola board of education to confer on a building program for the elementary school system.
This service of advice and inspection is offered by the School of Education to Kansas schools, and is carried on by the Bureau of School
Frazier Speaks At Architects' Meeting
The Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Architecture will meet tomorrow at 10 a.m. on the ninth floor of the Hotel Kansan in Topeka At 12 noon, there will be a luncheon in the Orchid dining room of the ho-
Bernard Fraxier, sculptor a member of the faculty of the University of Kansas, will talk and exhibit a few of the smaller pieces of his work.
The following faculty members of the department of architecture will attend the meeting: Associate Prof. Vernier Smith; Prof. G. M. Beal, member of the executive council of the American Institute of Archi- cstruction; and a pres- dent of the state chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
Hugh Randall, who graduated from the University last June, is now the city attorney and city clerk of Checotah. Until recently he was connected with the county attorney's Douglas county here in Lawrence.
Grad Chosen As City Officer
GOSSIP (Choice)
ARTICLES (Special)
PICTURES (Yours)
CARTOONS (Hilarious)
JOKES(Funny)
15c Buy it on the campus 15c
SOUR OWL Out Today
ALL AMERICAN
Here are some winners for the Big Game Saturday!
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Sigma Gamma Epsilon
Holds Smoker: Prof, Grider Talks
Sigma Gamma Epsilon, professional geology fraternity, held a smoker in the Union building last night. Prof R. L. Griwer gave a talk and showed some slides of an old gold mine in Wyoming. Professor Grider last summer testing the gold in this mine.
Election of new members was held. They are to be announced in a few days.
"Two Eggs, Toast,
Jelly, Coffee
20c
An every morning special
at your
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Giving Magazines This Christmas?
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THE BOOK NOOK
Pond's Facial Tissues
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by Stetson
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Alarm Clocks 89c and 98c
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A
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The hat your grandfather, your dad wears.—Ask them the hat to buy and they answer.—Stetson.
Playing Cards 29c, 2 for 55c
City Agents
$5 and $6
CARL'S
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for lowest prices in town
For Thanksgiving a pound box
Joan Manning
Chocolates 50£
Pack of 25 Pursuet
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Puretest Halixer Oil
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73c
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PAGE FOUR
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937
Favorites Win Openers Phi Gam's Bury Pi K.A As Beta's Eke Out Wiri Over Delta Tau' s
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Phi Gamma Delta, the team that went through the season with the loss of only one game, and the team that scored a surprisingly easy 19 to 0 victory over Pi Kappa Alpha in an eleven-game outing for the intramural championship.
Not only did the Phi Gam victory serve as sweet revenge for the loss suffered at the hands of Pi Kappa Alpha, it also sounded a warning to the other teams competing in the play-off series. The fact that Pi Kappa Alpha scored a game tied, and a record of four games won, one game tied, and one game lost would belie the assumption that Phi Gam's 19 to 0 victory was made against an
The Phi Gam aggregation completely outplays the game, in every department of the game, and at no time was the outcome of the game in
Pi K. A.'s Outplayed
In Kell, Phi Gamma Delta has one of the finest passers in the intramural basketball league and is most important part in the one-sided victory yesterday, and kept the Ki K.A. team hot water on their hands. Mr. Brennan also gives a good account of themselves in yesterday's game, and should cause plenty of worry for their future up-coming season.
Play Hard Game
Beta Theta Pi, who scored at will in comping through its regular season against the Minnesota tar yesterday in the Delta Tau Dei team, and was hard-pressed to win
Kell led the scoring for the Phi Gam's with seven points. Morris scored six points, and a pass from Seven tailed the other touchdown.
A pass from Nessly to Stolland, who was standing in the end zone, scored the lone touchdown and broke the tie with Leavitt. The two between evenly matched teams. The Touchdown pass good for Kyle Rudolph came last half, after a 15-yard tackling penalty against the Beta's, and proved to be the break needed for the game.
Although the game was a defensive one, the play of several players stoo out. Nessily and Stoland, Beta pass combination, have been securely held. The team led the way to victory that keep Beta Theta Pi undefeated. Stoland's putting was a feature of the game with the team being a strong team in the hole. For the losers Prale led the way with his fine pass receiving. Most of Delta Tau Delta's yardage was made via the airia with, Praile doing the receiving.
Beta's Favorites
Yesterday's victory installs the Beta's as a favorite to go on and win the intramural championship, although two rounds are to be played. The regular season is also ord compiled during the regular season, in addition to the victory yesterday, the Beta's cannot be overlooked as a strong contender for the tournament.
Championship
Overshadowed by the play-off games, three regular scheduled games were played yesterday.
Ki Pha Kappa Piai "B" defeated Sigma Piha Epsilon B "18 to 6, in a game that may be regarded as an upset. The team won the first round "B" team and the large margin of triumph for the Pihi Pi队 made the result all the more surprising. As a result of the loss, the Sig Eps are in favor of the Giants for six end place in the "B" division.
Leadyard proved to be the thorn in the side of the Sig Eg team, as he hit 18 points for the Phil Martin scored the touchdown for the Sig Eg.
Sigma Nu and Sigma Phi Epiglon engaged in a game to decide the cel- lar occupant of division II, with
Sigma Nu winning the argument. If to 0. The victory was the second of the season for Sigma Nu.
- Kappa Alpha "B" forfeited to Phi Delta Theta "B" in the other game scheduled for yesterday. In a match against Aces, Akai forfeited to Kappa Sigma.
Play-off games scheduled for today are field 3, Phi Delta Theta vs. Sigma Alpha Epiphany; field 4, Philadelphia vs. Alphonso; the rest of the touch football schedule: field 1 Sigma Chu "B" vs. Phi Delta C"; field 2 Hexagon vs. Red Devils.
Today's tennis schedule: Deli Cai
a. Alpha Tau Omega; Phi Kappa Pa-
ti; Triangle; Sigma Alpha Epsilon
b. Upsilon; Sigma Alpha Chi苏
alpha; Upsilon.
Women's Intramurals Helen Wilkerson
Corbin Hall Wins Volleyball Tournament
Corbin ball, through a series of victories in the league and teams in the victory volleyball tournament won the championship by defeating the Tigers. This of officially ends an unrivalled ball games for this year, and the cup will be awarded to the Corbin team.
Hockey
The University of Kansas women's
hockey team defeated the team from
Washburn by a score of 41-1, Wednesday
afternoon at Topeka.
The games for the inter-class-tournament of hockey have been posted. The games will be played on Tuesday, Nov. 18, and Tuesday, Nov. 23.
The players in the first senior-grade Reakek, Bubba Woody, Lawrence, Gikelson, Grizell, Baker, Curd, Rowlwan, Howlett, Hines, James, and Juneus.
The players in the first junior sophomore game are King, Anderson, Tiffany, Kyle, Learnard, Bigelow, Peden, Wilkenson, Learnard, Learnard, Latimer, Van Lassery.
Football Ticket Sales Are Heavy
A n. mber of good seats are still available for the Kansas State football game here tomorrow, the athletic office announced yesterday, although there will be because of the added impetus lent by recent Kansas victories.
Those planning to attend the Homecoming game between Kansas and Missouri Thanksgiving are urged by the office to buy their tickets now as a crowd of near-record propor- tionals join the Jayhawks win tomorrow.
Traveling by special train, a large group of fans from Manhattan will arrive here before noon. With them they will watch a movie, and which will march at the game.
The board of directors of the University will entertain the board of Kansas State College at a bureau of criminal institution building tomorrow morning.
Challenges Youth To Prepare Against War
A challenge to American youth to prepare against war was presented to Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. members yesterday afternoon in an Armistice Day service held in memorial of those to be killed in the next war.
To open the meeting, held in Fauro theater, the Rev. Carter Harrison, if the Lawrence Episcopal Church, gave the invocation with a candle. It was dramatization which followed of the fate of the peace-minded citizen in wartime who is branded as "yellow," and the soldier who loses his life in the trench, was given by Marvin English, Richard McCann, e'40
57
Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, c'39 Kansan Sports Editor
In the absence of Fira, this column is forced to take on a slight femininity touch. No cracks from the knee in Cleveland is good-looking—or is it cute?—even in a football suit. But not to let our admiration carry us to the wrong side of the fence. I guess we can always remember the face of Fira.
Jean Thomas Guest Conductor
And now comes the Aggie game Saturday—not that you have forgotten that. So all the latest in polo coats, furs, and hats will show up in the Memorial stadium, and KU. Win, heaven help the players. After the demonstration the women put on at Lincoln, it is to be expected that the men don't get on the field without a lot of feminine help—taking a victory for granted or that statement with a cup of salt.
Iris
Beautiful Floral DECORATIONS
Just call FlowerFone 820
For an example of good sportsmanship in the Big Six, we quote a letter received yesterday by Chancellor Lindley from Dr. E. A. Burrell, chancellor of the University of Nebraska: "I want to congratulate you on your service which you team played at Lincoln last Saturday. I do not think we have had a finer or more difficult game at Lincoln this season . . . Your band made an excellent showing and was much complimented by the audience." Thank you, Dr. Burrell, and a return of the compliments.
Plus Candle Light will insure the success of your party.
BACK HOME FOR THANKSGIVING GO IN Home-like COMFORT UNION PACIFIC CITY OF SALINA ON THE Streamliner CITY OF SALINA Between Salina • Toloca • Kansas City
Buy her a beautiful chrysanthemum for the Aggie game.
WARD'S Flowers
After the exhibition that Lew Ward turned in at Nebraska last week while still a boy, we're waiting anxiously to see what he can do. We'll be celebrating his twenty-first birthday Saturday. He has been one of the iron men of the Kansas线 since 1933, and will be team captain in the Missouri game. He's only two years old, but height doesn't make the man.
After seeing the game last Saturday, we gals are eager to see that Divens man out in a football suit again—also Warren, Replogle, Sullivan, and Douglass the "Driver." We've been disappointed most of the season by the absence of Dave Shirk but he'll be back in the sportlight Saturday. We watched him for a while at Lincoln, but he still has something of a hitch in his go-along, though it was not particularly
"Flowers of Distinction"
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On the City of Salina, as well as on other fine Union Pacific trains, you can relax in a restful, reclining coach seat. Tasty meals are served on routes, so you will enjoy every minute of your journey. On the Union Pacific, you can enjoy the Union Pacific. See schedule below for complete service.
BACK HOME
FOR
THANKSGIVING
GO IN Home-like COMFORT
UNION
- The best way to travel economically, safely, and comfortably is to use the money last schedules save time. No worry about outside weather or traffic.
Streamliner CITY OF SALINA
Between Salina · Jopeka · Kansas City
DAILY SCHEDULE
CITY OF SALINA
Denier Limited
Pacific Limited
7.00 a.m. 2.55 am 11.06 am Lv., Salina ... Ar.
* 7.14 a.m 2.55 am 11.27 am Solomon ... Ar.
* 7.27 a.m 3.27 am 11.48 am Chapman ... Ar.
* **7.29 a.m** 3.29 a.m 12.00 am Jt, City ... Ar.
7.55 a.m 4.55 am 12.30 am Jt, City ... Ar.
7.55 a.m 4.35 am 10.55 am Manhattan ... Ar.
* 8.22 a.m 4.35 am 10.55 am Washington ... Ar.
* **8.51 a.m** 4.55 a.m 14.00 am St, Mary ... Ar.
8.18 a.m 5.18 a.m 2.15 am Topeka ... Ar.
8.18 a.m 5.16 a.m 2.15 am Lavenca ... Ar.
* **01.23 a.m** 5.16 a.m 2.15 am K. C. Ku ... Ar.
10.30 a.m 7.15 a.m 3.45 am K. C. Mo... Ar.
12.30 a.m 12.30 a.m 3.45 am K. C. Mo... Ar.
12.54 a.m 12.54 a.m 3.45 am K. C. Ku ... Ar.
* **11.32 a.m** 12.54 a.m 3.45 am K. C. Ku ... Ar.
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Rose
We understand that tickets for the game are selling by the dozens and hundreds at Man-hattun, so the Aggie team will, no doubt, have plenty of moral support to the stands—we hope they need it.
The team looked okay to us last night on our pass defense practice—and we do know a pass defense player who was the ball single was a little too fast for the ball.
--noticeable, either in his appearance or his game.
*Conditional Stop—Consult Agent.
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Rankin's Drug Store
See you Saturday—come early and avoid the rush for those front seats where the new Jayhawk jerseys book so party. And tomorrow Pitz will be down and down and make any apologies be decem- nary for today's spam.
"Handy for Students"
We must keep our public informed, so we'll spill this one—Pitzer-girl, who is sports editor to us, is a "cigar store quarterback" to the K-State Collelian. But he's been calling his signals pretty straight so far this year, and we don't think he'll go far wrong this time if he predicts a win for the home folks. (We hope, we hope, we hope.)
Nash Speaks at Atchison
1101 Mass.
Phone 678
Speaking on "Schools in Transition." Dr. Nash emphasized the need for a modified school program to meet the requirements of present-day problems. He stressed also the importance of emotional adjustments to the child and the extent to which 'bey effect' his school career.
Dr. Bert A. Nash, professor of education, spoke last night to the Parent-Teachers' Association of the Martin School in Atchison.
Rollins Hosiery in the new Fall Colors
BEAT THE AGGIES
Lace Top
Chiffons
$1.00
Four Thread
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79c
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PRESENTS
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BEAT THE AGGIES BEAT THE AGGIES
For ENTERTAINMENT After the Game---
Aggie
VARSITY DANCE
Everyone Will Be Celebrating Our Victory (?)
To the Music of LOUIE KUHN'S BAND
Saturday Nov.13
DATES----75----STAGS
BEAT THE AGGIES BEAT THE AGGIES
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J
Special for
01.
Editors
Sigma Delta Chi
Parents
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
VOLUME XXXV
NUMBER 48A
Editors To Have Busy Morning
Roundtables To Begin
At 9:00 in Journalism
Building; Will H e a r
Hugh Baille
Climaxing the Editor-Professor day yesterday, the annual Kansas Editor's Roundtable will open at the Journalism building this past month.
Starting at 9:00, roundtables for daily papers will commence in room 107. Roundtables for papers other than dallies will be held in room 102 Each group will select its chairman by telephone sent by editors, will be presented.
Mr. Hugh Baille, president of the United Press and National honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi will address the joint group, Baille's talk will be entitled "Present Day News Gathering Throughout the World - The Most Tremendous Task of All Times."
At 2:00 the Kansas editors and their wives will be guests of the University at the Kansas-State football game in Memorial stadium through the courtesy of the Athletic director, Mr. Gwinny Henry, director.
At 10:45 the joint meeting with delegates to the Twenty-second National Convention of Sigma Delta Chi will be held in Fraser theater, the university chancellor of the University of Kansas, will give the address of welcome.
Architects Hear Howard L. Smith. Housing Expert
Howard Leland Smith of Washington, D.C., president of the American Institute of Architects, was a recent visitor at the University of Kansas. Mr. Smith in talking to students in the School of Architecture paid the University a number of compliments. His present duty is to help in figuring out solutions for the problem of small housing.
