UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVII Z-229 OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1939 NUMBER 55 Miller May Start Despite Injury Zino Francescatti To Play Concert Tomorrow Night ★ Young Violinist Arrives Here Today from Lincoln Neb.; Well Known Music Leaders To Attend Concert Zino Francescati, young French violinist who has made a sensational rise to prominence, will arrive in Lawrence this afternoon for the concert of the concert course in Hoch auditorium tomorrow night at 8:20. Among the prominent musicians coming to Lawrence for Wednesday night's concert are Samuel Thaivu, concertmaster of the Kansas City声乐团 and Danny Fritty, manager of Kansas City's series of concert presentations. Francescatti comes to the University from an engagement in Lincoln Neb., and his concert here will be the only one in this region. The young French violinist made his American debut only two weeks ago, and his seven weeks' tour of the country includes appearances in the role of soloist with the Chicago and Cincinnati Symphonies as well as a tenor part in a concert with theatta, with which he made his American radio debut on Nov. 23. the concert program includes Francescatti's own arrangement of "Concerto in D Major" (Paginiani) which he played with the New York Philharmonic orchestra. Also to be played by the young violinist are "Sonata in A Major" (Handel), and "Chaume" (Bach). Students will be admitted to the concert upon the presentation of activity books. Musical critics favor playing with that of Helletz, playing with that of Helletz. Lawrence Man Killed in Crash W. B. Roberts, Jr., 88. Lawrence resident and motor car dealer, was instantly killed shortly after noon Sunday when his car was struck by a vehicle while he flew streamer, "The Chicago," at the Indiana street crossing. Funeral services for Mr. Roberts will be held privately in Kansas his former home. The immortal flowers are requested that no flower be sent. The only eyewitness, Louis Arnold, 426 Indiana street, said that the train apparently struck the car near the back of the right side and the impact rolled the car over five or six times, coming to rest on its wheels from the roadway. Roberts was dead by the time aid reached him. Sink 'Doric Star' London, Dec. 4- (UP) - The 10- 86-ton British steamer Doric Star was reported tonight to have been sunk in the South Atlantic by a German sea raider, believed to be a battlecraft 'battleship'. Admiral Schieber. The Doric Star was en route to England from New Zealand and Australia under the command of Captain W. Stubbs. She normally carried a crew of 70 and had accommodations for six passengers. On the Shin By Reginald Buxton Scattered notes on the young Republican convention in Topeka—a dash here, a wild dash thrive, and a lot of balderdash everywhere . . . it takes a lot of lubrication to keep convention cogs well oiled . . . the excitement was highly reminiscent of the method employed in hunting elephants (the literal breed). Hunters beat drums, yell madly, confuse the pachyderms until they are driven into a trap. That is exactly what happened to a lot of young Republicans bent on owning their own souls and minds that are going through it last year," M.S.C. prexy. Blaine "J" Mystery Play Tickets To Go On Sale Thursday Morning Tickets for the second dramatic production of the season, "Night of January 16th" will go on sale at the ticket office in the basement of the swimming. Students must exchange notice books to reserve seats. (Continued on page three) Many inquiries about the play from persons in surrounding cities indicates an unusual interest in the play. Prof. Allen Craftron, head of the department of speech and dramatic art and director of the play at The Critic's Factory from sources asking about the Dramatic Club production. The murder trial plays start s four night run in Fraser theater week from tonight. Because of the unique way in which it is presented. Director Craft- Capacity Crowd Hears Recital - Irene Pecabady and Olga Eitner Give Faculty Music Performance A capacity audience of nearly 400 persons filled Frank Strong auditorium last night to hear Irene Peabody, mezzo-soprano, and Olga Eitner, violinist, present a Fine Arts faculty recital. Playing Opus 64 of "Scotch Fan-taises" (Bruch) in a manner that brought repeated curtail calls, Olga Eitner, instructor in music opened her section of the program. She was accepted by Ruth Orcult, professor of piano. Irene Peabody, professor of voice, presented an all Rich Strhaus group of songs with the piano accompaniment of Winifred Hill, fa'40 in the opening section of the program. Her presentation of "Berefit" by Strauss brought continued applause from the audience. Miss Peabey followed this with in much-applauded presentation of "Samson and Dalia" (Sai-Saens). Miss Eitner returned to the stage to offer her final section of the program, a soft-toned rendition of "Bird as Prophet" (Schumann) and "Rondo" (Viennexp). Concluding the recital, Miss Pea- Body presented a group of recently written songs including the well-re- cognized "Husband" and "A Thousand Eyes" (Hogeman). 600 May Attend R.O.T.C. Dance University marching men will break ranks and try a few individual steps when the annual Military Ball on Tuesday, June 25, is at Komoriar Union ballroom at 9 o'clock. A large attendance is expected, according to Colonel Karl F. Baldwin, professor of military science. More than 600 R.O.T.C. members and guests have received invitations to the dance. The committee in charge states that the receiving line will form at 8:45 p.m. to take care of the increased crowd anticipated at this year's dance. The committee also announced that the dance is strictly invitational. Tickets are not transferable, or for sale. Dale Brodie and his orchestra will furnish music for the hall, and decorations will be in keeping with a military theme. ton believes that the play will appeal strongly to Campus theater-goers. A woman, on trial for her life, will be tried before a jury made up of theater patrons. The stage is set for the furnishings of a courtroom, with judge's bench, witness stand, and jury box with the regulations. In this film, the floor of Fraser theater will serve as the seating room for the "trial patrons" and will also have the witnesses seated among the audience. The final touches to the one-act scene for "Night of January 16th" are being completed this week. Junt row, Director Crafton and his head scene-builder, Don Dixon, instructor in the department, are completing in the department, are competing in a jury room off-stage in which members of the jury will confer. Officers Destroy More Than 1,150 Pints of Liquor Sherif Charles Banning, with the aid of under-sheriffs and courthouse employees, yesterday destroyed more than 1,150 pints of whiskey, gin, and alcohol that had been accumulated in the vault since March. The liquor was broken down when the bottles were broken in a pile and the mass set afire. The last "liquor break" was staged in February when more than 1,000 bottles were destroyed in the court-house yard. State laws require that all confiscated liquor be destroyed publicly. Late Wire NEWS (By the United Press) Abandon Helsinki Helsinki, Dec. 4-(UP)—The government of Premier Risto Ryti tonight prepared to abandon Helsinki and set up an emergency capital in the north of Finland to set up an aerial armada of hundreds of planes to bomb the city The Secondinavian wireless said the government probably would leave Helsinki during the night, after directing a mass evacuation of the city's civilians. The radio said it was believed the temporary capital would be moved at Yasn on the Omaha Bothnia, about 230 miles northwest of Helsinki. Reiect Armisitice Proposal Moscow, Dec. 4—(UF) -Russia to nightly blindly rejected Finland's proposal for an armistice and peace negotiations with the statement that it recognize the existence of Premier Ryut Ryk's new government in Helsinki. Premier and Foreign Commissar Vinciashel M. Molotov told Swedish Minister Wilhelm Winter, who transmitted Finland's request, that Russia will deal with the revolution "People Democratic Republic of Finland" set up in the frontier town of Terioki under Otto Kusinen, exiled Finnish Communist. Washington, Dec. 4—(UP)—The United States will not recognize any Russian conquest accomplished by force, but conversely there is little inclination in administration circles to break off diplomatic ties with the Soviet, it was indicated in semi-official quotations. No. U.S.-Russia Break Former Football Player Dies In Home Here - Arthur Huddleston Active in Masonic Work for 25 Years; Attended University From 1890 to 1893 Arthur E. Huddleton, 70, a member of the first University football team, died at 11:50 yesterday morning. He was born his home at 1637 West Ninth street. Mr Huddleston has been secretary of the Lawrence Scottish Rite bodies for the past 9 years, and has been an active worker in all Masonic branches for more than 25 years. He attended the University from 1890 to 1893 and played right guard on the first football team which played two games with Baker and one with the Kansas City Y.M.C.A. in 1890. He was also a member of the 1891 team which played seven games and tied one, and of the 1892 team which won seven and lost one. Mr. Huddleston became a Mason in 1914, and was a member of the Scottish and York Rite bodies, Eastern Star and Abdallah Shrine. He served as master of the Lawrence Lodge No 6. two years ago he married Barbara in the Eastern Star. He held the honorary 32nd degree in the Scottish Rite. In the late 1920's he served two terms as treasurer of Douglas county. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon from the Mastone Temple. Burial will be in Oak Hill cemene He is survived by his wife, two brothers, Verner R. Huddleston of Los Angeles and E. F. Huddleton of Lawrence; one sister, Mrs. Elmer Brown of Lawrence, and two nieces who lived with Mr. and Mrs. Huddleton; two nieces Anna Grace Doty of Detroit and Miss Mary Bess Doty of Chicago. Sigma Chi Theft Unsolved; Police Search for Coat No definite information has been received at the police station here concerning the $2,400 for coat stolen from the Sigma Chi fraternity house Nov. 25, chief of police Jude Anderson, said yesterday. Routine check-ups of pawn shops in Kansas City and surrounding territory are being made, he said. That remains the most promising chance for recovery of the coat and apprehension of the thief. Other articles stolen at the same time have not yet been found. Mrs. Elizabeth Birchard Davis, wife of Prof. Robert McNair Davis of the School of Law, died last Wednesday morning in the Lawrence Memorial hospital of a heart attack following a short illness. Mrs. Davis Dies Of Heart Ailment Mrs. Davis was graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music. She was a member of an honor music society and of the Music Club here. She was also a member of Gamma Pi Beta. Services were held Friday morning at the First Presbyterian Church. Huddleston Dies--five is a flock of dashing hippies that Iba has rounded up throughout Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. Dispatches from Stuvar water say it is the finest assortment of ever assembled in the midlands. R. E. HARRISON A. E. HUDDLESTON Arthur Huddleston, 70, a member of the first University football team, who died at noon yesterday at his home here in Lawrence. Kansan Advertising A Convenient Aid To Christmas Buying Although Thanksgiving's just past, it's not too early to start thinking about Christmas. And when we get a glimpse of it naturally, think about presents. Of course, it's fine to think about presents, but there is no sense in your worrying. Because your shopping problems can be solved by consulting Kansan advertisements. Throughout the rest of the month, Lawrence merchants are featuring special Christmas merchandise, designed for University students to buy. Christmas vacation begins Dec. 20, which leaves just two weeks for shopping in Lawrence. Start at The Dairy Shopping Center, Kansan advertisements, today. Carlson Dies Of Heart Attack ★ 53-Year-Old Ex-Senator Was Former Law Student at University John E. Carlson, 53, of Kansas City, Kan., and former state senator, died Saturday of a heart attack He was graduated from the School of Law in 1909, and had been an attorney for several years. Carlsen, known as "Swede," played center on the undefeated team of 1908, and on the 1909 team which only played game of the season to Missouri. He was a member of the basketball team one year under the late Dr. James Naismith and two seasons under Dr. F. C. Allen. Carlson was a senator from 1929 to 1933 and was a member of the Kansas City, Kan., board of education for several years. Funeral services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. today in the auditorium of the Wyndotte High School. Burial will be in Woodland cemetery. Zipple's Condition Improved Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Memorial Union building, who recently underwent an appendectomy, is recovering satisfactorily and will be released from the Lawrence Memorial hospital today. Season tickets are on sale at the athletic office in Robinson gymnasium for $1.50 and presentation of activity ticket. It will be necessary for students to purchase their season tickets before tonight's game, or pay the general admission of 75 cents. The sale of basketball season tickets was brisk yesterday, according to E. L. Falkenstein, financial secretary of intercollegiate athletics, as time neared for the first half of Oklahoma A. and M. tonight. Coach Henry Iba is bringing a star be-studded group of cagers here for the first intercollegiate game of the season for both teams. However, both schools have soundly thumped their opponents. The Akiesa won 55 to 11, and Kanaan dowered the yearlings 44 to 23. John Kline, tall junior guard and a fine defensive man, is still nursing a spained wrist suffered in a spill during Saturday's practice. Jayhawkers Face Stern A.-M. Crew In Hoch Tonight Four regulars are back from the Missouri Valley championship club that Ba turned out last year and are teaming with Vern Schwert- ter. The two are transferred from Dodge City Junior College Bullwark this starting It was Schwertfeger and Jess Renick, big, rough Indian athlete, who paused the Cowboys in their rout of the fresh and that is what magnifies the injuries of Miller and Kline, both well over six feet, and Miller and Kline are the tallest men on the Jayahawk squad. Announcement yesterday that Ralph Miller's knee is as bad as it was last winter put a decided crimp in Kansas' basketball fortunes for its tough curtain-raiser with Oklahoma A. and M, at 7:30 tonight in Hoch auditorium. (Continued on page four) Tuberculosis Workers To Hold Breakfast "only Miller had been going at full speed since the end of football season. Nov. 25, and he was being counted on heavily when he wrenched his knee in a Sunday workout. Dr. F. C. Allen said yesterday that Miller's knee is now just as bad as it was last winter when he hobbled through the Big Six campaign. PETER SMITH 14 shopping days till vacation!" [C. S. Taylor, conductor of the clinic] By Jay Simon (Kansan Sports Editor) The breakfast, to be attended by 32 persons including students, faculty members, doctors, nurses, business and professional men of Lawrence, will start the drive. At Air Force Station Cranston, the director of Watkins Memorial hospital, will read a paper on tuberculosis, and a paper written by Dr A breakfast this morning at 7:30 in the Memorial Union building will mark the opening of this year's exhibits on work in fighting tuberculosis. The drive for funds will be carried on this week and next. in Lawrence and the state sanitorium, will be presented. Chairmen for this year's drive are: Ray Buzzell,chairman of the Students who are helping in the drive are members of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, and members of the YMCA. Y and W.C.A. Work for the drive will be concentrated this week on semi-organized houses and next week on fraternities and sororites. men on the Hill, and Marian Horne, chairman of the women. Mrs. Seba Eldridge is general chairman of the Lawrence district. Dr. Cautenuso has this to say about tuberculosis and the work being carried on in the fight against the disease: "Tuberculosis ranks tenth in diseases in Kansas. Active cases are very dangerous and should be taken out of society in those where there is no health where the county and state health societies can do very much good." "There have been 500 deaths a year resulting from tuberculosis in the past two years in the state of Kansas. The disease takes a jump in the rank of college students. From the ages of 19 to 24 the individual is most susceptible to this disease. Since 1352 there have been 14 cases discovered in the University out of 8,000 students examined. All of them were cured by the disease was discovered during its early stages. There are 95 chances out of 100 for a complete cure when tuberculosis is discovered in its early stages. Adviser of Women Returns from Trip Sponsored by Life "Today, doctors know the causes and how to control the disease. This control comes through: early diagnosis, adequate treatment, and by taking active cases out of society. However, this is hard to do because of the lack of funds and slight public interest. "We on the Hill are well protected because there is a hospital to go to for treatment. But others are not and we come in contact with these people every day. Hence this cause affects the students." Miss Elizabeth Meguin, adviser of women, who has been in New York City for a four-day conference with officials of Life magazine concerning pictures of student life to be published in this week's issue of the magazine, returned by plane Saturdays evening. More than 200 pictures were taken recently by representatives of the magazine. Not all of these pictures will be used, but there will be seven or eight pages in the magazine showing a cross-section of a woman student's life according to Miss Meguiar. Pictures of independent as well as sorority student life will be shown. Miss Meguiar spent all day Tuesday and Wednesday and part of Thursday and Friday going over the page layouts and cut-lines with the editors. They made every change indicated by the dean in going over the details. Dean Meguiar was a guest of the magazine at several luncheon, dinner, and theater engagements in addition to having her expenses paid. Hardman Goes Back to Classes - Hospital May Release Coed Today as Physician Finds No Fractures Mary Alice Hardman, c'42, who was slugged by an unknown assailant a week ago last night, was allowed to attend classes yesterday although she has not yet been released from Watkins Memorial hospital where she was taken after the attack. The attending physician last night said Miss Hardman probably would be released from the hospital either today or tomorrow. It was at first believed that Miss Hardman had suffered a fractured cervical vrabla as a result of the two blows she received last Monday night as she was returning to the home of Dean Ivan C, Crawford, head of the School of Engineering, 1509 Stratford road, where she is a guest. Miss Hardman's home is in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The attack occurred about 9 o'clock last Monday night after Miss Hardman had attended a meeting of Sigma Kappa security, of which she is one member. Police夜里 said there were no new developments in the case. Malott, Ellsworth, Heady to Meeting The University will be represented by three persons at the combined meetings of the American Collegiate Publicity Association and the American Alumni Council in Excelsior Storms. Mo., this weekend. Chanellor Deane W. Malott will address the meeting at a dinner session on Friday. Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, will lead discussions on the subject of alumi magazines Saturday morning. Ray Heady, acting director of the K. U News Bureau, will attend Thursday. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kansan Comment I.S.A. Constitution Open to Question Of greatest importance to students reading the new Independent Student Association Constitution, printed in that organization's weekly publication, are the sections dealing with the election of the executives of the association. Article IV, Section 4, (b), decrees that the president of the association shall be chosen by the Independent Student Council. The constitution also provides that this Council is to be made up of eight members, four elected by the association members, one from each district, and four more chosen by the elected four. No matter how altruistic the heads of the ISA may be, this is not and can never be a democratic method of election. Although the constitution qualifies the election clause by providing that the president must have served at least two semesters as a member of the council, there is still nothing to prevent the founding of a "dynasty" by the members of any council, and the continued selection by them of men already designated and trained for the presidency. Revision of the constitution, not mere amendment, is the most straightforward method of correcting this potential evil. For while the ISA continues under the constitution adopted by its council, it is open to severe criticism. It leaves the way clear for selfish influence to obtain control of the organization. A public meeting of all ISA members and anyone else interested in the future of the group, wherein suggestions and recommendations for change may be solicited and considered should be held by the ISA council. Results of such investigation and discussion, acted upon immediately, would convince any opposition to the ISA movement of the sincerity of the council's intent. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1939 The World A Stage The scene was laid at Versailles. The curtain ascended at Versailles. Muted then were the sound effects of martial music which have swelled to full accompaniment since Poland. From stand-ins, England and France have emerged in major roles. With the attack on Finland, Russia has reversed Germany to the part of under-study. As yet the United States has not emerged from the neutral shadows of the backdrop. When and in what role will this country step upon the stage? In the immense theater of the world and with communications that bring it to the living room of every home, the plot unfolds. Suspense and climax upon climax unfold yet even the principal actors are ignorant of the denouement. It is a transitional period, the outcome of which it is impossible to predict. The government of the United States has within it the power to place and to keep this country in the role of audience. As audience it can judge, condemn or applaud but it cannot leave the theater. The shrinking of the world brought about by the technological advances so largely contributed by the United States prevents the complete denial by this country that a state of war exists in Europe. The United States must look to the future and not to the past. Imperialistic bread thrown on the waters is returning to its senders. Old standards of judgment cannot be maintained since no major participant is guiltless in that respect. To say that the United States dare not break off relations with Russia because of the Soviet aggression in Finland is to imply that the United States has the same motives toward Japan. For this country to go to war in the Far East would not only make it susceptible to the same charges applicable to European countries but would prevent the United States from entering with clean hands into European reconstruction of the future. And Europe will be reconstructed on a different basis, however the possibility may be camouflaged or trustfully evaded. Because of its strength the United States needs wisely directed foresight now as never before. It must look to the conclusion of the European war and not to its introduction. It has been established that the little European peninsula over which blood has been shed throughout history is capable of supporting three times its present population at a higher standard of living were it not for artificial barriers, economic and political. Militarism has been costly to Europe—the common peoples have paid for it repeatedly in blood and food. Cooperation willingly extended by the victors of the last war might have prevented this one. A full stomach and ample opportunity to obtain a measure of economic security are not the ingredients of a fighting man. No guarantees can possibly be made as to what direction the world will shift and finally settle at the conclusion of this war. That it will be a different world is indisputable. The United States may sympathize with its heart toward the Polish and Finnish people, it may rejoice at the stripping from Russia of the final trappings of Communistic ideology, but as a country its action must be guided by its head if it is to keep out of this war that promises nothing. --ings are expected to attract a potent crowd of 3,900 resident students out of the 4,610 attending the University this year. Roadside Courting The decision of Chief of Police Lyman L Parks of Elizabeth, New Jersey, to permit parking on the dimly lighted road of Union County's parks appears deserving of more comment by the press than it has been given. Chief Parks has explained that his order, listing only three restrictions, was made in the interests of matrimony. The romantically inclined must keep lights on, stay where daytime parking is permitted, and go home by 11 o'clock. "It seems that the only place left for courting is in a car," the police chief said. "Since courting is a natural prelude to marriage, night parking is permitted." No less than momentous is this decision. Sociologically it is of immense significance in as much as it is a frank recognition of the breakdown of the family wherein courting once took place. Politically it is equally important because it is a candid admission that the horse and buggy days have, after all, been superseded by the horessless carriage. Economically it should have attained more notice, particularly by the business man, for the stimulus it provides for the automobile manufacturers, who now have the opportunity openly to herald to a waiting world the substitution of the newest gasoline models for the antiquated parlor. The stamp of social approval has been placed on roadside courting by a courageous leader. It will be interesting to learn the results. Statistics should be kept for the information of more timid communities. Tabulations on increased parking, the number of marriages eventually resulting, and the total number of families established through roadside courting in New Jersey will be awarded eagerly. --ings are expected to attract a potent crowd of 3,900 resident students out of the 4,610 attending the University this year. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Tuesday, Dec. 5, 1933 No. 55 Notes due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on 11 a.m. and by Sunday, week and, at 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday lunch. --ings are expected to attract a potent crowd of 3,900 resident students out of the 4,610 attending the University this year. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular meeting, open to students, graduates and faculty members, will be held this afternoon at 4:30 in Room C. Myers hall - Jack Dalley, secretary. DELTA PHI DELTA: There will be a meeting of Delta Phi Delta tonight at 7:15 in the women's lounge of Frank Strong hall. Attendance is required—Helen Fincke. MATHEMATICAL ADDRESS: Professor Mark H. Ingraham, head of the mathematics department of the University of Wisconsin and president of the American Association for Mathematical Education, will afternoon at 3:30 in room 203, Frank Hall on "Why. When and How to Consult a Mathematician." Opening is open to the public—U. G. Mitchell, chairman. MATH CLUB: Math students are invited to attend the meeting the day before at 4:30 p.m. If you don't have a Florek Snorkel hall, Bruce Crum will speak on "Point Set Theory" The meeting, as usual, will move on to "Presidents' freshmen in the lounge"-Marlow Sholander,主席. SCABBARD AND BLADE. There will be a meeting of all actives and pledges this afternoon at 4:30 in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. All members are urged to attend—Rex Sage, 1st sut. SOCIAL ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE. The Social Activities Committee of the Student Union will meet in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building at 4:30 this afternoon—Sue Johnston, chairman. TAU SIGMA: There will be no meeting of Tau Sigma tonight—Gearidine Ulm, president. W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a ten for all University women in the women's lounge of Frank Stronch hall from 3 to 5 Wednesday afternoon. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will be hosties—Ethelmy Burns. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Managing Editor Walt Messinger Battery Editors Betty Kelly Campaign Editors Bettie Cotton, Dick Wright Makeup Editor Doe Swainkendon Home Editors Doe Swainkendon Rawlve Editor Kay Beorthen Rawlve Editor Inquiry-Edit in-Chief Richard Boney Richard Boney Martin Jones Feature Editors Mary Lou Randle, Julian Editorial Staff Publisher ... Harry Hill Business Manager Edwin Brown MEMBER KANSASO PRESS ASSOCIATION County Clubs To Organize REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 BROAD AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CITYCENTER 212-695-3278 Every student who is a resident in Kansas is automatically a member of his County club and is urged by Kurtner to attend the meetings in order to organize their groups and to plan activities for the year. - All Kansas Students Are Members; Expect 3,900 To Attend A meeting of 105 County clubs has been called for 10 a.m. Thursday in assigned campus meeting places by Irvine Kramer, c'40, chairman of the Statewide Student Activities Commission. The purpose of the Club chapel, an defined by Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, is to tell the "true story" of a former student who both while activities and endorses. Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school week. Available on Saturday. Entered as second class month September 17, 1910; office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. The meetings will be conducted by student chairmen of the individual clubs. Kurnar said that the meetings are expected to attract a potent crowd of 3,900 resident students out of the 4,610 attending the University this year. An exhibition of 27 paintings by John Nole, pioneer Kansas painter, is now on exhibition at Thayer museum. Noble Paintings On Exhibition Chairmen and meeting places of the clubs are designated on posters which were distributed over the campus yesterday. Also in the exhibition is a large portrait of the artist by Wayman Adaras. Mrs. Noble, wife of the painter, is spending a few days in Lawrence and will talk to groups of visitors to see the paintings and answer questions. She is staying at Corbin hall and will be at the gallery at 11 a.m. and in the afternoon from 3 o'clock on Mrs. Noble is leaving for New York. 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Here, men must far beyond the expectation of all well tailored and full cut. 图 A Wise Investment in MEN'S SHIRTS Beginning December 15, local roundtrip coach and intermediate fares will be reduced . . . making Union Pacific train travel an even better option. vantage of the lower fares —make your Christmas trip by train. 100% 98c Rich new patterns, masterfully the last word in value. Smart new colors for fall in many new patterns. Non-vest colors that are appropriate for winter. Go Home by TRAIN Round-Trip FARES REDUCED "When I "Everything a lot more difficult. When we wanted to buy or sell something we had to hunt all over town to find a buyer or seller. We would just wear ourselves out! But now everything is so different and easy. To get results, all we have to do is insert a low cost result-getting Daily Kansan Classified Ad." PATRICK MAYER Call KU 66 for a Kansan ad-taker TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5. 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill Here o an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizabeth Kirsch, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 resterday morning students surviving the deluge of Thanksgiving dinners and hometown activities reported to classes. Those suffering from the maladies of over-eating, over-doing, or over-sleeping arrived on the Hill at various hours of the day. Ted Fo Rita's orchestra and the Sophomore Hop, Friday, Dec. 15. will make the Union hallroom the undivided center of attention at that time. The following night Kappa Kappa Gamma, Corbin hall, Ricker hall, and Campus house will have their winter formalms. Serving as a power-gathering period for the filled calendar before the Christmas recess, the week opens with society in low-gear. Near the latter part of the week a shift will be made to high and from then until Dec. 20, parties, dinners, and dances. Although the University officially closes its doors at noon the 20th, many a lad and lady will remain on the Campus for the dimmer-dances to be held that evening: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Pi Kappa Psi, and Beta Theta Pi, with its traditional Turtle Pull. Friday night in the Memorial Union ballroom, the brass buttons and dark blue of R.O.T.C. uniforms will prove the adage: "There's something about a soldier." The same evening, in the same building the Owl society will entertain in the Kansas room, while on Edgehill road the Phi Delta Theta winter formal will be in full swing. A stuffed boar's head and blazing plum pudding will highlight the Corbin hall faculty dinner Wednesday, Dec. 13. Carolers and caroling in the old English manner will add to the holiday spirit. Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold its Christmas party Saturday evening in the Memorial Union ballroom at Delta Upsilon, Triangle. The celebration the advent of Christmas brings their respective chapter houses. The engagement of Maxine Almon, c'40, to Jack Leddy bärd, v'40, a member of Phi Kappa Pai fraternity, was announced last Mon night at the Kappa Kappa Gamma formal Thanksgiving dinner. New Star for Sigma Nu Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Bob Helms, c'42. Miller hall will hold open house Tuesday evening from 7 to 8 p.m. Mrs. W. L, Heiser, Leo Heiser, and Martha Hudgess of Anthony were Sunday evening guests at Miller hall. Guests at the Pi Beta Phi house last Wednesday noon included Emmet Parks, c'40; Dick Hogin, c'40; and Dick Amerine, c'40. Hal Ruppenthal, c41, who was in Paris when the present European war broke out, spoke to the young people of the Congregational Church in Manhattan last night. Ruppenthal was a delegate to the World Conference of Christian Youth in Amsterdam. Lee Powell, St. Louis, is a house guest at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. The pledge class of Sigma Nu fraternity will hold its annual Paddle party Saturday evening. The Freshman commission cabinet of the W.Y.C.A. is a tea from 3:30 to 5 c oley. Barbara Koch, c'43, is in charge of the tea and she will be assisted by Colleen Poorman, c'43. This is program chairman of the cabinet. The University Women's Club will WANT ADS FOR REMIT: To adults, good modern - 5 room-bungalow, sleeping porch, - biveg, garage. South of University. - 139th Ishihara. Phone: Phone 2539R - 80 - 60 LOST: In room 101, Chemistry Building. Tuesday, November 28. Log Log Duplex Slide rule in leather case. Charles Wiles, 1230 Oread. Phone 2988. Reward. -55 LOST: Black leather zipper note book with name by Neron Schroeder on it. Reward. Contains valuable notes. Phone 837. -55 FOUND: At K. U.