"The professor who comes in late is rare—in fact he is in a class by himself," the Valparaiso Torch
LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1937
MAX
LEWIS WARD
JACKSON
PETER
1932
PETER BROOKS
DON
EBLING
57
J. O. RICHARDSON RUSSELL CHEWNORD
Two Free Movies Downtown Tonight If K.U. Wins
Both the Dickinson and Granada theaters will offer free shows at 11:15 o'clock tonight if Kansas Wins this game with the Kansas State Wildcats.
In the event of a Jayhawker victory, the Dickinson will show "Stand-In," with Leslie Howard and Joan Blondell. The Granda's program had not been definitely decided upon last night.
Managers of both theaters requested the co-operation of students in preventing damage to theater property.
Teachers in Colleges of State To End Two-Day Meet at Noon
Economists Here Today
Thirteenth annual meeting of the teachers of economics and business in Kansas colleges and junior college on the campus this morning.
Featured in yesterday's discussions were papers on labor problems. Most of the sessions are devoted to technical economics and to the problems of teaching this subject in colleges.
Saturday morning's session, in room 210 Administration building, will hear a talk by Dean C. Keehler of the School of Business administration, University of OSA (Oklahoma State University) 'Treasury Position'. Presiding will be R. E. Pickett of Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia.
Homecoming Plans Announced
Plans have been formulated to stage one of the most colorful and largest Homecoming celebrations in the history of the University, it was announced yesterday by Capt. William L. Brady, assistant professor of military science and chairman of the Homecoming committee.
Hobo Day, scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 24, the day before the annual gridiron clash between the Missouri Tigers and the Jayhawkers will mark the opening of the festivities.
Events of the Homecoming program will open on Thursday, Nov. 25, with registration for the alumni at 3 o'clock in the Memorial Union building. The rest of the day will be devoted to a radio rally during the dinner hour, a Homecoming parade from 8 to 10 o'clock, a homecoming rally at 8 o'clock, and a variety dance at 10 o'clock in the Union ballroom.
Fraternity and sorority floats and other exhibitions will make the parade the outstanding part of the day's activities. A prize will be awarded the winning float. The rally will climax the parade in front of radio station WREN, and will be broadcast.
The second day of activities will be given over to an informal reception at the Memorial Union building at 10 o'clock, a committee meeting of the class of 1915 to plan the quarter workday and to meet at the some hour. A meeting of second and third generation students will also be held.
Manhattan High School Defeats Lawrence High
As an early "curtain raiser" for the Aggie-K.U. game today, Manhattan and Lawrence High Schools met in an Eastern Kansas conference game at Haskell stadium last night, with Manhattan winning, 13 to 0. Each of the two quarters brought the victory for Manhattan.
Jay Janes Hostesses
The Purple Peepers of Manhattan are to be the luncheon guests of the Jay Janes today in the ballroom of the Memorial Union Building. There are forty Purple Peepers and forty-west Jay Janes.
Journalists Look Toward Expansion
Sigma Delta Chi Plans
To Broaden Scope of
Fraternity; Will Come
To Roundtables
and Charles Alexander, c28
Toppek, Nov. 12—Action taken late yesterday afternoon by the delegates of the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity now meeting in Chicago, a city with a positive change in name and the renegotiation of the body.
By Claude Dorsey, c'38
The decision, which was reached by vote of the representatives of both active chapters and alumni groups, was to consider the plan offered by the central committee of the organization, which was appointed by Carl E. Miller, chairman of the fraternity's executive council.
Represented at the convention are 40 of the 41 active university chapters from 29 states, and nine alumni groups.
The plan, as presented, is aimed at broadening the sphere of influence of the fraternity. Among other things which adoption of the pre-August 1976 constitution is changing of the name for both active and alumni chapters, a change for
Last night at the dinner at which the convention was guest of the two Topaka newspapers, the Daily Capital and the State Journal, a parade of Kansas personalities was featured, including:
The Michigan chapter is the only undergraduate body which did not send a delegation.
the alumni chapters only, or the retention of the name, "Sigma Delta Chi," but the substitution of "society" for "fraternity."
The Hon. Alfred M. Landon, former Governor of Kansas.
The Hon. Walter A. Hoxman, Governor of Kansas.
Governor of Kansas.
The Hon. Henry J. Allen, editor of the
Topcka State Journal.
Tully Nettleton, national president of
'CITY CHALLENGE'.
Carl P. Miller, past president, editor of West Coast edition of Wall Street Journal, to Los Angeles California
The Hon. John F. Dawson, chief justice of the supreme court of Kansas.
T. A. McNeal, editor of Topeka Daily Capitol and Kansas Farmer.
Charles M. Harger, editor, Abelene Reflector, and chairman of the State Board of Revents.
The Rev. Dr. Charles M. Sheldon, author of "In His Steps."
Dr. E. H. Lindley, Chancellor of the University of Kansas
University of Kansas
Dr. Phillip B, King, president of Wash
Dr. Phillip B. King, president of Wash burn College.
Nelson Antrum Crawford, editor, House hold Magazine.
Kirk Meacham, secretary of the state historical record
historical society.
Harold Hammond, president of the Kan-
Prof. L. N. Flint, chairman, department of journalism.
Prof. C. E. Rogers, department of industrial journalism, Kansas State College
and the University of Kansas, alumni chapter of Sigma Delta Chi and secretary of the Kansas Press Association
Running concurrently with the undergraduate discussion was a meeting of the alumni delegate to con- tenture their year's alumni activity program.
The program yesterday afternoon included a roundtable discussion by the undergraduate delegates for the consideration of chapter activities student publications, and campus newspapers.
Marco Morrow, national executive councillor of Sigma Delta Chi and assistant publisher of Capper publications, was toastmaster.
secretary of the Kansas Press Association Charles H. Sessions, managing editor of the Daily Capital
A. J. Carruth, je., managing editor, Topeka State Journal.
"Football weather" is predicated for Lawrence tomorrow by United States weather bureau forecasters. "Fair and coldier" was the official forecast last night for eastern Kansas. Roads were reported in good conditions for gridridion-bound motorists.
"Football Weather" Predicted
WEATHER
The K.U.-Kansas State game today will be broadcast over the University's radio station, KFKU, beginning at 1:45 p.m. today.
the running account of the game will be given by Guy V. Keeler assistant director of the extension division and sports announcer of KFKU. Color and between-period announcements will be made by Nelson Sullivan, cunel, student announcer for KFKU.
KFKU on Air at 1:45 With Game Broadcast
The broadcast will be on 1220 kilocyles, which frequency is shared by KFPU with WREN.
Luncheon For Alumni
Grads of State College And University To Meet At Union Building
A social luncheon, sponsored by the K.U. Alumni Board, will be given today at noon in the Memorial Union building in honor of the members of the K.U. and Kansas State College Alumni associations. This is a yearlong program which is held each year by the K.U. and Kansas State Alumni Boards.
Any other member of the K.U. or Kansas State Alumni association is welcome, according to Fred Ells-worth, secretary of the K.U. Alumni Association. Any person must be made by 9 o'clock Saturday night Dinners will be 60 cents.
Senator and Mrs. Henry W. Rugley, Maryland President, green press; R. V. Christian, Guam head of the economic economics department of Kansas State College, Manhattan; treasurer; T. K. Kleiner, Kansas State College; vice president of Engineering, Kansas State College, Manhattan; Mr. and Ms. Charles Shaver, Saskatchewan; Kevin Nevers is the director of the state WPA. Mr. and Mrs. Kenning, Ford, Forss is the secretary of the Alumni association with the University.
Mr. and Mrs. Chentz E. Woodward Tooka, Woodward is president; Judge Robert T. Price, Osage Cayt M. Helen剥er, Woodward is president of the board, and Mr. May, Archison T. F. Strickler, and Mrs. Strickler, Kanan City, Woodward is mayor of City; Mr. and Mrs. Leen Reitz-Kans City, Ms. Justice Walter Theile and Mrs. Theile, Bruce Hardy and Ms. Theile, Bruce Hardy and Ms.
Guests from the K.U. association are:
Prof. W. W. David and Mrs. Davis, Prof.
Joseph J. David and O. Jordan,
Dr. Marion H. Topka, Dr. B. Smith,
Karl Kloefer and Mrs. Kleoer; Prof.
Lawrence Woodriff and Mrs. Woodriff
Some members of the Board of Regents, and also some of the athletic board members will attend the luncheon; some board members will attend are!
"Tickets for the Agame game are going fast," E. L. Falkenstein, athletic department financial secretary reported late Friday.
The estimate of the crowd which will view the football game between Kansas State College and Kansas University is about 20,000, and the sales are still brisk. A block of tickets which were returned from Manhattan yesterday are still available for the local fans.
Those who wish to attend the Missouri-Kansas game should buy their tickets as early as possible because they will be expected. Mr. Falkenstein has expected.
20,000 Expected At Aggie Game
SEASON'S RECORD Kansas and Kansas State Kansas
Kansas 7, Washburn 15.
Kansas 7, Wichita 18.
Kansas 14, Iowa State 6.
Kansas 6, Okahoma 3.
Kansas 0, Michigan State 16.
Kansas 13, Nebraska 1.
Kansas State
Kansas State 7, Boston College 21
Kansas State 7, Missouri 14
Kansas State 14, Marquette 0.
Kansas State 15, Creighton 0.
Kansas State 0, Oklahoma 19.
Kansas State 20, Washburn 7.
JAYHAWK TITLE CHANCES HINGE ON TODAY'S GAME
S. B. HOLLINGTON
Chief Speaker
World - The Most Tremendous Task of all Time. His auditors will be members of Sigma Delta Chi, he for national convention, and state chapter. He will be a guest at sessions. Mr. Ballie is national honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi.
Journalism Classes Taught By Vacationing Editors
Up-from-the-ranks newsman Hugh Baillie, who now heads the United Press, one of the world's large new-gathering organizations, is returning to the theater. His topic will be "Present-day Newsgathering Through the
Editors of a representative number of Kansas newspapers are taking a two-day vacation yesterday and today. But for the first day of the so-called vacation they took over the work of the professors of the department of journalism. Yesterday the editors taught all of the classes of journalism; today they will attend roundtable discussions.
This is the first time such a plan has been attempted in this University, and according to several of the "professors for a day" who were interviewed on the subject, they enjoyed it as much as the students.
The students found that in publishing a small country weekly there are "pit-fails" to a supposedly "snap job" of publishing a paper once each week. When a reporter, the editor to act as lifestyle operator, pressman, editor, and reporter in putting the weekly sheet to bed. It was the warning of several editions wrongfully impressed by the fine equipment placed at the disposal of
the publishers of the "University Daily Kansas". Such equipment is seldom found in the press rooms of weeklies, and it becomes necessary for the employees to make the best of the equipment on hand.
E. A. Briles, of the "Stafford Courrier," and chairman of committee of ways and means in the state legislature was placed on the spot in rather interesting manner yesterday. Mr. Lindsley, Chancellor Lindsay asked him when the University was going to receive a new Journalism building. According to reports from other editors who were present Mr. Briles "asked for it" when he said something concerning the present building. "We all are held. It wasn't possible to obtain his answer.
The editors were amused at student questions about "putting out a paper." It was the opinion of the "professors" that the students had to read textbooks and text books and professional teachers teach them a lot of "foolishness."
Hugh Baillie, U. P. Head, Has Held Numerous Jobs on His 'Ladder Climb'
Hugh Ballie, United Press head who will speak in Fraser theater, Saturday at 11 a.m. has held almost every position in the newspaper world from reporter to executive. He will speak on "Present-Day News Throughout The World" Most Themed Tenseal of All Time"
Square-jawed Mr. Baillie was born in Brooklyn 44 years ago. He started his newspaper career on The Los Angeles Record, a Scripps paper, after two years at the University of California. This start was that typical of many newspapers men.
In 1915 he became manager of the Los Angeles Bureau of the United Press, and from there he went successively to the Portland, San Francisco, Chicago, New York and Washington Bureaus.
His biggest assignment was Clarence Darrow's trail for jury bribery. He was one of the UPSae reporters and trailed President Wilson on his way to the United States. In 1932 he got an historic interview with Franz von
Papen, former German chancellor.
Besides reporting and editing,
Baillie worked seven years in the
business office. He turned from the
editorial to the business side of the
organization in 1924, and later became
the general business manager.
In 1931 he became executive vice-president and succeeded Karl Bickel to the presidency in 1935.
Mr. Bailie is a fourth-generation newspaper man, brushing and dying newspapers. He is a bournary member of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity.
Fifteen Highway Patrolmen Protecting Traffic Here
Roads between Manhattan and Lawrence, and highways around Lawrence, are being patrolled today members of the state highway patrol.
Twelve patrol cara and two motorcycles are being used by the highway police, who are on duty to help drivers. They are also a traffic affix for the game moving and safe.
Long Rivalry Is Factor In Dope
Victory Would Put K.U. Well on Road to Big Six Championship; O d s Are About Even
The probable starting lineups:
KANSAK KANSAK STATE
190 Shirk LT Kiernt 161
181 Rhule LT Kruger 190
30 Stephengate, LG LG Beiler 200
19 Warren C Niedorfman 174
19 Warren G Cardean 175
19 Warron RD Watson 27
19 Sihaknac RE Cromhaker 180
19 Masner QB Sums 115
19 Masner RH Spere 167
19 Replodge RH Spere 167
19 Douglass RH Briggs 183
10
officials. E. C. Owley, St. Mary,挥发剂; Ted O'Dowley, Manila,umpire; John W. Mossman, field judge; Thomas J. Emerson, Taunton, head linesman.
A rivalry of long and intense standing will be renewed this afternoon for the thirty-fifth time when the Wildcats of Kansas State meet the Kansas Jayhawkers on the Memorial Stadium gridiron. The many interesting aspects of the contest are expected to draw to the Kansas Stadium one of the largest crowds since the Notre Dame game here in 1932. Forecasts are for a crowd of at least 20,000.
"The outcome of the game has assumed great importance, due not only to the strong feeling between the two schools b u t schools but also to the fact that a victory for the 'l shawkers would put them in a favored position to win the conference, title, while a defeat would remove practically all chances for this honor.
Sizing up the two teams it is difficult to arrive at any forecast for the context. Actually, the dope faze conference record is the conference records of the two
Big Six Standing
W L T P Pet. ptat
KANSAS 0 2 1 833 33 22
Abiloba 2 0 1 750 40 20
Missouri 2 1 0 625 59 27
Oklahoma 0 2 1 625 58 13
Kansas State 0 2 0 000 7 33
Iowa State 0 2 0 000 7 33
squads. On the other hand non-conference performances would point to Oklahoma having been seen in the Missouri and Oklahoma games.
Another influence that helps to nullify all dope is the state of mind of the two teams. Last week the Jayhawkers were highly keyed up to meet the Nebraskans and some letdown is almost sure to follow. Kansas State, on the other hand, if the sport columns of their school super are to be taken as an index of college football being played with the theme "We don't like Kansas and there is nothing we would rather do than wallop the Jayhawkers." Thus prospects are for a highly keyed Agte team.