-M. U. football game, Saturday; in student section, a ladies' ring. Call 2633, Carolyn Anneberg. -55 LOST: Saturday, at Stadium, ladies' gold Hamilton wrist watch with chain bracelet. Reward. Lillian Fisher, Wattins hall. Phone 950- .55 FOUND: Saturday, on K. U. Golf Course, a woman's wrist watch. Phone 1445 at 6:00 p.m. -55 hold its annual Christmas party at 8:20 Thursday evening in the Memorial Union building. Bachelor faculty members and husbands of club members will be guests at the party. Mrs. John Hankins is chairman of the program committee, and Mrs. Laurence Woodruff is in charge of general arrangements. Mrs. Lowson's Condition Improved, Returns Home Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, wife of Dean Lawson of the College, continued to show improvement today after being token to the home Thursday from hospital. Mrs. Lawson is still too weak to receive visitation, it was said. This Week--with you, for tonight." This clever fellow undoubtedly led a happy childhood pulling wings off butter- flies. Where To Go; What To Do --On the Campus TODAY-Douglas county Tuberculosis and Health Organization breakfast, English room, 7:30 a.m.; department of mathematics luncheon, English room, 12:30; Union Publicity committee, Pine room, 4:30 p.m.; Scabbard and Blade, ballroom, 4:20; American Association of University Professors dinner, English room, 6 p.m.; Tau Beta Pi dinner, Kansas room, 6:30; Kappa Psi, Pine room, 7:30 p.m. TOMORROW-Midweek, Memorial Union ballroom, 7-8 p.m. W.S.G.A. T tea for all university women, Women's lounge in Strong hall, 3-5 p.m. University Concert Course: Zino Francescatti, violinist, Hoch hall auditorium 8:20 p.m. THURSDAY—Phi Chi Theta luncheon, English room, 12:30; Women's Pan-Hellenic meeting, Pine Chair, 4:30; Phi Bita Kappa tea, Kansas room, 4 p.m. University Women's Club Christmas party, Union ballroom, 10 p.m. Hockey and valley ball feed, 10 p.m.; Conversation of Girls club, 10 a.m. FRIDAY- Scabbard and Blade dinner, Kansas room, 7 p.m.; Owl Soirée, Kansas room, 9 p.m; R.O.T.C.舞会, Memorial Union ballroom, 9:25 p.m. SATURDAY - Simma Tau invitation dinner, English room, 8:30 p.m. 12:30 a.m. Kansas room, Memorial Hall ballroom, 9:30 p.m. 12:30 a.m. (Continued from page one) quite happy with the scholarly type of work provided by his position with the legislative council in Topeka,炎 interested in writing a book on the history of rounding college life, but is more concerned about getting out to Hays to see fannie Jane Flood . . . On the Shin-with you, for tonight." This clever fellow undoubtedly led a happy childhood pulling wings off butter- flies. It's unaccent how young John Slocum can greet so many persons with their correct names and with such superb poise . . . not at the convention but in one of these places, was Phi Delt Walt Weeks, last year's act playboy and this year an employee on a Crete, Nebr. paper . . . Of course, John Randdle Tye, the Kansan's page-two columnist of last year and now of its kind. Instead, J.H. was around. Johnny is firmly convinced now that there is a big difference between being for the masses while in college and being of the masses after graduation. The fact isn't being publicized but army and navy recruiting stations in the Middlewest are leary of college students because of possible too-liberal leanings. None are recruited without a through check-up. The Hummer and Sickle has virtues after all. Tattoo a red star on your wrist or drink a barrel of vinegar to keep out of the draft come the call to arms. (In case the latter comes to pass, I take this item back.) If this be humor then give me the World Almanac—A Delta Chi pledge called Theta Eleanor Crossland and gave her an ante-diluvian line about her charms and then remarked: "If it weren't so far over to your house I would make a date Concerning fickle cupid.-Phi Giam Jim Hamis as having about as much luck as an eskimo in the Sahara desert with Kappa pledge Betsy Dedge (and that doesn't mean he's setting warm). . . . Kappa Jenne Wedell has supposedly decided upon Phil Gam Fa刘安KEe as her man about the H叶 leaving Phi Delt Kenny Lewis—where? The Pi Phi house is as good as any, I guess. . . Chi Omega Helen贝Ba巩固 and Sig Ep Lyn Burttle practice cooing, woken on ways each other during the week so as to be in condition when they travel together to K.C. in Faubion's car to see their respective boy_and girl friends. Helen Beth can no longer legally term her's "practicing" since her home fire has departed for Randolph Field, Texas. "My soul is dark with stormy riot. Directly traceable to diet." ——Samuel Hintonstone. The Shin wishes to dedicate this little verse which seems very pertinent. The Shin says, "Thanksgiving season to all suffers who have eaten well but not wisely—like the Shin." Friends are wishing Phi Pi Virginia Anderson and Kappa Sig prexy Dick Hansen luck in the attempt to re-light the candle of romance. The candle will go out rather suddenly if Miss Anderson announces her engagement to Sig Alph alumnus Jack Townsend, which current rumors say will happen soon. Sigma Chi Lawrence Nelson has spent the past month clamoring for a dish that sounds like "Late Fisk." However spelled, it is a Swedish fish food. The reason for Nelson's sudden epicurean interest is his desire to take Ingrid Frestadius to dinner. Frankly, Nelson's thoughtfulness is ill-considered. The charming Miss Frestadius is a marvelous example of northern physical culture and probably better able to withstand the "simple" standard fraternity cuisine than Nelson. The new combination of Pi Phi pledge Chestine Wilson and Jimmy (Sour Owl) Robertson is about happy a one as could be conceived. Comely, Jovely Miss Wilson has all the social desires desired while Robertson—well, I hate to admit Pi— possesses a rare wit and aptitude for clever repartee that smooths over some of high rough Your LAWRENCE Theaters Granada Shows 2:30-7-9 10c-25c NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY The Loff Hit of the Year! Fred MacMurray Madeline Carroll "HONEYMOON IN BALI" IN BALI" Allan Jones Akim Tamiroff ADDED Cartoon — News — Sports SHOP EARLY READ THE KANSAN for gifts for: MOTHER FATHER SISTER BROTHER GIRL-FRIEND BOY-FRIEND GRANDMA UNCLE COUSIN ETC. Merry Christmas WAKE UP Christmas is upon us! CHRISTMAS is like finals. You can get caught, or you can get ready—right NOW! Take a tip from Santa Claus! Jump in the saddle and make out your Christmas list. How? Lawrence merchants are ready for you. Watch their suggestions in Kansan ads. There are some good ideas in today's paper. Write 'em down and go down town. NOW! 102 HERE'S THE IDEA Every day in the Kansan you will find columns and columns of interesting and unusual gift suggestions for everyone on your gift list. Remember that the merchants of Lawrence are operating stores for STUDENTS, are selling merchandise for STUDENTS, and are advertising their wares in a STUDENT newspaper, the University Daily Kansan. By shopping early you will enjoy the opportunity of complete selections. And you won't forget anybody at the last minute. Get the Christmas habit TODAY! The DAILY KANSAN Your Daily Gift Shopping Guide spots such as his or our observant mom. Billboard at the Paleys "A Little mistake" "Bebecca of Sunnybrook Farm." Schiller Shore Shopping nodes — the ingenious inventor has perfected a "war muff" for poshies. Mounted on first grade cardboard the little muff alps easily over the back of the shoulder and quaternary impervious to said. Your poach will be tended to death with this gift." promisee Shore Put your Heart in his Christmas Gift... 1234567890 SWANK JEWELRY FOR MEN Packages of pleasure—college men are always in favor of a Swank gift. Buy his gift from his favorite store—Ober's. We carry a most complete assortment of jewelry — jewel-ware in gift boxes. Attractively packaged for gifts . . . . . , MISS LOVE Collar Holder and Duo gram Cravat Chain set . . $2.50 Oobee's love to rock our tattoos Mot. 25c Nite 35c Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW! THRU THURSDAY They have a baby now! William Javanna POWELL LOY Asa The Pup! "ANOTHER THIN MAN" DICKINSON Friday - Saturday ON THE STAGE Kappa Alpha Psi's "HARLEM JAMBOREE" Ernie Field's 11 Place Band Singing - Dancing Jivin' Jawn Session! PATEE ENDS TONIGHT BABY SANDY HUGH HERRERT "Little Accident!" SHIRLEY TEMPLE "Robecca of Sunnybrook Farm" WEDNESDAY 3 DAYS "Legion of Lost Flyers" — and "Trade Winds" PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS I TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1930 SIMONIZING... SPORTS Bv JAY SIMON "Two of Kansas" all time greats in an athletic way are probably recalling the good old day on Mt. Oread as they mark time out in sports Vallahia, John "Swede" Carlson, one of the greatest of all Jayhawk football players, died Saturday in Kansas City to follow in the footsteps of Dr. James A. Naiad and his classmates who had passed on just four days, before Carlsen played center on the KU teams of 07, '08, and 09, and made all of the all-Missouri Valley teams The Jayhawker was undefeated in 1988 and has been ranked as one of all of Kansas football machines. C. E. McBride, sports editor of the Kansas City Star, recently named "Swede" on his all time-all star team of the Valley. Jess Renick, big Indian who will hold down a sentinel position for the Cowboys tonight, was one of the stars of Oklahoma A. and M.'s run-up football team in the Missouri Valley loop. Out for bass fishing only, she danced hanging up his cleated brooms, Renick registered 10 points as his mates licked the yearlings, 55 to 11. Don't count out Iowa State when you pick the favorites in the forthcoming Big Six basketball campaign. Saturday night the Cyclones handed Simpson a sound, 67 to 40, beating. Leading the scoring parade was Bob Harris, redheaded junior who hung in 24 points. Harris was placed on several all conference teams, including his paign of college basketball. Trailing along behind Harris was Gordon Nicholas, center, with 19 points, and Al Bodifolon, a sizzling sophomore forward who抓ed up 13 counter In an effort to keep Ralph Miller playing as much as possible tomorrow night, trainer Dean Nesmith will have his diathermy over in Hoch auditorium to apply heat to the star's re-injured knees. "Hoe" may put Miller in at the start of the game just because his knee will be warmer after the pre-game maneuvers. The trainer plans to give the joint a good baking between halves. Coaches Allen and Iba will be facing each other for the fifth time when their teams clash tonight. The first time they met was in the Olympic playoff of 1936 and the Kansas mentor drew first blood. Last year the Jayhawks dropped a pair to the Cowboys at Stillwater on successive nights, but made some amends by winning the return engagement here at the fag end of the season. They have two of the finest records any basketball in the business. They have to turn out powerhouses at Maryville Teachers and recently has been making life miserable for fellow coaches in the Missouri Valley circuit. Women Cagers Start Tonight With Two Games The E.T.C.'s vs. the Independents, and Watkins hall fighting it out with their neighbors, Miller hall, will open the women's intramural basketball season tonight in Robinson gymnasium at 9 o'clock. While minus the coaching of Phoop Allen, it is expected that all teams will meet with tough competition. Basketball is the leading team sport for this term in women's intramurals and hard practice indicate that several original and trick plays will be performed as prominence as the season advances. Ping-pong and aerial darts complete the schedule for other competitive games. Brackets and entries have been posted on the bulletin board in Robinson gymnasium. The game will be played off by Saturday, Dec. 9. The schedule of the initial rounds in basketball is: Today. 9 p.m.-E. T. C. vs. Independents; Watkins vs. Miller. Thursday, Dec. 7, 9 p.m.-Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. Chi Omega; Pi Beta Phi vs. Kappa Alpha Theta. Tuesday, Dec. 12, 9 p.m.—L W. W. vs. T. N. T; Gamma Phi Beta vs. Albia Chira Omega. Thursday, Dec. 14, 9 p.m.—Corbin hall vs. Sigma Kappa; Alpha Delta Pi vs. Alpha Omega Pi. "Coyote wells" in American desert parlance, mean natural depressions in the rock which catch and hold rain water. Flashy A.&M.Crew Works Out Here By Klint Kanaga, c'42 "We will play the best we can. We never predict the outcome of any game," remarked Henry Iba, Oklahoma A. and M. basketball coach, when questioned last night at Hoch auditorium where his team was undergoing it's final workout. After watching the Aggie squad go through a drill sessions for about an hour, we can well imagine the headache Coach "Phog" Allen must be undergoing at the present time. These lada from Oklahoma just don't miss the hoop. The Jayhawk five will have one of its busiest evenings of the coming season tonight. Never has Ibain had a better team in his five year stay at Stillwater than the starting lineup he will put on the floor tonight. It is our humble opinion that this A. and M. team will have a greater season this year than their season of 1953-36 when their squad carried such great stars as Merie Rouge, Cox, Little, and Dobson. In fact, the 1959-40 Aggie aggregation has performers who will match these former greats. These Ten Likely To Start Tonight--- | Kansas | Ht. | Wt. | P. | Wt. | Ht. | A. & M. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Howard Engleman | $6_{1/2}$ | 168 | F | 160 | 5-10 | Harvey Slade | | Don Ehling | 5-11 | 163 | F | 160 | 6-1 | Gene Snelson | | Bob Allen | 6-0 | 167 | C | 195 | 6-5 | Vern Schwertfeger | | Dick Harp | $6_{1/2}$ | 162 | G | 185 | 6-2 | Jess Renick | | Bruce Voran | $6_{1/2}$ | 177 | G | 195 | 6-0 | Howard Doyle | Officials: Parke Carroll, Kansas City, and Ted O'Sullivan, Missouri. Trick Knee Returns-- NBA HUZA TAYLOR RALPH MILLER Ralph Miller, football and basketball star who has hobbled through three major sports campaigns since his arrival on Mt. Oread, re-injured his "football knee" 'Sunday to deal a severe injury' to Miller was coming along in fine shape until this mishap occurred, Has Injured Wrist--- AUTHENTIC JOHN KLINE John Kline, rangy junior guard from Hutchinson, will be slowed up for the A. and M. serap with a Saturday practice session in a Saturday practice session. Athletic Awards To Be Presented Women Thursday The Women's Athletic association will hold its annual Hockey and Volley Feed Thursday in Memorial Union building at 6:30 p.m. Presentation of the blazers and K U. emblems are to be made at the meeting. These awards are made each year to the women securing a certain number of points by participation in intramura and playing on class teams. A blazer is awarded to women credited with 1350 points. Six hundred points are required to earn a K U. emblem. New members are also to be initiated at the "Feed." In order to become a member of the W.A.A. it is necessary to have a specifier amount of points gained by taking an active part in athletic competition Players on the varsity hockey or volleyball team are to be announce All members of these two class tean are invited to attend Thursday. The sale of basketball tickets for the coming season is now under way. The Jay Jones, who are sponsoring the sale of tickets, will visit all organized houses before the game tonight. Jay Jones Are Handling Sale Of Basketball Season Tickets As in the past, seats may be reserved at the time a ticket is purchased. Helen Pierce, c40, is chairman of the sales committee. Miller May Start---- (Continued from page one) Allen plans to use Miller in part of the game and may even let him take the floor at the start because his knee will be warmed up better offer the pre-game exercises. If Miller does not get the opening nod, his place will go to Don Ebling, senior forward who has been hitting in fine style in recent scrimmages. At the other front corner of the court, man blonde junior shot-maker from Ark City and one of the leading scorers on the team last year. Have you lost your K. Book? K. Books can be purchased at the Business Office Besides Schwerterfeger and Renick Coach Ia will have Gene Smielson and Harvey Slade at forwards and Howard Doyle at the other sentinel post. All three were regulars last year when the Aggies downed the Jayhawkers two times out of three. The guards will be held down by Dick Hart, rounding out his third campaign as a regular, and Bruce McCormack, who has been chained from a center. Just after the customary flag-raising ceremony there will be a brief service conducted in honor of Dr. James A. Nismith, founder of basketball and a member of the department of physical education. Would you like a K.Book to send home? 15c Do you have a K. Book? Hurry - While the Supply Lasts One interesting feature about the game tonight is the fact that two of the country's foremost basketball coaches will be matching wits. Coach "Phog" Allen has won or shared 22 titles, including three at college, while Henry has an equally fine record although not as long, as he bison won 10 titles in 12 seasons. Be sure and keep your eyes on Slade and Smelser, regular forwards on the Oklahoma Aggie five for the past two years. They're good. I good. They're great. They're great. Renick. Aggie guard. I'm sure who ever happens to guard him will more than make up for your lack of attention. Renick was selected on the all Missouri Valley team last year. He's one of the best players in the Midwest and he sure wasn't missing in practice last night. One thing more about that session last night. Every man on the A, and M. squad had to hit five successive free throws before he could leave. Only four men on the thirteen man squad didn't get to leave after their first five trials. And they were substitutes. basketball talent that is coming along this year. Sophomores who are ready to break into the starting lineup as substitutes include Levy Floyd, all-Kansas guard from Argentina who played a year at Oklahoma City U.; J. T. Newman of Walter, Oka, who tallied 822 points in his senior year of high school; and L. J. Eggleston all-Okahoma forward who averaged 2* points through four years of high school competition. Iba has lined up some plenty salty are going to the East coast to play some of the crank teams of that section. Although Eastern fans see fine cage teams year in and year out, this Angle five should really open their eyes. Before the Oklahoma Aggies commence their journey homeward for the Christmas holiday season, they HERE'S THOSE CARL BOYS AGAIN-- OUR ANNUAL CHRISTMAS GIFT TO YOU-- A. W. C. K. L. S. P. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J 5 Starts This Morning and for a few days only It has been our custom for years to give you a real Christmas Gift Special, and this year is no exception. The savings you receive will make your Christmas money go farther — and is our gift to you — We hope you like it. Cordially yours. Owen and C. C. Carl -HERE IT IS-325 SUITS SELECTED FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK SELLING AT A DISCOUNT OF --- 2 $20. Suits $13.35 $22.50 Suits $15. $25. Suits $16.65 $27.50 Suits $18.35 $28.50 Suits $19. THE PRICES $30. Suits $20. $35. Suits $23.35 $37.50 Suits $25. $43.50 Suits $29. $50. Suits $33.35 HERE IS YOUR CHANCE TO GET A REAL SUIT All styles — All sizes — Real Values 331/3 PER CENT "AND HERE IS SOMETHING" YOUR CHOICE of the BALANCE of OUR FANCY SUIT STOCK and EVERY TOPCOAT or OVERCOAT in OUR STORE of the THESE REDUCED PRICES— $20.00 values for... $16.00 | $35.00 values for... $28.00 $22.50 values for... $18.00 | $37.50 values for... $30.00 $25.00 values for... $20.00 | $40.00 values for... $32.00 $27.50 values for... $22.00 | $42.50 values for... $34.00 $28.50 values for... $22.80 | $45.00 values for... $36.00 $30.00 values for... $24.00 | $50.00 values for... $40.00 STYLES FOR MEN, YOUNG MEN AND HIGH SCHOOL BOYS Here is a fine opportunity for you to "Santa Klaus" yourself with a fine suit or coat—or buy one for "dad and the boys" for Christmas, and at a substantial saving. Every garment carries the original retail price on coat sleeve, which makes it easy for you to figure your saving. THIS AD MEANS JUST WHAT IT STATES—NO FOOLING. BETTER COME TODAY SPECIAL Tweed Sport Coats $16.50 values $12.40 $15.00 values $11.25 $10.95 values $ 8.20 Remember--- CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES These Specials are for a few days only and not a garment reserved except Tail and Tux suits. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII Z-229 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1930 Jayhawks Down A.&M. Cowboys SUMBER 56 Zino Francescatti Herz Enthusiastic About America - Violinist Practices but One Hour a Day While on tour; Released from Draft by France Enthusiastic at what they have already seen and experienced in this country, Zimo Francescetti, violinist, graduated from the University of Lawrence yesterday afternoon. Frenchcascott, good natured young French violinist who will play a concert tonight, described his experiences as "simplify marvelous." During his three weeks stay in the United States, he has formed a liking for American food, particularly tomato juice. A Chicagoan, after finding this out, presented the violinist with a case of canned tomato juice, to be shipped back to France and utilized on special occasions. Practices Little Francescetti and his equally likable accompanist, Doctor Herz, have found the few student audiences before which they have appeared enthusiastic and appreciative. "Very nice for the artist," is the way in which Doctor Herz describes the attitude of such audiences. The French artist, who is of war age, was released from draft by the French government because it was "thought more important for him to tour than to serve as a soldier." Find Students Amacriete Francescini does very little practice while on tour, usually less than an hour a day. He uses two violins, one for large concert halls or smaller venues. For his concert tonight he will use his smaller, a Sario Sanffio. Doctor Herz, amiable pianist for the violinist, is a native Hungarian. Waldemar Geltch, professor of violin at the School of Fine Arts met the pianist at his home in Budapest this summer, and the two formed what Herz described as "a very intimate acquaintance." Chess, Checker Match Applications Due Saturday Noon All applications for the chess and checker tournament must be in by noon Saturday, Winford Ferry, e'40 director of the tourney announced last night. The first round of play will begin Monday afternoon. Matches in the chess game will consist of one game each. Two points will be awarded for a victory, one point to each player in case of a tie and no points for losses. In the checker division the winner will constitute a match. Points will be awarded on the same basis as for the chess game. Prizes have not been decided upon, Ferry said, but trophies or medals will probably be awarded. The chequer games will be played in the lounge of the Memorial Union building, and the chess games will probably be played at the houses of Debaters Meet South Dakota Two University debate teams will meet two South Dakota teams today in non-decision demonstration debates before the Topken High School board approved that the federal government should own and operate the railroads. Mary McAnaw, c. 42, and Anna McConigly, c. 43, make up the feminine University team. Members of the University team, Eleanor Baxter, c. 42, and Richard Oliver, c. 42. Tomorrow Miss McAnaw and Miss McConigly will oppose Kansas State College debaters at a dinner meeting of the Lawrence Co-op Club. At 9 p.m. ban, Baker and Baker will oppose Kansas State team over KKU Kansas Forecast Plays Tonight--shopping days 'til vacation!' Kansas Forecast Fair and somewhat cooler to night and Thursday. VINCENZO D'AMICO Zino Francescatti, prominent young French violinist, who will give a concert tonight in Hoch auditorium at 8:20. Senior Is Star In N.Y.A. Movie John Pilrose, c. 40, has the male lead in a color moving picture, "Builders of Tomorrow," photographed by the Rev. H. Lee Jones, pastor of the Lawrence Unitarian church, and sponsored by the NYA, which will be shown in Fraser theater at 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Mary Mikelson, former student of the University, has the feminine lead in the movie, which depicts the problems of unemployed young persons (who are not in school, of which it is estimated there are 40,000 in Kansas. The shots were made on the campuses of the University, Washburn, and Kansas State College. About nine weeks were required for the photographing, and the preparation of the scenario and editing the film was about 3 additional weeks. The movie has a running time of 33 minutes. The picture, financed by the NYA and released from its Washington office, was recently received at the Topkea office. Fifteen copies of the film have been sent all over the country. A private showing of the film for Chancellor Deane W. Malott and other University officials probably will precede the public showing. Miss Anne Laughlin, Topena state, NYA director, is expected to attend the showing of the picture. Miss Anne Laughlin, Topena state, the University NYA office said. There will be no admission charge To Pledge Cadets At R.O.T.C. Ball Candidates for the Scabbard and Blade, national military honorary society, will be formally pledged at the annual Military Ball, Friday evening, in the Memorial Union ballroom, Cadet Captain Donald Deord, c'40, announced yesterday afternoon. The pledging ceremony will take place immediately before intermission at the舞场. The dpleges will walk through an arch of sabers to be decorated with the traditional red, white, and blue pledge ribbons. This year's pledge class, the largest in recent years, is made up of Pat Barrell, c'40; William H. Monroe, b'40; G. S. Rice, c'40; Stewart Jones, c'40; F. M. Sheridan, c'42; Sam Coryelly, J. Debbie Balke, Julie Hammond, c'41; Carter Butler, c'41; George R. Kochler, c'43; Kenneth Kost, c'43; Ray Stantliff, c'41; Richard Large, c'41; Billy Lash, c'41; Preston Shane, c'41; George Wiszneaukas, c'41; and Bruce Johnson, c'41. Women Pass Point System Bill In Meeting - Measure To Prevent Over Ambitious Women from Too Much Work and Encourage Others By unanimous vote last night the W.S.G.A. passed the Point System Bill to serve as a control of women's activities on the Hill. Under the bill points will be given for each office and activity, the number of points depending upon the honor of the position and the amount of time required to fulfill the duties. Juniors and seniors will be limited to 60 points, sophomores will be allowed 40, and freshmen 30 points. "The purpose of the bill," Velma Wilson, c'40, president, said, "is to keep a few women from working too much and will encourage other women to get into activities in order to get points." The bill is expected to affect a comparatively small group of senior women. Those having too many points may resign certain positions in order to keep the offices they wish to work in. Encourage Women Barclay is Board Manager Elizabeth Barclay, c'40, will serve as manager of the board to administer the bill. Three other members of the W.S.G.A. will be appointed to the board sometime this week. Lists of activities and the number of points awarded each can be viewed online at www.wsg.a.org. Of women until the bill is published. The organization voted $10 to the Red Cross fund. Closing hours for Dec. 19 were discussed, but no definite action was taken. Seniors Get Free Health Check-Up Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of the student health service, yesterday requested seniors who will graduate at the end of the first semester to make appointments for physical examinations at Watkins Memorial hospital. The senior physical examinations require about 40 minutes. Doctor Sanutmes said, and include repetition of the tuberculin test, x-ray of the chest, Wassermann test, laboratory tests, immunization for typhoid and small pores and other tests necessary to make a complete examination. The occupation of the Finnish island of Hogland was announced but little progress was claimed on the Karleian Isthmus, the main front on the Finnish mainland. Dispatches from there indicated that stubborn Finnish resistance was providing unexpected difficulties for invaders, despite the heavy superiority in numbers and equipment. This is the third year that seniors have been offered the free examination. The students will not be notified of the examination by letter this year, because of the expense involved. Doctor Canuteson said. Moscow, Dec. 5. — (UP) — Russia announced today that 11 Finnish warplanes and one of Finland's five submarines had been destroyed, and at the same time denied foreign reports of Soviet losses. Students graduating in June can take the physical examination after the Christmas vacation. RUSSIA DOWNS PLANES Rough and Tough Tilt to Kansas By 34-30 Count Last night's basketball opener between Kansas and the Oklahoma Aggies lived up to its advance press billings of being a tough and tough game. Thirty-four fouls were called as the Jayhawkers outpointed Heinan's Cowboys, 34 to 10. By Jay Simon (Kansan Sports Editor) Trailing 6 to 1 early, a fighting Kansas team, paced by Captain Dick Harp and Bruce Reid, began finding the range to chalk up a 21 to 12 lead at the half. After the rest period the A. & M. crew began taking up the slack and at the three-quarter mark were behind only 22 to 27. From then on out the Jayawkers played a cagy game to protect FEAR SOVIET BOMBERS Stockholm, Wednesday, Dec. 6- (UP)- A 3-day snowstorm along the Bulf of Finland coast has ceased and a resumption of Soviet air bombs on the island had earlier caused it feared "at any hour," reports from Heliski said. Late Wire NEWS (By the United Press) Today is the twenty-second anniversary of Finland's independence from Russian rule. Helsinki, Dec. 5. — (UF) —The government announced tonight that Finnish troops, stubbornly standing off Russia's invasion on all fronts, have killed 2,000 Soviet soldiers and destroyed 64 enemy planes in fierce fighting in the Karelian isthmus bottleneck north of Leningrad. FINNS KILL 2,000 13 On the northern shore of Lake Ladoga, near the town of Salmi, the Fims reported that two platoons of Russian troops were "wiped out" while six tanks were captured and one plane destroyed. "only Washington, Dec. 5 — (UP)—Political experts tonight analyzed the records of three senatorial candidates for the 1940 Republican presidential nomination to better evaluate the chance of a Northwest job candidate's new district attorney. The 37-year-old racket-busting attorney makes his "keynote" speech in Minneapolis, Minn., today. FRAME NEW BOWL PROPOSAL FRESH NEW BOWL FOOTBALL Dallas, Tex. Dec. 5 UF—FD Florence, spoke at the Dallas Council on education, said to night that a committee was working on a new proposal to submit to Tennessee and Texas A. & M. College for "a national championship" game New Year's Day. MAY NOMINATE DEWEY NORMAL FACE COVERS Ralph Miller, star forward whose physical status was in doubt after re-injuring his knee three days ago, started the game and turned in a creditable performance in the eight minutes he played. der the wire with four points to spare. Allen Takes Spill Bobby Allen, fiery quarterback, took a bad spill near the East goal midway in the first half and left the game with an injured knee. However, he came back in the second canto to spartan the team with some dashing floor play as if nothing had happened. Jess Renick, big Indian guard for the visitors, opened the evening's scoring when he drove in close for a bucket. Schwertferger, 6 foot 5 center, and Smelser, forward, followed right along and A. and M, was leading 6 to 1, the Jays counting on Miller's free throw. Howard Engleman and Miller both hit from the floor and Engleman and Allen pitched in gift shots to give the homeliness into a swung 7 to 6 in a game was erased when Dodge plunked one near the netting from short side. Ebling Scores It was at this juncture that Allen went down in a wild melee and Kline and Ebling came into the game. Ebling calmly tossed in a pair of charity shots on Renick's foul to send Kansas into a lead they never relinquished. The Jayhawk string began to hutge as Harp dumped in four points. The rest of the team had a comfortable $\Phi$-point margin to rest on. Renick seemed to take charge in the Cowbys came back for the afterpiece. He drove in hard for two goals, but Harp and Allen each ripped the drygoody from the floor and the circle to run the margin to 27-16, the most they were ever ahead. Play Is Close Schwertfert and Renick, the visiting tall men, began playing in close and taking rebounds as their mates fired from long range. Schwertfert tipped one in after the ball bounced off the rim. Renick barged in with a full head of steam to count on a follow shot, and shot back. Schwertfert stitched the ball through when a mate missed fire at the free throw line. This left Kansas only five points to the good, but Reid came through in the clutches for two baskets and Ebling calmly arched in a shot from the side to run the score to 34-25 over three minutes left. Kansas Stults Kansas began freezing the ball as much as possible, but the Cowboys were coming out in a frantic effort to gain possession. Slade hit from the side after the visitors stole the ball, and Floyd made it a little (Continued on page three) To Award $225 In Essay Contest - Expect More Entries This Year; Will Write on Application of Christianity First prize is $100; second, $75; and third, $50. Last year's contest was won by John Lintrite, now an international in economics and political science. Three University students will win prizes totalling $225 which are to be awarded this year for the best essays on the application of Christ's teachings, and the announcement last night by the Hattie Elizabeth Lewis contest committee. Modern Pied Piper Uses Dry Bread To Lure Mice There were only 15 entries last year. Because the prizes are for large amounts, more students are expected to enter this year. Essays must be not less than 5,000 or more than 10,000 words in length. Outlines of the essay must be submitted to the Chancellor's office not later than April 1. The contest closes Mav 1. Pie-eyed Piper Schiller Shore, using dry bread for bait, lured 12 mice to their deaths yesterday in the animal building, rodent hoop house. According to Shore, this beats all previous records established by so-called housemates. First evidence that the Pie-eyed Piper was stalking his game yesterday when Regina had received a dead mouse with a card attached saying: "Dear Brother; Mother sent me to live with you." Students wishing information may see Prof. Ebida Eldridge of the department of sociology, chairman of the committee. Other members are Dr. William Coburn, professor of English, Miss Elsie Neuenwander, professor of romance languages; and H. L. Smith, assistant professor of journalism. Senate Fixes Exam Schedule The examination schedule for the first semester was fixed by the University Senate in its December meeting yesterday afternoon in Frank Strong hall. Examinations will be from Jan. 25 to Feb. 1 inclusive. Chancellor Deane W. Malott presided at the meeting during which yearly reports given by chairmen of nine standing committees of the Senate were heard. Not all reports were made, however, and the remainder will be read at the January meeting. The Senate authorized the School of Law and the School of Medicine to make their own examination schedules provided exception is made in conflicting examination dates for students not enrolled in either of Entrance examinations for the second semester may be taken from Jan. 25 to Feb. 1, inclusive. Persons wishing to take such examinations should arrange for appointments with Prof. M. E. Rice, room 202, Blake hall, on or before Jan. 22. HOOVER TO AID FINNS Four to Mock Trial for Alleged Kidnapping San Francisco, Dec. 5 — (UP)—Former President Hoover has undertaken to set up an organization to appeal for and coordinate American contributions for the homeless, it was disclosed here tonight. actives of Sigma Rho Phi. He came to school thrilled with the expectancy of pledging a fraternity. Sigma Rho Phi rushed him, rushed him he landed one dark night in a Topka hotel room with the door locked and surrounded by five Tai Beta Gamma sorority siens bolt on making our Wilbur a pledge of sai fraternity no matter what it took and, judging from Wilbur's complaint it took plenty. By Reginald Clement Buckton, c'40 Four men from dear old Sigma Rho Phi will on mock-trial for the kidnapping of Wiford Montgomery, alleged, c'43, at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, in the basement of Green hall. P.W. Viessemil, professor of law, will sit as judge on the case. It seems that Wilford was once a clean, wholesome lad, but that was before he got messed up with the The four Sigma Phi Rho's accused of causing Wilbur's kidnapping and subsequent downlareAlexander Wentworth (Bill Waugh, b)40. Ronald Blushingham (Bob Guy, c)40. Johnny Walker (Paul Heinz, c)41 and Peter Van Smythe III (Clavelle Holden, c)40. The women involved are Virginia Dare (Jean Perry, c)40. Belie Standing (Cecil King, c)41. Alice Parks (Mary Alice Livingston, c)43. Sara Teadale (Maxine Miller c'41); and Starr Hennessy (Marianna Bantleon, c'40). Montgomery charges that the accused man took him to the hotel room against his will. Once there, Montgomery says, he was pledged with liquor and women, women and liquor, and women, and women he did not know what he was doing. "I didn't mind the booze, but when I woke up at 4 o'clock in the morning all but seduced by Starr Hennessy Floyd Kelly, '140 and Edmund Page '140, represent the state in the case while Charles Henshall, '140, and Glenn McCann, '140 have been retained by the defense. The jury will be made up from a panel of 30 freshmen. The mock-trial is open to the public. (Four Starr for short) that was the blow that broke my pledge with Sigma Rho Phi". Montgomery lamented last night. National Leader Wants Secure Tenure, Freedom Concerning the security of tenure of faculty members of American universities and colleges, Doctor Ingraham remarked that it wasn't necessary to underpay a professor to get the best of his teaching ability. ★ Dr. Mark Ingraham Speaks to University Chapter of American Assoc. of Profs. at Banquet Lost Night Advocating a need for academic freedom and more secure office tenure of professors. Dr. Mark H. Ingramhah of the University of Wisconsin and national president of the American Association of Professors, spoke last night at the banquet of the association's University of Kansas chapter in the English room of the Memorial Union building. Ingraham advocated a need for academic freedom and tolerance of other's opinions. He pointed out the desirability of faculty participation in the administration of the school's affairs. D. L. Patterson, professor of history, was elected president of the local chapter and C. J. Posey, associate professor of geology, was chosen secretary and treasurer. Two delegates, to be chosen later by an executive committee, will attend the national convention in New Orleans, Dec. 27 and 28. The association has approximately 14,000 members in the United States. Kansas has seven local chapters. The University chapter has 75 members. 