Doped Psychological
Still the ledund of the Jayhawkers may not be great. Squid members and conchacs feel there is a score to settle with the K-Staters for the 26 to 6 beating Kanessa took last year at Manhattan.
Cleveland Leads Invaders
Leading the invading Wildcats will be Howard Cleveland, elusive quarterback who scored three of the four touchdowns against Kansas last year. He is back to take another try in a tough roughhoused over the Jaya Hawk's.
While Cleveland is the shining light of the Agile team, such backs as "One man gang" Hackney, Sims, and Briggs cannot be overlooked.
CLARENCE
LYMAN DIVENS
26
EMIL WHENECKE
(1)
FORREST
HARDACRE
CALDWELL
HOWARD BURNETTE
21
MIKE SINLANICK
[Photo]
PAUL
MASONER
DAN
R.HULE
MILTON SULLIVANT
YOU WANT TO BE MORE AWESOME.
NATIONAL CHAMPION
DICK AMERINE
105
DAVE SHIRK
A
GEORGE
STAPLETON
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1927
≈
Comment
Here's to K-State Our Friendly Rivals
Friendly feudists, brothers under the skin, worthy opponents, and fellow Kansans: Your friends and fellow members of that other great state institution of learning and football, the University of Kansas, extend greetings to you students of the Kansas State College as we meet again for another gridiron classic.
Antagonists though we may be—competing for scholarship, beautiful women, handsome men, economic royalists, erack column wiser-cracks, and Big Six championships, (leaving the fattening of cattle to the Aggies and retaining a crop of lawyers and doctors—no veterinaries—for our use) our rivalry is still friendly.
When one of us is the victor, the other feels less saddened by defeat, knowing that the laurels may still remain within the hands of other Kansans. Naturally we hope to be victorious on the football field, and realize that our respective feelings of school rivalry are keen. Nevertheless, "To the victors belong the spoils", and whether celebrating your victory or ours, we're glad to have you with us again.
For Sigma Delta Chi:
A Handshake and a Hope
The campus is host today to a group of men and young men who may be making history.
The members of Sigma Delta Chi, alumni and under-graduate, may be a bit embarrassed by being classed as history makers. Like others who have changed the course of events, they are merely doing what they see needs to be done, and doing it in the best way they can under the circumstances. But they are in a likely spot for making history, nevertheless.
Here's the situation:
For some decades, the professions of medicine and law have had strong national organizations which established their professional standards. The engineers have had their technical societies which served as the medium for exchanging professional views and to some extent for enforcing professional standards. These have all received a legal status, founded on the theory that the public must be protected from quacks, shysters, and incompetent.
Meanwhile a good many newspapermen have felt that their occupation, serving as it does in a democracy to present the day by day picture on which the public bases its action, had need of a similar organization.
Now there are organizations in the newspaper field. The American Newspaper Publishers Association is a strong group, but it represents primarily the ownership of newspaper properties. The American Society of Newspaper Editors is a going concern, but it includes primarily the news executives of the metropolitan newspapers. The newly organized American Newspaper Guild is affiliated with the C. I. O. and is a purely economic group. There are also organizations of advertising men and of circulation managers.
But there is no one organization which represents journalism as a profession.
Sigma Delta Chi has within its ranks some eight thousand alumni members, representative of every group in the newspaper and magazine fields. Included also are men in the allied radio, advertising, publicity, and motion picture groups. Here, argue some Sigma Delta Chi members, lies the nucleus of a truly professional organization which will include all those whose business it is to convey information between the various groups of society that type of information which is of interest to human beings as human beings, and not as butchers, bakers, doctors, lawyers, and day laborers; in short, news.
As this is written, the action of the current Sigma Delta Chi convention on, this question of professional organization has not been taken. But, if it is not taken this year, it will next, or the next—if not by Sigma Delta Chi, then by some other group.
So, here's the handshake of the order for Sigma Delta Chi. If you make history, it's needed. If not, maybe history will take care of itself. Anyhow, we're glad to have you here and hope you enjoy the day.
Visiting Editors---
We Salute You. Too
≈
When 300 editors meet, you can bet then, will be some warm stories told.
Many notables will gather around the Kansas newspaper "roundtables" today to expound the reason why and howfor of Kansas newspapers. Shop talk and old times will probably occupy the minds of the busiest men of Kansas. Kansas' chance for the conference title may even come in for a few words.
The Kansas newspaper roundtables have become an annual institutional affair, and every editor who has attended them always anticipates them weeks before hand. Those who have not been here look forward to a new adventure.
These editors enjoy being here, and we enjoy having them. Journalism students, embryonic and potential newspaper men and women, are grateful for the acquaintance and association with those who have a wealth of newspaper experience. In short: Editors, We Welcome You.
Strange that the nations of the world get around to recognizing Uncle Sam as the outstanding nation only when a crisis exists.
Official University Bulletin
Notices d. at Carcassonne's Office at 3 p.m., preceding regular publication days and 11:00 a.m. on Sunday, December 26th.
Vol. 35 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937 No. 47
CR5ATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative
Workshop takes place after school from 3 until 4 o'clock at Huntley Junior, Mr Avrid Jacob,
of the department of design, will help anyone interested in starting a playhouse blocks for Christmas
to be other activities—Ruth Fensel,
Charles Coulbaub.
ESTES RALLY: The Washburn Estes group has invited those from K.U. interested in Estes to a rally at Washburn on Sat at 10 a.m. 5 o'clock, and interest, call Corrine Martin at 950 - Emday May Parks.
NEWMAN CLUB. The Newman Club will receive Communion in a body at the first Mass this Sunday. All regular members not intending to come to 1:b the breakfast afterwards will please notify Margaret Montgomery before 10 a.m. Saturday. Copies of the Newman breakfast—T.-C. LawRENce. at the meeting following breakfast—T.-C. LawRENce.
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Phi Delta Kappa will meet
their annual meeting in the hall of study hall of
Oregon Training School—Rolf Hemphill.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWFRIES, KANSAS
PUBLISHER J. HOWARD RUSCO
KANSAS PRESS
MEMBER 1937
ASSOCIATION
Editorial Staff
EDITOR-N-CHIEF
Associate EDITORS: JOHN TYE AND DAVID ANGVINE
MORRIS THOMPSON
Associate EDITORS: JOHN TYE AND DAVID ANGVINE
FEATURE EDITOR ... LOUN FOCKELI
News Staff
MANAGING EDITOR JON COCHRANE
CAMPUS EDITORS. CHARLES ALEXANDER AND MARY GRAY
NEW EDITOR BUTT TUCKY
SOCIETY EDITOR WILLIAM BITTENBERG
SNOWY EDITOR M. JEAN CRAVIS
WESTERN EDITOR WILLY BITTENBERG
MARKUP EDITOR LAURA BANNK AND ARNOLD CAULLE
RUNWAY EDITOR HAROLIND ABDONSON
REWRITE EDITOR JASON WALPRIES
Kansan Board Members
ALICE HAEDMANN-JULIUS
J. HEIDRUG WOOD
J. LEWIS ROUGH
E. EVAN GRAVE
KENNETH MORRIS
GRACE VALENTINE
CATHERINE CLAIR
F. QUINTON BROWN
WILLIAM FITTINGKELD
M. LARSON
Edward BARNett
Mevin BURTON
Marine GARCIA
Jane FLEOPON
Morton FLOODMAN
Grace GLANDER
Grace GLANDER
F. QUINTON BROWN
WILLIAM FITTINGKELD
M. LARSON
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Admissions Reporter
ADAMSON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
CITY OF CLEVELAND LAKE
LOUIS AMHERST POTTSTOWN
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
NATIONAL Advertising Service, Inc.
Business Staff P. QUENTIN BROW
BUSINESS MANAGER
1937 Member 1938
Associated Collegiate Press
Business Staff
Collegiate Digest
Distributor of
Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910; at the gon
office at Lawrence, Kan.
NOW TEAM--- "Beat the Aggies" CHARLTON INSURANCE AGENCY
Phone 689
Present Convention of Sigma Delta Chi Is Third at K.U. in 22 Years
This fact is not at all strange when one considers that the University of Kansas was the first school to be granted a charter by the Alpha chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, founded at DePauce University, Greencastle and granted one year after the founding of the 'internacy in 1909.
By Vigil Mitchell, c.39
The advent of the twenty-second annual convention of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, on the Campus today, marks the third time that Kansas has played host to the recognized journalism brotherhood of the United States.
Joseph Murray, '11, who is now managing editor of the Lawrence Journal-World, has written an account of the Beta chapter of Sigma Delta Chi at KU, recording the progress of the University group as most important of the undergraduate and alumni chapters in the country.
Murray's account traces the birth of the Kansas organization back to the Scoop Club, a fraternal body of journalists organized by Roy Roberts, now managing editor of the Kansas City Star.
When the Kansas petition had been approved and negotiations for the charter were finished, the Kansan boys found that they didn't have enough money to send for a representative from DePawu to come and install the new chapter. Murray recalls that the rituals "were for demonstration of one of the prospective members the neophytes proceeded solemly to initiate themselves and each other."
Petitioners were all members of the Scoop Club, and all continued to
In preparation for National Art Week, students in the department of design are exhibiting part of their work at the National Museum of Music Bell Music company of Lawrence.
Insurance Building
Exhibit Student Art
Included in the exhibition are wood blocks, pottery, weaving, metal work, wood-carving, textile designs, and packages, all of which are practical applications of design principle in industry. The materials and processes used in the industries.
be active in both organizations for the next two years. Charter members included: Paul W. Harvey, who was largely responsible for securing the K.U. charter; Edgar Markham; Earl C. Fischer; Homer G. Berger; E. R. Schaffauer; Joseph W. Murray and Ralph C. Hemenway.
Other downtown exhibits during the year are planned by the department in addition to the continuous building of the third floor of west Administration.
A feature of the exhibit is a competition in the re-styling of the package design of a well-known line of dresses. The designs display the "luxury class" packages for novelies, cosmetics, and candies. The designs for textiles show patterns for silk and cotton dresses and for dress materials and draperies.
The packages were made in the classes of Prof. T. D. Jones, who came to the department this year. Crafts and potteries were made under the supervision of Miss Marjorie Whitney, instructor of design, and Prof. Rosemary Ketcham and Arvid Jacobson, assistant instructor of design, were in charge of the textile designs.
Members of the state board of reeges are scheduled to hold a meeting on the University campus this morning. The nature of the business to be transacted was not announced. A session of the board is also scheduled here for the morning of the Kansas-Missouri game.
Reading through Joe Murray's humorous history, it is possible to get a clear picture of an organization of embryonic newspapermen. In 1919 Kansas had the largest chapter. During that year, nine were initiated. A few years later, he coined "cal." In 1925, William Allen White was elected president of the national
In 1926, the K.U. chapter sponsored a gridiron篮房 modelled after the famous newspaper banquets given in Washington every year. At this banquet, Brewsster Morgan delivered six speeches. Invited guests who did not appear were Calvin Coolidge, Sinclair Leinur, William Randolph Hearst, Upton Sinclair, and H. L. Mencken. The latter was
In 1927, the national convention was held in Lawrence, and Carl McGee, the man who uncovered the bomb during World War II, was the speaker featured.
Paul Masonner, one of the strongest reasons why K.U. is leading the Big Six, will have a special reason for winning the tussle with Kansas State University. Masonner, Paul Servey, 28, president of the Hydrate company in Kansas City, Mo., is coming to the game and bringing with him 36 employees.
and H. L. Menken. The latter was detained in Boston because of trouble with the police there.
Masoner To Have Double Inspiration in Today's Tilt
Regents' Meeting Today
Since the founding of the K.U. chapter, it has been ranked at the top of the national organization twice and has always been one of the strongest groups. Alfred M. Lee, a former editor of *The University at Yale*, said once of the University of Kansas chapter, "This department of journalism is turning out more and more big-time journalists every year. The credit goes to such student organizations as Columbia Tech and other departmental clubs."
SEE! NEAR! TUNE!
1938 AUTOMATIC TUNING
PHILCO
NO SQUAT
NO STOOP
NO SQUINT
HANNA'S
Long Rivalry -from the Jawhawk starting lineup, Boslevace, junior tank, who was in the hospital during the Nebraska game, will be replaced by Dan Rhule, sophomore, who played an outstanding 60 minutes of football against the Cornhuskers. Boslevac, while not yet back in the best of conditions, will be ready to enter the game if needed. (Walik St. Clair)
Continued from page 1
K. U. Strong in Line
Equally outstanding are Krueger, Beeier, Nordstrom, and Cardarelli in the Kansas State line.
For Kansas the offensive work in the backfield will probably fail again on Replogle, Douglass, and Sullivant, with able assistance from Amerine and Divens. Ahead of these backs will be what is possibly the best line in the Big Six, at least from tackle to tackle.
Only one regular will be missing
Shirk To Start
Shirk, last year's outstanding Kansas player, will be in the starting lineup for the first time since he was injured in the Washburn game. Lasi
week Shirk showed some of his last brilliance, and Kansas coaches and fans are hoping for sixty minutes of play that will come up to the standard he set last year. If Shirk can come through, the most apparent weakness shown against the Hokkers will be partially remedied. The stadium this afternoon should present a colorful sight with the North Carolina State team by the Kansas cheering section for the first time. Both the Kansas and Kansas State bands will be on hand. The game will start at 2 o'clock.
Aggies next
AGGIES NEXT
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Kansas Will Be Strong On Court
Another Sigh class Kansas varsity basketball tea mats that should again be in the thick of the Big Six championship race, seems in prospect this year, 22 candidates, including six returning lettermen f 0m and 18 varsity co-champions, having reported to Dr. D. P. Allen the past week.
Lettermen Reporting
Several more, who are now out for football, including Fred Boulie-saund, rangy veteran of last year's squad, are expected to swell this season before the opening tide of the season against the Freshman, Dec. 3.
Fred Pralie, "All-Big Six" guard the past two years, and Sylvester Schmidt, part-time regular last season, are expected to form the lock-
Other lettermen who have reported and will undoubtedly see service are Lyman Corlis, Lester Kappelman, Foen Durand, and George Bowles. A number of our reporting are LeRoy Fujitui, George Bowles, and Mora Hormuth.
Thirteen Sophomores
Thirteen sophomores, several of outstanding ability, also turned out for practice. They are: Sanford Dietrich, Loreen Florent, Richard Harp, Robert Hunt, Carl Johnson, Warren Johnson, Frank Kombat, Kirk Owen, John Sullivan, Bruce Robinson, Neson Sullivan, Brice Vorn, and Ed Wienkee.
Ten Conference Games
Dr. Allen announced that starting Monday practice sessions would be on a six-day-a-week basis, in preparation for a heavy 20-game schedule, beginning in December.
In addition to the Frosh tilt, there are 10 games scheduled against non-conference opponents before the Jayhawks tangle with the Oklahoma Sooners here Jan. 7, in the first league game.
The schedule:
Dec. 3. Varsity-Frosh, at Lawrence
Dec. 6. Doane College, at Lawrence
Dec. 7. Ottawa University (A and B) Lawrence
B) at Lawrence.
Des 25, Ottawa University, at
Dec. 10. Ottawa University at Ottawa
B) Lawrence.
C) Merrimack College.
Dec. 13. Baker University (A and B) at Lawrence.
B. August
Dec. 14. Southwestern U. (A and B).
L. Louisiana
B) at Lawrence.
Dec. 15. Morningside College at
Dec. 15. Morningside College at Lawrence
Dec. 21, Southwestern (A and B)
at Winfield
Dec. 16, Washburn (A and B) at Topea.
Dec. 29. Drake University at Des Moines.
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Journalism Fraternity Officers
Sigma Delta Chi executives who will lead the convention delegates to Lawrence today to attend the joint meeting with Kansu authors. Dr. Lennard, a member of Watson secretary and editor of Publishers Auxiliary in Chicago;
Carl F. Miller, chairman of executive council, and editor of west coast edition of Wall Street Journal at Los Angeles; Tully Nettleton, president of Christian Science Monitor Bureau at Washington, D.C.; Willard B. Smith.
Pact Recalls Acute Rivalry
As the opening whistle of the annual Kansan-Kansas State game nears, the University Daily Kansan again prints the past made between the student councils of the schools.
Hereofore, it was quite the thing to form marauding expeditions and to daub the other campus with paint, before the annual football lift. Heads were shaved, clothes torn and of course paint was literally spread over each campus. Every time a state was removed to remove it and there was still a chance that he would be painted again in the next 24 hours.
Several years ago a painting party from Aggieville doubled royal purple paint over the front of the comparatively new Audiotok at the University. Damage was to the extent
tressurer, and bureau chief of the United Press at Madison, Wis.
Standing: George A. Brandenburg, executive counsel, and with Charlotte Gilman and Publisher; James C. Kiper, executive secretary from Chicago.
Jan 4. Washburn (A and B) at Lawrence.
15. ian. 18. Iowa at Lawrence
Jan. 19. Missouri at Columbia.
Feb. 2. Nebraska at Lawrence.
Feb. 7. Kansas State (A and B)
Jan. 7. Oklahoma at Lawrence.
Jan. 11. Kansas State (A and B)
Manhattan
Feb. 18, Oklahoma at Norman.
Feb. 21, Iowa State at Ames.
Feb. 28, Nebraska at Lincoln.
Feb. 3, Missouri at Lawrence.
hit the stone at the front of the moulding had o be sanded by professional stone cutters.
Wheeled at a sharp edge after that episode and it was about high time something was done before the vandals went too far. A committee composed of representatives from the governing bodies of both schools met and drew up a peace pact to meet the urgent situation.
The peace pact is now in effect and the officials of the two schools as well as the governing bodies hope that in the future the pact will curb the destructive feeling between the two schools.
The past between the councils is "AN AGREEMENT entered into by the Moe's Student Council of the University, and the Agricultural Council of Kansas State Agricultural College, on the behalf of their respective student bodies, to abolish forever all member of school activities between the two schools.
"WHEREAS, These fights and activities have grown to such proportions in the last few years that the friendly relations of the two institutions are in danger; that unpleasant publicity results to each school; that serious injuries result from social injuries and that much property is damaged and ruined.
"WHEREAS: To avoid such serious results the above named Men's Student Councils covenant and agree on
Dickinson leads---always the Best
--the part of each institution that this shall constitute a formal treaty, calling to a close all such fights and activities, to be in effect hereford and
DICKINSON
TOMORROW
In a Great Funfest
Lestie Moward - Joan Blondell
NARRATIVE
NOW
The New Universal Presents
DEANNA DURBIN
YES! IT'S GREATER THAN EVEN THE SENSATIONAL "THREE SMART GIRLS"!
"STAND IN"
100 MEN and a GIRL
The 4 Merry Men Are Coming---
Merry Go Round of 1938
"Skin the Wildcats"
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forever, and binding all Student Councils in the future to recognize and enforce the said treaty.
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home of the bywahs
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"WHERAS: If from time to time, various members of either student body in violation attempt to carry on, or do carry on, such fights and activities, the Student Council of the institution the said students represent agrees to mete out serious punishment for such violations, that the dignity and intent of this document may be preserved."
LAST TIMES
TODAY
Continuous
Shows from 2
The Greatest of All Singing Cowboys SMITH BALLEW In Zane Grey's
"ROLL ALONG
COWBOY"
— AND —
"WEST BOUND
LIMITED"
Lyle Talbet - Patty Rowles
"Yea Jayhawks"
Lyle Talbot - Patty Rowles Also—Selected Short Subjects
"Joe College," 424-pound museon of the Baylor University football team, is a grizzly bear who delights in bucking gunels and tack-ings around.
SUNDAY!
MAGNIFICENT!
Magnificent as its Desert Setting. Stirring as only the story of a Great Love Can Be!
Marlene
DIETRICH
Charles
BOYER
Morely Jermings, a football coach for 25 years, told Baylor University students that "football has no place for hysteria," and blamed recent pop ups for the attacking deficit of Baylor by the under-rated University of Texas team.
GARDEN OF ALLAH
Meet me after the game at the ever popular...
B.
Soon: "RAMONA"
"TALK OF THE DEVIL"
IN TECHNICOLOR
AND
He's Back Again
WILLIAM BOYD
in Clarence E. Mulford's
"HOPALONG
RIDES AGAIN"
GRANADA COFFEE SHOP
BEAT THE AGGIES and Your FREE SHOW TONITE AT 11:15 Will Be
First door south of Granada Theatre
"We Went to College"
Warning!
Hugh Herbert Chas, Butterworth Walter Abel And Selected Shorts
Attend Our Regular
9 o'clock show Tonite
JOE E. BROWN
"Fit For a King"
And Be Sure of Seats for Your Special Free Show and Rally
GRANADA
Sunday—"CONQUEST"
8
Crush the Aggies
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Only $2.75 for the remainder of the 1937-38 school year
PAGE FOUR
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 13. 1937
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
S.A.E.; Phi Psi's To Semi-finals
Scoring in the first few minutes of play, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon touch football team defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in the quarter finals of the playoffs.
Nearly three hundred spectators divided their attention between the Phi Delt-Sig Alph game and the Phi Pai-Kappa Sigma game.
After an early exchange of punts the Sig Alphs received the ball on a bad kick by Trotter and Buck passed it to Paul in the ball in Deltit Dirt territory. Buck passed to Norse for a short gain and on the next play, a sweeping left end run, Buck passed to Hall end run. Buck passed to Sig Alphs to kick for点斗.
After receiving the Sig Alk pickhack, Trotter threw pass after pass to receivers only to have them slip through their hands when they were in the open. On a long pass from Van Cleave, Trotter dropped a long would be touchdown pass in his tense effort to catch the ball.
The Sig Alphs were badly outplayed during the second half, completing only four passes and having several intercepted by the tight Phi Delt defense. Near the end of the game, Siffers, Phi Delt center, intercepted a Sig Alph who jumped for a touchdown when Norse tagged him on the Sig Alph six yard line. Try as they did the Phi Delt were unable to score
The Sig Alps received the ball on downs or playing a safe game. Norse grounded the ball in the end zone for a voluntary safety.
Norse, Hall and Buck were by far the stars on the Sig Algha队. Manchey, Cheatum, Siffers, Van Cleave and Tolhurst made the manatifs for the Phi Delta.
In Kappa Psi turned on the beat yesterday in their quarter-final game with Kappa Sigma to win by a score of 25 to 6.
Franklin, Phi Psi end, scored in the early minutes of play on a pass from Bob Allen. Franklin scored again when the Phi Psi advanced into the ball into scoring position. Near the goal line, Kappa Sig defense out ran the Kappa Sig defense to score a third touchdown for the Phi Psi's.
At the beginning of the second half, Southern, Kappa Sig recovered the kickoff in the Phi Pai end zone score of the game for his team.
Bilhantist passes by Allen to at least a half dozen different receivers was the big feature of the game. The Phi Pit team put up a defensive wall with Bilhant after up more than his share of the passes.
The Phi Psi team will meet the powerful Beta Team day morning in the semi-finals. Both teams have plenty of defensive ability and
47
Hinge-Hipped
The opponents call him "hinge-
The opponents call him "hinge-hiped," but his name is Howard Cleveland. He is quarterback on the Kansas State team and is one of the best ball lagers in the Big Six.
On the other hand, the Sigma Alpha Epialon team will meet the Phi Gma team in the other semifinal game. Each team is ranked by the Sig Alphas are rated a shade better than the Phi Gma on paper; but the once this season and that by the Phi Gma team has been beaten only once by the Sigma team so decidedly defeated in the playoffs last Thursday.
this game promises to be a great tussle.
200 Pound Guard
15 16
Don Beeler tips the scales over
200 pounds and is one of the many great Kansas State linemen who will attempt to make the going rough for Kansas today.
Extend to you a cordial invitation to visit our store — Before and after this Kansas-Kansas State game.
CARL'S—For 25 Years the Home of "Good Clothes"
A
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Imported Harris Tweed Top Coats ... $35.00
Imported Isaac Carr Covert Coats ... $37.50
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Here are your weekly football winners. If you don't think so, you coin on a coin with game and you'll probably come out ahead. (That's self-confidence, not 'it'!)
Along the Sideline By William Fitzgerald, e'39 Kansan Sports Editor
Oklahoma - Missouri. We'll give the Sooners the edge here although most of the Tiger cripples are getting back into action.
K-State-Kansas. Toss your first coin on this one. If we pick Kansas it would be prejudice; if we pick State it's disloyalty. Your choice is my choice here, and if you pick Kansas, may your team win.
New Wool Mufflers
Nebraska=Pitt. This game is a sell-out with Pitt easily favored. Nebraska should put up a battle, how people can't be wrong. (Or can they?)
Iowa State-Marquette. Two down trodden teams, with Marquette apt to win one for a change.
Northwestern - Minnesota. The Gophers are an up and down team, but Northwestern is the team they've been waiting for. Minnesota has enough power to avenge last year's defeat.
Notre Dame - Army. Notre Dame gets the nod in what should be a thriller.
And here are the names of your own named colleges—OHIO STATE.
CALFORNIA-Oregon.
HOLY CROSS-Brown.
Cornell-Dartmouth.
INDIANA-Iowa.
Michigan-PENNSYLVANIA.
Texas A. & M-RICE.
Oregon State-SOUTHERN CALIF BAYLOR-Southern Methodist.
VANDERBILT-Tennessee.
Texas CHRISTIAN-TEXAS.
Purdue-Wisconsin.
Princeton-YALE.
College-ALABAMA.
TULSA-Washington (St. Louis).
Syracuse-COLUMBIA.
Auburn-LOUISIAN STATE.
Colle College-COLORADO.
Carnegie Tech.-MICH STATE.
ARKANSAS-Mississippi.
And here are the rest of your win-
THE ALL-TIME RECORD
THE MARKET
Year 1902 16 K. K.S.Y. K. K.S.
1903 16 01922 1 K. S.T.
1904 34 01923 0 0
1905 41 01924 0 0
1906 28 01925 7 14
1906 4 01926 0 27
1907 29 101927 2 13
1908 12 61928 0 10
1909 5 61929 0 14
1910 1930 10 0
1911 16 01931 0 13
1912 19 61932 19 0
1913 16 61933 19 0
1914 28 01934 0 13
1915 19 71935 9 0
1916 0 1936 6 26
1917 0 0
1918 13 7Total 411 191
1919 16 3Games
1920 14 21 10
1921 21 7Tied 3 3
An address of welcome will be given by Chancellor E. H. Lindley at 10:45 o'clock this morning. Following the Chancellor's address, will be an address delivered by Hugh Baillie, president of the United Press and honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi.
S. D. X.
To K.U. Today
Activities of Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, will shift from Topeka, where the festivities have been taking place, to Lawrence this morning, when a joint meeting will be held on the University campus.
This afternoon, the delegates and other members registered at the convention, will attend the Kansas-Kan
10:45-Joint meeting with Kansas ditors, on University Campus. Address of welcome, Dr. E. H. Lindley, Bancellor, Address, Hugh Baillie, of United Press of a national president, president of Sigma Jeta Chi.
8 a.m.-Business session, Jayhawi hotel. Committee reports 10-Trip to Lawrence. Entire convivial party will go by chartered buses.
Saturday Program
8 a.m.-Business session, Jayhawk
hotel. Committee reports.
12. 15 p.m.—Lunch. Delegates free to lunch at will and visit points of interest on Campus.
2-Football game, Kansas vs. Kansas State, Memorial stadium. Delegates and other members registered at convention will be guests of Uta
5:15—Return trip to Topeka. The entire convention party will return to the Jawahawk hotel, Topeka, by
"BEAT THE AGGIES, TEAM"
San State football game as guests of chartered bus. 6:30-Model initiation, Jayhawk model initiation for associate and hotel. National officers will conduct the University
We're pulling for you 100 per cent
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WHEN YOU TELEPHONE
THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
THE FASHION MAGAZINE
1. Be slow to hang up when calling.
2. Be quick to answer when called.
In the Southwest, 25,000 people a day hang up before the called party has a chance to answer.
SKIN THE WILDCATS
AVOID PARKING TROUBLES
RIDE THE BUS TO THE GAME TODAY
BEAT THE AGGIES
BEAT THE AGGIES
BEAT THE AGGIES
BEAT THE AGGIES
BEAT THE AGGIES
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas
NUMBER 48
VOLUME XXXV
Senior Engineers Take Trip
LAWRENCE, KANSAS. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1937
Seventy - four Members Leave This Morning on Annual Inspection Trip in Great Lakes Region
Seventy four members of the senior class of the School of Engineering left yesterday morning for their annual one-week inspection trip, which will take them to Chicago, Milwaukee, Indiana Harbor, Jackson Park, and other midwest industrial centers. The electrical and mechanical engineers who left yesterday went to the actual car. A bus has been chartered for the chemical engineers who will leave this morning.
Activities Begin in Chicago
The tour is planned to give the students an opportunity for obtaining first-hand information concerning the technical application of chemistry and engineering to industrial purposes.
1
On Tuesday, the group will inspect the Lakeside Plant of the Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Company, where powdered coal is burned successfully. In the evening, the workers will travel back to Chicago.
The inspection activities will begin for the electrical and mechanical engineers in Chicago, Sunday. Nov. 14 with a visit to the Field Museum, Aquarium, Planetarium, and Art Institute. Students will travel by bus to Milwaukee where they will register at the Plankton House.
Monday morning the entire party will visit the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company at West Allis, Wisconsin. After being luncheon guests of the Allis-Chalmers Company, the party will travel to the plant of the Allan-Bradley Company in Milwaukee.
Wednesday, the party will inspect the Indiana Steel Company at Indiana Harbor, Indiana, the State Lane Power Plant, and also the Rosenwald Industrial Museum in Jackson Park.
Visit Hawthorne Works Thursday
By bus the entire party will travel
Thursday to the Hawthorne works of
Hawthorne and by bus the afternoon all electrical engineers will visit the Wacker Drive Sub St.