'All-Freshman' Dance Date Set for Jan. 15 Freshman class officers met yesterday afternoon in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building to commemorate the breaking "all freshman" dance. The date for the prospective dance was set for Saturday, Feb. 24. It will be held in the Memorial Union ballroom with music furnished by a Hill orchestra. The affair will be semi-formal. The idea of a "just freshman" affair was abandoned at yesterday's meeting. It was decided then that only one member of a couple, either the man or woman, must be a freshman. Ticket prices were set for 70 cents, date or stag. Tickets will be on sale Jan. 15. Freshman officers who attended yesterday's meeting were: Elmo Maiden, c'43; president; Martha Anne Hall, c'43; vice-president; Ruth Morrith, c'43; secretary; Glee Smith, c'43; treasurer; Howard Sells, c'43; and Harry Smith, c'43; dance managers; and Bob White, c'43; and Art Black, c'43; freshman representatives of the men's Student Council. Final plans and details for the dance will be made by Sells and Smith, dance managers. Hospital Releases Mary Hardman Mary Alice Hardman, c4' 192 was released yesterday from Watkins Memorial hospital where she was taken for treatment after having been struck by an assault eight days ago as she was returning to the home of Dean Ivan C. Crawford, head of the School of Engineering, 1500 Stratford road. Mary Hardman is a guest of the Crawfords. Miss Hardman was permitted to attend classes Monday, although she was not considered well enough to be released until yesterday. It was believed at first that she had received a fractured vertebra, but X-ray plates disclosed that the bone had not been broken. She was struck on the side and back of the head by the assailant. The blows apparently were delivered by a heavy, blunt instrument, the attending physician said after examining the injuries. The assailant fled when Miss Hardman screamed. No arrests have been made by police. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1933 1939 Kansan Comment Students Can Help At 10 o'clock tomorrow morning one hundred and five County Clubs will be organized by University students to "aarouse in the people of Kansas a feeling of interest, good will, and pride toward their University." The idea is not a new one here. Such a system was begun in 1920 and continued with success until 1931. Now, after a span of years when interest flagged, the Statewide Student Activities Commission has extended its efforts in this direction once more. Aim of the project is not merely to carry on a drive for more students. It seeks a far more important goal—that of helping adults of the state to understand the school's activities and problems. Service of the Student Correspondence Bureau during the past few years has been commendable. But it, alone, is not enough. It is not enough to send Jayhawker magazines to the high schools. An organization is needed to plan high school and civic club entertainment programs and to hold home-town activities for the purpose of promoting familiarity with University activities and strengthening alumni friendships. Plans for such an ambitious program are fully developed this year, but they call for ambitious leaders and demand complete student cooperation. They form a project worthy of every student's support. --one allotted to each ocean. Finally comes Italy—no bids are heard for Italy. Could it be that no one wants the Duce's boot-shaped country? Eleanor vs. Critics The most berated and at the same time the most appiauded American woman, Eleanor Roosevelt, who prefers to be herself and not a traditional copy of a President's wife, once more has thrust forward a delicate part of her anatomy for the critics' saw. In vulgar parlance, the First Lady has "stuck her neck out" again. This time she has aligned herself with the American Youth Congress against the Dies Committee of investigation of un-American activities. It is an undeclared war with the First Lady offering food, aid, and encouragement at the White House to the enemy of the Dies Committee. She has provided the Youth Congress with further ammunition by appearing at the hearings and taking her seat with the group for which she has acted in the past as a sponsor. Mrs. Roosevelt has shattered precedence and tradition since entering the White House with an abandon which almost hints at remediation and malice aforethought. The critics' sword of Pericles which has hovered about her head consistently, has swooped down a few times to no avail. Eleanor carries on blithely, downing her critics for the count. The trouble with the First Lady, from the critics' point of view, is that she doesn't know when she is licked. Give her the gullotine and she arises, not only with her head unbowed, but bloodless. The first lady surely can "take it." --one allotted to each ocean. Finally comes Italy—no bids are heard for Italy. Could it be that no one wants the Duce's boot-shaped country? Science Needed If only the world were a gigantic laboratory for the political scientist, the realistic man of science soon could make experimental adjustments in the redistribution of nations which not only would contribute vital truths but rebound to the joy of all concerned. The spirit of science reacts to modified conditions. Once nations proceeded on the assumption that might made right. Later that assumption was modified on the unscientific basis of humanitarian principles. Today's current events show the original truth of the fine old maxim that strength alone should and will conquer. By conducting experiments to prove the hypothesis, the new scientist could affirm the theory and restore a long hidden natural law. If the experiment is to be fair, new rules must be established. These would include prior rights, clear claims, self-determination of peoples, economic self-sufficiency, rights of minorities and rights of aggressors. To begin with the Orient—Japan would be given to China. This should show that two nations bound closely by racial ties, economic identity of interests, and similarity of culture and background, will prosper. Indian should have Great Britain—on the principle that turn about is fair play. France may have Spain—a division based on the rights of the Spanish minority in France. Belgium may have Ireland—if Belgium can control Ireland, the theory holds. Finland may have Russia—by right of aggression. Poland may have Germany—for the same reason. To Switzerland goes the United States of America as a temporary arrangement—to teach the party of the second part a lesson in true neutrality. Next is isolation of the Balkan states—with --counts of buffalo, deer, antelope, ... miles of woods ... large rivers ... fertile valley ... vanquished Indiana ... schools. All these advantages were enumerated by Governor Crawford in his letter. Labor Loses The decision to invoke the anti-trust laws against certain practices of labor organizations is indicative of the present reaction against the strides taken by labor in the past few years. Prosecutions of labor unions on charges of restraint of competition are scheduled under the new rulings. The strong position gained by labor in this country in the past ten years is endangered by the same factors within the labor organizations which have been credited with their success. Aggressive leadership, the split of the CIO from the parent craft union, and the tactics used to achieve stronger organizations; have hurt the cause of labor in the eyes of the public. The history of organized labor in the United States has never followed that of labor movements in other countries. It was slower to develop and less united after it got organized. Had this country not been fundamentally in sympathy with the aims of labor and ripe for the labor movement, the last decade would not have seen the successful growth of labor organizations. Labor leaders need to concede this in evaluating their own tactical offenses. The time for a general overhauling and revision of the labor organizations is at hand. The strength of the whole movement is split in its bi-partite divisions. Yet cherished gains to date need not be sacrificed. Certainly prosecutions under the anti-trust laws are not helping the cause of labor. --counts of buffalo, deer, antelope, ... miles of woods ... large rivers ... fertile valley ... vanquished Indiana ... schools. All these advantages were enumerated by Governor Crawford in his letter. Germany and Balkan stamp dealers are doing a landslide business. Hoarders, who fear a repetition of World War inflation and gold confiscation, are responsible. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1939 No. 56 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication, starting the week, and at 11 a.m. on Sunday. ASCE.ASME. There will be a joint meeting of the ASCE and the AMSE on a bursary day; Dec 7 at 8:30am, Dec 8 at 11am, stenzel, chief testing engineer for the Santa Fe Railroad will speak on "Modern Developments in Railroading"; Dec 9 at 12pm. FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF Y.W.C.A.: The Freshman Commission of the Y.W. is giving a tea for the Y.W. cabinet Thursday afternoon, Dec. 7, from 4 to 5 p.m. The Y.W. committee are invited—Helen Martin, publicity chairman. NOTICE TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. Dr E. H. Crawford, the Watkins Memorial Hospital each Tuesday for a visit to the problems of mental hygiene. Appointments may be made through the Watkins Memorial Hospital Ralph E. H. Crawford. MATH CLUB: Math students are invited to attend the opening ceremony of the new gym in room 263, Frank Strong hall. Bruce Crabbridge will speak on "Point Set Theory." The meeting as usual takes place at the gym in the lounge—Marlow Shollur, president. PERSONAL RELATIONS COMMISSION: There will be a roaring skater party Friday, Dec. 8 from 9:30 to 12 at the Rollerdrome. Tickets are available at Henley House, the Y.M. office, and the rink. Everyone is invited—Marjorie Wiley, Charles Yeomans, co-chairmen. W. S.G.A. TEA; There will be a tea for all University women in the women's lounge of Frank强华站 from 3 to 5 o'clock this afternoon. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will be hostess - Ethelnye Burns. Y. W. and Y.M. CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The last meeting of the year will be next Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at Henley House. All are invited to attend—Betty Joyce Miller, Charles Wright, Jr. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Horry Hill Edward-in-Chief...Ulerta Sherry Associate Editor...Richard Boyce..Brittany Jones Editor...Larry Randall..Mona Lendahl. Management Editor Walt Meininger Managing Editor Betty Coulson, Hugh Wright Comus Editors Bette Coulson, Hugh Wright Marketing Editor Dave Hickocken Education Editor Dale Hickocken Rowell Editor Kay Bozzor Rowell Editor Kay Bozzor Publisher Editorial Staff Edwin Brown MEMBER KANSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Business Staff REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative N.Y. CITY CHICAGO • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO • COLUMBUS Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class office at Lawrence, office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Kansas Painted as Ideal Land In Governor's Letter of 1866 By Hal Ruppert. A. W. Davidson, professor o chemistry, recently translated a German letter and read it at the last meeting of the Chemistry Club. The letter, dated 1866, was written by a former governor of Kansas and is available in the University library. Several years back when Kansas was still a young state, she needed farmers to break the soil on her plains. She needed workers to cut the woods and make their homes within her boundaries. At that time S. J. Crawford was governor of the state. He wanted to fill Kansas with progressive, hard-working people. In order to do this he sent a letter to Germany telling immigrants who planned to come to this country that Kansas was an ideal land to settle. Governor Crawford first brought forth the agricultural inducements of the state when he wrote, "The savage hordes of Indians who formerly occupied these rich valleys and prairies have disappeared, and in their stead the dilugent farmer guides his plow." He told of the many grains which grew in our state: wheat, Indian corn, barley, oats, rye and prairie ON THE OFF B-E-A-T By Roderick Burton This department is unable to confirm the rumor that last Thursday will be positively the last official Thanksgiving for this year. Uyuletide facts: In Texas, the department store Santa Clauses wear cowboy hats. The Lament of a Column Comes a day in the life of a column When the pen and paper fall: When try as one can, the quips (Read this column for further detail.) Although no one knows for sure which side of the fence Russia is on, at present it seems to be the Finnish side. Headline in the Houston Post: "Two City Detectives Robbed of $200 and Guns by Suspect." That makes almost anyone suspicious. The Stinister reports the trouble with college women is that they are always taking everybody too illiterately. Every morning we read in the paper about the ships which didn't pass in the night. GRANADA G thay. Also among this long list, Gov- ron Crawford included product which we rarely think Kansas is suitable to raise. "Tobacco, hemp, flax, and cotton are also grown in large quantities." WEDNESDAY 3 DAYS FIRST RUN MAJOR HITS 2 WEDNESDAY 2 Shows 2:30-7-9 10c-25c ENDS TONITE Fred MacMurray Madeline Carroll "Honeymoon in Bali" Cioire Trevor - John Trevor The early governor was proud of the many cultural advantages which Kansas offered. He enumerated a few of the colleges throughout the state. "The state university is on Mt. Oread, near the city of Lawrence with a population of 7,000 souls, situated on the south bank of the Kansas river." He also mentioned Kansas State agricultural training institute in the city of Manhattan. He said, "In the last year, more than 100 students were matriculated there." "ALLEGHENY UPRISING" The Roaring Adventures of Fighting Jim Smith, Unsung Hero of the 1760's! The writer mentioned that a stage coach ran daily through the rich valley of the Republican river from Wyandotte city, the western terminus of the Union Pacific railroad to Denver city. He also told road crews that the railroads were making extensive their lines into and across Kansas. But knowing that settlers would be attracted more by the agricultural benefits that Kansas might bring than by any one other thing, he emphasized her possibilities in that industry. TODAY Since the West was known as a great plain, Governor Crawford made it known to the prospective settlers that Kansas, despite the fact that the ENJOY DRIED They Flow for the Loved — And Fought for the Woman They Wanted! "In the western portion of the state," he said, "there are millions of buffalo (wild cattle), deer, antelope, and all sorts of wild ducks, geese, and chickens. Where all this wild life subsists and finds sufficient food to sustain them as to the success of sheep raising, for 50 sheep can be maintained by the forage required for the subsistence of a single buffalo." And Here!'s One Guy You Have to Handle with Gloves ...JING GLOVES JOBN PAYNE "Kid Nightingale" March 19, 2014 PATEE Your LAWRENCE Theaters Richard Andy ARLEN DEVINE 'LEGION OF LOST FLYERS NOW! DICKINSON — 2nd Feature — A Story You'll Be Forced to Treat to in the Next FREEDRIC MARCH JON BENNETT "TRADE WINDS" News and "Lone Ranger" Mat. 25c Nite 35c Shows 2:30-7-9 THRU THURSDAY March Time - News William POWELL Asta The Pup! "ANOTHER THIN MAN" Friday - Saturday ON THE STAGE Kappa Alpha Psi's "HARLEM JAMBOREE" Myrna LOY "HARLEM JAMBOREE" Ernie Field's 11 Piece Band Singing - Dancing Jivin' Jam Session! larger portion was prairie land, it was richly endowed with many varied species of wood. "Wooded areas three to ten miles wide and 100-300 miles long, full of oak, walnut, ash, elm, cottonwood, hackberry, and sycamore, together with many other species of trees, traverse the state." Clyde Smith To Play At Midweek Clyde Smith and his orchestra, featuring Barbara Edmonds, c'40, will play in the midweek varsity in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building from 7 to 8 o'clock tonight. The 200 stug limitation will be enforced again, Leo Johnstone, e40, president of the Student Union board announced. Faculty Organizes Riding Club Faculty members and their wives have organized a Sunday morning riding class under the instruction of the physical education department. vJfnoi now now now now now nw The class is being conducted in connection with the athletic program for professors which was started several weeks ago. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. For Good Times and Good Thin To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card Sales, rentals, cleaning and Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. USB 743 Mass. Phone 673 Only $750 for the new RAND Close-Shaver The Shaver that really Shaves CARL'S Gustafson Optometrist 911 Mass. KEYS Locker Padlocks Guns — Ammunition RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 with the sensational DIAMOND-BRAND HEAD FEATURES: Super precision Diamond Brand Shaving Head for short hairs. It gets "30% Closer". Powerful, self-starring motor units. No oiling, no rage. Vaccine vialing case. 110-120 VOLTS AC. TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mailin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Hasselt OREAD BARBER SHOP OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread 1237 Oread KODAK FINISHING and Fine Grain Developing Film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 Built-in self-calibration exposure meter. Certified f.4.5 tripel Annotagon lens 1/25 to 1/200 second shuttle speed. Use 35 mm, movie film in standard ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 "When I was a girl . . . Call KU 66 for a Kansan ad-taker "Everything was a lot more difficult. When we wanted to buy or sell something we had to bunt all over town to find a buyer or seller. We would just wear ourselves out! But now everything is so different and easy. To get results, all we have to do is insert a low cost result-getting Daily Kansan Classified Ad." MARY HOWARD BARRICK 10 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6. 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill--an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizabeth Kirsch, Society Editor Two people sitting at a table eating. Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 With the smell of holly in the air and the sight of new party dresses hanging in formal closets, there is a vague uneasiness in the back of more than one mind based on the realization that the end of the semester is fast approaching. Everyone has heard the story of the ants and the grasshopper—a study in the contrast of plodding and pure undiluted fun—and it all adds up to the reminder of the bitter days coming after the holidays. The bitter days, whereof we speak, being final exams. Professors Participate in Society A worthwhile suggestion will be a way to combine business and pleasure so that both will be well-balanced. But since practicality is out of tune with holi$ ^{4}$ While students enjoyed the warm unseasonal weather yesterday, professors tossed aside tutorial wories and ungraded quizzes to honor Prof. Mark H. Ingraham, national president of the American Association of University Professors and head of the department of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin. Professor Ingraham is visiting colleges in this section. Before coming to the university he was a guest at Manhattan and is now en route to Dallas. Approximately 70 members of the American Association of University Professors attended the dinner in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building at 6 p.m. to honor Professor Ingram Following the dinner the selection of delegates to the national convention of the association was discussed. The convention will be held in New Orleans, Dec. 27 and 23. days and merriment we can only cry, "On with the dance." Mathematicians Luneh Following a luncheon in the Old English room, members of the department of mathematics and special guests heard Pref. Mark H. Ingraham, head of the department of mathematics, spoke to "How, When, Wisconsin, speak on 'How, When, And Where to Consult a Mathematian," at noon yesterday. Included in the 40 guests attending the luncheon were: Chancellor Dean W. Malotl; Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College; Frank Stockton, dean of the School of Business; Ivan C. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; Posey, associate professor of educ. tecture; and C. J. Posey, associate professor of geology. Jane Coffman, c'11, was a dinner guest at the Phil Delta Theta house Monday night. New Fraternity Officials Della Chi fraternity elected the following officers Monday night: president, Ed Hall; ed'43; vice-president, Kenneth Troup; c'40; secretary, Charles Grutzmacher; e'42; secretary of the responding responcilcy. Charles Wright, ira and sergei-at-arms, Herbert Anderson, c'48. Monday night the members of Kappa Sigma elected the following officers: president, Lou Ward, c'41; grand proctor, Roger Ludeman, c'41; and grand master of ceremonies, Bob Leidig, c'42. Alpha Chi Omega entertained the pledges of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity with an hour dance last evening from 7 to 8 p.m. Sunday dinner guests at the Alpa Omicron Pi house included: Mr. and Mrs. G. A Hagedorn, Montreal Mr. and Mrs. George Fox, West Englewood, N. J; and Mr. and Mrs J. W. Morash, Hallax, Nova Scotia They were visiting Bentrice Hagedorn, 'i. 41'. Luncheon guests at the Alpha Omicron Fi house Monday were Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Witt, and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Williams from Russell. Noontime Guests The sophomore class of Pi Beta Phi entertained the following guests at lunch yesterday; Dick Baskett b:40; Harry Harn, e:42; Tom Sweeney, b'41; Roy Edwards, c'42; Harry Linn, c'40; Al Becker, c'42. WANT ADS LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies gold Elgin wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone *9241J* or return to *1177 Vermont*. *62-83* LOST: Black leather billfold in and around Robinson Gymnastics. Redward, Hepworth, phone 365.-56 FOR RENT: To adults, good modern 5-room bungeal, sleeping perch, insulated garage. South of University city. 139 Rhode Island Phone 2539R. -60 Bill Horton, c'42; Bob Gilliland '42; Jim Russell, c'41; Bob Little '42; and Bill Bailley, b'40. Other luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Phi house included Mary Lou Borrears, E. Paso, Texas; '98; Jean Robertson; '10; and John Robertson; '40; and Mr. John Noble. FOR RENT: To adults, good modern Kappa Kappa Gamma will be in charge of the W.S.G.A. tea to be held from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the lounge of Frank Sturgil hall. Fledges of Gamma Phi Beta entertained tuggies of Alpha Tau Omega at an hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. yesterday. --included a welcome address by Robert R. Moore, e'40; and a response by Presson Shane, e'41. Leo Johnstone, e'40; toastmaster, Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the engagement of Marjorie Crume gr. to Frank Ryman, in 10. No. Blythe Dodd is involved in the professional fraternity. Mrs. John Noble, wife of John Noble, pioneer Kansas artist whose paintings are now on exhibition at Spooner-Thayer museum, is a guest at Corbin hall. Monday dinner guests at the Alpha Omicron Pi house included: J. W. Jarrett, Hutchinson; and M. E. G. Harrington, Kansas City. Mary Louis McNown, c'43, and Mary Jean Edmiston, c'41, were luncheon guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house yesterday. Tau Beta Pi Initiates Thirteen Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternity, held an initiation for 13 junior and senior students following a banquet in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building last night. Speaker at the banquet was Dean Ivan C. Crawford The program in- Those initiated were: Charles Cleason, e'40; John Hamilton, e'40; Rudy Kowach, e'40; Gordon Ramiser, e'40; Dean Ritchie, e'40; Kenen Rosebusch, e'40; Charles Thibodeau, e'40; George Hurge, e'41; Robert Brockett, e'41; George Lupier, e'41; and Presson Shane, e'41. English Department To Offer Reviews In keeping with a practice of several years' standing, the department of English of the University is offering again this year a series of afternoon lectures on contemporary literature. The lectures are intended primarily for freshmen, but others who are interested may attend. The program for the remainder of the year, including the book, author and reviewer: Jan. 10—"Grapes of Wrath" (Steinbeck) Waggoner, instructor Feb. 14—"The General's Ring" (Lagerlof) Miss Blanche Yeomans assistant instructor. Dec. 13—"The Web and the Rock' (Wolfe)—Perry Westbrook, assistant instructor. March 13—"The Yearling" (Rawlings)—Maurice Hatch, assistant instructor. (Continued from page one) Continued from page 158 closer with a one-pointer when Ebling got too anxious. Newman made good on a long side shot with only seconds to go to give his mates an even 30 points. Jayhawks Down--probably sets some sort of record for dramatic characters in Fraser theater. Only a little less difficult is the part of defense attorney, Stevens, being played by Jack Nelson, gr. He must be 253 individual speeches. The Juyahwaters took advantage of the new rule of declining a free throw just before the gun. An Agnge fouled one of the Kansans while trying to get the ball, but instead of taking the shot, Kanas took the ball out of bounds and kept possession. Partridge, who was driving, was approaching a car, a truck, and a bayruck at a speed of about 50 miles an hour. As he applied his brakes, the brake rods pulled loose. He chose to hit the car which was going in the same direction. His crew lifted the other rolled in to the ditch. Phil Partidge, e43, and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Kallin, all escaped serious injury in an accident which occurred Sunday as they were returning to Lawrence from Hutchinson where they had spent Thanksgiving. Student in Car Accident Escapes Serious Injury Kalin received minor cuts on the forehead, but no other injuries. North College, the first K.U. building, was erected in 1866. ---On the Campus This Week---- Where To Go; What To Do On the Campus **TODAY** -- Midweek, Memorial Union ballroom, 7-8 p.m., W.S.G. A. Tea for all university women, Women's lounge in Strong hall, 5-5 p.m. University Concert Course: Zino Francescatti, violinist, Hoch auditorium, 8:20 p.m. THURSDAY--Phi Chi Theta Juneco, English room, 12:30; Women's Pan-Hellenic meeting, Pine room, 4:30; Phi Chi Kappa tea, Kansas room, 4 p.m.; University Women's Club Christmas party. Union ballroom, 10 p.m; hockey and volleyball feed, 6 p.m.; Convention of County club- FRIDAY- Scabbard and Blade dinner, Kansas room, 7 p.m.; Owl Sister dance, Kansas room, 9 p.m; R.O.T.C.舞会, Memorial Union ballroom SATURDAY—Sigma Tara dinner, English room, 6:30 p.m.; Kappa Alpha Theta dance, Memorial Union ballroom, 9:15 p.m.; iSA Dance, --- a GIFT from Weaver's is all one could desire for a very merry Christmas a GIFT from Weaver's L The last nail has been driven and the final splash of paint has been spread on the setting for "Night of January 16th," Dramatic Club production which opens next Tuesday for a four night run in Fraser theatre. Workmen Complete Set For Coming Mystery Production The last thing built was a specia room off stage where the jury will confer in private—the jury which will be picked from the audience. Tickets will go on sale tomorrow morning at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall. This murder case has been presented to an all-student cast of 23 members. Rehearsals on the play are running smoothly and the east expects to be ready for dress rehearsals Sunday Probably the hardest act job in the play falls to Less Hixon, csp, who has the leading male role, that of the prosecuting attorney, Flint. Hixon has memorized some 326 individual peeches of varying length—which Dressing for Pleasure WITH SWANK WITH For the big moments that come after swank, Swank has the correct accessories. Available in a $2.50 variety of styles. ATTRACTIVELY UP PACKAGED FOR GIFTS CARL'S This is due to the fact that the play has only one setting for the three acts, with all of the main characters appearing during the whole performance. Motion pictures were taken of Chancellor Dene Malot yesterday morning which will be added to the fifteen minute film entitled "Tour of Mr. Cross." The silent short subject will be edited with several recent shots showing life on the Canis. Motion Pictures Taken Of Chancellor Malott The film will be first shown at a football banquet in Kansas City Dec. 12 or 13. --- A ship with sails in the wind. OUR SHIP IS IN - LOADED WITH CHRISTMAS BOOKS FOR ALL YOUR FAMILY AND ALL YOUR FRIENDS! BOOKS—the one gift that never fails to please! And yet so easy to shop for. Come in now where our selection is complete, and from the fascinating array of BOOKS pick your gift for FATHER, MOTHER, SON, DAUGHTER or FRIEND. We have everything in BOOKS to please anyone up to three, up to the most discriminating room—wat The Book Nook 1924 A. WATERS. PHONE 861 FICTION POETRY DRAMA NON-FICTION CHILDREN'S BOOKS SENSE HERONY RENTAL LIBRARY Japan's finance ministry will increase by 1,000,000,000 the number of cigarettes made in the country this year. The Finest KAYWOODIE of all The Finest KAYWOODIE of all FLAME-GRAIN BRIAR Inlaid with Imported MERCHANTS MEERSCHAUM $1250 Well, there's quite a buzz about this one in the clubs and tap-tops—fellowes who think what the Messiemann does to this pipe we certainly wouldn't go to the trouble of putting the messermans in there, having to go all the way to Anatolia (Turkey to you) to get it, what with the War and the turmoil in the world, and the terrestrial in the world in which to smoke tobacco. Proteins the flavor. keeps it melow. The smooth mild smoke of this toy-hip Kawydlew will boost your awake life all gone for it. Shown above, No. 14. KAYWOODIE COMPANY "Hi-yo Dunder and Blitzen...away-y with you! It's the magic carpet for gifts!!! SANTA Read the Kansan for gifts for Mother Father Sister Brother Girl-friend Boy-friend Grandma Etc. What is the magic carpet? Your Copy of the Daily Kansan! Jump on it every morning and peruse the ad columns for Christmas gift ideas. Then sail on down to Massachusetts street and its tributaries. To your delight, the teasers shown in the ads will come magically to life awaiting your selection. The Magic Carpet will carry hundreds of gift ideas for every person on your gift list. Its columns will tell of extra services: gift packaging, mailing facilities, personalizing features — everything to make Joy happier and Roy glad for the Christmas spirit. So don't miss an issue of the Kansan. The Magic Carpet will save steps and time. The DAILY KANSAN Your Daily Gift Shopping Guide PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6. 