Station of the Commonwealth Edition
Company and the Chicago Lighting
Institute in the Civic Opera building.
The mechanical engineers will
see the machinery. The international Harvester Company
Chem Engineers To St. Louis
Friday, the entire party will visit the Marshall Field. Store and the National Broadcasting Company to meet with representatives located in the Merchandise Mall.
The chemical engineers have a different but quite as interesting itinerary. After spending Sunday night at the Kings-Way Hotel in St. Louis, the group on Monday will visit the Monato Chemical Company.
Tuesday morning there will be an inspection of Anheuer-Busch, Inc. In the afternoon, the student section of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will hold a round-table discussion. The group will spend the night at the Morrison hotel in Chicago.
Wednesday, the chemical engineers will join with the electrical and mechanical engineers in inspecting the Inland Steel Company at Indiana Harbor. The time in the afternoon will be spent at the Crossroads Building, 801 E B I L D DuPont de Nemours and Company in East Chicago, Indiana.
Thursday, time will be spent at the Western Electric Company. Hawthorne Corporation, 3100 South Kedzie Avenue; and the Liquid Carbon
Continued on page 2
Y.M.C.A. Freshman Council Will Meet Tomorrow Night
The freshman council of the Y.M. C.A. will meet tomorrow night at 7 o'clock in the Union building to discuss faculty and student relations. Joseph Weaver, c'41, will lead the group.
Gerald Banker, c'40, will lead the current action study group in the discussion of higher education at 4:30 o'clock Wednesday afternoon.
Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock the Campus problems commission led by Elizabeta "Zeke" Cole, c.40; discuss the race situation at K.U.
The Y.M.C.A. cabinet will held its weekly meeting at 7 o'clock Wednesday night.
Puff Pant Prom Produces Pretty Potty Princinados
"Heck, there wasn't any fellow who tried to crush the Frem," lamented a feminine-looking ROTC officer, as the last strains of the orchestra ended the annual Puff Pan for women only Friday night.
With the stag-line embellished by several "men" hands enough to merit "ohs" and "ahs", from the women present, and with "dates" turning out variously in uniforms, tuxedos, tails, and business suits, the Prom was told to be more successful than it has been for many years.
Prizes were given to Marian Dresser, buncel, and Barbara Goli c38 for the best dressed couple in the dress. Prizes were awarded prizefor the best dressed "star."
Helen Geis, c'40, and Jean Bailey, c'40, were awarded the prize for the most original costume. Miss Geis came as a football player and Miss Geis football queen. Lenora Grisselz, c'20, received honorable mention. c'20
Chaperons and judges were Miss Ruth Hoover, Miss Elizabeth Dunkel, and Mrs. E. R. Elbel. Clyde Byson's orchestra played.
Kibm Signs 'Frolic' Band
Floyd Ray. West Coast
'King of Swing.' Will
Plau for Frost Party
Floyd Ray and his Harlem Dictators have been signed for the Freshman Frolic which is to be held Friday, Nov. 19, Paul Kibm. varsity dance manager, announced yesterday.
"From all reports, Floyd Ray's band is rapidly becoming known as the West Coast's 'King of Swing'. Khim was. "Although his name is not so familiar in this part of the country as in California, where he bails from, his band has really been playing at the Palmer Park and the mid-western and eastern states." The band was invited to play in the Swing Concert held last summer at the Palmer in Los Angeles. Playing along with such bands as Benny Goodman, Ben Pollack, Hal Kemp, Laura Prima, and Jimmy Greer, the band has earned criticals to have more than carried off its share of the honors."
Featured with Ray's orchestra is Joe Alexander, the Harlem Bing Crosby. He is reputed to be one of the finest Negro ballad singers in the country. His own compositions will be rendered. Also the only known colored girls' rhythm singing trio "Ivy, Vern and Von" will be among the galaxy of entertainers. Johnny Alston, one of the stars, will present some "scat" songs.
The orchestra is composed of five brass instruments, four saxophones, and a rhythm section including piano, drums, bass, and guitar. Most of the arrangement and composition of special numbers is done by Ray himself, who is a saxophonist. He plays the clarinet and flute band is one of the few that entirely play music that has been arranged especially for it.
"Ray's company has a personnel of 18 persons," said Kihm, "and is one of the few colored orchestras that can play both sweet and hot music. We are promising a lively evening to Freshman Frolickers."
Brandendburg Announces S.D.X. Awards
"There are two advantages to this innovation of having practical newspaper men take over journalism classes for a day," commented W. A. Kansan, the editor-in-chief of Kansas, at the end of his day as "dean of the journalism department last night." It gives the students a chance to ask editors to explain and justify their practices in the field of journalism, and it gives both students an opportunity to understand the problems which confront each in his daily work."
Washington University
Wins First Place: Allen,
Brant and Baillie Speak
At Banquet
"Well," he replied, "as long as the newspapers of the country expect
"But what about the possible effect of the recent "red scare" here, on the pocketbooks of the regents taxpayers?" Mr. Bailey was asked.
Effect of 'Red Scare'
'Innovation In Journalism Classes Has Advantages,' Says 'Dean' for a Day
"For instance," he continued, "we editors have become concerned with the need for a new journalism building at K.U. This morning, we had lunch with Chancellor Lindley to discuss the possibility of the erection of such a building as soon as possible."
Embroyé journalists squirmed in the stairs at the Sigma Delta Chi national convention in Topeka last night as George Brandenburg, chairman of the committee on chapter efficiency and professional achievement awards, spoke leading up to the announcement of the contest winners.
By the time the last chapter named—that of the winning organization—was read, young writers were fairly sitting on the edge of their chairs, ready to shout for the name.
The announcements were made at the convention banquet, where Kansas representatives were frequently called upon to explain the defeat of a football team which last week tied the Cornuskers.
By Charles Alexander, c'38
and Claude Dorsey, c'38
The other winners, ranging from second degree of excellence down, were Iowa State, Indiana, Oregon State, Penn State, Northwestern Wisconsin, North Dakota, South Dakota, Butter, Butte, Drake, Missouri
The speakers at the meeting were Henry J. Allen, editor of the Topeka State Journal, Irving Brant, editorial writer on the St. Louis Star-Times, and William Allen White, nationally famous editor of the Emporia Gazette, and an honorary member of Sigma Delta Chi.
Records made, business done, new national officers to be elected Sunday morning, were all forgotten while journalistic youngsters, journalism teachers and advisers, and practicing, newspapermen forgot dead lines, copy paper, cranky managing editors, and Monday classes and let the friendly spirit of an all-American bull session prevail.
Plans for the Hockey Banquet to be held in December will be discussed at the W.A.A. meeting in the gymnasium Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. All W.A.A. members are asked to attend.
The University of Washington,
came out in first place in the
chapter efficiency contest, and the
chapter delegates accepted the honor
with a mixture of pride and relief
from the strain of waiting.
Convention friendships and story-swapping are in full flower last night after the trip to Lawrence yesterday for a joint meeting with the Kansas editors at their Roundtable at the Kansas-Kansas State game.
Winners in the profe-
sional achievement award contests were Stanford, Drake and Oklahoma, in that order.
In any room, particularly those in the wing occupied by the Kansas University host chapter, might have been found tales of off-the-record campus affairs of any of forty defiant instances scattered over the nation.
Tully Nettlementon, national president of the fraternity, acted as toast-master.
W.A.A. Meeting Wednesday
"Mr. Bailey," the Kansas reporter said, "I happened to overhear you and a group of the other editors talking over the events of the day. From what I gathered, most of you enjoyed your new jobs pretty well. How would you like to change places with Mr. Flint permanent?"
The Kansas City publisher smiled, recalling perhaps the years he had spent as principal of Wyandotte High School. "Yes," he said. "I have envy. I know how hard it is to permanently way of making a living—well, I think I'd rather take the work of an active newspaper man. There are too many interesting siders."
to have their constitutional right of freedom of the press recognized, they must themselves recognize the other four freedoms guaranteed in the Bill of Rights. They must freedom of discussion, and as long as all political theories of government are presented equally at a state university, that institution does not need to be afraid that the taxpayers need necessary funds." Editors Enjoy Day
work of an active newspaper man.
There are too many interesting sides
Continued on page 2
Casting aside their purported tradition dignity for the spirit of collective support of the football team, the University law students, yesterday afternoon, marched not austerely but conspicuously down the Hill and into the stadium and into a building that they ducted themselves, not dignified, but pointedly in favor of the Jayhawk gridders.
Loyal Laws
Loudly Laud
Losing Luggers
The "laws" previously banded together at Green hall about 1.30 p.m. From there they were led by their professors down the Hill and into the stadium. Each of the 150 future supreme court justices was adored by them. They took part in which leaf color to their roaring demonstrations during the game.
Yesterday's concerted support of the team by the "Laws" was the first time that any such demonstration has been held.
Howard "Tony" Immel, 138, reported to the police last night that his rooms in the Moody apartments, 1343 Tennessee, had been entered yesterday afternoon while he was at the football game, and clothing to the value of $500 taken. He told the police that the man had been taken from all clobbering but had not taken any money or other valuables.
'Tony' Immels' Rooms Robbed
Neighbors told him they had seen some one leave the apartment just before the radio brought the news of the Kansas State touchdown.
Mr. Immel announced last night he would pay a liberal reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the robber.
Public To See Sun's Storms
K. U. Observatory will feature the K. U. Observatory will feature the Sun in a popular Sky Day program today at 2:25 p.m.
Sun spots, those gigantic solar turbines that cause magnetic storms disrupting the world's electrical communications, are at the peak of their eleven-year cycle and make a striking spectacle. They will be exhibited to the public with the six-inch telescope.
Dr. N. Wyman Storer, director of the observatory, will speak on "The Star of Day." There will be an astronomical exhibit, including a spectroscope through which the solar spectrum may be viewed. The solar imagery program will be literature related to K.U. School of Music will featurelections with solar themes. Everyone is cordially invited to this event.
"Pledges 26, actives fight! On to the Cotton Bowl." These were the crises of enthusiastic pledges Friday evening after their 26 to 0 rout of the annual battle for possession of the coveted Schiller Shore trophy.
The victory of the pledges over the actives was the first in the history of the fend, which began five years ago. So apparent was the demoralizing effect of the defeat on the actives that the activists resisted in protest against the raucous behavior of the pledges for the rest of the evening.
Acacia Pledges
Win Coveted
Shore Trophy
The game had hardly started, when McCoy ran wide around right end for a touchdown and the first six points. Although the pledges did not score in the second quarter, it was apparent that they could run around, through, or over the active line any time they wanted to. The potent ground attack combined with a perfect air attack rolled up three
McCoy scored the second touchdown on an off-tackle play in the third quarter. Then to make his day all the more complete, he scored two more touchdowns on end sweeps in the fourth quarter. One of the touchdowns came on a 35-yard around jump, and was the result of some good blocking on the part of the pledge team.
Pledges Score Early
Finish in the Dark
The game started rather late in the afternoon, and as a result was finished in the dark. But it was rumored around the Acacia house after the game that the activities had played in the dark all afternoon.
in the dark all afternoon.
Two Hundred Kansas 'Eds' Talk Shop
Hugh Bailie, U.P. Head,
Addresses Joint Session
Of Editors and Sigma
Delta Chi
Two hundred Kansas editors and their wives, from almost every county in the state, attended the annual Editors' Boundaries discussions, held at the University yesterday and Friday.
Hugh Bailleil, president of the United Press and national honorary president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, was the principal speaker on the Roundtable program.
At a joint meeting of editors and Sigma Delta Chi delegates in Fraser theater yesterday morning, Chin-ung Kim, president, accrued the editors to the University.
Following Chancellor Lindley's remarks, Prof. L. N. Flint, chairman of the department of journalism introduced Mr. Baillie.
The American press is keeping the public better informed than even before despite the fact that these are days of unusual storm and stress in national and international affairs. Mr. Baillie said.
People Better Informed
"People today, the average people, of this country are far better informed, more sophisticated, more technologically advanced, self-willed well-matured, than ever before." Bailie said. "They know their own minds better than they used to, and the percentage of the population has declined greatly."
Baillie said more and faster travel, radio, sound newsreels and other factors have contributed to this improvement, "but the greatest single factor in keeping the people informed is enlightened is news and newspapers."
Propaganda Resisted
In today's turmoil of undeclared wars, unprecedented labor "unrest and conflicts of dictatorships vs. democracies, propagandists are more visible than the propaganda drive hasn't gotten to first base in the newspapers of America," Baillie said, "because the working press, and the desk men, and the publishers, have been on the front lines and offended it all about the line."
There is a tremendous responsibility on newspapersmatter to keep their personal convictions out of the news, he noted. "Occasional traitors" may try to sneak propaganda into the news.
Traitors Discovered
"Up to now at least they have usually been found out," he said, "and furthermore they have merited the contempt of their associates. I trust the day never comes when, because of any development of the future, such traitors to journalism will have the support and sympathy of their associates, or their employ, for them. Journalism is the journal of such. That day would be an evil one for human liberty in this country."
Speaking of wars, Ballie noted that in today's scattered undeclared wars the United Press has 25 full-time war correspondents at the various fronts, while during the World War, when correspondents' activities were severely restricted, only five or six were needed.
FOOTBALL SCORES
Army 0, Notre Dame 7.
Army 6, Notre Dame 7
Cornell 6, Dartmouth 8
Cornell 6. Dartmouth 6.
Caleb 76. Princeton 0.
Rutgers 0. Ohio State 13
Carnegie Tech. 6, Michigan St. 15
Pennsylvania 6, Michigan St.
Carriegie Teen. 6, Michigan St.
Pennsylvania 0, Michigan 7.
Geo. Washington 33, N.D. St. 6 in the Midwest
Minnesota 7. Northwestern 0.
Indiana 3. Iowa 0.
Marquette 0, Iowa State 3.
In the Valley
Nebraska 7, Pittsburgh 13
Oklahoma 7, Missouri 0
Kansas 0, Kansas State 7
Tulsa 6, Washington (St.L.) 7.
In the South
Alabama 7, Georgia Tech. 0
Kentucky 8, Boston College 13.
Georgia 7, Tulane 6.
In the West
California 26, Oregon 0.
Oregon State 12, Southern Calif. 12.
Colorado 35, Colo. 6.
Aitchison, Nov. 13—(UP)—fames Foley, Jr., 18, captain of the Maur Hill High School football team, died today of a blood infection.
AGGIES CRIMP K.U. TITLE HOPES, 7-0
SUMMARY
First downs
Yards from scrimmage
Yards lost in scrimmage
Punts. No.
Total yards, punts
Return of punts, yards
Forward passes attempted
Forwards completed
Forwards, yards gained by
Laterals, yards gained by
Laterals, yards lost by
Passes, intercepted by
Yards ret., intercept, passes
Penalties. No.