1939 SIMONIZING.. SPORTS By JAY SIMON Already into the cage can paign after last night's tussle between the Jayhawkers and Oklahoma A. & M., this department trusts that it won't meet with the fate of Lot's wife for taking one last over-the shoulder glance at the rapid waning football season. Notwithstanding the fact that there are two important conference tilts on this Saturday's grid menu involving teams of "bowl callire," the football situation is relatively clear. It is not so much a question of "who's going a-bowling," as it is "where are they going?" This week's stadium-rocker will be the Southern University-U.C.-L.A. clash in Los Angeles that can billet to attract 101,000 spectators. The Uclans and their two Negre backs, Kenny Washington and Jack Robinson, could upset a lot of dope sheets by taking the Trojans in this clinch fray on the coast. To the winner goes the Pacific coast conference title and the honor of being host at the Rose Bowel Cup in August at U.C.-L.A., undefeated, but three-fied, has a powerhouse, but Southern Cal should be able to bounce back nicely from its narrow escape with Washington last week and win the Western honors handsily. The other important game Saturday is Tennessee vs. Auburn. Auburn is below par this year and it hardly ranged to extend the powerful Vols. Still, there is the old story of the underdog in these tough Dixie classics, and if a team was ever due or a letdown it's Tennessee. And this brings us around to the question of "who's going where"? Figuring U.S.C. and the Vols to come through their tests Saturday, that team was expected to take on lane as the host teams in the bowls of Roses and Sugar, respectively. The two invaders will be Tennessee and Texas A. and M., the scourge of the Southwest that roared through a stiff 10-game slate without meeting a tie or defeat. It makes little difference which goes where. It the Aggies are invited out and take a spill all the second game, will start yelling. "They were afraid of Tennessee?" and vice versa. I don't think the pickers will go wrong selecting either team to go either The brass hats that are running the Cotton bowl show at Dallas have been waving a lot of collateral, at the big boys, but it looks like they are going to have to be satisfied with a couple of the lesser teams, Tennessee and Texas A. and M. have each been of the first four affirmation of labor Jan. 1, 1940, but it looks like cash is not enough. The match this corner would like to see in Dallas is undefeated, but once-tied Diqusne and one-beaten, once-tied Nebraska. Then there is the little matter of the Orange bowl. Georgette Tech has been invited and has already replied that "we'd be delighted to attend your party, if mother (the Southeast conference) says we may." The officials are fishing for Missouri's Figers for the "Northern" team and they may have accepted by the time you read this. And now to get around to a cur rent note to W. A. White of Emporia. Dear Mr. White: The young lady with the Missouri band that you so maliciously took apart after the KU-MU. MU game is a 16-year old miss who attends Ward high school where she has been as she is called, does the stuffing and twirling for the Kansas City American Legion band. Intramural Cage Volleyball Begin Thursday The 1938-40 interimral basketball and volleyball seasons will get under way Thursday night, Dec. 7. A total of 63 teams are entered in basketball while 18 outfits will take part in volleyball. ★ Sixty-three Entrants in Basketball; Eighteen Sign up for Net Sport as Winter Program Opens The cage teams are divided into three divisions. Division I is made up of 16 squads. They are as follows: Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Upsilon, Delta Tau Delta, Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta, Beta Theta Pi, SIGma Phi Epsilon Chi, Chi Kappa Pi, SIGma Delta Chi, Pi Kappa Pi, SIGma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Nu. The volleyball teams are divided into two divisions. In Division I are Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon Phi Si, Delta Chi Alpha Sigma G. Domines, Pi K A, S. P E, and A. T. O. Division II contains Phi Delta Theta PI, Phi Gam, S. A. E. Sigma Chi D, T. D. Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu, Theta Tau, and Triangle the schedule for the season' opening basketball games is as follows: Teams listed in Division III are Dominos I, Alpha Kpai, PS1. ISA 2, ISA 4. Buccaneers, Dunakin Club. Hexagons, II, Jayhawk Co-imp, Mississippi Meteors, Rock Chalk Warriors. Thursday, Dec. 7, East court: 10:00 A.T.O. vs. Phi Delt; west court—DU. vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. DON. Members of Division II are the defending champion Galloping Ghosts, Comets, ISA 1, ISA 3. Alpha Chi Sigma, Dominoes II, Hellhounds, Hexagons, I, Kappa Eta Kappa, and Theta Tau. Friday, Dec. 8: East court -4:30 D.T.D. vs. PiKai; West court -Cometts vs. Ohio Ichabods; 6:30 Dominoes I vs. Warriors; Acacia B" vs. Beta T' = 7:30 A.K. Piws vs. RockChalk; ChiDelt B" vs. A.T.O.B" Saturday, Dec. 9: East court -8:30 D.U. "B" vs. D.C. ChiB"; west court-PhiGam "B" vs. D.T.D. B" 9:30 PiK.A. "B" vs. S.A.E. B'S.P.E. "B" vs. Sigma Chi B"; 10:30 K.Sig "B" vs. Sigma PiK.A. "B"; Beta C" vs. S.A.E. C"; 11:30 PiK.A. vs. Delta Chi Kappa Sigma vs. Acacia; 1:00 PhiGam vs. Triangle Beta vs. Bigma Nu. Hargiss Attends N.A.A. Convention in Florida Bill Hargiss, University track coach, left today to attend the National Amateur Athletic Union's convention which is to be held at Miami, Fla. Hargiss is president of the Missouri Valley A. A. U. Those accompanying the University coach are: Ward Haylett, track cousel at Kansas State College, and college of the Missouri Valley A. A. U. Miss Myrn Hull of the department of English will speak on American folk music at a meeting of the Women's Dining Club at the Ormond hotel in Kansas City Saturday evening. Miss Myra Hull To Explain American Folk Music Miss Hailo has collected more than 120 early American folk songs in the past 10 years. She has obtained all recordings from relatives and friends. Have you lost your K. Book? Would you like a K. Book to send home? Do you have a K. Book? K. Books can be purchased at the Business Office 15c Hurry - While the Supply Lasts His Tigers May Go to Orange Bowl-your car a chance POP JAYY FRITZ DON TO MIZZOU AND WINDOW IN ATLANTIC TIME DON IS ONE OF THE FIRST ROOKS FROM MOUNTAIN GROVE HOW TO PLAY FOOT BALL HE IS AN AL-COUNTRY TRAILER AT UNIVERSITY CINEMA HENRY IS A GREAT DELIVERY IN SPRING PRACTICE BEGAN HIS BRILLIANT CORNWELL COLLEGE TECH- NICAL COLLEGE HOOD 20 SHS CLOSET MODEL TO A HIS CREDIT OVER A PR. JOB OF 5 YEARS POLISH Five persons represented the University at a Y.M.-Y.W. field council meeting in Creek, Neb., last week end. Dou Faurie, youthful mentor at Missouri, may take his Big Six champions to the Orange Bowl at Texas Tech in one of the New Year's Tech in one of the New Year's University members attending were: Marjorie Wiley, c'41; Chuck Yeamans, b'40, chairman of the personal relations committees; Kernit Franks, c'40, president of the Y.M.C. A; Edda Padock, secretary of the Y.W.C.A.; and John O. Moore, secretary of the Y.M.C.A. Schools Should Pay Athletes---Hargiss Bill Hargis, track coach, attacked universities for denying financial aid to athletes and at the same time giving scholarships to students ranking high in mental achievements. Speaking at a dinner in Salma given by the chamber of commerce for the football squads of Kansas Wesleyan university, Salma High School, and St. John's Military School, Hargiss said that he saw no harm in giving an athlete a soil job so long as the player gets his school work. University Represented At Tri-State Meeting The Ramblin' Wreck has already accepted the bid and Missouri is awaiting faculty and Big Six conference approval. Day attractions. Alice Ann Jones, c 41, is in charge of the bazar and will be helped by Shirley Jane Ruble, c 41; Agnes Betty Strachen, c 42; Beaulah Tailob, c 41; Mary Ewers, c 42; John Moorehead, c 43; and Verdin Lou Maurer, c 41. Y.W.C.A. Will Sell Unusual Gifts at Christmas Bazaar The organization will have various articles to sell. There will be Mexican hand drawn lace, alver pieces and bouchures from El Paso Texos. Plans are under way for the Christmas bazaar sponsored by the Y.W.C.A. from Dec. 11 until Christmas at Memorial Union building. From a Russian shop in New York City will come small wooden bowls, brass and silverware, and linens. One of the interesting articles for sale is a box filled with fleas dressed in different fashions. These are from Mexico. Dr. Bernard Donnelly, a graduate of the School of Medicine in June, 1929, has begun a six-week's period of internship in Watkins Memorial hospital, replacing Dr. Raymond Pendleton. Internes from the University hospital, Kansas City, Kan., each spend six weeks of internship in the student hospital. Medic Grad Starts Internship Football Letters To 34 Members Of Kansas Squad Thirty-four varsity Jayhawk football players were voted letters for the recently completed season by the Athletic Board, W. W. Davis, chairman, announced last night. Those receiving the award included: Dick Amerine, c'40; Bill Arnold, c'40; Bill Bunsen, ed'42; Frank Burkay, ed'41; Russell Chitwood, e'40; Ward Crowell, e'41; Eindrall Cadwalader, b'40; Jake Fry, ed'42; Denzel Wolverton, ed'42; Robert Harbert, Hartman, ed'41; Ed Hall, ed'42; William F. Jack, e'42; Jay Kern, e'42; Bill Leharch, c'41; James Morris, c'41; Moner Merkel, c'41; Quido Massare, c'41; Ralph Miller, ed'42; John Narramore, b'40; Don Pierce, c'41; Steve Renko, ed'42; Dan Rhule 40; Mike Silanik, ed'42. Milton Sullivant, c'40; Ed Suagee ed'd41; Jack Turner, b'40, and Hubert Welcome Back From That Fine THANKSGIVING VACATION. Today — and give Drive in and see us to be Thankful too to be Thankful too —Fill up with--gift suggestions from the students' store" Oldsmobile Sales and Service M. F. HUDSON CO. Philips 66 800 N.H. Phone 825 Y.M. and Y.W.C.A. To Take Field Trip to Kansas City The Social Service commission of the Y.M.C.A. and the Y.W.C.A. will take a field trip to Kansas City Saturday to study social conditions there. They will be accompanied by John Burge, ed'41; Dick Brown, e'42; George Cierrny, e'42; Vincent Graves, ed'41; Chester Gibbens, c'41; Ralph Schaake, ed'41 Provisional letters were given to the following: Miss Eda Paddock, secretary of the Y.W.C.A., and John O. Moore, secretary of the Y.M.C.A. Some of the places they will visit in Kansas City are the Guadalupe settlement house, the Wilson packing plant, the Board of Trade, and the Toy lending library at the Grace and Holy Trinity church. EXCLUSIVE WITH US--gift suggestions from the students' store" The group plans to leave about 7:30 in the morning and return at 6 o'clock in the evening. In the party of twelve will be Charles Dodge, and Marjorie June Gray, c41, heads of the two commissions. See this New Shirt--gift suggestions from the students' store" The "Bruce" a new Arrow shirt right from shirt style quarters — Featuring the new Hollywood Long Point Collar — $2. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHINGS "p-s-s-t ... practical Oversized Display Box EATON'S Stationery. With your personal monogram absolutely free. ★ Buxton Billfolds and Keytainers ★ Sheaffer and Parker Fountain Pens ★ Zipper Notebooks Carter's Stationery 1025 Mass. St. Where Students Find What Thev Want --- K Real Mildness "Any All-American Selection," GRANTLAND RICE, says GRANTLAND KIDS "must have the right combination to give top performance all the time." That's just what Chesterfield with its milder better taste does . . . gives more smoking pleasure in each and every one smoked. BETTER TASTE Make your next pack IS CHESTERFIELD'S RIGHT COMBINATION of the world's best cigarette tobaccos When you ask for Chesterfields you're buying something no other cigarette can give you at any price . . the RIGHT COMBINATION of the world's best cigarette tobaccos. All over America millions of smokers find that Chesterfields give them a cooler, better-tasting and definitely milder smoke. A Copyright 1939, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. Chesterfield TIGARETTES LIMITED PIPE TUBACO ON CHESTERFIELD Chesterfield THEY REALLY SATISFY hesterfield 4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBEI 7, 1939 Missouri To Orange Bowl Late Wire NEWS (By the United Press) Miami, Fla. Dec. 6—(UP)To the surprise of no one, it was announced officially tonight that Missouri and Georgia Tech would be the principals in the Orange Bowl football game here New Year's Day. Z-229 Columbia, Mo., Dec. 6—(UP)—Couch Faino Dauret came out of a faculty meeting late today, grimmed broadly and said: "I'm very happy about Missouri's going to Miami for the Orange Bowl." Then he ordered four practice sessions for his busky B16 Six conference champions before they entrain the night of Dec. 21 for Miami. "It will be a fine trip for the boys and fine opportunity to meet a great Georgeta Tech team." Supply Arms To Fins The Missouri Tigers had accepted Georgia Tech's invitation for the New Year's game, and today the committee on intercollegiate athletics announced its approval and that of the faculty and the conference. London, Dec. 6- (UP) - Great Brit. in and Germany are supplying ams, fighting planes and other war supplies to Finland to strengthen the Flim resistance against the Russian reliability, reliable informants and tomb- site. Russia Masses Troops British firms, it was said, are supplying a considerable quantity of war materials to the Fins including about 25 fighting planes. Helsinki, Dec. 6—(UF) - Russia tonight was reported to be massing between 500,000 and 700,000 troops, hundreds of pilots and Baltic warships in the waters near land in hopes of bringing the invasion of the Baltic republic to a quick end U. S. To Aid Finns Between 50 and 69 Italian warplanes, including Savoia bombers were understood to have arrived to strengthen Finland's tiny air force. Washington, Dec. 6—(UP)—A broad program of American aid to civilian victims of Russia's invasion of Finland was being shaped by President Roosevelt tonight after he had cabled hopes of a "hupper eruon" soon to the head of the little Baltic republic. Frustrate Prison Break Laming, Kian, Dec. 6—(UP) —Prison orders to shoot today frustrated an attempted break by 12 prisoners who with wooden guns kidnapped four guards and stomped the walls. Forecast G.O.P. Victory Three carefully aimed bullets from wall guards stopped the break with outwounding a prisoner or their hostages. The convicts used two carved pistols, covered with black friction tape, to subdue guards. --professor Stevens named eight native specimens of the flower and showed lantern slides illustrating each. Washington, Dec. 6—(UP)—Chairman John D. M. Hamilton of the Republican national committee said tonight that the party is in better shape now than it has been for several years and that he is party in the 1930 presidential elections. On the Shin NUMBES 57 By Reginald Buxton= My idea of heaven with a gold-plated bathroom would be to have a deaf, blind, and of course, dumb wife and then hire the 10 Hill beauties that appear in the next Suo Wong Owl on the "I" parade as maids. Editor Robertson's idea of heaven would be to have 3,000 persons buy copies of the mug to see the "I" parade. Two-bit ready-made telegraphs are always safer than your own brain-storm. Polly Rohm is in a dither worrying whether she can be sent when he sent her telegraph saying: "I'm thankful to day for fiends and you top the list No cemetery neon lights here—Kappa Sig Frank Goodwin started out in a gala moal to visit brother Bill Sutherland in Ellinwood during the war. The haunt finds the cause of a misty haze, raided up in near-by Hoisington. Dale Brodie's ace fiddle plucker, Gene O'Brien, will go to work for Jimmy Joy's orchestra sometime this month. Does her heart beat for you?— Sig Ep Jack Mankin was observed (Continued on page two) Jury Hears First Evidence in Mock Kidnaping Trial ★ Four Members of Fictious Fraternity Accused of Abducting Rushee; Forced Him to Remain in Topeka By Roscoe Born Kansan Court Reporter A cap-twisting, down-gazin freshman took the witness stand in mock court yesterday to tell how four Sigma Rho Chi chien imprisone him, foodless in a Topeka hotel room for 26 hours while they and five University women drank and dance through an early rushweek night. "They told me I wasn't leaving until I pledged Sigma Rho," said Wilford Montgomery, c# 43, who men with second degree kidnapping. Montgomery told how, during rude week, the four men and five University women persuaded him to drive to Topeka "to meet some friends" and room, and threw him back onto a couch every time he tried to escape. Enter Into Spirit "The they tried constantly to get me to drink." Montgomery said, "and Stain Hennessey, one of the women who was sent into the spirit of the occasion." Charles Henshall | 140, attorney for the defense, cross-examined the plaintiff. "Did you take a drink?" Henshell asked. Montgomery was emphatic in his "no." "Why didn't you?" the course persisted. "I hate rum," Montgomery declared, and the bailiff's gavel was pounding for order. When in high school, Montgomery had previously testified, he was an eagle scout and a prize orator for the W.C.T.U. Henshall went on: "How did you know that it was liquor they were drinking?" Montgomery was the orator against "The cap was off the bottle and I could sense the evil odor." Doesn't Like Date In his testimony Montgomery related how he refused to associate with his "date," Starr Hennessy, but that she "associated with him." "She held my hand and tried to get me to drink," he said. When Henshall asked if he "even made a pass at any of the women" prosecuting attorney Floyd Kelly I40, objected and insisted that the defense counsel restate his question in English. Henshall began again: "Did you ever attempt to enter into anything more than a platoon relationship with the women?" The witness did Don't know what he means. "Did you get fresh with these girls?" Amid the laughter in the courtroom, Montgomery shook his head and signified that he didn't understand the question. But when Henshall asked if the witness kissed one of the girls, Montgomery was emphatic and indignant in his "no." Henbail and Glenn MacCann, 140, are the defense attorneys while Ed Page, 140, and Kelly, are prosecuting the case for the state. The attorneys had no trouble in agreeing on a jury. When the first 18 jurors were called they were asked if they had ever read about the case in the Daily Kansan. All 18 raises their hands in affirmative. Stevens Shows Slides At Botany Club Meeting Prof. W. C. Stevens of the department of botany discussed the helanlion or common sunflower of Dougallia spp. in the mounting of the Botany Club yesterday. The next meeting of the club will be at the Christmas party of the combined natural science clubs on Saturday, Dec. 16. (UP)—Between 450,000 and 500,000 1340 automobile license tags have been issued to county treasurers commissioner C. M. Voehler announced. Issues Near Half Million Tags County treasurers will put the tags on sale anytime between now and the first of the year, depending on local regulations. Deadline for purchase of new plates is February 1 Voeker said. Crafton Is in a Quandary Over the Selection of a Jury The second dramatic production of the season starts a four night run in Fresher theater Tuesday. Tickets for "Night of January 16th" on go on at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall today, GerhardTonn, msp, in charge of ticket sales has announced. The office will be open every day from 9 until 12 in the morning and 1 until 4 in the afternoon. Students must exchange their activity book stubs at the office to obtain reserved seats. the audience. The present worry o. Director Crafton is what method to use in calling the jury. He may have the theater patrons sign their names as they enter, or call out the seat numbers of twelve persons at random. The jury is called by the Clerk if the Court in the play. Indoor Smokers Subject to Four New Restrictions "There have been many inquiries to is whether or not the jury will be fixed," said Crafton, "I assure you he will it not be. Many have asked if they could serve on the jury. We appreciate their wanting to help, but he jury is chosen without bias and it random from the audience." Indoor smokers came under four more restrictions yesterday when the joint M.S.C.-W.S.G.A smoking regulation followed additional regulations; 1) Smoking is prohibited in all engineering laboratories except the first floor of the hydraulic laboratory. 2) Haworth hall is now among the list of buildings in which smoking is completely banned. ( 3 ) The third floor and all stairways in Frank Strong hall are on 'be no-smoking list. 4) Smoking is prohibited in Hoch auditorium, except in the first-floor front lobby. The smoking committee explained that these new regulations were to clarify the rules which the committee formerly laid down. Traveling Forum Speaks at Haskell The traveling forum grope up of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. hold a discussion of "The United States in a War" at Haskell Institute last night. The forum is prepared to hole meetings on three other subjects including: "Should I go to College?" and "Minority Groups." Forums have been held in Liberty Memorial High School and plans are being made to go to Central High School in Kansas City. Kenneth Smith, assistant general secretary of the Student Christian movement, is the chief speaker on the program at the meeting of the Freshman council, which was held at 4:30 in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. He will speak on "Christian Students in the Modern World." R.O.T.C. Practices Drill Used in Actual Combat Yesterday's drill was held in the field behind Fowler shops and was under the direction of Major Ruy-chen Shi. The instructor military science and tactics. The R.O.T.C.U. unit of the University practiced extended order drill yesterday afternoon at the regular Wednesday drill formation period. Extended order is used in the regular army to provide for orderly defense against small units for hand and for movement under battle field conditions. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday. Dec. 8 R. O.T.C. Ball, ballroom of Memorial Union building. 12 p.m. Phi Delta Theta, party at chapte house, 12 p.m. Owl Society, Dance in Kansas room of Memorial Union building 12 n.p. First Christian Church, party, Myers hall. 12 p.m. Saturday. Dec. 9 Alpha Delta Pi, winter formal at chapter house. 12 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega, party at chapter house. 12 p.m. Alpha Kappa Psi, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. Services for Early Grid Star To Be Held This Afternoon District I of I.S.A., Dance at Ricker hall, 12 p.m. Districts II & IV of I.S.A., dance in Kansas room of Memorial Union building, 12 p.m. Delta Upsilon, dance at chapter house. 12 p.m. Kappa Alpha Theta, Christmas formal at ballroom of Memorial Union building. 12 p.m. house, 12 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega, party at chap. Services for Arthur E. Huddleston 70, a member of the first University football squad, will be held at 2 PM, afternoon from the Massacre Temple. Dean R. A. Schwiegler of the School of Education will be in charge. Buria will be in Oak Hill cemetery. Elizabeth Meguiar, Adviser of Women, for the Joint Committee On Student Affairs A discussion of the question: "Can business and government work together?" is the main topic on the program for the Town Hall meeting tonight at 8:30 in the main image of the Memorial Union building. Town Hall Group Will Meet Tonight The group is holding the discussion after listening to the broadcast of Town Hall of the air on which one same question will be argued by Robert A. Taft, Jerome N. Frank, chairman of the United States Securities Exchange commission, and William Martin Jr., president of the New York stock exchange. The meetings are sponsored by the Social Action commissions of the Y.M.C.A. and the Y.W.C.A. Contribute Articles To Bar Journal Student and faculty members to the School of Law have contributed four articles to the November issue of the Kansas Bar Journal, which is published three times a year by the Kansas State Bar Association. "Convoyances of Oil Royalties and Mineral Fee Interest in Kansas" is the article written by H. H. Lesar, assistant professor of law. Harry G. Wiles, '41, analyzes the various bases of tort liability, and "The Right to Solicit Customers of a Former Employer" is discussed in a brief commentary by Philip E. Buzick, '41. Each of the articles and comments by students was written under the supervision of a member of the law field of the field concerned in the article. Five senior law student prepared the commentary on the legal aspect of group health organizations. These students are: William Baisinger, Eugene Buchan, Paul Lackie, Glenn McMann, and James Mackie. "Modern Developments in Railroads" will be the subject of a lecture given by Walter Bohnstenger, chief testing engineer for the Santa Fe railroad, at a joint meeting of the American Societies of Civil and Mechanical Engineers in the audition of Marvin hall tonight at 8 c'clock. Bohnstenger Will Discuss Railroad Developments The talk will be open to anyone who wishes to attend. Shorten Classes For County Club Sessions Today ★ Objective Is To Promote Good Will for University; Convocation Schedule in Effect This Morning At 105 different spots on the Campus, students will meet at 10 o'clock this morning to organize a club for the county counties represented on the Hill. All classes will be interrupted on regular convoction schedule. Chairmen and meeting places of the clubs have been designated on posters which have been distributed over the Campus. The clubs are meeting for the purpose of organizing their groups and to outline their activities so they may do some constructive "University advertising" during the Christmas holidays in their respective home towns and counties. All students, providing they are resi- First period 8:30 to 9:50 Second period 9:15 to 10:50 County club meetings 10:00 to 11:50 Third period 11:00 to 11:35 Fourth period 11:00 to 11:35 Fifth period 11:45 to 12:20 The prime motive of the County club movement is to promote the University in the state, by giving high school students, parents, and citizens in general an idea of the opportunities and work being done here, as well as to increase interest among alumni. students of Kansas, are expected to attended their county meeting. The major objectives of the clubs are three-fold: activities in the home and community; various forms of publicity; and personal contact. "Contrary to some belief," Iiving Kuraner, c40, executive chairman of the movement, said, "the County club organization is not a 'student grabbing' bureau, but rather a means to attract to the University the most desirable students in the state of Kansas." Landes To Talk on Igneous Rocks at Manhattan Meet Professor K. K. Landes, chairman of the department of geology, has been invited as guest speaker at the annual fall dinner meeting of the Kansas State College chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific fraternity, Saturday evening at Manhattan. Professor Landes will speak on "Ignite Rocks of the Mississippi Valley." The dinner will be held a 7 o'clock Saturday evening in the banquet room of the Hotel Gillett in Manhattan. Graduate Displays Water Colors in New York Galler Chris Bitter, '31, has an exhibition of water colors on display in the Untown Galleries in New York City. His work has previously appeared at the Chicago Art Institute, the Pennsylvania Academy, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. He also served as director of the Museum, the Kansas City Art Institute and the Art Student's League. Mrs. Elsie Kirbv Killed in Wreck Thirteen Women Join Athletic Association Mrs. Elsie M. Kirby, 67, two and a half miles west of Lawrence on highway 40, was fatally injured late yesterday afternoon near her farm home when she was struck by an automobile driven by E. L. Clementsonon, 927 Straight St, Topeka. Mrs. Kirby was removed to Lawrence Memorial hospital, where she died several hours later. Thirteen new members will be initiated into the Womens' Athletic Association at the annual hockey and volleyball feed, this evening at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Union building. Announcement of players on the varsity hockey and volleyball teams both honorary, will also be made at the banquet. The new initiates are Helen Wilson, ed'43; Betsy Dodge, fa'43; Betty Harman, ed'43; Katherine Brown, ed'43; Ala Bingham, ed'42; Betty Wabson, ed'42; Virginia Hartmann, ed'42; Wanda Horoken, ed'41; Mar jorie Heimbrook, fa'41; Mary. Beth Dodge, fa'42; Mary Margaret Crosgow, c'40; and Dean Denlon, c'42 will present a skit at the banquet. Letters and blazers are to be awarded at the meeting. These awards are made each year to the women securing a certain number of points by participation in intramurals and playing on class teams. A blazer is awarded to each woman who is accredited with 1350 points. Six hundred points are required to earn a KU. emblem. The new members are required to have 125 points or more. Ten University Students Compete In Riding Contest Ten University equitation student will compete in a riding contest in the Christmas parade Friday night. The rider of the most stylish mount will be selected from the contestants. Students participating are: Alta Armratmol, 'fa 40; Elizabeth White, c'42; Nadine Butler, c'41; Jean Lee Azsman, 'fa 43; Dorothea Thompson, 'fa 43; Edward McComas, c'43; Joe Cheksy, 'c'43; Phil Wycoff, c'uncl.; Joe O'Neil, 'fa 43; Charles Grabake, c'42. Since instructor E. B. Degroot can not ride with the group, Gayle Mot will lead the students. Phi Beta Kappa Initiates Five; Gibson Speaks Hilden Gibson, instructor in political science will instruct on "The Activistic Materialism of Karl Marx." Five students will be initiated into Phi Beta Kappa after a tea given by members of the local chapter today. Students must be admitted to the Memorial Union building. The following students were elected to membership in November: Maurine Gray, $c_{40}$ Jean Crawford, $c_{40}$ Robert Smith, $c_{40}$ Diane Siemon, $c_{40}$ John D. Ramage, $c_{40}$ Invasive watermelon of Karl Marx. A short business meeting will follow. Two Graduates To Federal Jobs Dr. H. B. Chubb, associate professor of political science, has received word that two former students of the department of political science have been appointed to positions with the United States government. Eldon Smith, '39, has been placed with the Personnel Administration of the Treasury Department; and Lawrence Birney, '39, has been has been placed on the Division of Personnel Management and Supervision of the Department of Justice. Both men held Summerfield scholarships while in school here and received federal government internships to the Institution of Public Affairs upon graduation. A total of 50 internships were appointed Regular government positions were granted the men after completion of the training in this institution. Publishers Release Malott's Book Chancellor Deane W. Malot's new book, "The Agriculture Industries," now has been released by the publishers. The book presents the business aspects of purchasing, processing, financing, and marketing chief agricultural raw materials. Problems peculiar to the industries involved are analyzed in their economic political, and social significance. Oroad Students Sponsor All-School Box Supper Oredo High School students, their parents, faculty members and friends will revive old times Friday night in the gymnasium. A band and lance in Robinson gymnasium. The party is being sponsored by the junior class to obtain money for the Junior-Senior banquet next weekend. The lunch boxes will begin at 8 o'clock. Carl Barlow, president of the junior class, and Oliver Grover, vicepresident, are planning the party and appointing assisting committees under the supervision of Miss Mary Sutton, instructor in the School of Education. The cast of characters for the play, "I Killed 20,000 Men," to be broadcast soon under the auspices of the Campus Peace group has been documented by Gordon Biegam, c40, arranger and director of the play. Peace Play Cast Announced By Director Gordon Brigham The cast includes six male characterizations which will be portrayed by: Frank Annemberg, gl; Clarence Peterson, '42; James Cox, '41; Albert Boulder, '43; Ralph Hammond, b 40; Marvin Moon, '40. Francescatti's Listeners Ask Four Encores ★ Young French Violinist Makes Dekton in Midwest Before Appreciative Audience Lost Night Exhibiting delicateness of tote combined with youthful vigor of presentation. Zino Francescati intra-ventricular in Moldovah in Midst auditory last night. Playing before an attentive and appreciative audience that called him back to the stage for four encores at the end of the concert, Francescaithe was at the hands of Handa's "Soalam in A Major" in attention of the audience. Twenty-First American Concert The French violinist, appearing as the third presentation of the concert course, followed with "Chaconne" written for violin unaccompanied. Here again the young French artist exhibited the excellent tone control that has sent him near the top of the musical ladder. Twenty-First American Concert Francescini was playing his 21st concert since his arrival in America three weeks ago. Dr. Otto Herze, noted Hungarian pianist, accompanied Francescini here in his only concert before midwestern student audiences. The 34-year-old violinist concluded the first section of the program with his own arrangement and variations of "Concerto in D Major" (Pagani). The father of Francesca canneli received the original manuscript for this composition directly from a student of the famous composer. Gets Curtain Calls In playing this composition, the sincerity attributed by critics to the young star was in evidence and appealed to her stage for reseated curtain calls. Outstanding in the concluding section of the program was Kreisler's brilliant "Scherzo-Caprice" for violin alone. Next came the light and air "Weekend" (M. F. Gallard). Following in order were: "The Little White Donkey" (Ibert), "Moto Pero-tune" (Novack), "Romance Anda-louse" (Sarasate), "Danse Espagnole" (DeFalla). In the concluding "Douse Espapole" (DeFallia), Francescani again demonstrated the vigorous and pre-chaotic mood that has been praised by critics. The young artist will play as soloist with the Concerts Symphonies of Montreal next Tuesday, passages from his 2014 tour, weeks tour of the United States. Ambassador Visits Turkish Minister Istanbul, Turkey, Dec 6- (UP)-German Ambassador Baron Franz von Pape suddenly visited the national assembly today and asked an immediate audience with Turkish foreign minister, Sukru Saracoglu, but no details of their talk were revealed. Saracogu received von Papen in a private room of parliament a private room of parliament. General Ismail Inoou, president of Egypt, visited the northern, southern, Erzezer region tomorrow to inspect the Turkish-Soviet frontier. Turkish quarters denied German press reports of troop troop concentrations along the frontier and said that no extraordinary measures were Turkish sources said that Turkey merely has reinforced her frontier forces like all other states and explained that the strategic value of the recently-inaugurated Erzerum railroad is so great that there is no need for large military preparations or troop concentrations. POLICE 100-750 "only 12 shopping days till vacation!" PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS THURSDAY. DECEMBEL 7. 1930 Kansan Comment Soviet Secret After Finland, what? The question arises in any discussion of the end of the Finnish-Russian struggle. By taking Finland, Russia will bring less than one hundred and fifty thousand square miles of land and fewer than four million people under Soviet control. The Anland islands, which block Leningrad, make up the chief prize. Russia's economic gains will be negligible in proportion to the Soviet's own wealth and resources. Finland, despite payments on her debts is among the least wealthy of European countries. Timber, wood pulp, and cellulose are its main exports. Large cities in the sense that America knows them are entirely absent. Helsinki's population does not exceed three hundred thousand. The population, ninety per cent Finnish-speaking, are four-fifths rural. Whether or not Russia will accept the contributions which Finland can make to the Soviet after it has been properly incorporated by war remains to be seen. Finland's chief contribution to the world, like that of Sweden, has been principally in the field of social progress. It was the first country to emancipate women politically, giving them the vote and right to hold public office simultaneously. Its cooperatives handle a quarter of the retail and two-thirds of the wholesale business of the country. Just how can such social progress fit into the Russian scheme? The key to the future may lie in large aims of Russia not yet revealed. Possession of Finland may not offer great economic advantages. But as a step towards control of the Scandinavia, it could be invaluable. The end of Finland may not mean the end of Russian aggression. --of 70 feet. Such a mine, if not fitted with a device to render it harmless after a time would become an object. Gum Chewers Alarmed Mayor LaGuardia treads dangerous ground. His latest campaign for civic improvement of New York City, directed against the careless tossing away of chewing gum, smacks not only of a straight to the jaw attack upon the time-honored profession of street cleaning, but also of a profane invasion of the civil liberties and sacred rights of American citizens. Probably the Mayor should appear before the Dies Committee. Publicity for the campaign points out the financial problem involved in cleaning chewing gum from the streets and paints a dire picture of a city ultimately blanketed with masticated chicle with pedestrians mired in the work of their own jaws. Such a vision should arouse the professional pride of the street cleaners who surely will not stand idly by while this opportunity for their vindication knocks. Let them raise a hue and cry! One of the virtues of Democracy is that public money can be spent at the public wish to employ hordes of street cleaners to follow the wake of a gum-chewing and gum-expectorating populace. --of 70 feet. Such a mine, if not fitted with a device to render it harmless after a time would become an object. The other interested party, the American people, will never stand for the regimentation proposed by the Mayor. Anti-New Deal speech makers have reiterated too often that the American people will never stand for regimentation of any kind. If freedom to chew and to expel the "chaw" where fancy dictates, is taken, then the torch of liberty dims, the citadel of Democracy collapses and the influence of the American revolution fades. Shades of Patrick Henry! What is liberty if a man cannot chew and spit where he please? Mines Make Sea Drama Rumors that German airplanes are laying magnetic mines by dropping them from parachutes has caused public uneasiness as to Britain's supremacy on the seas and raised the question: Can England's program of mine-sweeping and of blockade exports offset Germany's U-boat warfare and the so-called magnetic mine? Naval experts, who know the immense difficulties in creating a strong magnetic field in water, have admitted these three possibilities in regard to the magnetic mine; (1) A sea-bed mine. Instead of the ordinary mine motor, a boat would be anchored to the sea bed by a sinker. The approach of an iron or steel wheel would set up magnetic impulse which would actuate the motor. If the mine was lowering it to float upward on its buoyancy and to explode by contact with the ship or through a (2) An "antenna" mine on the model of those used in the last war by the United States and Britain but with improvement in exploding power or detonating mecha. The mine was fitted with a British and American types were equipped with copper antennae wire, held up by wooden floats fitted with perforated steel caps. When the hull of a ship touched two or more of these materials, it wires a small current sufficient to explode the mine. (3) A muered antenna device that would become a "wild" mine if not touched off by a passing object should be a soluble chemical compound forming a link in the anchor cable just beneath the mine; once freed, the device would take a few feet below the ground and horizontally over a maximum pre, in calm water, To offset these devices the British make use of two types of mine sweepers. The first consists of a serrated cable, towed by two converted trawlers, which lags beneath the water surface and cuts loose mines from their anchors and renders them useless. Paravanes, attached to the ship's bow, traveling one hundred feet under water also ward off mines from the ship's side and cut them adrift. The second mine-sweeper is an "electric apron" or powerful magnetic force that could be thrown some hundreds of feet ahead of mine-sweepers. This ray would explode mines which otherwise might blow up the sweepers coming in contact with their antennae. Complicating the problems of undersea warfare, sunken ships tell no titles of their doom And as usual, the sea maintains it deep silence and mystery. --their tuberculosis programs. In the United States plastically all the work of the state and local tuberculosis associations is supported by the annual sale of these seals. By mutual agreement between the national UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vel. 27 Thursday, Dec. 7, 1939 No.57 Thursday, Dec. 7, 1939 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day of the conference during the week, and at 5 a.m. on Saturday before the event. --their tuberculosis programs. In the United States plastically all the work of the state and local tuberculosis associations is supported by the annual sale of these seals. By mutual agreement between the national ASCE-ASME. There will be a joint meeting of the ASME and the ASME, at 8 o'clock this evening in Marvin auditorium Mr. Walter Bohnstengel, chel test engineer for the Santa Fe Railroad, will speak on "Modern Developments in Railroading"—Wray Fogwell, secretary of ASME. EL ATENEO: The Spanish Club Christmas party will be on Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 7.37 at Professor Shoaker's, 1228 Indiana Street. Please sign in the office or visit www.atenoe.org and must be paid before leaving."Louise Bub, president." FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF Y.M.C.A.: The Freshman Commission of the Y.M.C.A. will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the men's lounge. Mr. Kenneth Smith, associate secretary of the Student Christian Movement at Denver University, will speak on "Christianity and Education." Attendees are invited—John J. Conard, public chairman. FRESHMAN COMMISSION OF Y.W.C.A.: The Freshman Commission of the Y.W. is giving a tea for the Y.W. cubinet this afternoon from 4 to 5:30. All freshmen cubinet cannets are invited. Hein Martin, publicity chairman. MATH CLUB: Math students are invited to attend the "The Art of Math" conference, Frank Stuart ball, Bruce Crustie will speak on "Point Set Theory." The meeting, as usual will be preceded by refreshments in the lounge—Marlow Shoer. MEN'S PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL. The Council meet on a sunday in the Pine room - BohA Hellenic Center. NOTICE TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. Dr. E. Gibson is at the Watkinson Memorial Hospital each week to provide care for students and problems of mental hygiene. Appointments may be made through the Watkinson Memorial Hospital—Ralph D. McCormack. PERSONAL RELATIONS COMMISSION: There will be a roaring skater party Friday, day 26. Dec. from 8:30 to 12 at the Rollrerdrome. Tickets are available at Hienley House, the Y.M. office, and the rink. Everyone is invited—Marjorie Wiley, Charles Yeomans, co-chairmen. QUELL CLUB: Mr. Gronicka of the German department, will speak to the Club today in the Pine Room His subject will be "The Influences of Symphonic Composers Through History." -Leon C Freed, chancellor RHADAMANITI Rhadamaniht, poetry society, will meet at 3:30 this evening in the Union building. Jean Kresie will discuss the poetry of E. A. Robinson—Gordon Brigham, president. ROGER WILLIAMS FOUNDATION: All Baptist students and their friends and members of the faculty and staff at an intensive reception of 15 years of the Rev. C. W. Thomsen, then a student of 15 years of service as minister to students in the University of Kansas. The reception will be held in the first Baptist church, December 8 at 8 o'clock - Gordon Kohm, president. Y-M-Y. M-RETERPRETATION OF RELIGION COMMISSION. The Reinterpretation of Religion Commission will speak on Hinduism, and Peggy Osmond IVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Harry Hill Publisher Managing Editor Walt Minginger Editorial Manager Betty Cotton Campus Editors Bettie Cotton, Hugh Wright Campus Editors Bettie Cotton Makeup Editor Dale Heckmanen Beginner Kit Kerry Kim Rumble Editor Kay Borpott Rumble Editor Kay Borpott Editor-in-Chief Editors-Authors Richard Bone Richard Kuneda Stewart Jones Jim Dugan Editorial Staff MEMBER KANSASO PRESS ASSOCIATION News Staff Business Manager ... Business Staff REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kauai, during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class on Friday, and entered office at Lawrence, Kauai, under the Act of March 3, 1819. Selling Seals To Fight Disease Started by Danish Postmaster In 1963 in a little village in Denmark, Emin Harboloelt, a postmaster, came to the conclusion that the greetings on Christmas cards should carry a message of health which includes funds with which to fight disease. This was the beginning of the Christmas seal. The king and queen of Denmark parrotized Einar Holbeel's idea, and in 1904 the first seal became a reality. Other Scandinavian countries soon took up the idea and in 1907 an American woman, Emily P. Bissell, living in Wilmington, Del, read an account of the Danish Christmas seal in "Outlook." She decided that if such a plan worked over there, it was worth trying in this country. First American Sale In 1907 In the Christmas season of 1907, Miss Bissell launched the first seal sale. So successful was it and so enthusiastic was she over the inherent worth of the Christmas seal that she persuaded the American Red Cross, with which she was a member of the Christmas wide seal sales in the fall of 1908. To the surprise of everyone interested, this sale, with little organization, brought in $133,000. In 1910 the American Red Cross took the recently organized National Tuberculosis association into partnership for the conduct of the Christmas seal drive. Until 1920, this partnership existed and each year the seals were sold as Red Cross Christmas seals under the American Red Cross subbuy but with the National Tuberculosis association and its affiliated state and local associations reaping the benefits from the sale. From Miss Biscayne, a resident in Windsor, Indiana, interest grew in every part of the United States until in 1919, the last year the Red Cross was associated with the sale, nearly $200,000 was raised. In 1920, the American Red Cross, denying to concentrate on its own annual membership roll call, withdrew from the partnership. Since then, the National Tuberculosis association has been sole proprietor of the Christmas seal in the United States, and each year it authorizes the 48 states and thousands of local committees to sell the seals and to carry on the fight against tuberculosis. Since 1920 the seals have regularly borne only the double-barred cross emblem of the international fight against tucurucous. The American Red Cross is no longer in any way associated with the Christmas seal Forty Countries Adopt Idea More than 40 countries have adopted ideas and videos and have used or now are using Christian seals as a means of support for Forty Countries Adopt Idea DENPING HOUSE for boys 113b Mississippi. Good meals, nice rooms. Rates to group of four. Phone 1115. -50 LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies gold Elgin wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 34213J or return to 117th Vermont. -42 WANT ADS FOR RENT: To adults, good modern 3-room bungalow, sleeping porch, multi-lits garage. Sq. of University- and College 1159 Rhode Island Phone 25381 state and local associations, 35 percent of the gross proceeds from the sale remain in the state where the seals are sold. On the Shin-- (Continued from page one) (Continued from page only) listening with great relish to Chi O pledge Zita Ann Lowry's heart through a stetoscope during class. Mankin probably doesn't know yet whether it was beating for him or because it didn't have anything else to do. Last year's spring elections are still paying dividends to photographer Tom Bowls. Bowls has sold six pictures of the political event to the New York Sunday News for use in their rotogravure section. Don't go west, boys, just buy yourselves a camera and stick around. At the mock-trial—Plaintiff "Wilford Montgomery" is a panic. For two hours he assumed the greenest pose I've ever seen. Gooh, perhaps he was not acting . . . he was so good he had sober-miered Judge Vesselman in mild smiles . . . State's attorney Floyd got a little billed up, asked Montgomery "Had you eaten Wilbur? I mean, Wilford, had you eaten?" — lawyers-for-the-defense Glenn McConn and Charlie Hershall had their objections overruled more times than a Ford lawyer before the Labor Relations Board . . . if it weren't for ethic reasons in the newspaper, I'd say those Beta Rho Phisters were guilty as sin . . . Only the Beta's would waste a好 kidhapping on such a dumb looking guy . . . the sorority accomplices in the mallement of our Wilford will go on the witness stand this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Uncle Zeke writes that he'd like to have our horsey, fox-hunting (it's really just a 'coon skin the hounds chase) set in out Western Kansas on a good coyote hunt. "The trouble with you young college whelps is that you're always chasing some rodents, not 'ain't there!" Uncle Zeke reckons. KFKU SCHEDULE TODAY 2:44 Campus News Flashes. :47 Books and Reading, Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Assistant Professor of English 6:00 Your Health. "Food Poisoning", talk sponsored by the School of Medicine, and arranged by Dr. Hugh Dwyer. 30 University of Kansas Roundtable "$should the Government own and operate the railroads?" University of Kansas Debate Team and the Kansas State College Debate Team. FRIDAY, DEC. 8 2:30-3.00 Music Appreciation Period 6:00-6.30 Woodwind and Brass Engages from the University of Kansas, Wood Interview Aviation Prospects Mr. Walter Bishop, representative of the Wright Aeronautical company will arrive today to interview senior students of the department of mechanical engineering for positions in the company's engine manufacturing division, according to E. D. Hay professor of mechanical engineering Time LOOK YOUR BEST FOR BRIGHT COLOR UNDER CHRISTMAS WITH A Use Wards Time Payment Plan YOUR DARK COAT 598 New, fessive dresses with tiny waists, flaring skirts, fine shirring and other feminine details! Rayons in new colors: Lime, Gumdrop Rose Aloha Blue! Black, tool skins from 14 to 20. OTHER NEW COLORED MONTGOMERY WARD DRESSES, 2.98 and 3.98 This Week---- Where To Go; What To Do On the Campus TODAY— *Phi Chi Tai hunehun, English room, 12:30; Women's Pan-Hellenic meeting, Pine room, 4:30; Phi Chi Kappa tea, Kansas room, 4 p.m.; University Women's Club Christmas party, Union ballroom, 10 p.m.; vaulet and valley bath feed, 6 p.m.; Convocation of County club, 10 a.m. FRIDAY—Scabbard and Blade dinner, Kansas room, 7 p.m.; Owl Society dance, Kansas room, 9 p.m.; R.O.T.C. dance, Memorial Union ballroom SATURDAY - Sigma Tau initiation dinner, English room, 6:30 p.m.; Kappa Alpha舞队, Memorial Union ballroom, 9:15 p.m.; 1:5A, dance; Remember when you struggled with fractions? struggled with fractions: 2 3/4 12 -1 1/3 You'd be surprised how telephone engineers put them to work for you How to put more and more wires into a telephone cable without increasing its diameter is an ever present problem at Western Electric—manufacturing unit of the Bell System. Existing ducts beneath city streets limit both the number and the diameter of cables—but demand for telephone service continues to grow. Until recently, the largest cable contained 3636 wires in a diameter of $2\%$ inches. Years of study led to an entirely new insulating process that saved 3/1000 of an inch per wire. Multiply this tiny fraction of an inch by 3636, and you provide enough space to place 606 more wires in the same size cable—a total of 4242. With such resourcefulness, Bell System engineers meet countless problems. Result: you can talk to almost anyone, anywhere—quickly, at low cost. A telephone/call home would be appreciated. Rates to most points are lowest anytime after 7 P.M. and all day Sunday. AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TOLLWAYS CO. BELL SYSTEM ASSOCIATED COMPANY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TIDYBRIGHT CO BELL SYSTEM AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES KANSAN Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card For Good Times and Good Things To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. Sales, rentals, cleaning and Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. WOLFSON'S [43] Mass. Phone 675 Optometrist 911 Mass. KEYS RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 Gustafson 14.18 Locker Padlocks Guns — Ammunition TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mallin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread CAMERA ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-calculating exposure meter. Catalyst 4-fifte Apostrogon Anastigmat lens 1/25 to 1/200 second shutter speeds. music movie film in standard cartridge. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 THURSDAY, DECEMBEI 7.1039 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the - Hill - Just a few more weeks and a clock striking twelve will announce the arrival of a new year. Not only will that chiming herald the coming of a new year, but it will signify the opening of a new decade. The '30% will belong to the past, and the '40% will lie before us. A few years ago we were living in the whirl of the 1920s, the jazz decade, when life moved so swiftly that the 18-day diet could abolish the evils of years of over-eating. Our older sister had a boyish bob and brother prided himself on driving the oldest car in town. The twenties were called the golden decade of business by financial sharks. The thirties may be dubbed a "Blue Prelude" because from an economic standpoint they were disheniering but also because they are a potent threat to turn our lives behind the veil of the forties. All of which is just a thought for Christmas and holiday retrospection. With all sorority members on deck to serve as hostesses, Kappa Kappa Gamma held the weekly W. S.G.A. tea yesterday afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. in the women's lounge of Frank Strong hall. Mrs. Charles D. Howe, housemother, poured. Miss Elizabeth Meguir, dean of women, visited in Kansas City, Mo. yesterday. While there she attended the mutee performance of Katharine Cornell in "No Time for Comedy." Prof. and Mrs. Weldemar Gelfelt held an informal reception for Zino Francescatti, French violinist, at their home last night following Mr. Francescatti's concert in Heeh auditorium. Corbin hell will hold open house from 7 to 8 p.m. this evening. Prof. W. C. McNew entertainer with a luncheon at Evans Hearth yesterday honoring Prof. Edward Bennett, head of the department of electrical engineering at the University of Wisconsin. Guests were: Dean Ivan S. Crawford, head of the School of Engineering; Prof. S. E. Clements; Prof Richard Kopman, Prof. V. P. Hess; Prof. Leister Zurand, all of the department of electrical engineering. Martha Lee Brooks, c'42, was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house yesterday. Sigma Phi Epsilon will hold a buffet dinner followed by an hour dance tomorrow night at the chapter house from 6 to 8 p.m. The following new officers were elected by Kappa Eta Kappa, electrical engineering traternity, Monday night; president, Dale Whitaker, e40; vice-president, Richard Carter, e41; treasurer, Wilk Philok, e42; correspondent secretary, Bex Bailey, e42; librarian, George Nale, e40. Betty West, c'12; Marjorie Wiley, c'41; and Betty Jane Bodington, c'40; were lunchon guests at the Chi Omega house yesterday. Crusse Palmer, fs, of Kansas City, Mo., was a dinner guest at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house Tuesday night. Ray Summer Tomorrow Box Supper Tomorrow Well-packed lunch boxes and old-fashioned dancing will be features of the Oread school party to be given tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Robinson gymnasium. Sponsored by the junior class of the school, and included student teachers and faculty members as special guests. Luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Fli house yesterday included: Dick Amerine, c'40; Bill Hines, c'40; and Gloria Biechle, c'43. Mary Jean Miller, fa'43, was dinner guest at the Delta Upsilot house last night. MEETING PAMPUS The meeting of Pi Lambda Theta women's honorary education socrity, which was scheduled for tonight has been postponed until Jan 4, when Gwen Hunt will discuss "Propaganda Agencies and Activities on the Campus." Meeting Postponed Mrs. Ray Puckett is a guest at the Alpha Chi Omega house this D. U.-Kappa Sig Trade week. She is southwestern proving president of Alpha Chi Omega. DJ Kannon Siz Trade Kappa Sigma and Delta Upsilon fraternities hold an exchange Tuesday night. Guests at the Kappasigma face were: John Hocevar,gr; Howard Hamilton ,c'42; Vincent Hiebach, c'43; Bob Guy, c'40; Dick Cochener, c'40; Warren Williams, c'43; Ed Jewett, c'43; Glenn McCann, c'41; Al Gallup, c'43; Fred Gads, YES SIR--FELLOWS THERE IS A SANTA CLAUS! SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SALE OF SUITS ALL SIZES ALL COLORS VALUES TO $29.50 now $19.50 VALUES TO '$35.00 now $24.50 VALUES TO $45.00 now $29.50 VALUES TO $50.00 now $34.50 c'43; Chyton Harbar, c'43; Charles Baer, c'41; Earl Carle, c'42; John Wilson, c'43; Kenneth Rockhill, c'40 Guests at the Delta Uplift house were Earl Lowe, c'43; Sawney Love, c'42; Fred Murtin, f'41; Dick Hansen, c'40; Bob Richardson, c'41; Frank Goodwin, b'41; Carol Vogeler, c'41; Germain Morgan, c'42; Mac Bush, c'42; Howard Harris, c'42;罗德Luder, c'42; Howard Rankin, c'42; Warren Rogers, c'42 and Stew Cowan, c'40. ONE LOT Hickey-Freeman Suits Values to $65.00, Now .. 41.25 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS Two Kisses instead of one! There's a Bonus Kiss coming to you when you enhance your Christmas Gifts with our Fancy Gift Wrappings. It's fun to use our gift wrappings with all the new designs to choose from. And our new Tie Tie ribbonette can easily be arranged in countless distinctive bows. See our "NIFTY GIFT" assortment We have greeting cards for all members of the family, personalized cards, and boxed assortments. Lawrence Paint & Wallpaper Store 919 Mass. St. Phone 1473 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 "only 12 shopping days 'til vacation!" Be Ready for the Pre-Holiday Parties Call us now and avoid the last minute rush Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE E. W. Young Ed Young Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCk Harzfeld's Harzfeld's quilted satin HOUSECOAT soft, snug, ladylike lounge accessory. Designed to dress you beautifully for leisure or for gracious Christmas giving. White, baby blue, tearose with matching rayon tafeta lining. Small flower print. Sizes 12-20. 12. 95 other robes as low as $5.95 beautiful collection of gift slippers as low as $1.95 Xmas gifts for We pres a parad We present a parade of LUCIEN LELONG Colognes E LUCIEN LELONG Colognes The Botanical Darling Robin Hood Cologne - Lucien Leong's swaggering, adventuresome new Cologne, filled with wit and whimsy, at a remarkable price. $1. 宋朝 Indiscret Cologne - That heady, biting fragrance in 'Tinderdeep' Cologne you'll love every single whiff. In flasher illustrated CHEMICAL SUPPLEMENT - Makes you feel like the star of the performance. A brilliant, head fragrance by Lec昂 Leibon. $2 and $5. Opening Night Cologne BENETTON'S BOHEMIA FINE GLASSWARE Impromptu Cologne - Luefin Lelong's "Imprompt" is truly one of the richly fragranced you will enjoy it all through its sweetness. - Lucien Lelong' s famed "Whisper" Peru added to sparkling cologne. A "hist seller" that we strongly admire. - Lucien Lelong's Ean de Cologne. Fanned for its refreshing pick-up quality. $1.50. Weaver's --- SANTA CLAUS COLLEGIATE SHOPPER A trip down town will convince even the skeptic that there is a Santa Claus. For—he's been there—and left sheives overflowing with everything you've ever wanted! Stores are gay with tinsel and bells and holly and Christmas trees. Massachusetts Street shouts,"Merry Christmas!" ___ A Something extra special is the Lentherita's "FORMALTE" Evening Bag . . . the gift that will accompany her on the most memorable occasions. In shimmering black or white satin novel tassel handle and fitted with a leather zipper, this American's sensational perfume 'Anticipation' $12.50 at Weaver's, 901 Mass. This isn't a threat. Nothing like that at all. But—the **Hison** are suggesting that any girl give you a kind of personal message. Maybe she's just busy and have hurry down and get away in case she just finished giving away your photographs, give the friends a candid camera (they are from $1.00 up); maybe you'll give a return in 5 minutes. How about taking a cabinet of printed stationery home for Dad or Mother? You'll find the new Secretary size printed in blue at the Douglas County Republican, 100 Mass. and 500 Church. You can fit 81 with printing free, that stamps your cards as individual. Drop in and see them! MARK IX Nothing gives such a lift over term paper—and as sure of such a gift as the excellent twentieth-century writer. A special Christmas price of $40 is made by the Lawrence Typewriter Exchange, Mass. They will be lucky students who have won such a gift. We found the most attractive of sportswear in white cotton. Its breathable, durable, and **Moss** tags in style are those of white brushed wool with embroidered yarn flowers in gav color, all sizes, and prices at $2.98, and $1.99. The image is a stylized illustration of a woman wearing a military-style uniform. She has a confident expression with her hand on her head, suggesting a sense of authority or victory. The uniform is black with white accents, including a collar and buttons. The background is plain white, emphasizing the figure. The Blue Mill (you know where it is) is the best eating place between Lawrence and the heavenly realm. It is all because of the food, the people and the atmosphere. For a single super pick-me-up try fudge cake or ice cream. You can also ask if you wish to help you hello to Charley while you eat, and see if you don't perk up. We do. (Tis Christmas morning (come on, use your imagination), and then you stand, stunningly lovely in a gaily colored housecoat. To see how you will look when it comes to dressing Boggs and Albert Milennium, 911 Mass, and try on one of their lovely housecoats. They are priced at $300 for a family member. They will make lovely gifts for mother, or sister. A woman holding a Christmas tree. --- To be different this year you can't give Mother a tie and Dad the perfume, but you can give anyone and everyone a delicious fruit cake from Drake's Kitchen. You can serve it at home or in a restaurant, doubly—first, because they are every bit as good as her’s and she knows picnic cooking, and second, because it will save her time when she needs to get to Drake's any time. Buttons will gleam as R.O.T.C. men swing their partners to the strains of Dale Brown's orchestra tomorrow night. The Military Band is set to place it at the ward of a Ward 910 Moss. A phone call to 820 tadw will make room for perfect, or stop, in and choose it yourself. C For Him—to make him feel like the sportiest man of fashion give one of the new saddle leather key ring and bill fold sets. These sets from F. H. Roberts, 833 Mass., are in the style of finest hand craft, and have a nice healthy smell that will appeal to a man. Prices start at $2.50. Or maybe he's the gaming cat. In that case nothing could be more appropriate than a combination hat and bandana. You can wear it with a ship wheel numbered for action. For yourself get some cunning Wits end stationery to make Christmas correspondence a humorous affair. Price 50c. CINEMAS OF BOSTON We've stopped wondering why more men about the Hill are wearing hats since we found that ADAMS hats are available at Fielder's. 813 Muss. All moustaches styled hat in town. All priced at $2.95. Yes, it does sound slightly insane, but lists of men are doing it. Stacking up on pipes we mean. They call it collecting. You better humor him at Christmas, so sound him out gently on the subject then let Rankin's Drug Store, 1101 Mass., show you some handsome Kayoowie pedals. Leather shoes and jeans are there too. If you are nuts and want something for Her, Wristily's candle cologne and bath powder will please her and be a permissiongift. If you want to take home a gift to Mother that will last for years, dip in at Shimmons Stop. The glassware is the perfect glassware before you go home. They have a complete line of gifts and gifts to fill your cup. You will want to return. We did. Tostoria THE GLASS OF FASHION THURSDAY, DECEMBEI 7, 1932 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SIMONIZING.. SPORTS By JAY SIMON A few facts and fancies gathered in a mental journey through the Big Sis's composite 76 game basketball schedule: Following the recent trend of the griders, the loop's cage mentors are going out after bigger and tougher game . . . On Dec. 28 both Missouri and Oklahoma will be in New York for a double-header with Gotham's best. The Tigers tangle with N.Y.U. and the Sooners will play at the home game. Both men will occur Jan. 8 when the two Kansas outsits stop in Chicago for engagements with Loyola and DePaul . . . Maybe the reason they are keeping so quiet up Lincoln way is the man-killer of a schedule that Coach W. H. Browne has lined up for his Cornhuskers. There isn't a soft spot on the card as they meet South Dakota, Indiana, Stanford, Minnesota, Utah, Wisconsin, Detroit and California before going into conference games. Last year the men took a trip to the Pacific coast, but this year they will stay at home and let the westerners come to them. Besides its joint to the Windo City and a side trip to Creighton, Kansas will get its away from home, non-league competition in the Washburn invitational tourney between Christmas and New Year's. Coach Bruce Drake's Sooners will tackle Southern Methodist, Arkansas, and Oklahoma A. and M. down in their neck of the woods and trek back East to play with Temple and Fordham for a little geographical diversion . . . The farthest Iowa State gets away from its home state out of the state of Kentucky through Creighton, and that's just across the river . . . However, they meet four teams in the state and Denver comes to Ames for another clash outside the Big Six. Kansas State will go part way back east for games with Kentucky at Lexington, and Evansville, Ind., college, in addition to its game at Louisville. It will take off a couple of days to run down to St. Louis, with its prize PATEE XCOMMON NOW! JAN APR MAY ENDS FRIDAY Richard Arlen - Andy Devine LEGION OF LOST FLYERS 2nd Feature — JOAN BENNETT FREDRIE MARCH BRADLE WINDS TRADE WINDS See the Lost Chapter "Lone Ranger Rides Again" SATURDAY ONLY! THE 3 MESQUITEERS "NEW FRONTIER" "Spider's Web" excursion being the one to New York and Philadelphia. Herbert G. Alpin of the department of physical education will leave this morning for Corcina, Texas, where he will attend the third annual Y.M.C.A. Southwestern Conference and has been invited to speak on Recreational Aquatics during the three day meeting. Practice sessions for the University men's swimming team have been changed from two to four times a week, Jim Rapport, swimming coach, said last night. From now on all practices will be held on Friday, and Friday afternoon at 430, and on Wednesday at 5:15. Swimming Team Will Practice 4 Times a Week Twenty-two men are on this year's squad, six of which are freshmen and will form the nucleus of the freshman team. Among the stalwarts being counted upon heavily to keep Kansas in the Big Six race are Kenneth Rosebusch, e'40; and Frank Wilson, e'40; oush men, and Marion Cooper, e'42; Dawn Ritchie, e'40; and Gene Foster, e'40; Joe Spearing, e'42, is a dier who is destined to carry much of the load in the springbund division. There is at present only tentative but the Pratt will probably observe the round-robin schedule with the other Big Six schools, except Missouri, which does not have a swimming队 Opening Games Forfeited In Women's Cage League Women's intramural basketball opener ended in scrimmages Tuesday evening as the E.T.C.'s forbidden to the Independents, and Miller to Watkins because they lacked enough players for a full team. Tonight Pi Beta Phi moits Kappa Alpha Theit and Kappa Kappa Gamma will match their team against Shi Omega at 9 p.m. GRANADA NOW! ENDS SATURDAY 2 FIRST RUN HITS 2 FIRST RUN HITS Shown at 7:15 and 10:10 John Wayne - Claire Trevor "ALLEGHENY UPRISING" Companion Feature Shown at 8:55 John Payne - Jake Wyman "Kid Nightingale" Plus March of Time "News of War—1940" See the real reason of the Stalin-Hitler Alliance! Also — Latest News Events All Shows 25c Sunday — "Daytime Wife" Follow Arrow And You Follow The Style Follow Arrow And You Follow The Style Duncan Aden TIE Walton TIE Lord Kent DATING TONIGHT? With any one neckband shirt you can vary the style of the collar to suit your mood or your girl friend. You'll like the smart appearance and economy of Arrow starched collars. WHEN you want to look your best for an important date, no other article of apparel creates more the impression of immaculate attire than an Arrow white starched collar worn with a solid colored or striped Arrow neckband shirt. ARROW COLLARS See your dealer today regarding this high style 1940 fashion. SHIRTS . . . TIES . . . HANDKERCHIEFS . . . UNDERWEAR Jayhawker Five To Warrensburg Tomorrow Night ★ Second Clash of Season Will Dedicate New Field House Where Doctor Allen Used To Coach Successfully by a touch opening game, the Kansas basketeers play Warrenburg Teachers there tomorrow in a tilt that will dedicate the new Walter E. Morrow field house. It is fitting that a team coached by Dr. F. C. Allen should help dedicate the new field house, as Doctor Alen coached at Warburgons from 1913 to 1919 and turned out a championship team each year. Walter E. Morrow was a member of the athletic board during hat time. Dick Harp, senior guard, and Bob Allen, son of the coach, faced the Jayhawk attack against Oklahoma A. & M. opener and appear due for great seasons. Harp and Allen each scored eight points. Doctor Allen was particularly pleased with the smart defensive game Kanaus played. Standing out in this respect was Ebing, who is only 5 feet 11 inches tall, but a battler from the word go. Bruce Reid and Don Eshing, a pair of senior forwards, also were outstanding against the Cowboys. Reid was one of the additional to doing some beautiful passing. Totals 11 12 11 34 15 200.0 A, A & M. (30) fg ft mft tp pf mp Shade, f 1 0 1 0 3 2 37.0 Eggleston, f 0 0 0 0 2 11.0 Newman, f 1 0 0 0 2 3.0 Smelser, f 1 0 0 2 2 13.0 Johnson, f 1 0 1 2 1 20.0 Fate, f 0 2 1 2 3 9.0 Schwertferg, c 3 0 1 6 2 32.5 Francis, c 0 1 1 2 1 4.5 Doyle, g 1 2 1 4 0 27.0 Hopkins, g 0 0 0 0 0 4.0 Millkan, g 0 1 0 1 1 5.0 Renick, g 3 1 1 7 3 29.0 Floyd, g 0 1 2 1 15.0 --in prospect for Friday night. The Mules defeated Southwestern college, which last year won the intercollegiate tournament at Kansas City. All an-veteran team will face the Javwhuks. BOLL 11 8 8 30 20 200.0 NIGHTS BOX SCORE KANSAS (34) fg ft mf pf mp fp Engleman, f 1 1 0 3 1 1.5 Ebling, f 2 2 0 6 1 30.5 Miller, f 1 1 0 3 1 7.5 Hunter, f 3 0 0 0 1.5 Hunter, f 0 0 0 0 0 Allen, c 2 4 4 8 1 3.5 Harp, g 2 4 3 8 3 4.0 Voran, g-c-f 0 0 1 0 0 14.5 Kline, g 0 0 0 0 13.5 Totals 11 18 8 30 200.0 Officials—Ted O'Sullivan, Missouri and Parke Carroll, Kansas City One of the probable starters for Warrensburg is John Gibbs, 6 foot 5 inch center, who played on the Oklahoma A. & M. team last year. He played in two games for Warrensburg and the younger Gibbs followed him there this fall. First Call for Christmas Shoppers! Warrensburg, also opened its sea- Enrollment at the University son with a victory and a real battle is Kansas this year is 4.613. W $2 to $3 - You can get him the best-liked shirt in America - an Arrow Shirt which only arrow collar (in several styles) ... they have the smartest new patterns and colors. Strink (alicirc shrinkage less than 1%!) $2, *up* 100% COTTON MADE IN USA Ober's CHRISTIAN NUTRITION 65 to 12. He'll be pleased as punch when you give him Arrow Shorts — for they are famous for their "scameless-crutch" comfort. 