Yards lost by penalty
Fumbles
Kansas 0 0 0 0-
Own fumbles recovered Ball lost on downs
Score by periods:
U. K.S.
29 10
28 29
12 24
29 11
473 36
160 55
10 7
0 1
0 2
0 24
0 21
0 16
1 5
5 2
4
20 30
0
0
Kansas State 0 7 0 6
Attendance 19.00
Officials E. C. Quigley, St. Mary,
reference; Ted O'Sullivan, Missouri;
ampute John Waldorf, Missouri;
impair Emperor Emporia
Teachers, head lineman
Tichnet's Speech on Finance Ends Meeting of Business Teachers
"The Position of the United States Treasury and Its Implications" was the subject discussed by C. C Fitchner, dean of the School of Business Administration at the University of Arkansas, yesterday morning after a gathering of economists. Dean Fitchner's address ended the two-day session of the thirteenth annual meeting of teachers of economics and business in Kansas colleges and junior colleges. Several important governmental political events have affected the United States treasury were enumerated by Dean Fitchner.
Points Emphasized
Special emphasis was given the following points:
1. Expansion of the national debt has been associated with expenditures for relief and "pump-priming" to stimulate business for the past six years.
2. Regular federal expenditures will be based on a high plateau for the future and reflect a change of government relations to income and expenditures.
3. Because of the accumulation of Social Security funds, old age pension, and the like, the treasury has been made up by a hand at be end of the fiscal year.
4. The treasury has ceased to be the dominant inflationary agency of the United States government.
5. As shown by recent subscriptions of bond issues, the credit of the United States is high.
6. A sound fiscal policy would require that pumping process policy be reversed and debt be reduced by the trimming of expenditures.
7. The treasury has control over bank reserves and money markets which should be relinquished to the Federal Reserve system.
Gagliardo Traces Union
A general review of the trade union agreement was presented by Prof Domenico Gagliardo, principal speaker Friday afternoon.
Professor Gagliardi traced something of the history of the trade union in the United States, and something of the origin of the disputes between the American Federation of Labor and the CIO., and added a bit on how now being made to bring reconciliation between these two groups.
Organization Extended
"There has been tremendous growth in the membership of the trade unions," said Professor Gagliaro, "not only in an increased membership of established unions, but through the extension of organizations into steel and other basic industries.
"Both the aggressiveness of the C.I.O. in organizing and the national labor relations law have made possible this extension of membership."
.
Public opinion, according to Professor Gagliardo, has been more favorable to the A.F. of L. than that the C.I.O., largely, he said, as a reaction against C.I.O. procedure of a year ago.
K. State Lone Tally Comes In First Half
By Bill Fitzgerald, c'39
19,000 Parents' Day
Fans Witness Annual
Intra - Kansas Classic:
Editors Are Guests
It was all Kansas State in Memorial stadium as the fighting Wildcats topped the Kansas Coyahawks from their top perch in the Big Six by a 7-0 score. The one touchdown margin was not an indication of the difference between the two teams as they dominated the play throughout, and kept Kansas from making any serious threats.
The Kansas State touchdown came with less than a minute to play in the first half, with Cleveland scoring standing up after a Cleveland-to-Atlanta game. The Jayhawkers' five-yard line. Cleveland's great kicking kept the Kansas team back on its heels the rest of the game. The Kansas line, which屯鳆ched kansas's great forward wall was out played through Wilkens, who hold the Jayhawkers to 50 yards from scrimmage.
The game, which saw Kansas State reach its peak just a week after the great Kansas State against Nebrer, so it was played before some 19,000 guests' Day fans who braved a high wind to view the intra-Kansas classic. Kansas Editors were guests at the game. The Jayhawkers
Standing of the Teams
W L T L Pt.PelPts.
Nebriy 2 0 2 750 40 20
'Oklaiona 3 1 1 700 62 13
Kansas 1 1 1 603 62 29
Kansas 1 1 1 603 62 29
Kansas St. ie 1 0 0 333 14 33
Iowa State 0 0 0 000 00
above, suffered a big let-down after their Nebraska game, and were not match for it. *Mardianthus yesterday.* The merger of 229 yards to 50 from scrimmage tells the whole story.
Use of cards by the cheering section, an innovation so far as the University of Kansas is concerned, produced a favorful impression upon the crowd attending the game, as did new evolutions by the University band. The band; new maneuvers had been presented at Nebraska last year, and seen previously by a home crowd.
State Starts With Rush
Kansas State started its offensive activities shortly after taking Dougless' opening kick. Brugs and the Wildcats beat the Navasota for good gains, and the Wildcats were on. The Jay-Hawks tightened up however, when K-State generated too far into the verticie, and took the ball on down.
Replegue's superiority in punting durin1, the first quarter kept the State team back in its own territory. A cross wind which was blowing south and east was a handicap to Briggs, the K-State kicker.
Coach Wey Fry sent in almost a complete new backfield to start the second quarter. He sent his ace.
Continued. page 4
Howard Cleveland
47
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1937
≈
Reform Can Be A Hot Potato
Comment
Three incidents—two of them in North America, the other in Europe—pillow the course which history will probably take among the democracies in the next several years, at least until the next world-wide depression.
Early this fall Leon Blum abdicated the longest premiership in France since 1916 in favor of Camille Cheautempts. Blum, leader of the Popular Front bloc, had pushed a program of social reform—had pushed it so fast and so far that the most sluggardly House of Deputies would not follow him and he sustained a reverse in the French parliament.
Lazero Cardenas, president of the Mexican Republic, facing, as did Leon Blum, a financial crisis has been forced to show the redistribution of land, the organization of agriculture into communes, the encouragement of public works, and the socialization of education.
In the United States following the market crisis of last month, President Roosevelt is facing his stiffest opposition from business and commercial interests since his rise to power in 1933. New Dealers themselves seem to be a bit shaky on the policy of pursuing more reform at the present time. Sources close to the administration indicate that the President, in convening the special session of Congress Nov. 15, may advocate a lowering of corporate profits tax rates, the elevation of railroad rates to compensate for rises in wages, and the delineation of a policy friendly toward public utilities. All of these represent concessions by the administration.
In all cases these reform movements were initiated by popular reaction against the hypocrisy and ignorance which failed to mitigate the economic collapse of 1929. In all these countries significant reform movements have been forced to halt far short of their goal. In all these countries prosperity seemed to follow in the wake of reform—up to a certain point. And that point reached, Cardenas and Blum and Roosevelt faced the failing confidence of business and a financial crisis.
These trends seem to show that once the march from the depths to prosperity has been retarded for an instant, reform is no longer opportunistic as a political philosophy. The end of reform and the stagnation of government is in sight—until a bigger and better depression.
More Impressive By Their Absence
"I should like very much to see college units of the R.O.T.C. march in parade. Just before the parade starts, let fifty per cent of the boys drop out, but don't close the ranks. The gaps are the places of those who were left 'over there.'" . That is part of the suggestion offered by Arthur Northwood, Jr., president of the National Student Federation for a demonstration portraying the horrors of war.
"Hatred of war is not enough, but more of it is sorely needed."
He says that within the past few weeks this country has been evidencing an increasingly war-like psychology. About the suggested demonstration he says, "I think it would do some girls good to look eagerly for their sweet-hearts, see a gap in the ranks, and suddenly realize that they were "killed in action"". He might well have mentioned parents and friends as well as girls, but it seems to be a good idea. There are enough R.O.T.C. units in the schools in the United States to make an impressive demonstration, marching proudly with scattered gaps in their ranks, with perhaps a large placard explaining those gaps.
They Also Detract Who Do Small Damage
Now that "Uncle Jimmy" and the Pioneer saturate are protected by a Men's Student Council resolution to push prosecution of individuals caught decearing them and a $50 reward for the apprehension and conviction of such individuals, attention might be turned to the lesser acts of vandalism and thoughtlessness that mar the University campus.
Outstanding among these are the painting of sidewalks and the distribution of handbills. For the sake of those who must paint signs on the sidewalks, it might be pointed out that white wash is much cheaper than the sort of paint that stays to detract from the appearance of the Campus long after the advertised event has been forgotten.
It has long been the practice of many groups to stand at strategic points and hand out varicolored dodgers to class-bound students. An unbiased survey has shown that more than 99 per cent of these students drop the dodgers within 16 steps after having received them, giving the campus a circus-groups appearance.
Perhaps the Men's Student Council and the W.S.G.A. can do something about these minor irritations.
≈
Let's Have No Line Where None Should Be
Students in semi-organized and unorganized houses have started a movement for organization that will ultimately include a wide and promising program. Plans are being made for social functions that will make up the deficiency in the social life of most independent students, which usually is confined to mid-weeks and variates.
Only one danger lies in this movement. That is an accentuation of the demarcation between sorority and fraternity members and independent students.
The University is fortunate in that that line is not as clearly drawn here as it is in many other colleges and universities. However, the larger and more progressive universities are even further abolishing the distinction.
All effort should be toward that end.
Barkless dogs have been imported from Belgium. . Now if someone would import a noiseless auto horn. . .
Official University Bulletin
Notice due at Chamberlin's Office at 3 p.m. preceding regular publication days and 11:35 a.m. on Thursday, March 18, 2016.
Vol. 35 SUNDAY.NOVEMBER 14,1937 No.48
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION There will be a meeting Tuesday afternoon in room C. Myers hall. All students and faculty members interested are invited to attend—Kevin Davis, President
COLLEGE FACULTY: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 16, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building—E. H. Lindley, President
**CRAFTIVE LEISURE COMMISSION:** The Creative Leisure Commission will meet from 3 to 5 o'clock this afternoon at Henley house. Students from the department of design will help anyone interested in starting leisure blocks for Christmas cards. These are other activities: Ruth Hong, Charlie Coolbaugh.
HOUSE PRESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION. There will be a meeting of the House Presidents' Association in the Pine room on Monday at 4:30 p.m.-Sophia Shellenberg, Secretary.
FRESHMAN Y.M.C.A. COUNCIL: Notice is hereby given of the change in time of meeting. In place of Tuesday night, the meeting will be Monday Nov. 15, 2018. Attendance to the meeting are invited.-Charles Wright, Jr., Vice-president.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB: A meeting for the purpose of organizing an International Relations Club for the study of current international problems will be held Tuesday, 16, Nov. at 4:30 in room 104 Administration building. All sophomores, juniors, seniors, and graduates interested in a group study of international affairs possessing world simulations are urged to attend—H. B. Chub, Audrey; Free Armstrong; Secretary.
"IBSM" COMMISSION; The "Ibm" Commission will meet at 4:30 Tuesday at Henley house. John Stimson, Professor of Art at Baker University, will speak on the subject. All University women are invited—Janee Youngman.
KU. CAMERA CLUB: The Camera Club will meet in room 102, Journalism building, at 7:30 Tuesday evening, Nov. 16. A special program illustrating good composition both before and after taking the picture, with an instructor in the picture after the initial taking, has been planned. All interested are well-connected—Lowell Postma, President.
MENS STUDENT COUNCIL. The Men's Student
Council meets on Thursday, May 4th at 8:15 in
the Pentagon; Mens Election, Secretary.
PHI DELTA KAPPA: Phi Delta Kappa will meet
the group to discuss how to study hall at
Oread Training School—Red Hemphill.
University Daily Kansan
Official Student Paper of
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
LAWRENCE, KANSAN
PUBLISHER
J. HOWARD RUSCC
KANSAS PRESS
MEMBER 1937
Engineers-rant for Industrial Arts Museum Jackson Park.
EDITOR-IN-Chief ___ Editorial Staff ___
ASSOCIATE EDITOR JOINT AND JEAN DAYTANGING
ASSOCIATION
MANAGING EDITOR
JOE COCHRAN
CAMPUS EDITORS. CHARLES ALEXANDER and MARRY GODEEL
SOCIETY EDITOR
M. JEAN CASEY
SENIOR EDITOR
WILLIAM FIZZIONEGA
WHITE TITLE EDITOR
MAKEUP EDITORS.
LAURA BARNES and AMBRA CABIEL
REWRITE EDITOR
HONOR EDITOR
FLETTON E. CARTER
Editorial Staff
News Staff
Louis Fockele
ALICE HARDMAN-JULIUS
J. HOWARD RUCO
E. PATRICK MORRIE
KENNETH MORRIE
GRACE VALENTINE
CARCERA CERRO
F. QUENTIN BROWN
WILLIAM FYTGELBAR
M. LUISHER MORRIE
EDWARD BRANNET
MARTIN BRENTON
MARY WILSON
JAMEE FLORE
MONICA THOMPSON
CRAIG CASTRO
F. ELTON E. CANTER
ELTON E. CANTER
ALAN AIMER
Kansan Board Members
FEATURE EDITOR
REPRESENTATIVE FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Retention
420 HOLLYWOOD ST. N.Y.
BOSTON BOSTON BAN FRANCISCO
BUSINESS MANAGER
Business Staff
F. QUENTIN BROWN
1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegide Press
On Friday, the final inspections will be of the Sherwin-Williams Company, 115th street and Cottage Company, at 2769 Northbrook Avenue, Company in the Union Stock Yards.
Colleside Digest
Entered as second class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kane.
CIMICAMIA ANXI
Ballard, L. P.
Branty, L. Vevo
Bryant, J. L.
Carmichael, John
Carner, Norman
Dunneberg, D.
Forman, M. W.
Fowler, W. F.
Hallin, H. V.
Hall, John
Hubbell, C. H.
Ireland
Saturday morning the chemical engineers may visit the museums and other points of interest.
Clark, J. G.
Evans, Drama
Green, William
Green, Hugh
Hindman, D. M.
Horrell, John
Horrell, Raymond
Irmerson, R. R.
IMANICS
Asbhy, Thomas F.
Brukey, Guy T.
Brown, Richard
Brock, Frank C.
Bryant, James
Daniel, Edward
Caramel, Daniel
Chark, Robert
Charles, David
Charles, Charles
Grant, Charles
Graham, Charles
Hinton, Charley
Johnson, J. Alogt
Johnson, Karl I.
Merkle
Those students planning to make the trip are:
MULTIPURGULATION
Kutter, Lewis
Mauers, Neal
Mauers, Neal
McGregor, Jack
Padee, Ellie
Shaw, John
Shaw, John
Smithmayer, H. T.
Talferleer, H. T.
Thompson, Duard
Tomanerman, R.
Innovation-to this business which come only with its practical application."
Advice to Reporters
McKale, T. P,
Narmer, Harvey
Nobile, H. A.
Single, John
Vairum, M.
Braver, Harvey
Vail, Claremion
Wilson, F. Q.
AND INDINIANA
Puddam, Richard F.
Mugen, Harley
May, A. Gail
May, A. Gail
Moodel, Wendel
Ivick, Clement W.
Rhillon, Elison
Rhusl, G. Milton
F尔德, Edward S.
Strickland, T.A.
Strickland, T.A.
Sotton, Richard
T. Rushland,
Theorem, Arthur A
Traine, James C.
"Which brings us to another point," said his int-reviewer. "Just how practical are these schools of journalism, any way?" How well can a classroom prepare a reporter to his way on a modern newspaper?
"The only way to answer that question is to tell you that the top reporter is always the best informed reporter. It doesn't matter so much how you get your information, so long as you have it." He continued by advising future reporters to take as many courses as possible in the political science, economics, and sociology departments of their university, and to learn problems of the future will be to interpret these aspects of the news for his reader, he believes; and to do this he must have as wide and thorough a background as possible. That is where education comes in.