65c, up (10), 50c, up (1) $1 to $1.50 - Get him the kind of tie that never stops winning compliments—an Arrow Tie. Made of fine fabrics, tailored to resist wrinkling, cut to knot perfectly. ARROW TUESDAV NIGHTS BOX SCORE 256 to $1—No man ever has enough handcuffs to handle with all his shirts and ties. He'll welcome some new items, we have a great variety, we build or initiated 256 up $1 and $1.50 If you want to see some patterned shirts that are real beauties . . . shirts that are absolutely tops in style . . . just drop in today and use our swell new collection of Arrow shirt's. $2 up. ARROW CARLS GOOD CLOTHES for ARROW shirts BEAUTIES HIT TOWN! DICKINSON Mat. 25c Nite 35c Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 William Myrna POWELL LOY "ANOTHER THIN MAN" ENDS TODAY "HARLEM JAMBOREE" 20 People - 11 Piece Band Jive - Jam - Jitterbugging! FRIDAY — SATURDAY On the Screen LAUREL & HARDY "FLYING DEUCES" On the Stage MIDNIGHT SHOW SATURDAY 11:15 p.m. Stage Show "HARLEM JAMBOREE" Screen TYRONE POWER "DAYTIME WIFE" Adults 12+ Children 10+ SUNDAY The Professor Himself! Kay Kyser 'That's Right You're Wrong!' A Target Change For Rifle Teams A change in the rifle team target system was announced yesterday by Major Raymond Edwards, who is in charge of the University men and women's rifle teams. The change involves a new system of using individually marked targets for each member of the teams. These marked targets will be the only ones recorded in the individual marksmanship records. VINTAGE ADVERTISING In the women's rille team two of these marked targets are required to be shot and handed in on or before Dec. 20. Members of the men's rille team are required to shoot a marked target in each of the three firing positions — prone, standing. XMAS SPECIALS Fancy Tweed Sportcoats, 25 per cent discount — Real values at a real saving Your Choice of Any Topcoat or Overcoat in Our Store at. These specials for a few days only—better come! Baby Brownie Kodak $1.25 325 SUITS 33 $ _{1/3} \% $ SELLING AT Discount Schick Electric Shaver $12.50 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT Shavemaster Electric $7.50 Joan Manning Chocolates lb-50c OUR ANNUAL CHRISTMAS GIFT SPECIAL Is Attracting Men and Young Men Who Want to Save. — Read-and kneeling. The deadline for these is also Dec. 20. Nell Clark, c'40, and Marvel Johnson, fa'43, were lunch guests at the Sigma Kappa house yesterday. Soda King Syphon Bottles $5.00 Evening in Paris Perfume 55c Kaywoodie Pipes $3.50 Yardley's Men Sets $2.45 The 10 persons firing the highest scores in each team will be chosen early next semester to compete in rifle matches with teams from other colleges and universities. Colgate's Men's Sets 89c H. W. STOWITS Rexall Drug Store Boxed Assorted Xmas Cards CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Phone 516 Free Delivery Cascade Playing Cards 29c --- FIRST C Get your car ready for that unexpected morning when it won't start! THEN NOTE THESE Firestone Auto Supplies Fog Lights — Wheel Grips — Anti-Freeze Floor Mats — Tow Cains — Defrost Fans For Winter Driving CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS Fritz Co. --- The Dramatic Club Presents... This play is a murder trial carried out in regulation court proceedings. A jury will be picked from the audience and paid a jury fee of $1.00. Perhaps your name will be called for jury service on the night you attend "Night of January 16th". NIGHT OF JANUARY 16th Fraser Theatre Dec.12,13,14,15 Exchange Activity Book Stubs for Reserved Seats — Ticket Office, Basement Green Hall, Phone 174 Be A First Nighter! 10 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII Court Testimony Arouses Mock Plaintiff's Ire LAWRENCE, KANSAS. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1939. \* Wilford Montgomery and 'Girl from Home' Leave Courtroom in a Huff After Hearing Witness Anrate andindignant Wilfor Montgomery hustled himself and his "girl from back home" out of the courtroom yesterday when John Morgan Walker, a defendant in the mock trial for second degree kidnaping,Montgomery, the plaintiff, drove at 80 miles-an-hour on a winding highway from Lawrence to Topake, clutching a bottle and holding one arm around the sorority girl who was his date. "We don't have to sit here and listen to these lies." Montgomery blurted and seizing his flincess' arm he hurried her out of the room. Girl Joins Wilford Z-229 The girl, Mary Fulka, joined Montgomery in court yesterday. She was wearing a pin the plaintiff won in high school activities. Throughout the trial, when defendants asserted that Montgomery made "improper advances" toward women in the party on the night of the alleged kidnapping, defendant denied the charges viciously to his Blue Springs sweetheart. Miss Fufka stayed by Montgomery throughout the day but after the court's session last night she told a Kanser reporter that if the jury acquitted the four defendants she would believe their testimony concerning Montgomery's actions toward the police night party. "If this happens," Miss Fufka said, "I will return the pin I am wearing." NUMBER 58 Montgomery is charging four men fromsigma Rho Chi fraternity with inviginating him into driving, with the four men and five women, to a Topeka hotel, where Montgomery declared, he was imprisoned, footfall, for 28 hours while the other danced and performed. They are related to let him leave, the plaintiff asserted, until he promised to pledge their fraternity. Bell Hop Testifies The prosecution called to the stand yesterday a Topica bootlegger and a bellhop from the hotel. Both witnesses declared that while in the rooms which the captors allegedly reserved the saw Montgomery attempt to escape and that he was sent out and back on a soda in the room each time. A desk clerk from the hotel testified that a man and a woman from the University party registered for the reserved rooms as "Mr. and Mrs John Smith," and that all 10 persons then went up to the room. "The women didn't leave until 8 the next morning," the clerk said, "and the men checked out at 5 the following afternoon." Ed Page, 140, prosecuting attorney, asked how the clerk happened to remember the names so well. "One doesn't forget a young couple two register as married, some in without luggage, and register under those names," the clerk answered. When Betty Weaver, telephone operator at the hotel, testified that a Wilford Montgomery tried to put in a call to Blue Springs to a William P. Cox attorney who denied venturing him, Judge P. W. Viesselman, professor of law, declared the court in recess. At this point the state rested its case. A move for dismissal of the case on grounds of insufficient evidence was denied by the court. The defense put on the stand all four of the defendants in the case. They declared that the testimony given yesterday by the plaintiff which described him as an innocent victim of high-pressure rushing, was entirely (Continued on page two) I'll just use the text as it is. Wait, the image shows two faces. The one on the left has a cheerful expression and a light smile. The one on the right is a baby with a darker face and a wide, toothy grin. They are both smiling. "only 11 shopping days 'til vacation!" Marriage Expert Condemns Dating For College Men New Orleans (U.P.)—Mrs. Emily I. Morgan, marriage expert from the University of Iowa, has come to the aid of hard-pressed college boys who ration their spending money for dates on the weekend. She told the student body at Newcomb College that she thinks dating is too expensive for the boys and that they should learn to work and play together with their male companions. "You're hoping to graduate right out of your father's arms," she said, "into the arms of some unassertive men who believe that he's economically secure." Late Wire NEWS (By the United Press) EXCHANGE INFANTRY FIRE EXCHANGE INFRACTION THE Parts. Dec. 7—(UF)—The French war office announced tonight that infantry fire was being exchanged by the French and Germans along the Rhine—the first activity reported on the Rhine front since the start of the war. The Germans gained some advance posts in the no-man's-land between the Maginot and the Siegfried lines, but subsequent Falkenstein victory further pallied the military fire forced most of the Nazi troops to retreat, army reports said. Paris, Dec. 7. — (UP) — General fighting reportedly broke out today along the 90-mile front between the Mocelle and the Rhine rivers in the wake of separate German raids on French positions. Helsinki, Dec. 7 — (UP) – Finnish troops today launched a strong counter-assault against the Red army on the Karelian lathmus while Russian warships bombarded numerous points along the Gulf of Finland coast, a military communique said tonight. LAUNCH COUNTER-ATTACK The Soviets were accused officially of using poison gas on the frozen front north of Lake Ladoga and Red army planes were said to have strafed civilian populations with machine-gun fire. COMPLETE NAVAL BLOCKAGE Copenhagen, Friday, Dec. 8 —(UPI) -Russia has imposed a complete naval blockade of Finland's coasts effective at noon today, the Danish government was informed in an official notice from the Soviet government. BATTLE OFF NORWAY Bergen, Norway, Dec. 7—(UP)—A sea battle involving three ships believed to be British, several planes believed to be French, and two French fought about 20 miles off Bergen today, according to fishermen reaching here. TROSTKSY TO DIES COMMITTEE Mexico City, Dec. 7- (UP)-Leon Trostyk revealed today at his home in suburban Coyoacan that "under certain conditions" he might agree to testify before the U.S. house of representatives committee investigating un-American activities. TROTSKY TO DIES COMMITTEE Robert E. Stirling, secretary of committee chairman, Martin Dies, D. Tex., said yesterday at Orange, Tex., that the committee hoped to query Trotsky and Diego Rivera, Mexican muralist, regarding alleged Soviet plans to spread Communism in Latin America and the United States. Budapest, Dec. 7- (UP)—Student demonstrations in which Russia was booed and Finland cheered were staged in the streets of Budapest tonight, a few hours after diplomatic relations between Hungary and Russia were restored formally after a 10-month break. STUDENTS ROO RUSSIA 'Builders of Tomorrow Depicts Youth Problems Three showings of "Builders of Tomorow," the motion picture in color sponsored by the NYA, were given yesterday in Fraser theater. This film, starring John Rilisso, c'40, and Mary Mikelson, fs, depicts the unemployed problem of American youth in 33 minutes. The picture, photographed by the Rev. H. Lee Jones, pastor of the Unitarian church, and financed and released from the Washington NYA office, shows scenes of the University, Kansas State College, and Washburn College. Fifteen copies have been distributed. Cadet Corps Stages Annual Ball Tonight - University R.O.T.C. Will See Formal Pledging of Seventeen Scabbard and Blade Neophyte The army will replace drill with swing at the annual R.O.T.C. Military Ball tonight in the Memorial Union ballroom from 9 to 12 o'clock More than three hundred couples are expected to dance to the music of Dale Brodie and his orchestra according to a study at University R.O.C.E. regiment. Invitations have been extended to representative members of the military corps at Ft Riley and Ft Leavenworth, and to R.O.T.C. members in other Kansas and Missouri schools and universities, prominent Lawyers, and other members in addition to the University R.O.T.C. instructors and students. Formal pledging of 17 new candidates for the Scabbard and Blade will be a signal event of the ball. Cadet Major Robert Marietta, c40, will conduct the ceremony in which the pledges will walk through an arch of sashes held by the activities to be decorated with red, white, and blue pledge ribbons, by the guests of the actives. Captain Captain Donald Bard and Brandon Bard and Blade, will talk briefly upon his inaugurations and ideals of the society. Cadet Captain Donald DeFord, c'40, presiding as toastmaster at the banquet, will introduce the speakers of the evening, Colonel Baldwin, and Major Raymond Edwards, professor of military science. The planning committee of the Ball was headed by Colonel Baldwin. Assisting him were cadet officers Ted Raymond, c'40; John Morrow, b'40; Bob Marietta, c'40; Willard Wright, c'43; Fred Luke, c'41; Robert Morrison, c'41; Carter Butler, c'41; Daniel Hopkins, b'40; Clarence Robinson, b'42; and Stewart Jones, c'40. Preceeding the ball will be the traditional Scabbard and Blade banquet at 7 o'clock in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. Sooners Reject Cotton Bowl Bid The Big Six conference's chances of having two teams in post season bowl games came on an end yesterday when athletic officials at Oklahoma University declined to host the game, but two teams in the Cotton bowl game at Dallas. Missouri has already decided that her Tigers will go to Miami, Fla. to play the Rumblin' Wreck from Georgia Tech providing permission by the conference office at the meeting in Kansas City tomorrow. The Sooners had been surprised when they received the invitation to play an unnamed team in Texas' post season classic. At first Coach Tom Stidham had been happy over the chance to send his team into the game, but yesterday school officials decided differently. ence in 1850, then Street Museum would probably have been unknown The poor creatures who have never sported a sabre or rifle will be out of luck tonight when they miss one of the glamour parties of the year, the Military Ball. They will miss the pump and ceremony of the occasion, the martial air. They will miss seeing the pledges of Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fraternity, march under the arch of sabres. It's the uniform that counts! Do not be tempted, however, to don your roommate's uniform and sneak away to the Ball like Cinderella. It just won't work according to the experience of two boys several years ago. They masqueraded as honorable and upright R.O.T.C.'s for three hours of jazz and dancing. Then they were caught. The boys didn't know it, but the penalty for such an act according to law is six months in jail and a $200 office fee. The老板 never quite taught, but they did make the boys publicly apologize in writing to the students in the department. Two years before this sad occurrence in 1920, such strict measures did probably not happen. From Wrestling to Dancing Is History of R.O.T.C. Ball Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will start a financial drive among University students 'thursday to help 10 under-privileged Lawrence families enjoy Christmas. Pitch Coins in Frank Strong To Aid Ten Needy Families Along with the increase in distance there resulted also the raising and stabilizing of speeds of these engines. The rates of speed have increased from 40 mile-an-hour to 70. According to Bate Table 3, a vehicle now is moving carved on for stabilized speeds of 80 or 90 miles-an-hour. Reverend King To Discuss Summer Conference Camps The Rev Joseph King of the Con- gregational church will be main speaker at a meeting of Seese Poo in Henley House at 4:30 Sunday. With the old type of steam engine the total mileage between overhaulings was 200 to 300 miles; developments in these steam locomotives has allowed for an increase to 900 or more mile runs. The same applies to other engines that motive runs between overhaulings are as high as 2227 miles. "Do your pitching in Frank Strong" and fill the bucket which will make Christmas a more joyful season for ten under-privilleged Lawrence fami- The Rev. Mr. King will tell the group about a study he spent at the W Y.C.A.-Y.M.C.A. summer conference camp at Eases Park. This was the occasion of the first R.O.T.C. get-together. As a fancy ball had not yet been planned, a good old-fashioned mixer was the answer to the social incinations of the soldiers. Attractions that put zip into the evening's entertainment were the boxing and wrestling matches engaged in by the members themselves. Relating the history of advance in motive power for railroads, Mr Bohnstenger stated that mileage runs between necessary overhaulings has increased with the advance of modern railway and the various types of locomotives. Pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters which miss the bucket will land on a canvas suspended below the bucket. The coins will be counted twice every day. The progress of each coin can be measured large thermometers. One will count the pennies "pitched in." The other will record those that "missed." A bucket suspended above the heads of first-floor hall walkers in Frank Strong will provide amusement for students in their Christmas giving. Coins will be pitched into it from the second floor. Kenneth Cederain, president of Alpha Phi Omega said, "We will provide weights for anyone wanting to nitch dollar bills." Speaker Traces History of Rails Increase in mileage and speed effected by the Diesel engine was a topic of "Modern Developments in Railroad." discussed by Walter Bohnstenger, chief testing engineer for the Santa Fe railroad, at a joint meeting of the American Societies of Civil and Mechanical Engineers in the auditorium of Marvin hall last night. Betty Van Deventer, c'41, and Bob Collet, c'42, will be in charge of the meeting Sunday. Organized houses will be asked to share in this University Christmas project. A record of contribution will be published after the drive is started. Alpha Phi Omega will place a Christmas tree in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall Thursday. The admission to the first mixer was 50 cents. In 1928 the dance was free. Now annual dances take care of the year's entertainment. Robinson gymnasium housed the first few R.O.T.C. gatherings. The old F.A.U. hall was the next place the dance was held, and for the past 14 years the balls have been held at the Memorial Union building. When Major H. D. Burdick, head of the R.O.T.C. at that time, asked the attendants of the mixer if they would like another one, he was given a definitely affirmative reply. Since that time, he has Since this tour only uses mrs. ROTO. dance of some kind every two weeks, Now we offer Military Balls and barbecues, which replace the old banquets at Weidemanns, are the program for the year. Band To Present Concert Monday - Feature Two Movements from New Symphony in Annual Fall Program One hundred and ten members of the University concert band will respond when Russell L. Wiley, director, lifts his baton for the beginning of the band's annual full orchestra at 8:13 o'clock Monday night. A varied program of 13 numbers will be headlined by two movements of a recently published symphony for bands, "Symphony in C Minor" (Ernest S. Williams). This marks the introduction of the recently-written symphony to the Middle-wert. "Onward Kansas," University march song written last year by Jack Laffer, '39, will also be played for the first time by the band. The number was composed for "Cum Laude," produced last year. An arrangement of the song by Bill Ward, fa 40, drummer in the band, will be Students who have not had an opportunity to contribute in the drive for funds to fight tuberculosis may buy their Christmas seals in the lounge of the Memorial Union building this afternoon. Members of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, the W.Y.C.A., and the Y.M.C.A. are endeavoring to contact all University students for contributions sometime before Tuesday. Chairmen of the drive are Ray Buzell, b'41, and Marion Horne, c'40. Students Compete In Xmas Parade Ten University equitation students will compete in a riding contest in the Christmas parade up Massachusetts street today following the arrival of Santa Claus in his airplane at 7 p.m. The rider of the most stylish mount will be selected from the contestants. Two mounted heralds, playing trumpets, will lead the parade. They will be followed by a motorcycle escort and the University band. Other bands taking part in the parade will be the Lawrence Memorial High School band, the Haskell Institute band, Jim Hollyfields jazz band, the Ottawa drum and bugle corps, and the Lawrence American Legion drum and bugle corps. W. B. Dalton's dalmatian dog cam and the Jenny Wren ponies will be shown. Nineteen new auto-mobiles for kids, a 100 bicycles will also parade. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Dec. 8 R. O.T.C. Ball, ballroom of Me morial Union building, 12 p.m. morial Union building, 12 p.m. Owl Society, Dance in Kansas room of Memorial Union building, 12 p.m. Phi Delta Theta, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. First Christian Church, party, Myrs hall. 12 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 9 Alpha Delta Pi, winter formal a chapter house, 12 p.m. Alpha Kappa Psi, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. ter house, 12 p.m. Delta Upsilon, dance at chapter house, 12 p.m. house, 12 p.m. District I of I.S.A., Dance at Ricker hall, 12 p.m. Districts II & IV of ISA., dance in Kansas room of Memorial Union building. 12 p.m. Kappa Alpha Theta, Christmas formal at ballroom of Memorial 'Union building. 12 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Adviser of Women, for the Joint Committee On Student Affairs A Jayhawk Star--for extension of their visas. 10 ROB HALLEN The Kansas "quarterback" will be helping his father continue his winning ways at Warwensburg when the Jayhawks play there tonight. "Phog" coached seven years at the Missouri teachers college and produced a championship team each season. Crawford Attends St. Louis Meeting Ivan S. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture; G. W. Bradshaw, professor in the department of civil engineering; and Donald L. Flanders, e40, of University of Missouri, in Missouri today and tomorrow. Dean Crawford will speak today it a convocation of the Missouri School of Mines in Rolla, Mo. Tomorrow he will talk to the American Society of Civil Engineers in St. Louis. Professor Bradshaw and Flanders will attend only the meeting to be held in St. Louis. Flanders is president of the student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Saturday afternoon delegates will be guests of the Washington University. St. Louis, student chapter of the American College to be held in the Kingley hotel. Malott Speaks to American Alumni Association Today Chancellor Deane W. Mallet will speak at a luncheon meeting of the American Alumni Council Association at Excelsior Springs, Mo., today. Fred Elsworth, alumny meetings of the Association today Ray Heady, director of the new bureau, attended the Associatio meetings yesterday. Westinghouse 'W' Award Goes To Former Professor Dr. H. M. Elsey, associate professor of chemistry at the University from 1920-25, now consulting chemist with the Westinghouse company, including a company has been presented the Westinghouse "W" award. Dr. Elsey received a silver media for distinguished service during the past year. The award was based on his improvement of the manufacturing processes connected with refrigeration and air conditioning. His results resulted in the lowering of production costs in these fields. Kansas City Star Reporter Addresses Theta Sigma Phi Miss. Harrison Johnston III of the staff of the Kauanas City Star described her experiences in interviewing famous people to members of Theta Sigma Phi, honorary journals servery, yesterday afternoon. Dorothy Dix, Mrs. Alfred Landon, and Dorothy Thompson are among some of those she has interviewed. The hardest person to interview was Ruth Bryan Owen, recent minister to Democrat Hillary Clinton, who she was afraid that anything she said would be "in the headlines." Owls to Hoot Tonight Twenty-two active members of the Owl Society and nearly forty alumni will dance to the music of a nickle-odeon in the Kansas room from 9 to 12 p.m. today. The party will be informal. 2,500 Members Pledge Support To County Clubs - Meet in 105 Different Rooms; Arrange 40 High School Asscmblies, 45 Window Displays More than half of the student body banded together yesterday morning in scattered meeting places to pledge support to advertising the University during the Christmas holidays. Plan Conferences About 2,500 students were assembled in 105 different rooms on the campus where they laid down definite plans for publicizing the University's efforts to get more students arranged for 40 high school assemblies over the state as well as more than 45 window displays depicting various phases of University life Members of the individual county clubs have planned conferences with graduating high school seniors in order to set them straight on certain points concerning the University which may be more or less value to them. The group has also made arrangements for college and churches. In addition to these plans, the County club chairmen will send congratulatory letters to graduating high school students in their county. The chairmen report that they have collected money enough to purchase 60 Jayhawkers which are to be placed at the disposal of different high schools in the state before Christmas. Additional funds have been pledged for the purchase of more magazines. Give Teas In several counties, women members of the clubs are giving teas for graduating women seniors in order to familiarize them with the University. Irving Kuraner, c'40, chairman of the movement, said. "It is gratifying to see such wholehearted cooperation in revival," he added. The success of the program is due directly to the enthusiasm of the county chairmen." Y.W.C.A. Bazaar To Open Monday The bazaar will be open every day until 5 c'clock in the evening, and on December 13, the last day, it will remain open until 8:30 p.m. The Y.W.C.A. Christmas bazaar will open Monday morning at 8:30 in the main lounge of the Memorial Union building with gifts that promise to be beautiful. Mexicana dressed sheeves to delicate lace bee from the island of Cyprus. The bazaar, which will be the only one held at the University this year, is an annual Y.W.C.A. event at which students and faculty members may purchase Christmas gifts. The articles which will be sold at the bazaar include: Mexican, Chinese, Syrian, Cyprian, and Russian, knick-knacks, candy, and hand-carved stone articles from Arizona. Ticket Sales for First Night Of Coming Play Are Good First day ticket sales for "Night of January 16th" were described as "very satisfactory" with most of the center section of Fraser theatre being sold out for first night, Don Dixon, ticket manager, said last night. He advised students to reserve seats as soon as possible. "Night of January 16th", Dramatic Club stage production, opens in Fraser theater Tuesday with a schedule of four nights. Director Allen Crafton, head of the department of speech and dramatic art, is putting his actors through the final stages of practice before the curtain goes up on dress rehearsal Sunday. Over 400 from Warring Nations To U.S. Colleges New York (U.P.)—More than 400 students from warring European countries have enrolled in schools and colleges in the United States during the past two months, according to the School and College Advisory Center. The students entered this country on special visitors' permits—"educational visas." They registered in schools approved by the Department of Labor. When their six-month stay ends, they petition for extension of their visa. PAGE TW3 一 1. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 一 Kansan Comment Academic Freedom Academic freedom, a popular subject when academicians meet, was the topic of Dr. Mark H. Ingraham's lecture here this week before the University chapter of the American Association of University Professors. It is a subject closely related to the right of free speech recently brought to public attention with the refusal of two large Eastern schools to grant Earl Browder an opportunity to speak on their campuses and with the riot-reception accorded Browder at Yale. Academic freedom for professors is a matter of degree with which the prestige of a school varies directly. Limitation on the freedom of professors in their lectures injures the scholastic reputation of a school and the standing of its graduates far more than a run-down physical plant or insufficient funds, important as these latter items are. Science, particularly, felt the handicap of intolerance in its earlier years. Teaching of the Darwinian theory of evolution in the biological sciences was opposed successfully for many years as a threat to established institution. William Jennings Bryn's argument against the presentation of a theory of evolution when he engaged Clarence Darrow on the question in the historically famous "evolution trial" of Tennessee is an example of such conflict. Today, academic freedom for political theories has supplanted science as the object for attacks. Scoffers who discount the need for a greater freedom often do so on the grounds that advocates of a cause ask tolerance only for their own opinions and are unwilling to grant it to others. Events in the political arena seem superficially to bear this out, but it is a trite excuse that will not stand up under examination. Those who argue for personal freedom of speech while unwilling to concede it to others are attempting to maintain an indefensible position and are not the ones considered here. To put it another way—a defender of Earl Browder's right to speak under the sponsorship of a Campus group at a great Eastern university does not mean that the defender is a Communist. Neither does it follow that defending a professor's right to speak freely on theories of government is equal to plotting the overthrow of that government in which he lives. To learn about biology, the student must study evolutionary theories—to learn about government, he must study political theories. Nowhere in a Democracy is the student compelled to accept his studies as his own opinions and beliefs. As often pointed out by others, intolerance and limitation of free speech tends to react to the benefit of the suppressed and not to the suppressors by providing publicity through protests. Today when Democracy is challenged by war, when academic slavery and intolerance have ruined the formerly great German universities, when freedom of speech is attacked in America, the time has come for renewed emphasis on the virtues of Democracy. Chief among them is freedom of speech extended equally to all. --pause to smile. Josias Miller's Joke Book is two hundred years old this year. Tributes are in order from Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Fred Allen, Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and all the others. Radio Rivals It isn't what you say—it's the way that you say it. Golden-voiced Thomas Dewey came whooping out of the elephant burial grounds leading a G.O.P. stumpede when he hypnotized a crowd of Minnesota Republicans. This is the day of ear-consciousness and a radio-dominated public. To compete with a swing band, a politician has to be pleasingly vocal. A candidate may be a pillar in the community and a shining political light, but if his voice has the mellowness of a buzz-saw and his diction is jerky, his noble cause may be sunk on the ether waves. Dewey may or may not write his own speeches, but he can deliver them in a manner to warm a ghost-writer's heart. He has volume, emphasis, color, and a good Anglo-American vocabulary. His Wednesday speech thundered against the New Deal policy of defeatism. It was the usual rallying cry calculated to rouse somnambulent Republicans. Hits ear-appeal and undeniable radio personality may yet be an open sesame to the White House. True the glamour-voiced Roosevelt croons into the microphone sweet nothings that send the public back to their gas-lit firesides placated and comforted. But now a competitor appears. Tom Dewey, youthful rival in the presidential sweepstakes, threatens the Rooseveltian supremacy as America's Number One political bedtime story teller. --pause to smile. Josias Miller's Joke Book is two hundred years old this year. Tributes are in order from Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy, Fred Allen, Bob Hope, Jack Benny, and all the others. Joe Miller's Birthday The two-hundredth birthday anniversary of a notable book would not ordinarily provide a laugh. But when the book is the most famous joke书 of all history, the most sober-minded Joe Miller, an actor, did not pose as a literary man. It doubtful, history says, that he could read or write. His reputation as a gagster came from the light parts he played on the Drury Lane stage in London. After his death in 1738 a bookseller, T. Reed, and a playwright, John Mottley, undertook to exploit his popularity. From any handy source they assembled 247 jokes, sayings, and enclosed credits to Joe Miller. Now the book which caught the public fancy of that day appears in modern format to delight the ears of modern pum lovers. The original book expanded many times. Today, with his American edition containing 2,000 jokes, tenfold is the influence of Joe Miller, who in the 1730's brightened the world with laughter. Note on modern civilization: while housewives in Berlin make tea out of apple peeling, the army men at the front (not especially occupied at present) drink real Brazilian coffee with cream. The soldier has an abundance of butter, eggs, warm uniforms, and a generous supply of tobacco while his mother at home is rationed four ounces of butter per week, eats few eggs, and wears clothing made of synthetic material. --- --- UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Friday, Dec. 8, 1939 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 10 a.m. on Sunday. --- EL. ATENEO: The Spanish Club Christmas par will be on Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 7:39 at Professor Shoe maker's 1220 Indiana Street. "Please sign in the o'clock." Students must must be paid before送上Louise Bush, president. MEN'S PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL. The Council will meet at 10 a.m. Sunday in the Pine Room - Bob A Hodgson MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL. There will be a registration period from Dec. 1 to 8:35 pm in the men's post office Katarina, Tahiti. PERSONAL RELATIONS COMMISSION. They will be a roaring skater party tonight from 9:30 to 12:00 at the Rollerdrome. Tickets are available at Henley Center for $50, and tickets must be prepaid—varied—morning–davis—marjorie Wiley, Charles Yeunans, co-chairman. ROGER WILLIAMS FOUNDATION: All Baptist students and their friends, and members of the faculty, are invited to attend an informal reception in honor of Dr. Michael H. Gordon-Kolman, service as minister to students of the University. The reception will be held in the First Baptist Church this weekend at Gordon Kolman, president Roger Williams Foundation. SPAINISH TABLE. All students interested in Spanish are invited to practice conversation at the Spanish table held at Hal's Cafe at 12:20 today and every Friday. Students enrolled in Spanish is necessary to attend—Louise Bush, Paul WESTMINSTER STUDENT FORUM: The last meet on Wednesday, November 17 at 7:20 SUN evening. A Christian play, directed by Margaret June Grey, will be presented. Mary Ewilyn Frankle will lead the worship service—Charles Yeowan. WITAN. All new and old members of the K.U. W妒 are requested to attend the meeting this Saturday night. All dues must be taken care of at this time—Haver Glassmire. Y-M-Y.W. REINTERPRETATION OF RELIGION Mr. Martin will meet Kendall Hendley at 4:30. Hefer mission will meet Kevin House at 4:30. Martin will speak on Hinduism, and Peggy Osmond will speak on our welcome. *Cormartine Martin* and Gordon Brigham. YW-YM. CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The last meeting of the year will be next Sunday afternoon at 230, at Heyley House. All are invited to attend--Betty Jovie Miller, Charles Wright, Jr. FENCERS All members of the University fencing team are requested to attend the practice at 7 o'clock tonight. Any University fencing interested in team com- ments are invited to attend this practice—Haven Glassmire. BOXERS: All students interested in intramural boxing are requested to sign up with either Haven Glassmire, Joe Martin, or Wilber McPherson—Haven Glassmire. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Managing Editor ... Walt Meininger Sunday Editor ... Larry Young Journalist ... Kevin Young Bottle Caution, Betty Coulson Sociality Editor ... Elizabeth Kirsch Sports Editor ... Sports Editor Make-up Editor ... Heckmann Telegram Editor ... Eugen e Kuhn Picture Editor ... Ken Bazett Picture Editor ... John Baldwin Editor-in-Chief John B. Carr Richard Bayes Richard Hays Feature Mary Editors John Randal, Lillian Fifeer Business Manager ... Edwin. Brown MEMBER KINDSOSO PRESS ASSOCIATION Business Staff Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $175 per semester, Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second cause of death on Monday and office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Art of March 3, 1879. Oberlin, O. — (UP)—Oberlin College has a "league of nations" which really works—the Cosmopolitan Club, composed of 75 students who represent 23 nations of the world. Oberlin Students Erase Boundaries in Novel Club "We have no 'blocs', no 'haves' or 'have-nots', said Marion Jierim, pretty Argentine student. "There is nothing but the most pleasant of relations among us." France, Italy, Germany, Brazil, the Argentina, China, Japan, Switzerland, India, Syria, Korea, Canada, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Malay State and Iran are a few of the countries we have met in this pleasant college town, miles from the strife some of their nations are experiencing. Forret About War While Japan and China are locked in warfare, earnest discussions on peaceful missionary work are held here between Miss Masuke Oukake of Darieux, Japan, who is an exchange theological student, and Mark Wu of Shansi, China, who is visit- study in Oberlin, Carroll University. "It would be silly to carry on a feud over the war." Wu said. "That is not the way to do things, especially in America!" Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Taimok Kim have journeyed the thousands of miles across the Pacific from Taisy, Korea, to prepare for joint careers as Presbyterian missionaries in their homeland. "I have to decide next year whether I am to be an American citizen, an Englishwoman or remain an Argentine," she said. "My mother is English and my father an American scientist heading a government astronomical survey in Cordoba." Marjorie Zimmer came up from the Argentine to study art. "Women really aren't citizens in the Argentine," she said. "My mother wants me to be an American and I know I'd like it." Heloisa Cavalcanti, freshman secretary of the Cosmopolitan group bails from Rio de Janeiro. The young brunette said she though she would become an American citizen. America Appeals to Girl "The club meets weekly for international forums," he said. "There never is anything which even resembles a quarrel. ON THE OFF B-E-A-T "By Roderick Burton" We didn't attend any of those meetings yesterday. Since our legal residence is in Galveston, to all and purposes we are of no account. This is for Republicans only Christmas comes but once a year. Until from Rosevelt we hear. Missouri is going to play Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl game. Missouri rooters will soon be hopeful that we are going through Georgia." Overheard speech of a ooef:“Why listen kid, I lost my textbook in that class six weeks ago and I haven't looked at it since.” A Kansas State dietician thinks college students should have a warm, substantial breakfast before classes. This would promote more efficient study, the expert insists. The idea is that students will digest more food for thought in their classes if they didn't have to devote so much thought to food. Reginald Buxion says we should be psychoanalysed—and all because we absent-mindedly called him the Shister. ENDS SATURDAY "ALLEGHENY UPRISING" Componion Feature Shown at 8:55 John Payne - Jane Wyman 2 FIRST RUN HITS 2 FIRST RUN HITS Shown at 7:15 and 10:10 John Wayne - Claire Trevor GRANADA NOW! News Fronts of War—1940 See the real reason of the Stalin-Hitler Alliance! "Kid Nightingale" Plus March of Time Latest News Events All Shows 25c Sunday — "Daytime Wife" "I think if all the nations could get together the way we do there would be no wars. Then each spring we have a feast of native dishes cooked by members of the club. This naturally contributes to the amiability of international relations." Many of the club members are Americans interested in international relations. President of the club is Selden Dickinson, of Castilla, O. Samuel Ching Kuo, of Yunnan China, and vice-president of Oberlin, vice-president of Oberlin, Bacteriologists To Hear Sherwood in Manhattan Dr. N. P. Sherwood of the department of bacteriology will be the principal speaker at a banquet of the Missouri Valley branch of the Society of American Bacteriologists in Manhattan Saturday night. Dr. Sherwood will discuss "Bacteriology in Medical Education." Glenn C. Bond, assistant professor of bacteriology, will read a paper entitled "Iso-Hemagglutination in Tardles" and Louis Corliell, instructor in bacteriology, will speak on "The Effect of Vitamin C and Re-Enriched Ubiquinone Upon Antibody Production in Rabbit's" at the afternoon session. The meetings will open at 10 a.m Saturday at the Wareham hotel. Will Plant 1,500 Shrubs On Marvin Grove Terrace More than fifteen hundred dog-wood, sumac, witch-hazel, burning bush, and forsythia shrubs will be planted along the north slope of the campus. We will work week according to Andrew C. Elson. University landscape architect. The shrubs will be set along the terrace which has recently been built along Mississippi street between the building and the top of the hill. The work is a part of the campus improvement WPA project. Geological Survey Bulletin Ready The first of a series of bulletins prepared by the Kansas Geological Survey to assist in the additional recovery of oil from the older fields in the eastern part of Kansas has been submitted to the Survey office from the publishers. This bulletin is a bibliography listing 684 articles that have been published on methods of secondary recovery of oil, and gives a brief summary of the contents of each of the articles. $10 TO $20 WEEKLY Prominent Eastern Shoe Manufacturer producing complete line of dress and feature shoes, styler for the compus. Recommended representatives at the University of Kansas. The right man can cover full college expenses as our representative. We will supply full instructions and compliments to equipment. Write stating qualifications. KNAPP BROS. Brockton, Mass DICKINSON Mat. 25c Nite 35c Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 Only One More Day Lourel & Hardy "The Flying Deuces" — On The Stage — Nights at 9:00 only 20 People — 11 Piece Band Jivin' in the Groove! Songs — Dances — Music "HARLEM JAMBOREE" MIDNIGHT SHOW Saturday 11:15 p.m. — On The Stage — "HARLEM JAMBREEE" — Screen — TYRONE POWER "DAYTIME WIFE" SUNDAY KAY KYSER 'That's Right You're Wrong' PATEE All Shows 15c Any Time ENDS TONIGHT! Fredric March - Joan Bennett "TRADE WINDS" "THE LEGION OF LOST FLYERS" Richard Arlen Andy Devine News and Last Chapter of "LONE RANGER" SATURDAY ONLY! 3 Mesquiteers "NEW FRONTIER" Court Testimony— FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1939. (Continued from page one) false. The defenders described him Montgomery himself, who yesterday dramatically declared "I hate rum" asked for something to drink in the first few minutes he was with the Sigma Rho men. The five coke dates and the trip to Topeka were both Montgomery's ideas, the defense team had been objected to the liquor or the all-night party in a Topeka hotel. Defense witnesses admitted that they were holding Montgomery when the bell-hop and the bootedler were in the room but declared that they were restraining him from molesting Starr Hennessey, his date, who was screaming and running from Montgomery's advances. Jarman SHOES FOR MEN $5 TO $750 As Welcome As A Letter From Home! Latest in Hair Trims and Styles Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. For Good Times and Good Thing To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT KEYS Most Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtyard Card RUTTER'S SHOP W Sales, rentals, cleaning and Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. Optometrist 911 Mass. 819 Mass. St. Haynes and Keene KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 one of the defendants, said. Walker quoted Montgomery as answer- ing. All four defendants related that Montgomery "gulped down" much of the Scotch they had purchased and that he had a "tertile hangover" the next day. "It was the hangover," they said, "and I went to the hospital until 5 the next afternoon." RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 The court's next session is at 2:30 p.m. today in the courtroom in Green hall. The defense plans to place on the stand all five of the women who were on the hotel-room party in Topeka. 743 Mass. Phone 675 The defense answered the "forcibly restrained" charge by saying they feared that Montgomery would get into trouble, if not cause loss of life, if he got loose while intoxicated and tried to drive his car. Locker Padlocks Guns — Ammunition Phone 524 $5 Gustafson Optometrist 911 Mass. BUSINESS CARRIER "I've had enough provocation. Just take a look at Starr Hennessey." TAXI Hunsinger's. 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mailin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing $ ^{n} $lm—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hiver Hixon's Mass. Phone 413 721 Mass. Phone 41 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1939. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill- The couple are sitting at a table with a house behind them. an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizabeth Kirsch, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 When a modern army goes into action on the battlefield, officers enter the conflict sans bars, stripes or Sam Browne belts. To the enemy this development of military strategy is baffling. For the sniping of military leaders becomes a more difficult task than shooting at the colorful flash of gold braid and brass buttons. Tonight, however, when the University R.O.T.C. holds its annual ball, officers will be attired in full regalia with all the indicators of army rank blazing forth. The Memorial Union ballroom will be a kaliiedescopic combination of blue uniforms, winter formals, and the uniforms of Dale Brodie's orchestra. Preceded by the pledging of new men to Scabbard and Blade, the ball will begin at 8:45 and last until 12 o'clock when a large portion of University Cinderellas and campus Prince Charmings will head for home. Business Sorority Lunches Phi Chi Theta, professional business sorority, held a luncheon yesterday room in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building. Dinner guests at the Phil Dhi Theta house last night included Doug Miller, b'40; Robert Smith b'40; Bob Brooks, m'43; John Craym m'43; and Fred McCoy, m'42. The guest list included: Margaree Austill, b'40; La Vera Umbach, b'41; Dorothy Wise, b'41; and Adelyr Cast, b'41. Dinner guests at the Delta Upsi- on house last night were: Janis Weleh, c'43; Mary Jean Miller, f'a3; Marius Olego, c'uncl. Honoring the five new members of Phi Beta Kappa, a tea was given in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The recipients of Phi Beta Kappa keys are Dick McKenna. The recipient of Phi Beta Kappa keys is Kevin Kuran, c'40; J. D. Rumsey, c'40; and Maurine Gray, c'40. Mrs. Hal Lebrecht and Mrs. Edward Tanner of Kansas City, Mo., were luncheon guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house yesterday. Faculty Member Honored Miss Mabel Elliott, instructor of sociology, was guest speaker in Lincoln, Neb. at the University of Nebraska institution bainton.edu. This evening she will be guest of honor at a party for the department of sociology at the University of Nebraska. Mrs. R. B. Brown and Mrs. Harrison Johnston III were guests at the Alphi Chi Omega house yesterday. Jeanette Singleton, c'40, was a luncheon guest at the Chi Omega house yesterday. Nell Clark, C42, was a luncheon guest at the Sigma Kappa house yesterday. Prof. and Mrs. J. J. Wheeler were dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house last night. Mrs. John Noble of New York City was a dinner guest at Corbin hall Wednesday evening. Mrs. Noble is the wife of John Noble, whose pictures are now on display at Thayer museum. Sisters-Daughters Guest The following sisters and daughters of Pi Kappa Alpha alumni were dinner guests at the chapter house last night: Dolores Hiller, c'42; Mary Francis McKinney, c'42; Clair Lee Oxley, c'43; Helen Coleman, c'41; Elise Palo, f'40; Nancy Cook, fa'43; and Patricia Cook, gr. Mrs. L. H. Bowen of Independence was the dinner guest of her daughter, Louise, c'40, at the Chi Omega house last night. Warren Wilder, c'43, was a dinner guest at the Delta Chi house Tuesday night. Lancheon guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house Wednesday were: Mrs. Harry B. Ragan, Mrs. Earnest F. Gardner, and Mrs. Ben Allen, all of Kansas City, Mo. Alpha Omicron Pi announces the engagement of Jean Petermeyer, c'42, to Robert M. Montgomery of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Montgomery is a student at Kansas City Mid-Western Dental College. Alfred L. Seeyle, instructor in economics, was a dinner guest at the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house on Wednesday. Mrs. E. H. Lockwood of Liberal announces the engagement of her daughter, Gail, fa'41, to Charles Dowbler, b'40, of Pittsburg, Pa. Wednesday evening dinner guests at the Triangle house included: Professor and Mrs. A. M. O. Mckerbil of Lawrence; Miss Pritchitt of Lawrence; Don Forney; *e*3; Jack Henry, *e*4; Bill Frances, *e*4; William McIntire, *e*4; Bob Moore, *e*4; Robert Sams, *e*41. Kappa Kappa Gamma entertained Lawrence alumnae with a buffet supper last night. The following were guests: Mrs. W, E. Higgins, Mrs. J, L. Klaworth, Mrs. George McNell, M. F. E. Parker, Mrs. C. Johnson, M. R. Bussick, Mrs. A. B. Warner, Mrs. O. W. Monley, and Mrs. A. R. Busick. Theta Tau, electrical engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Robert L. Boone, c'42. Mary Alice Elliott, 'fa 41', was a luncheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Thursday. Triangle announces the pledging of Bruce Hackett, e41. Sigma Phi Epion entertained the following guests at a dinner-hour dance last evening from 6 to 8 p.m.: Patty Bigelow, c'43; Patty Bigelow, Patty Ledyard, c'42; Jane Veach, fe'43; Lois Howell, c'43; Barbara Bundschu, c'43; and Helen Harr. The Lawrence Mothers' Club of Alpha Omicron Pi met at the chapter house Thursday afternoon. The pledges of Alpha Omicron Pi entertained the pledges of Fri Delta Theta at an hour dance Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Reed of Salina were dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house Tuesday night. Kay Stinson, c'42, and Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Falconer of Kansas City were dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house Wednesday. Jacksonville, Ala. (U.P.) — Jacksonville state teachers college does all right by its graduates. Dr. C. W. Daugette said that every graduate of the college's 1939 class has obtained employment. Get A Job With Each Diploma This Week--- Where To Go; What To Do ---On the Campus The University of Kansas has had nine chancellors in 75 years. OPENING HOUSE for boys 1138 Mississippi. Good meals, nice rooms. Rates to group of four. Phone 1115. -50 LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies' gold Eglin wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 28143 or return to 1117 Vermont. -62 WANT ADS FOR RENT: To adults, good modern 5-room bungalow, sleeping porch, built-ins, garage. 1130 Rhode Island phone 25398. 1150 Rhode Island phone 25398. TODAY - Scabard and Blade dinner. Kansas room, 7 p.m.; Owl Society dinner. Kansas room, 9 p.m.; R.O.T.C. dinner, Memorial Union ballroom, 12 p.m. Oklahoma City Honors Early University Grad SATURDAY - Sigma Tau tilt dinner, English room, 6:30 p.m. Ioppa Alpha Theta Ballroom, Memorial Union ballroom, 9 p.1:5 A.D.舞会 Angela C. Scott, 77, gr80, an Oklahoma pioneer and distinguished lawyer and educator, received several honors this year in connection with the 50th Anniversary of Oklahoma City. He was asked to speak seven times during the six months celebration and his last address was printed on six supper plates which were deposited for posterity in an indestructible vault in front of the Municipal building. In October the Men's Diner Club invited him as a speaker in honor of his 30 years as president of the club. His address was "The Case For Homo Sapiens" which was written in answer to H. G. Wells' latest book of pessimism, "The Fate of Homo Sapiens." S. S. HAMILTON helped establish the city that has honored him. He was at one time the editor and part owner of the Times, the first newspaper in the city. He practiced law in the 90's and in 1899 took over the presidency of Oklahoma A. and M. He held this position until 1938, in spite of the fact he is a Republican in a democratic state. Following this he held successive positions as head of the department of English at the University of Oklahoma, dean of the Graduate School at old Epworth University in Oklahoma City, head of the extension division of the University of Oklahoma at Old Epworth University and head of English at Oklahoma City University. He is now retired. Scott is the author of "The Story of Oklahoma City." In addition he has many honors. In 1837 on his 80th birthday Oklahoma City chose him as its most useful citizen for persistent devotion to the city and development of the city. He was chosen honor guest of the senior alumni this same year here at the University on the occasion of his sixtieth anniversary of graduation. He was among the first Aurelo C. Scott He was among the first pioneers to Oklahoma and Scott was a founder of the Presbyterian church and the Y.M.C.A. in Oklahoma City. The Kappa's and the Pi Phi's won their opening basketball games in the women's intramural league last night. The Kappa defeated the Chi Omega's, 14 to 6, and the Pi Phi's won over the Theta's, 32 to 17. In the Pi Phi victory Virginia Anderson and Denny Lemoine were outstanding. The winners led at the half 11 to 14. The Kappa's shut out their opponents in the first half as they piled up an 8 to 0 lead. There will be no more women's intramural games until next Tuesday night. Extend Closing Hours Dec. 19 Closing hours for all University women will be 12:30 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 19, according to Vela Wilson, president of the W.S.G.A. THIRD TERM "STUFF" - LANDON Washington, Dev. 7. — (UP) — Former Gov. Al M. Landon of Kansas, Republican presidential candidate in 1936, declared today that third-term agitation is "stuff and nonsense" and said that present uncertainty regarding President Roosevelt's intentions affects not only democrats but all citizens. Landon's remarks came as the Re-publican national executive committee was meeting in Washington. --for gifts for: M GIVE HIM SPORTSWEAR --it's the sporty thing to do University men appreciate sportswear—so make it his gift this Christmas. HAPPY CHRISTMAS Leather or wool jackets in zipper or coat style; colorful wool sweaters, pullover, sleeves or coat style—make excellent Christmas dress and if you wish we will pack them in gift boxes. Come in—let us show you our complete assortment of sportswear and many other Christmas gifts. Ober's UNLANDSCAPED OUTDOORS SHOP EARLY READ THE KANSAN MOTHER FATHER SISTER BROTHER GIRL-FRIEND BOY-FRIEND GRANDMA UNCLE COUSIN ETC. Merry Christmas WAKE UP Christmas is upon us! CHRISTMAS is like finals. You can get caught, or you can get ready—right NOW! Take a tip from Santa Claus! Jump in the saddle and make out your Christmas list. How? Lawrence merchants are ready for you. Watch their suggestions in Kansan ads. There are some good ideas in today's paper. Write 'em down and go down town. NOW! DARWIN HERE'S THE IDEA Every day in the Kansan you will find columns and columns of interesting and unusual gift suggestions for everyone on your gift list. Remember, that the merchants of Lawrence are operating stores for STUDENTS, are selling merchandise for STUDENTS, and are advertising their wares in a STUDENT newspaper, the University Daily Kansan. By shopping early you will enjoy the opportunity of complete selections. And you won't forget anybody at the last minute. Get the Christmas habit TODAY! The DAILY KANSAN Your Daily Gift Shopping Guide PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1939. Kansas Engages Mules Tonight SIMONIZING.. SPORTS By JAY SIMON It's my idea that five Big Six basketball coaches will instruct their school's faculty representatives to go to Kansas City tomorrow and say "yes to" Missouri's request for a trip to the Orange bowl . . . Blaine Currence and Clay Cooper, two first stringers on the Tiger cage team, also participate in football . . . The temporary loss of these two should hold Coach George Edwards' co-championship defenders for awhile. . . Despite the fact that the Kansas football team didn't cut such a fancy figure in the W and L column, in a few individuals are coming in for country-wide recognition . First, Chester Gibbons rated a nationally syndicated article on his being one of the few dropkicking stars left in the business . Then Dick Aimerine was placed on Sonja Henie's all-America Adomis eleven ... and now Milt Sullivan's experience of crashing the gate at Lincoln is awarded first place in the A.P.'s poll of the "funniest happen- MILTON SULLIVANT "... You will remember that Milt flew to Huskerville for the N.U. game and the cabbie that took him to the stadium let him out at the wrong gate. After trying in several of the ticket, take that he was a member of the Kansas football team. Sullie called his own signal and pulled a quarterback sneak past one of the unsuspecting guards. A nickle mug of national import will come out with its all America selections today and you can sue this column if "Pitchin' Paul" Christman is not listed as the first string quarterback. . . . Not that I think he is that good, but rather because Grantland Rice is doing the picking . . . Rice has probably done more drum beating for the Tiger star than anyone out of the state of Missouri. A study in inconsistency: When the grid schedules were being drawn up last year, the Oklahoma moguls screamed and yelled when the Big Six wouldn't let them card 10 games. Now they turn down a bid to the Cotton bowl and a chance to pick up from 30 to 40 thousand iron men . . . Was Bob Seymour that important to the team? . . . Kansas State really rallied Wednesday night to give their new coach, Jack Gardner, a 35 to 33 victory over Baker in his first start at Aguilville. . . The Wildcats (K-State, not Baker's) trailed at the intermission by 11 points, but won on their ability to hit from the charity line. . . They made 13 out of 18, while the Methodist counted only 3 out of 10. Bob Harris, the crimson-topped beat-shot up at Iowa State, has really been torrid in the Cyclone's first two warm-ups. He's tallled 39 times as his notes have thumped Simpson and Morningside . . . The Jaw-hawkers are dedicating the new field house over at Warrenburg tonight, the Ames layout should be chalking up No. 3 at the expense of Intramural Schedule For the Weekend Friday. Dec. 8 4:30 D.T.D.—Phi Psi; Comets- Ohio Ichabods. 6. 30 Dominoes I—Warriors; Acacia "B"—Beta "B". 7:30 A.K.Psi—Rock Chalk; Phi Ps "B"—Sigma Nu "B". Saturday, Dec. 9 Saturday, Dec. 9 8:30 a.m. D.U."B"—D Chi "B" Phi Gam "B"—D.T.D."B". 9:30 a.m. Fi K.A. "B"—S.A.E. "B" S.P.E. "B"—Sig Chi "B". K.S. "B"—A.K. "B" 10.30 a.m. K.Sig "B"—A.K.Psi "B" Beta "C"—S.A.E. "C". 11:30 a.m. Pi K.A.-Delta Chi Kappa Sigma—Acacia. 1. 00 p.m. Phi Gam—Triangle; Ph Delt "B"—A.T.O. "B". To Exhibit Hand Craft Examples Examples of WPA hand craft work will be exhibited at 620 Massachusetts today and tomorrow. The work was done under the supervision of William Whitte of Tonoka. William Campbell, '37, is in charge of the dioramas, also on display. Hunting Senior--- BRUCE REID-FORWARD-GUARD Playing his last season for the Jayhawks, Reid will be one of the starting forwardes when Kansas takes the floor against Warriors' Josh Allen and a pair of the standouts in the opening victory over Oklahoma A. and M. Wichita Skyhawks At K.C. Saturday For Hockey Tilt Kansas City, Mo. Dec. 7 — Ice hockey makes its weekly show at the Pia-Mor Ice Palace this Saturday with the return of the Wichita "Skyhawks" to Kansas City ice. The Grayhounds, greatly strengthened and reinforced from a week's rest and the return of two players from the N.Y.C. team for the Wichita game than they have been for some time past. Ivan Nicholson, popular left winger, has finally hit his stride and his performance in the last two games fulfills the predictions of the BERTOLE PELAGI hockey prophets. Nick Wainwash, veteran right winger, has maintained his consistent scoring punch and is in the best place in the longest scoring record. The Wichita Skyhawks will present three new players in addition to their playing coach, Danny Cox, Steinhauber, Lord, and Roy are the newcomers and their presence in the lineup has strengthened the Hawks defensively, and increased their scouting ability. Y.M.C.A. Finance Needs Goal The final lap of the Y.M.C.A. Financial课, headed by Prof. J. F. Wheeler, of the department of mathematics, will get under way this afternoon in the Memorial Union building. The first part of the campaign for funds included appeals made to students, faculty members and parish officers. The remaining funds, $75, and parents, $131.25, The goal is set for $375, and will be solicited from Lawrence business men and friends. Game Dedicates New Field House At Warrensburg SCHOLARSHIP 2:30-6:00 Music Appreciation Period 6:00-6:30 Wooden and Brass Ensembles from the University of Kansas Gifts For Everybody KFKU SCHEDULE Dr. F. C. Allen will take 13 of his cagers to Warrensburg, Mo., this afternoon in an effort to jinx the Mules tonight when the teams dedicate the new Walter E. Morrow field house. seminars from the University of Kansas Band. Try Green Bros. for gifts this Christmas for all the family—We have a wide selection. GREEN BROS. 633-35 Mass. It will be the second game of the season for each of the contestants. The Teachers led off Monday night with a hard-fought, 23-22, victory over Southwestern and the following evening the Jvbhawkers set back Oklahoma. Coach Allen may be a stranger in the new cage arena they have erected, but he will be right at home on the Warrenburs campus. "Phoen" coached there from 1013 to 1019 and piloted a championship team every year. During this span, Walter E. Morrow, for whom the field house is named, was a member of the athletic board. A. & M. by four points. A Winner Every Time NAPLES, CA SANT ANTONIO, CA The Kansas mentor indicated yesterday that he expected to open the game with Bruce Reid and Howard and endleman at forwards. B o b Allen at center, and Dick Harp and either Bill Hogben or Bruce Vorn at the guards. sort, but there is a chance that either Dobling Ebbing or Ruber Malph will get the go sign in place of Erendem. At the other sentinel post Bruce Vorm or John Kline might also Hogben's place. Reid, Allen and Harp are The Muca startling lineup will be familiar to the Kannas in one way or another. Two of them were regulars on the Warrensburg team that last here in last year's opponent, two were reserves, and center John Gibbs unmerchanted from Ohioans. A third three opponents of Kannas last season. Starting with Gibbs will be law and Crockett, forwards, and Heller and Richardson guards. Law and Heller were regulars on the team that last year won the Oklahoma City invitational tourney. Against Southwestern Law set the pace with 12 points. The Kansas team will leave here at 12:30 today in motor cars for the trip to Warwensburg. Players making the trip are Bob Allen, Mike Schmidt, Joe Engelman, Dick Harp, Bill Hoben, T. P. Hunter, Bob Johnson, John Klime, Ralph Miller, Bruce Reid, Jack Sands, and Bruce Voran. The team will not return until tomorrow morning. The Eskimos paddle their kayaks amid the icebergs in their seal hants with great skill. Make it a Daniel GREEN CHRISTMAS... Probable Starting Lineups 10. Probable Starting Vincecrosso Kansas Warrensburg Reid F Law Engleman F Crookett Allen C Gibbss Harp G Heller Hogben G Richardson Daniel GREEN CHRISTMAS... $3.95 Come in and see our special Xmas selection of the new styles. Likes Kansas Team-- Royal College Shop PETER BROWN COACH RUDGE ORNICE Oklahoma's sophomore touch weat out in Iowa. Iowa State to take the coming Big six basketball race. COACH BRUCE DRONE Cincinnati, Dec. 7—(UP) The American League tonight struck a blow to break the strangle-hold of the New York Yankees on the championship when the club owners voted to bar a pennant-winner from acquiring a player in its own league, except via waivers. American League Plans To Break Yank Dominance The proposal was made by Clark Griffith of Washington and was passed by a unanimous vote. Apparently after the Yankees, naturally were opposed to the legislation, saw they were defeated, they agreed to make the vote unanimous. Submit It to National League The American League will submit the proposal to the National League at tomorrow's joint meeting. However, if the National League does not elected it as champions, the American League will return it in its circuit. The rule roads: "The championship club in other league shall not be permitted to acquire player contracts within its own league except through the waiver channel until they are no longer champions." Will Harridge, American League president, said the rule goes into effect immediately, thus preceding any attempts the Yankees might make to sieve a deal from now until the season or season or until they lose their title. Large Range of Smart Styles and Blending Colors Larry MacPhail's proposal for a "16-club world series," which was given the horse-laugh when he proposed it, was given even serious consideration at the National League meeting for a committee composed of P K Wrigley, Cubs; Sam Bradon, Cardinals; and Bob Quinn, Bees, to be appointed to consider the matter. SHIRTS ARE A GOOD GIFT! Easy to give . . . easy to get . our fine gift shirts are ideal for the man who iliies real style. Our choice of all new pre-shrank fabrics in every pattern. Boxed Free 98c to $1.49 The Gibbs Clothing Co. 