"There were some good questions asked in classes today." Mr. Bailey recalled, smiling. "Ralph Hemenway, of the Minnesota Messenger, had just told a class in advertising that he always did his buying in his home town, so as to keep peace with his advertisers, whereupon someone piped up, "Oh, is your newspaper run for your advertisers?" Ralph explained to him that the smaller the paper, the greater influence he gets. "It also puts out than any newspaper which was entirely subservient to any advertiser or group of advertisers would soon end in bankruptcy." "You can't please all of your advertisers, no matter how hard you try; consequently, it isn't a good idea to go to too great lengths in pleasing them.
A.A.U.W. To Hold Supper Meeting
BRAKES
The junior group of the American Association of University Women will hold a supere meeting in the Memorial Union cafeteria at 6:30 c'clock Tuesday evening. Mr. Oren Bingham, University photographer, will give an illustrated talk on "Some Points of Interest in Kansas." The meeting should make reservations with MISS Marie Miller by Monday morning.
The junior group is organized for those members of A.A.U.W. who graduated from college not more than ten years old and are 35 years old. However, anyone interested in the work of the group is invited to attend its meetings. This year there are three pre-graduates with international relations, and drama arts.
—Your Brakes
A Cappella Choir Sings Sunday Morning
Officers of the organization are as follows: Sponsor, T. H. Marshall; president, Evangeline Clark, *Penner*, vice-president, Catherine Penner, *36*; secretary-treasurer, Marie Miller, *38*; program chairman, Mrs. Morgan Rarick; membership, Frances Krusse; drama and arts, Mrs. Pine; international relations, James Schmidt; social, Lauretta Schmidt.
CHECK
—Your Tires
—Your Lights
Your Batteries
—Your Radiator
Change Your Oil
Westminster A 'Cappella choir, under the direction of Dean D. M. Swearthport, will sing at the regular morning service of the First Presbyterian Church. The selection to be presented is "Credo," a setting to music of the Apostles' Creed by the Russian composer, Alexander Gettinrohn. The solo part, a chant, to be sung by Jean Fisher, one of the members of the choir. For the offerty solo, Helen Campbell, soprano, will give an ar-
CARTER
For the offertory solo, Helen Campbell, soprano, will give an arrangement of the famous Cluck
SERVICE STATION
10th & Mass. St.
PHONE 1300
medeloy, "Dance of the Blessed Spirit," with organ and violin accompaniment. Mary Etta Wallace, also a member of the choir, will play the violin obligato, and Mrs. C. W. Straffon will be at the organ.
Independence A.A.U.W. Helps Schedule Lectures
The American Association of University Women at Independence, Kan., through the co-operation of the Alumni association of the University and the University lecture course to be given this winter. Lecturers and their topics are scheduled as follows: Dec. 7. C. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, "Engineers and the Des-
Feb. 7—Dr. Beulah Morrison, professor of psychology, "Personalities and How They Grow."
Jun. 10 - Dr. Lyle Powell, of Lawrence,
"A Yankee in India and China."
April 5- Dr. W. W. Davis, professor of history, on some topic connected with the Orient.
March 8 - Donald M. Swarthout,
dean of the School of Fine Arts,
"This Thing Called Classical Music."
Winter will hold no terror for three students at Syracuse university. They have collaborated on a device that will close their bedroom window and start a fire in the adjoining study before they awake.
For Sunday
Roast Turkey Dinner in Full Banquet Style 35c
We recommend Mrs. Stover's Bungalow Candies
MIDWAY CAFE 1031 Mass.
Custom Tailored Clothes Give You BETTER FIT
A made-to-measure suit is made to fit YOU not just to look great. Your materials are taken and you tailor the suit in whatever color you want. You! Why made-to-measure clothes are always more satisfactory. Let us help you find it at Priced $27.50 and
iced $27.50 and up
SCHULZ
THE TAILOR
924 1/2 Mass.
A Word To... DAILY KANSAN SUBSCRIBERS
Every subscriber whose order has been turned in to the office should receive each issue of the KANSAN regularly five days a week.
It is possible that some of the carriers may be making a few errors in locating your residence, or that we have made a few mistakes in transcribing our records or reading the correct address on your order blank.
If so, please help us correct these errors at once. Report to the KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE promptly any failure to receive the paper, so that we can get it started without further delay.
We have had very few complaints so far and we believe that very few errors have been made. With co-operation from our subscribers we will be able to make the delivery service nearly 100% perfect within a very short time.
Circulation Department, Daily Kansan Business Office.
REMEMBER -- THE
TELEPHONE NUMBER IS:
KU 66
or 2701K3 (after 5 p.m.)
PAGE THREE
Joy
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 14, 1937
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Here on the Hill
--an account of Mt. Oread Society
M. JEAN CASKEY, Society Editor
Before 1 p.m.; call K.U.21; after 1, call 7920-K)
Sunday night's theatre memorandum last night in the chapter house will use a formal dance. Red Blackburn's orchestra finished the music.
The chaperons were:
Mrs F. B. Kincaid
Mr William Huntt
C. J. Wilson
The guests were:
Charlotte Dutton, f'40
Virginia Appel, c'41
Bobby Blake, c'41
Mary Lou Border, f'19
Jean Cardwell, c'41
Nikki Clark, c'40
Kaleb Clark, c'40
Jerry Cottie, c'19
Darii Carte, Angela
Mary Dewey, b'19
Mary Dowen, b'19
Jean Coomil, b'19
Gwendy Catford, c'41
Giffin, c'41
Viggy Hawkinson, f'18
Helen Hay, c'40
Joe Rush Herbert, offd, c'41
Helen Heard, c'41
Caribbean Ebeke, c'40
Eloise Fritz, c'41
Mary Fitz-Gerald, c'40
Helen Johnson, c'41
Linda Johnson, c'41
Jennette Lovec, c'41
Mary K. Lattner, ed'19
Mery Marshkin, f'19
Wendy Warehouse, offl,
Betty Martin, c'41
Brity McVey, c'41
Maria Martinez, c'41
Marine Miller, c'41
Annette Rood, b'19
Amy Roth Many, c'41
Mary Welch
Phone K. U. 66
CLASSIFIED ADS
Jalette Tremblay, c/cnl,
Maxine Miller, c/c1
Helen Johnson, c/c1
Albert Hendon, c/c1
Dorothy James, c/c1
Jane Heimblemey, c/cnl,
Francesc Fearn, c/c1
Margaret Harvey, c/cnl,
Camel Jerry, c/c1
John Camel, c/c1
Betty Aynsley, c/c1
Betty Aynsley, c/c1
Betty Gene Sayles, c/c1
Mary Lawrie, c/cnl,
Amanda Murray, c/c1
Margaret McCoy, c/c1
Truennes Hard, f/41
Matthew Margo, f/41
Animate Rod, f/39
Noura Sloan, f/39
Kevin Askakian, f/41
Warren Wilson, f/39
LOST: Gray Blind Topper from Jayhawk
Cafe, Liberal Reward, Ken Wallace,
Phone 1160.
WAVO BEAUTY SHOP
Guests of Phil Gamma Delta fraternity at its picnic Thursday evening were
Phone 53 - 921 miss. ss.
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Phone
K. U.
6 6
Shampoos ... 25c up
Finger Waves ... 25c (dried)
Oil Permeants ... $2.50 up
WAVE, new styles, any style 250 dried
Anna Reynolds, f4'0
Amy Gage, Gene styles, c4'0
Beverly Gibson, Niroula Smirta, f4'
Jean Smiley, c4'1
Josephine Stevien, f4'0
Brian Hickman, F4'0
Peggy Wiggain, Lawrence
Dorin Woods, f4'1
Wilhelm Woods, f4'1
Klarken Klappström, f3'1
Frenne Joe eng 4'0
Cardine Perrie, f4'1
Mercedes Merkel, f3'1
Mary Filiz Fiske, f5'2
Make Harding, Caldwell
Marissa McGill, f4'1
Frances Metzger, c4'0
Amna K. Kail, f5'1
Helen Farb, c4'0
Helen Farb, c4'0
Jean Lindengrun, f5'1
SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty
END CURSL, $1 up, inquire
7 Experienced Operators
New Equipment Added
IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP
9411'j Mass. St. Phone 523
Next door Keeler Book Store
TAXI
HUNSINGER'S
920-22 Mass.
Phone
12
Jaywalker office, Union building, afternoons from 1:30 to 4:30 concerning selling subscriptions to Jaywalker Magazine on commission basis. - 48
SHAMPOO and 25e WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried, 50c
End Curls $1.00, complete
PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50, complete
MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 732½ Mass., Phone 2353
Marion Rice Dance Studio
Learn Modern ballet dancing:
Work with a class on Sling,
Wear Fox Tie, and Tee Shirt.
teach both men and women.
9271/2 Massachusetts, over Rumsey-Allison Flower Shop
TAXI Call 2-800 UNION CAB CO, "Originators of 15c Cabs"
Twenty-five words or less one insertion, 21c three insertions, 56c six insertions,
37c contract rates, not more than 25 words, 42 per month flat.
Payable in advance and accepted subject to approval at the KANAN
Business Office.
Leonine Hoffman, c40
Margaret Harburg, c18
Maryne Burcham, c18
Dillon Woods, c40
Jody Stewart, c40
Carole Green, c41
Michael Kruppich, City, Mo.
John Seanford, c28
Sally Harris, canel,
Kathy Jewell, c40
Jane Flood, c38
Mary Noel, canel
Marian Sparring, c18
Irving Gurney, c40
Virginia Wade, canel,
Jay Morrison, c40
Elizabeth Carrall, csp
Virginia Lee Sewart, c19
Alice Kinney, c40
Fallon Wiley, c40
Martha Mintongery, c40
Jane Waring, c40
Nadri Kneller, c41
Lucille Springer, c41
Nancy Hapig, canel
Barbara Beechman, c41
Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi
retoria house Thursday evening wine:
Paul Fisher, C14
Kevin Swindall, C17
Bob Charlton, Lawrence
Harry ORLIDY, b38
Dan Kane, C19
Jody Bell and Betty Helena, both of Wichita, are spending the weekend at the Pi Beta Phi house.
Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, announces the pledging of Robert Meyer, Fulrel.
Deltan Tau Dell fraternity entertained at the Country Club Friday night with a party. Louie Kubu's orchestra furnished music for dancing. Chaperons of the affair were Mrs. Margaret Perkins, Ms. Ed Garrison, Dr. Michael Klunkenburg, and Mrs. C. H. Landes.
Guests attending were:
Sue Fowler, c/o *
Harriet Dornily
Jetty Brown, c/o *
Betty Kay, Kansas City
Peggy Lynch, c/o *
A worker in an industrial setting operates machinery.
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!
Alice Marie Meyn, f4/40
Mary Martin Carson, c1/40
Mary Falken, c40
Falcon薛, c40
Marine Bondell, c40
Kathleen McKeithany, c40
Juletta Tremblay, c3/40
Phelia Woodbury, c19
Dioxie Johnson, c4/40
Daniel Johnson, c4/40
Jean Sundley, c4/40
Mrs. Tyre Elmore Lincoln, c4/40
Daniel Wood, c4/40
Berry Jann Beddorion, c4/40
Helen Lauen Dby, f1/8
Christopher Doyle, f1/8
Dobryseff Frize, c1/40
Marie Stevens, f3/40
Helen Forker, c4/40
William Forker, c4/40
Betty Marin, c4/40
John Johnson, c4/40
Liam Harter, c4/40
Nancy Koster, l4/41
Marienne Cary Dillon, f6/40
Betty Klein
Sam Parmer
Sash Staffer, f1/8
Florizelle Boudy, l4/59
Chrishew Ivy
Cindy Smith
Betty Amy Blue, c4/41
Denverly Glow, c4/41
Denverly Glow, c4/41
Henk King
Jean Robertson, c4/41
Jan Mary Holley, c4/41
Jan Ayland
Virginia Poltz, c4/40
Margaret Mengue, c3/40
Maria Tremblay, c4/40
Paraty Bishop, c18
Durabry Shearer
Theresa Shearer
All Work Guaranteed
In your
Join the Sunday Evening Crowd for Dinner
ELECTRIC
SHOE SHOP
W. E. Whtenste, Phone 680
*Mass.* Phone 680
UNION FOUNTAIN
Memorial Union Sub-Basement
College Music at Memphis
D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will leave tomorrow for a trip to Memphis, Tenn., where he will examine the music department of Southwestern n college in that city. Dean Swarthout is official examiner for the National Association of Schools of Music, and the curriculum committee of the association. He will return to his office Wednesday foreron.
Regents Study Fee Waiving Plan
a plan for waiving fees for National Youth Administration students in state schools was presented to the Board of Regents by Miss Anne Laughlin, state direct ee N.Y.A., yesterday morning at their meeting before the Kansas-Kansas State game.
Swarthout to Examine
E. F. Bohner, Colby; E. E. Reser,
Hays Teachers College; and
Miss Laughlin went to Stillwater,
Okla. Thursday to study a similar
Everybody Goes
To The
BLUE
MILL
NEW RECORDS
RI
The Student Hangout
Loving You
Right or Wrong ... Mildred Bailey
I'd Love To Play a Love Scene
I Want A New Romance ... Bunny Berigan
Miles Apart |
A Strange Loneliness Bunny Berigan
Russian Lullabv
Clap Hands ... Red Norvo
Bell's Music Store
plan in effect at the Oklahoma and M. College.
No definite action was taken by the dress but a committee composed of the Drew McLaughlin, Paula; E. F.
Beckner; and Sam Edwards, Blue Rapids, was appointed to study the plan and report to the board at the next meeting to be held the day of the Kansas-Missouri football game.
AT THE VARSITY
ALTHEA
Marlene Dichtrich and Charles Boyer in "The Garden of Allah," a Selznick International picture, now showing at the Vivart Theatre.
AT THE GRANADA
THE FILM 'THE DREAM' BY MAYBURY CRAVEN, AKA JAMES GREEN, AND ALEXANDER SHEPHERDS, WITH ROBERT BALDWIN.
Charles Boyer and Breta Garbo in "Conquest," heralded as A MGM film, has won awards for surprising her "Bent Hur" and "Big Parade" now playing at the Cineplex.
AT THE DICKINSON
LAKESIDE
"This haricut will last a long time," Danna Durin tells Adèle Menhui and he asks her not to make it permanent, in "Universal's" movie. "The one I want is this one."
We are Happy to Present—
FLOYD RAYE and his orchestra FOR THE
"FRESHMAN FROLIC" FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19
FLOYD RAYE'S COLORED BAND Has Recently Been Acclaimed by Critics to Be the West Coast's KING OF SWING
ADVANCE TICKETS — $1.50
On Sale at Business Office and
TICKETS AT GATE --- $1.75
Main Desk at Union Building
PAGE FOUR
---
More Than 600 Men Take Part In Intramurals
each Session Has It s
Appropriate Sports t s;
Sweetest Awards in
Late Spring
More than six hundred students turn to intramural sports for their relaxation, and each year the number grows. This growth in participation has led to various proposals, the most recent of which is the project to set aside a part of the student activity fund for the improvement of intramural athletics. The proposal is up before the student governing bodies now, and with the need of some sort of an intramural fund recognized, it is highly probable that the proposal will be passed.
Imagine you are an inhabitant in a town of between six and seven hundred population. Now imagine each of the inhabitants participating in different forms of sport through-out the year. That is the picture of the intramural athletic set-up here on the Hill, where one-seventh of the student body competes in intramural athletics.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The men who comprise the council: John Hoeceaver, DU.; Keith Swinehart, Sigma Chi; John Zeigelman, S.A.E.; Stanley Bloom, Theta Tau; and Bert Barnum and Howard Trabant, non-fraternity men. These men met with Elibel Thursday night to discuss plans for the basketball season, which will get under way soon.
Intramural Council Formed
Recently, an intramural council was formed to act as a co-ordinating group on various matters arising in intramurals, and to act in an advising capacity under the direction of Prof. E R. Elbel, director of intramural athletics. The council consists of two non-fraternity and four fraternity men, with Elbel choosing three of them and the Pan-Hellenic council selecting the other three.
The newly-formed council is expected to keep difficulties arising in intramurals at a minimum.
Fall Sports Numerous
The various intramural sports are spread over a period of three divisions or seasons—namely, fall, winter and spring. The fall session has by far the greatest number of competitors in such sports as 11-man touch football; 6-man touch football; handball (team and elimination); horsehoes (team and elimination); tennis (team and elimination); track; and golf.
This fall, 231 men comprising 21 teams participating in 11-man touch football, and 102 men comprising 17-6 men teams, are batting for intramural supremacy. As the season draws to a close, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Gamma Delta, Delta Theta, Theta Tau, (11-14) Men (11-14) Teams), and the 430 Engineers have won the championships of their respective divisions.
Touch Football Nears Finals
Eight teams, selected from the Iiam division, are now lighting in the play-off series for the intramural tournament. Round games were played Thursday afternoon with Beta Theta Pi and
Sunday Special
ROAST TURKEY
or
CHICKEN DINNER
Complete
35c
Regular Week-Day Dinners
20c - 25c - 35c
BILL'S LUNCH
717 Mass.
PATEE
Continuous from 2
All Shows 15c All Seats
TODAY ENDS
WEDNESDAY
OUR BIGGEST DOUBLE TREAT
THE MIGHTIEST LOVE STORY EVER FILMED
CLARK GABLE MYRNA LOY
Pi Gamma Delta emerged victorious over Delta Tau Delta and Pi Kappa Alpha, respectively. The games scheduled yesterday found Pi Kappa Alpha defeating Kappa Alpha and the Theta losing to Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
"PARNELL"
AND —
There are 17 teams in both handball and horseshoe team competition and 20 teams in tennis competition. Approximately 125 men competing in each of the tennis, horseshoe, and handball singles, swell the total. Sports listed under the winter heading include: basketball, water oolo, volley ball, wrestling, swimming, indoor handball.
AND
Howlywoods Goofy
Giggle Gland Guys
BERT WHEELER
ROBT' T WOOLSEY
"ON AGAIN
OFF AGAIN"
Benchley Novelty
Basketball Is Popular
Of the winter sports, basketball arouses the most interest with numerous teams in various divisions competing for honors. A play-off series to determine the intramural champion is hold after the regular schedule has been completed. In recent years the Galloping Ghosts, Johnson's All-Stars, Sigma Alpha Ophiologist, and Duala Mack were included the intramural basketball parade. Of the spring sports, playground ball holds the major interest, although many men compete in handball, horseshoes, and tennis matches. Spring track also usually box a large entry list and much spritter competition.
Sweepstakes Honors Last
After the spring sports schedule has been completed, the sweepstakes winners in intramural is determined. This involves counting the points won by each organization in various sports during the year. Place points and competition points count in the total and the organization amassing the largest total of points is declared the sweepstakes winner.
It is interesting to note that no organization is winning the sweepstakes. The winners move in a cycle, with a different organization winning every year.
Last year, Beta Theta Pi won the sweepstakes with 1,572 points, nearly 400 points more than its nearest rival. Phi Delta Theta, which was seeed with 1,208 25 points, Sigma Chi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon won third and fourth places, respectively.
So far this year, Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta are again running close for top honors, but it is a long time until intramural sports will be completed next spring, so any team may come from nowhere and win sweepstakes honors.
Odds and Ends
Here and there in intramurals:
Fred Pralle, star, Jayhawker basketball and baseball player, has been playing a fine end position on the Deltu Tau Delta team . Beta Theta Pi is the distinction of winning two touch football titles in one season, the 11-man and 6-man teams both winning in their respective divisions together, either team has been defeated
"Seven thousand Kansans in more than 100 Red Cross chapters in the state, today formed the agency Army of Volunteer Workers to carry the roll call message to the entire citizenship." This statement was issued Friday by William Allen White, State Red Rock roll call chairman, who expressed confidence that welcomingships will exceed the state objective of 94,000 enrollments. Eighty thousand joined a year ago.
For the attainment of the goal of 94,000 enrollments in Kansas, the state has been organized into 15 districts. District number one, which includes Lawrence and Douglass, serves as the center for J. W. Ross, of Topeka, chairman.
Red Cross Drive Inaugurated in Kansas
Roll call chairman for Douglascounty is县, Mr. Walter A. SchallOther roll call chairmen in districenumber one are Mrs. E. S. SheldonFranklin county, Miss Helen TrantOther colleges include the Kastin, the Kastin; Pottawatomi;Mr. James W. Ross, Shawnee; andMr. Ernest Roberts, Wabause.
Bob Allen, Phi Psi back, is the son of the famous Jayhawker basketball coach . . . Intramural Director Elibel does double duty directing intramural athletics and arranging the Jayhawker football programs . . . in his spare time, Elibel teaches physical education classes, handles the public address system at home football and basketball games, and sketches . . . Injuries in touch football games have been unusually high this year . . . around a dozen men or both have injuries other with injuries ranging from severe bruises to broken arms . . . Phi Delta Theta has three teams entered in touch football . . . one 11-man team and a "B" and "C" team in the 6-man division. Sigma Alpha Epsilon won three championships last year and yet finished fourth in the sweepstakes. Beta Theta Pi, which finished first, won only one championship. Jack Nourse, who played a bang-up game for at forward for Sir Alpha's last year, caught the eye of the coaches who had to compete in spring basketball. Nourse did everything good on offense and defense . . . Forty-eight organizations were listed in the sweepstake rankings last spring . . . When Piri Gamma Delta defeated Kappa Alpha, 19 to 0, in the play-off series, it was sweet revenge for the defeat suffered at the hands of the Pi K.A. team during the regular season . . . the defeat kept the Phi Gam's from winning a clear-cut title in division . . . crowds of 200 or 300 spectators are not unusual at the play-off series games.
Be Movie Wise and Dickinsonize
THE GREATER DICKINSON NOW SHOWING YES! IT'S GREATER THAN EVEN THE SENSATIONAL "THREE SMART GIRLS"!
PILAR
Don't You Forget We Play the Pick of the Shorts
The New Universal Presents DEANNA DURBIN
100 MEN and a GIRL
The 4 Funsters Are Coming---- Merry Go Round of 1938
Be Movie Wise and Dickinsonize
Howard Cleveland, in to replace the scrappy little Sims, and with Cleveland went Fogler and Hackney, two of the best backs Kansas has had to bring down this year. Cleveland Goes Over.
The Jayhawkers started fighting back with a little more success as the second quarter progressed and it began to look as though the first half might end without a score against the opposing team which didn't miss by far and Kansas took the ball on its own 29 with the quarter half over.
Aggies Crimp-the game ended with the Wildcats in possession of the ball in Kansas territory.
It was at this point that Fagler, Cleveland and Briggs, who had replaced Hackney, went to work. Fagler raced around his own right end for a first down on his own 36 and then Briggs broke loose to the Kansas 39. A perfectly executed spinner which developed into a forward pass from Cleveland to Ellis put the Wildcats on the Kansas five. The shifty Cleveland ran his own right end for the touchdown. Jim Brock, plaque kick specialist, was sent in to add the extra point.
The Kansas line gave its supporters some hope as the third quarter opened by smothering the Aggies on their first series of plays, but this advantage didn't last long. Amerine's ball carrying was the bright spot in the Jayhawk's brief flurry, but the shifty sophomore was injured before the period had gone very far and was replaced.
Second Half Scoreless
It was during the third quarter that Cleveland started his amazing kicking exhibition that was a reminder of the kicking of Freddie Harris in the K-State game here two years ago. Time after time he aimed at the ball, but when he actually he placed his kicks on the goauld side of the marker.
The final quarter saw the Jayhawkers open up desperately with passes from inside their own ten. All the tosses were wild, however, and
The backs that Kansas faced yesterday were probably the best aggregate set it has faced this season. Cleveland, of course, was outstanding, but little Sims was far behind and Fagler, Briggs, Hackney, Speer and Klimek were also working well in the State attack.
The Wildat line was superior yesterday to the Kannass line except in a few places. Nordstrom, Krueger, and Ellis seemed to stand out although the entire Agie line was on its toes all afternoon.
K-State Backs Outstanding
For the Kansas team there was no particular star. It just wasn't a Kansas day. The Jayhawkers were trying, but that old spark and drive that they displayed at Lincoln was abated. The Hawks had Ward hold up his side of the line in shape. Dear Shirk showed flashes of his former brilliance, but they were just flashes and the injured end was finally led to the sidelines before the final quarter ended. Amerine's ball carrying and Reporter's hands featuredatures that even approached above the average performances.
STARTING LINEUPS
Kansas K. State
Shirk LE Ellis
Rhule LT Kristen
Stapleton LG Beeler
Warren GC Nordstrom
Warrenton RG Cardarell
Ward RT Davis
Sibilanick RE Mulheem
Masoner RE Sims
Woard HR Sins
Replogle HB Klimck
Douglass FE Briggs
Kansas — Edds; Arnold, Burnett,
Boehle; Bosseve; McMullen;
Morland and Lloyd; Wilson;
d. Wilson; quarter; Wiencke;
and d. Meyer; Evans; Richardson
and d. Meyer.
Kansas State-Ends: Soeolofsky,
Crumbaker; Tackles: Beezley and
Hayes; Guards: Pits and Heaton;
Center; Case; Quarter: Cleveland
Halfbacks; Brock, Klimek, and
Rankin; Fullbacks: Hackney
Continuous Shows
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 1937
Today MON.
TUES.
Week Days 2:30-7:00-9:30
MAGNIFICENT!
The Show Value of Lawrence
ARSITY
Home of the hybawk
ARSITY
Home of the Jihawk
Magnificent as its Desert Setting; Stirring as only the story of a Great Love Can Be!
ALEXANDRA FERRER
MARLENE DIETRICH
CHARLES BOYER
in the
GARDEN OF ALLAH
In Technicolor
Hopalong Puts His Heart in This Fight!
Companion Feature
Remance Spurs Him on to the Most Thrilling of all His Action Packed Adventures.
Adriane Zuker presents
CLARENCE E. MULFORD'S
"HOPALONG
RIDES AGAIN"
featuring
WILLIAM BOYD
with George Hayes, Russell Hayden
Harry Worth, Nora Lane-William Duncan
Lois Wilde, Billy King - A Preamble Picture
CASSIDY PUTS HIS HEART IN THIS FIGHT!
Adamah Zakim presents
CLARENCE E. MULFORD'S
HOPALONG
RIDES AGAIN
featuring WILLIAM BOYD
with George Hayes - Russell Hayden
Harry Worth - Neen Lane - William Duncan
Lois Wilde - Billy King - A Praetentious Future
Wed. Thursday Tue. 10 AM
Loretta Young - Don Amache
"RAMONA"
Wed.-Thur. 10c to All
and Ricardo Cortex, Sally Eilers "TALK OF THE DEVIL"
Coming Soon!
"3 SMART GIRLS"
"LADIES IN LOVE"
"MY MAN GODFREY"
Jay Janes Entertain Purple Pepsisters With Luncheon
The Jay James entertained the Purple Pepers of Manhattan yesterday at 12:30 with a luncheon in the Memorial Union ballroom. The officers of the two organizations were introduced. Forty-five Jay James and 35 Purple Pepers were wore blue pants and pernants were used on place cards, and tables were decorated in crimson and blue.
"Home As We See It Today," is lecture by Hazel Chase West, is to be given Wednesday evening, at 8 p.m. on the campus of the Admiration building.
Hazel West To Give Fine Arts Leutre Wednesday
Sponsored by the department of design, in the School of Fine Arts, the talk will feature the showing of colored slides to illustrate the scenes in the Rome of today. The lecture is open to the public free of charge.
New Residents Enter Home Management House The Home Management house, a seven-room, white-painted cottage back of Blake hall, will be in charge
B
BRICK'S "ON THE HILL"
OUR SPECIALS
Hot Fudge and
Butterscotch
Sundaes
15c
of Faye Swedlande, c.38; Janetta Hardy, c.1unct; and Helen Nelzon, c.38; for the next forty days.
These four University students are succeeding Luelle Rich, c38; Nadine Wegman, c38; Dorothy Alexander, c38; and Lulu Tullium.
There are four positions at the house: cook, assistant cook, manager, and housekeeper. The women hold each position for an equal period of time. The meals are planned on a budget suitable to a moderate income level, and are adequate from a dietary standpoint.
IF YOU ARE SENDING Xmas Gifts to some distant land—Be sure and come here. —Gifts to wear have money to spare. —And our lines are now complete.
The house is under the supervision of Miss Olga Hossy, associate professor of home economics. Home economics can be studied for a time during their senior years.
Ober's
A Christmas Wreath with a Christmas tree and bow.
Napoleon's dramatic retreat from Moscow! Hundreds of cannons, horses, thousands of soldiers in unfortunate drama
AY
GRETA
GARBO
CHARLES
BOYER
(2)
BIGGEST
M-G-M HIT
OF ALL
TIME!
A Year in Production!
Cast of Thousands! ThrillsNever Before Equalled!
A love story to touch you heart...glowingly, magnificently lived on the screen by Garabo as the lovely Marie Walewka, and Boyer as Napoleon, master of empire and slave of romance ... torn from history's most flaming page... now brought to thrill and achont you with its miracle of pageantry, its thunderous drama!
PIC.
A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer PICTURE
(Above) Napoleon at Kila awaits the arrival of the only woman he has ever loved!
(Right) Pomp and panoply at Napoleon's royal wedding... 460 courts beauties ... dearing costumes. Love forgetten in the last
7
CONQUEST
A CLARENCE BROWN production
REGINALD OWEN • ALAN MARSHAL • ENRYNE STEPHENSON • LEIF
FERSON • DAME WHITTY • C HENRY CORNER • VLADIMIR SONOLOFF
Also—Band Act - Oddity - Latest News
TODAY Continuous from 2:30 4 GLORIOUS DAYS GRANADA