'WHERE CASH BUYS MORE' 811 Massachusetts St. I UNHAPPY THOUGHTS Bring your car in NOW for WINTER REJUVENATING Then you'll be able to make that 8:30 class —and on time. MOTOR IN ONE-STOP STATION 827 Vermont Phone 264 ONE-STOP STATION SATURDAY --- WE OFFER YOU THE CHOICE OF ANY TOPCOAT OR OVERCOAT IN OUR STORE AT — This is our annual Christmas Gift Special Better get in on this 20% DISCOUNT CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Christmas PHOTOGRAPHS Your Portrait A Gift ONLY YOU Can Give $4.44 Christmas PHOTOGRAPHS POLLY GREENWOOD ALL NOW FOR APPOINTMENT A portrait makes a lasting remembrance of your Christmas greeting. Give me anything, nothing, only you can give... your photograph! Owen Evansnell 'Till 9 HIXON'S TODAY'S GIFT SUGGESTION Becoming PAJAMAS Becoming PAJAMAS ... are Becoming IMPORTANT Many a man in town wears Manhattan Pajamas because he doesn't believe in hanging up his good taste when he hangs up his good suit! A pair of these trimly-tailored neatly fitted pajamas can add immeasurably to your sense of well-being. And remember Manhattan Pajamas are furnished with the Man-Eased "Band of Comfort," the stretchy band that lets you sleep like a baby with no strings attached. Manhattan PAJAMAS The Palace --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII NUMBER 59. LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1939. Mock Court Comes to Drab Finish Z-229 A spicy second degree kidnap trial in mock court came to a drab finish Friday when the jury returned from its deliberation with a verdict. For half an hour jurors weighed evidence but were unable to decide whether Wilford Montgomery, plaintiff, was the innocent victim of second-degree kidnapping, or was guilty of all-mighty party in a Toneka hotel. - Jury in Kidnapping Trial Steays Out Half an Hour; Is Unable To Arrive at Decision Montgomery charged that on an early rush week night he was inveigled into driving four Sigma Rho Chi men and five dates to a Topica hotel where he was held for 28 hours while the others spent the night drinking and dancing. Montgomery tried several times to escape, he said, but each time the boy fell down on his a laptop, telling him that he could not go until he pledge Sigma Rho. By Roscoe Born. c'41 Defense attorneys paraded the four defendants and their five sorcery friends before the jury to tell that Montgomery was in favor of the party, that he was far from being the shy, innocent character which he appeared to be. Montgomery was restrained, the defendants said, because he was intoxicated and they tried to drive his car. Defense witnesses also testified that Montgomery made "improper advances" toward the party, and that the defendants were forced to manhandle him to protect the girls: Four Hold Defendants Innocent Montgemery Not Shy Eight jurors were able to accept the prosecution's story and voted for conviction. Four held that the defendants were innocent and that Montgomery brought action as a defendant. The judge was unable to pleade the Sigma Ebo fraternity. The case was written and planned by Robert McNair Davis, professor of law. The taw school holds several of these mock trials each year to give law servers some practice in actual court conditions. The second of this year's trials will begin sometime this week in the court room in the basement of Green hall. Extend Chess Tournament Closing Date to Monday Final closing date for entries in the All-University Chess and Checker tournament has been extended until noon Monday, according to Wilford Ferry, c40, director of the tourney. Hours are set by a fill in application blanks at the hostess table in the lounge of the Memorial Union building. “Unless more entries are received, the tournament will not be played,” Perry said. “If it was, the Contest while 12 entrances are needed to fill all brackets, On the Shin By Reginald Buxton Kirech tire up one column that had the above item in it so just to show her you can't intimidate the press, make your best for fashioned glamour girls. Out of luck trying to woo Thea Beth Clemson, Phi Psi Bill Anderson disgustedly remarked. "Okay, I'm going to bring an overcoat or a Pi Phi." Agnes Mumert: (After a date with Leo Johnstone) I'm certainly disappointed in Leo. Smug as a Beta with a jail and almost as overboring, the Pi Fai's still insist their national officers prevented them from having their pictures in Life magazine. "Porky" Kirsch's story is a bit different and amusing. Our picture and anoum to so well - I guess," says Porky. Leo: (After the same occasion) I'm disappointed in Agnes. Shin: (After hearing both sides) There must have been a mutua misunderstanding. In Life Magazine--- Picture University Women **Fellow's note:** The Kauan survey on Life's "Kauan Girl" was conducted questioning the first person who answered the telephone. In this way, try to understand the student's role in the student body, the Kauan reporter endured to find the general consensus. By Shirley L. Johnson, c'41 Doing everything from reading the morning mail to learning to clothes babies in three-corped trousers, University coeds are pictorially represented in the Dec. 11 issue of Lice magazine. The series of pictures was taken three weeks ago when writer Judith Chase and photographer Alfred Agent agent a week-end on the Campus. The exterior view of four sorority houses and Corbin hall were shown, with special features of social life in sorority houses. The breakfast scene showing handkerchiefs and towels tied around the girls' heads is typical. The Theta "putting out her pin" is a representative scene in the sorority houses. Featured pictures of the Johnson sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma Mosquito Boats To Patrol Coast ---As They Are? - Navy Moves To Build Nucleus of Powerful Fleet United Press Staff correspondent Washington, Dec. 9—(UPI) The Navy moved tonight to build the nucleus for a powerful fleet of high speed "Mosquit" boats for coastal patrol as president Rosewell directed creation of a new naval district for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Walter H. Lucas, c'43, underwent a major surgical operation yesterday morning at Watkins Memorial hospital. His condition was described as "good" by hospital attendants last night. Acting Secretary of the Navy Chas. Edison placed a $3,000,000 order with Electric Boat Co., Craton, Conn., for 11 motor toped boats and 12 motor submarine chassers designed by Hubert Scott-Paine of the British Power Boat Co. Scott-Paine recently demonstrated the new "mystery" boats which rely on speed and deception to American authorities. They were reported unofficially as capable of making 50 miles an hour The Navy plans to concentrate the new craft, when finished at Norfolk, Va. into a special squadron. They will be under a unified command and each type will be rigorously inspected to determine the best type for any massed production program. On other occasions, the tiny vessels have provided efficient in making surprise raids and in patrolling. Initiation services were held for 11 pledges by Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon in the Pine Room of the Memorial Union building. The initiation was followed by a banquet at which Dean Paul B. Lawson was the featured speaker. Intiates were: Charles Wiles, e*40 Louis Smithmeyer, e*40 Bob Tibbets, e*40 Stafford Rubil, e*40 Clyde Pace, e*40 Joe Clark, e*40 Glenn Fryn- Gale, e*40 Carole Maleff, e*40 Grew, e*41 Carl MaFarnec, e*41 and Wray Fogwell, e*41 Lucas Undergoes Operation Doris and Helen, the beautiful of Kansas girls, Life in Miller and Watkins hall was depicted by four who live on the cooperative plan. The general consensus of opinion is: The pictures in Life were good publicity for the University, but a more representative view of college life on the Hill should have been presented. Bob Lucy, c'40, (Alpha Tau Omega; "it is a fair view of the life, but it would have been better if a few men had been shown." Karl Riddle, c'41, Vernon Dumayne, c'43 and Glenn Foy, c'49, independents, and said "After all, men are just as good news as women." "A more general view given by representing more sororities would have been better," said John Dickinson. c43, (Sigma Alpha Epsilon) Carrison, Arizona Tala Diahi with Dickinson and also suggested "more close-ups." Bert Dickerson, b'41, (Phi Kappa Pai): "They should have pictured more sororites, as it is, it is a partial view." *Cross section views of the University should have included more activities such as scenes at dunnes, cottages and car parks. Boy Koester, c.42 (Deltal Upson). Muriel Osgood, c'urnel, (Kappa Alpha Theta) felt the "choice of pictures of life in a sorority house were very good." Mary Madge Lloyd still said. "The sorority life pictured was very much like life in Miller." A Corbin hall girl said, "It makes K.U. look like a matrimonial bureau." Ida Anderson, fa 43, commented, "If it was to show University life, they should have shown more scenes on the Campus." Speaking for several Kappa Kappa Gamma women, Mary Louise McNown, fa43, said, "The representation as a whole was very good, and the pictures from our house were very natural." Richard White, e. 40, said, "It isn't quite fair to the independents who were not given much representation." Frosh Squad To Present Demonstration Debates Four members of the University freshman debate squad will appear in debates in Manhattan, Chapman Salina, and Junction City tomorrow according to E. C. Buchler, professor of speech and dramatic art. Members of the touring squad are Ralph Shenman, c'40; Verlyn Norris, c'43; James Gillie, c'43; and Jack Wagner, c'42. The freshmen will present demonstration debates and also meet teams of various high schools. Noted Literary Figure To Speak At Convocation Louis Untermeyer—poet, anthropologist, farmer, historian, lecturer novelist, critic, biographer, and punter—will appear at the University of Chicago morning as speaker for the second convocation of the school year. Class periods will be shortened to 35 minutes each to allow Mr. Untermerny from 10 to 11 a.m. to crack the code and answer questions. What Americans Read—and Why? At 54, Untermeyer is at the peak of a career which has included a bit of nearly everything. Since 1925, when he quit the jewelry business, he has lived by his wit—and it's been a merry life for Untermeyer, his family of three, and his many friends who call upon him at his Stony Water farm near Elizabethtown, N.Y. He breezes in, takes command of the situation, invites himself to dinner, and starts talking about literature, art, books, authors, or what name he. He usually brings along manuscript so that he may disregard it. - Louis Untermeyer Will Make Second Appearance Here Thursday; Topic Is 'What Americans Read' Untermeier will be making his second appearance here. He appeared on the 1834-35 lecture course, which makes him practically a native of Lawrence—because Untermeier is a stranger nowhere. Carnegie Corporation Presents $2,500 Gift to Memorial Union Santa Claus again will be host at the Union open house to be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 18. The image of the Memorial Union building Santa To Be Host At Open House Christmas carols will be sung by the crowd; other entertainment will be presented by the Corbin hall girls, the modern choir, the men's glee club, and folk dancers from the department of physical education. Prof. Allen Crafton of the speech and dramatic art department, will be master of ceremonies. A photograph, 600 records, albums, and indices, valued at $2,500, have been presented to the Memorial Union building by the Carnegie corporation. New York, and other cities, will be visited after the Christmas holidays. Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the building, announced yesterday. Refreshments will be served by the Ku Ku's and the Jay James. Almost 300 persons are expected to attend during the afternoon. Dr. and Mrs. Hobart M. Smith, who have been doing research work at the University, have gone to Mexico on a year's fellowship from UCLA. The team will collect specimens of reptiles and amphibians for the museum. Smiths to Mexico on Fellowship house the Carnegie gift. Plans are now underway for informal music appreciation programs in the room. The music set consists of a phonograph with a chair-side and speaker cabinet, the records, the card index according to composers, titles, medium (bass, duos, wind, stringed), and forms (operas, ballads, suites, sacrets), a compartment album cabinet, a set of albums, and a music dictionary. One hundred and twenty-three accounts are represented in this report, which was audited by Charles McCreight of the burster's office. BY OLDETTE BROTHERS, c. 41 A total of $148,868.70 was spent by student organizations during the 1938-39 terms according to the sixteenth annual report of the treasurer of the students organization fund. This is a total of $7,543.44 over the expenditures of 1937-38. A music room has been completed and furnished on the third floor of the Memorial Union building to Student Organization Expenses Have Increased The total disbursements of the Memorial Union, $50.949.68, were considerably less than the preceding By Olene Brooks, c'41 Foreaster R, J. Lloyd, whose bureau charts weather reports for much of the Middlewest, said it was just one of those things that wasn't likely to last long. Nevertheless, a warm weekend in golfers and the weekend motorists. Kansas City, Mo. Dec. 9—(UP)—Even the weather bureau admitted tonight that it was baffled by the balmy weather prevailing in every section of the United States except New England. Temperatures in the 50's and 60' were common. The coldest spot is the United States was Greenville Me, which had a temperature this afternoon of 18 degrees, about normal. year's total which was, $55,556.34. The Union balance was $11,894.12 compared to the $3,013.43 balance of the 1937-38 term. Sale of Christmas Seals Continues in Union Lounge Other organizations with large balances include: Jayhawker magazine with $858.31 on the credit side of the ledger; Sour Owl magazine with a balance of $706.02; the Dramatics Club with a balance of $1,644.04 and a balance of $1,044.04; and a balance of $4,739.70 and books valued at $4,722.80 on hand. Balmy December Weather Baffles U.S. Forecasters Expenditures for dances last year amounted to $8,076.69. This includes money spent on varies, mid-week dances, and four class parties. A balance of $680.92 in the varsity budget contributed to Union Union. The balance for 1937-38 which was presented to the Union was only $434.74. Wiley Presents Band In Annual Fall Concert The sale of Christmas seals now going on in the lounge of the Memorial Union building will continue through Thursday of next week, eventually to be displayed, Millburn, 18th, and Marion Horn, c. 40, student directors of the sale of seals. Of the 20 classes represented in the report, the class of 1917 is the oldest. It has the smallest balance of any class with $6.50 in the treasury. The class of 1938 has the largest balance which is $109.09. The classes usually draw from their funds to cover reunion expenses and for contributions to the Memorial Union. Guy C. Simpson Presents Organ Vespers Today ★ Fine Arts Instructor To Play Second in Series; Program Includes Works of Bach, Jonogen, Reubke The list of expenditures by the Guy Criss Simpson, who has studied in Paris under Marcel Dupew, will present the second in this year's series of University organ vespers at 4 a'clock this afternoon in Hoch auditorium. Simpson is at present dean of the Kansas chapter of the American Guild of Organists. He earned the degree of bachelor of music in both organ and piano in the School of Fine Arts. "The Ninety-Fourth Psalm" best known of Julius Reumke's works, will conclude the program. Actually, a fantasy in three movements, this is just one of the best examples of the romantic school of orran music. In a program open to the public, Simpson, instructor in organ and theory in the School of Fine Arts will play compositions of Bach, Jong, and Reunhk. He will open the vesper recital with "Dorothea Toccat and Fugue" (Bach). This will be followed by "Cantabile" (Jongen). class of 1539 includes 650 cob pipes, eight pounds of tobacco, and the printing of '39 on the pipes. The cost of these items amounted to $12,000,000 were presented as favors to the senior at the senior breakfast last year. From the 123 organizations the state, derived a total of $1,142.40 sales tax. The student organizations fund was established in the fall of 1923 to fill the need for a centralized finance of student organizations. Blames Dimped Knees for Failure In Classroom Reno, Dec. 9—Three dimpled knees of Elsie Crabtree got her a lot of publicity and a 2,800 mile tour through the west, but they also caused her to lose so much time from the classroom that today she withdrew from the University of Nevada for the year. The publicity started when the clean of women touched to her beauty cadrum major active. Elise, however, assured the students and the football squad that she would be back next fall to lead the band. U.C.L.A.-Trojans In Scoreless Tie - Both Teams Undefeated for Season; To Select West Coast Bowl Eleven Later Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles Dec. 9—(UP) -The football teams of Southern California and the University of California at Los Angeles battled to a scoreless tie before 103, 300 fans today. The underdog U.CLA. eleven stopped every scoring threat of the Trojans in a game that left both teams undefended for the season. It will be up to the seven faculty members of the Pacific Coast conference to decide the West's representative team. Rose Bowl on New Year's Day. Each team missed a chance to score. U. S. C. muffed its opportunity with a fumble over the U.C.L.A. goal line in the first period, while a 73-yard march by U.C.L.A. in the final quarter reached the Trojan two-yard line before it was stopped. Kenny Washington, UCLA.A's great negro halfback, almost became the goat of the afternoon when he humbled on the first play and Ed Dempsey recovered for U.S.C. on the Bruin 28. Flashing through a big hole in his right guard, Landsdell was smacked hard on the 3-yard line. The ball bounced out of his hands over the goal line. Woodrow Strode, giant U.CLA, end. picked it up and raced 16 yards, but the officials to the U.CLA to the U.CLA on the Brain 20-yard line. U.S.C. never got another good scoring chance. Washington, who starred for 58 minutes—until he left the game to win a great ovation from both sides of the field, almost pulled the game out of the fire for the Brains in the final period. Tennessee Defeats Auburn 7-0 Shields-Watkins Field, Knoxville, Tenn., Dec. 9 — (UP) — Sophomore Johnny Butler ran Tennessee right up to the Rose Bowl doorway today with a 40-yard touchdown dash that set back Auburn 7 to 0 and enabled the Volunteers to finish the season with a perfect record. Butler, substituting for the injured All-American George Cafego, swung around left end and cut down the ball. Butler's performance period for the only score of the game. Otherwise, Tennessee, not the same mighty football force that bowled over Alabama and Louisiana State so handily earlier in the season, had its hands full with an Auburn eleven power plus power in the fourth period. Speech Contestants To Give Five-Minute Talks Over WREN "How Can America Keep out of War?" is the topic upon which entrants in a 5-minute speech contest will talk at 8 p.m. Thursday over WREN. The contest is sponsored by the department of speech and dramatic art in cooperation with the union peace club. The winner, determined by a combined vote $v$ three judges and the audience, will receive a $5 prize. This is the first of a series of WREN programs, called "Student Opinion on the Air". The main see-how to begin after the Christmas holidays. Trouvys for the contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the men's lounge of the Memorial Union building. Members of the department of speech and dramatic art will speak in front of the entrance to speak over WREN. Musicians Play Tomorrow Night In Auditorium ★ Saxophone Quintet, Three Solists Take Spotlight On Program; 'Onward Kansas' Is Featured Three solos and the saxophone quintet will take the spotlight when Russell L. Wiley directs the University band in its annual fall concert in Hoch auditorium at 8:15 to morning night. Marshall Butter, fn'42, pianist, will present "Repartee" (David Bemet) in the initial solo number. Dennis Brooks, c'40, will give a solo presentation on the trombone of Arthur Sullivan's well-known "Lost Chord." From the opera, "Stabat Nater" (Rossini), Eugene Crabb, fn'41, will play the cornet solo, "In- flamatus." Play Group of Songs Five Saxophonists will combine to play a group of songs, "Excerpts from Familiar Airs." Taking part will be Joe McAnarney, ed'41, writer of the arrangements to be used; Russell Chambers, 'f41; Bud Baizer, gr; James Berkson, 'f42; and Clvde Bysom. A newly-written symphony for bands, "Symphony in C Minor" (Ernest S. Williams) will be introduced to the Midwest when Director Wiley leads the band in the Larghettio-allegro and larghetto movements of the composition. Laffer's March to Be Presented “Onward, Kana s.a.” University march number composed last year by Jack Laffer, ‘39, will be played by the band in the form of an arrangement by Bill Ward. ‘fa 40, a drummer in the band. The March was written as a part of the musical composition last year for a comedy production, “Cum Laude.” Other number on the program are: "Bravada, Pame Doble" (Frederic Curzon), "Scenes from the Sierras" (David Bennett), "The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise" (paraphrase by Harry Alford), "The Moosquite" Parade ("Whitney-Yoder"), "Memories of Stephen Foster" (Arnexed by Lucien Caillot), "Waltzes from 'Die Fledermaus'" "Johann Strauss", "Scenes from the Nibel-ungen Ring from opera 'Valkyrie'" (Wagner). Put Final Touches On Hill Production Formal dress rehearsal for "Night of January 16th" will be held at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon and again at 7:00 tion. The actors will remain in make-up and costume throughout the afternoon and evening and will have dinner served in Fraser theater. After a Saturday rehearsal which lasted most of the afternoon, the dress rehearsal, and also running through Monday, the Director Allen Crafton expects to have the finishing touches on the play and the entire performance set for opening night Tuesday. Tickets sales have been unusually ast, according to ticket manager Dionixon. He advises students to exchange their activity books for an issue in an available tickets are issued from office a the baseement of Green hall. Lawrence Dance Instructor To Perform for Tou Sigma Mrs. Alice Bauman, '30, will dance with her group for the meeting of Tauga Sigma at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday evening in Robinson gymnasium. The group was Alice Sherbon, is now an instructor or of dancing in Lawrence. Science Clubs Combine for Party The Bacteriology, Botany, Entomology, and Zoology clubs will have a combined Christmas party in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building from 6:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesday. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kansan Comment Opportunity For County Clubs The indirect object of the County Club organizations in which more than half the students enrolled this week is to dispel false ideas believed to exist through the state about life at the University. Recent comments in the state press support the illusion that students live the "country club" life at Kansas University. Life Magazine in presenting a florified cross-section of the life of women students at Kansas sustains the fallacy. Facts and figures dispute it. It is a case of seeing the few and judging the many. More than one-half of the men students at Kansas University are part or fully self-supporting, as are one-third of the women students. Men students who are members of social fraternities are less than one-third of the men enrolled. Of the 1487 women enrolled last year, 440, or approximately three-five per cent joined Greek social organizations, 265, or approximately eight per cent organized houses which were not sororites but the great majority lived economically in rooming houses. The big percentage of working women students came from the latter group. For a real cross-section of University women's life, the Life photographer would have journeyed into low-rental apartments, rooming bounces including those where cooking arrangements are made in ill-lit basements, and to Lawrence homes where women students work for their room and board. The National Youth Administration employs few less than four hundred students, all of whom come from Comparative figures for school expenses at Kansas University, Kansas State College, and all other state schools of higher learning show that a student may attend a college economically as he may attend any other state school. All of this is of primary importance, not only to County Clubs but to all well-wishers of the University. The County Clubs would well apply statistics on comparative costs at the University in their promotional activities. The secondary gain would be the dispense of the illusion that Kansas is a rich man's school. The core of the popular misconception concerning Kansas University is found in the pre-depression era when with other schools in the country, students on Mount Orcad遗丹 connescoin coatts, drove sport roadsters and entertained with expensive parties in which fraternities attempted to outdo each other. Even at Mount Orcad, women usually exercised before the university, then as well as now, had its point of working students. early 1930's have been made all over the United States—all bear out the post-deposition trend now observable at Kansas which is toward a more studious student body, a more economical student body, and one which is more interested in world affairs, and their own economic and social future than in the latest collegiate studies. The latter of these dents but also has been observed in fraternity groups. At the same time that students as members of the County Clubs are conducting legitimate promotional work in behalf of the University, they could well study some of the needs of the school, the fulfillment of which would make the University more attractive to students. The university will have a ment and extension of housing facilities, both for men and women. One concrete opportunity offered is in support of Alumni Place, the new dormitory for boys. Standards for inspection and approval of room houses should be raised with the final goal set as the establishment of low-cost, clean, and well-heated rooms for students who can make up the larger proportion of the student body. Social opportunities for students coming from the lower-income groups is important in offering reasons for attending Kansas University. The Independent Student Association offers these opportunities at low cost and with its membership of more than seven hundred indicates the need and support of such an attempt. County Clubs could publicize social opportunities offered here other than those sponsored by Greek organizations. The County Clubs have before them the opportunity to do untold good for the University. They will fulfill that opportunity when they give clear, accurate information about school on Mount Orend as it really is. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN OFFICIAL BULLETIN Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 10 a.m. on weekends. No. 59 --de la Mora — In Place of Splendor $3.00 CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE LECTURE: M. Peter D. Wetrock will review *The Webb and the Rock* by Dr. D. Wetrock, Wednesday, Dec. 19, at 10 a.m. for Freshmen, upper classmen and graduates are cordially invited to attend. W. J. Johnson EL ATENOYTU The Spanish Club Christmas party will be held on December 25th at the Spanish Club. Please in advance for this event you must visit us. Donate your gift to the Spanish Club. MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL. There will be a regular meeting on M W C, Monday 12, noon, in HI. In the Fine Arts Department, Delaware. MEN'S PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL. The council will meet at 10:30 am the morning in the Presbyterian clinic - Aldo, Holmes, or St. Joseph. PHI CHI DELITA Phi Chi DELITA Christmas will be held Tuesday, Dec. 12 at Westminster Hall at 5:30. Marget Hastel and Maxine Bashaw are in charge of the musical performance. Marget Bashaw is in charge. Earlier, Tipton Ellen Jane Yount, program chairmen. PSYCHOLOGY CLUB, Dr. Dervis will speak at the regular meeting on Monday covering his talk on "The Developement of Reasoning in the Child." The meeting is to be at 4:30 in room 2141 in the Administration Building at Harrison Horn,息安 SETRE FOOC. Setre Fooe will meet this afternoon from 1400 to 1500 at the Damascus City Library, Damascus District, 626 East 7th Street, N.W., are welcome. All interested in meeting with us please contact setre@foc.edu. **SNOE HALL CLUSS:** The clubs of Snow Hall are having their annual Christmas Party in the Kenwood room of the Union building Tuesday night, December 12 from 6:30 to 10:00. All members and their guests are invited. Attendance 84 people. SOCIOLYCE CLIENT: The Sociology Club will meet at 15:30 Tuesday in the Old Library Room of the Union Hall on Monday from 10:30 to 12:45 and 12:45 to 14:15, and the Kauai Center will speak on "Opportunities and Training for Social Work." The talk will be followed by a Christmas party—Jane Smith. WESTMINSTER STUDENT FORUM. The last meeting be fore January will he be held at Westminster hall at 7:30 this evening. A Christmas play, directed by Marragan Jane Grey, will be presented, followed by a speech, will be told the worship epiphany. Charlie Youssafi, president, W. Y.C.A. CHRISTMAS BAYARET! The Trainer will be坐Bed Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, December 12, at 11:18, in the Union Building bourse from 8:30 to 3:30. On the first day it will continue and from 9:30 to 11:30 it will come—to see the exhibit. *Alice Ann Jones, chairman.* V-W-VM- M- CREATIVE LIVELY COMMISSION. The last name is M. All are invited to attend. Jr. Bruce Miller, Ms. Johnson. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Konas MEMBER KANSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year excluding holiday and Sunday. Entered as second class office (910) 826-4700 or office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the art of March 3, 1879. Y ray of a X-ray of a Xmas package! A LOCKING BOX WITH HANDCUFFS AND TOWELS. TABLELON 14215 Personalized Christmas stationery by Monlog and Eileen for a distinctive gift. Priced from 35c up. Practical gifts for most anyone. Pen and pencil kits attractively boxed by Sheaffer and Parker. Neme engraved without chance. Priced from $1.95 up Rowlands Miscellaneous trinkets from all over the world. Joeyhawk Jewelry Musical Boxes Boudoul Sifis Book- cards Gift Books Zipper Notebooks Guest Log and Memory Books AND--de la Mora — In Place of Splendor $3.00 So many other fascinatingly different items, we can't describe them. Rowlands TWO BOOK STORES 1237 Oread 1401 Ohio TAR ON THE OFF B-E-A-T Winter Sports Note: The Soviet army is Russian for the Finnish line. Dewey's first campaign speech reminded us too much of the first part of a serial mystery story—and as we recall, for some reason or other, we never did find out what the solution was supposed to be. By Roderick Burton This is for Democrats Only Christmas comes but once a year- At least until from Santa Clau we hear. A reader comments that nothing is sure in this column but puns and Texas. NYA's payroll for this month shows an increase of $148 over that of last month, according to Miss Billman, executive secretary of NYA. NYA students will receive their checks before Christmas vacation begins. A total of $5,773.25 will be paid to 385 students of the University for 17,227 hours of work for the NYA month of Nov. 3 to Dec. 2. The payroll includes 279 undergraduate students and 12 graduate students. NYA Student Payroll Shows $148 Increase This Month "Photography in the News" will be the topic of Henry Ladd S Smith when he speaks to the K.U. Camera Club in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building at 7:45 o'clock Tuesday night. Smith To Address Camera Club Smith, an associate professor of journalism, will tell what the nevapapers want in pictures. The discussion will be demonstrated with both technical and subjective examples of news pictures. Professor Smith will teach a course in news photography next semester, similar to the course offered last year. Final results in the Homecoming exhibit will be announced at the meeting and prizes will be awarded on print documents of outstanding quality. E Alteneo, Spanish Club, will hold its annual Christmas party at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec 13, at the Alteneo Student Center. The professor of romance languages. Miss Merle Simmons, assistant instructor in romance languages, is in charge of the program, which will be given in Spanish. Everyone attending will speak Spanish throughout the entire evening. Spanish Students Will Hold Christmas Party Wednesday Maletto to Speak in K.C. Tonight Chancellor Deane W. Maletto will speak at the First Christian Church in Kansas City, Mo., at 7:30 o'clock tonight. His subject will be "Religion and Education." PIANOS MASON & HAMLIN— MASON & HAMILIN The Aristocrat of all pianos KNADE Official piano of Metropolitan and Chicago Opera Co's. SPINET— The new type of upright. RADIOS Through the years R.C.A. has remained the great standard for comparison. Table-Top Models, Radio-Phonograph Combinations. $14.95 to $154.50 RECORDS The popular records of the day recorded by your favorite orchestra. GIVE MUSICAL GIFTS Albums of Classics for the music lover. Instruments, All Styles, All Price's, Cornets, Drums, Trumpet, Flutes, Clarinet, Saxes. Bell's Music Store Make This a Book Christmas Partridge—Country Lawyer. $2.75 Conby—Thoreau. $3.75 Walt—Reaching for the Storm. ★ Wellman—The Trampling Herd. Page—Tree of Liberty. $3.00 Lin Yutang—Moment in Peking. Exupery—Wind, Sand and Stars. 62-75 Keith—Land Below the Wind. $3 Van Paossen—Days of Our Years. Goddon—Black Norcissus. $2.50 Rome—Wine of Good Hope. Maryle - Kitty Povey - $2,000 John - Katie Johnson - $4,500 -Die- Life With Father, $1,000 -Gramma - Sarah Rush - $6,000 -Pinocchio, $1,000 and $1,000 Menners Make Men, - Lodge-Lore. $3.00 Keith—Land Below the Wind. $3 Your Choice of Spreider $3.00 Wellman The $1.00 each Metropolitan Opera Guide. Mr. E. Giant $1.25 Gibran — The Prophet. $2.50 Strait — Union Now. $3.00 SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10. 1939. $2.75 stors. splendor. Herd. d. $3 ears. ng. $0 M. L. Giant, $1.25 Gibron — The Second, $2.5 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. St. Tel. 666 * French Club Will Give Annual Christmas Program Cerule Francais, the University's French club, will hold its annual Christmas program at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in room 308 of Fraser hall. The program will consist of French carols and poems. Poems will be read by Vivian Clark, *c*41, Helen Rijnon, *e*40, and Eleonor Crossland, *e*41. Solos will be read by Robert Hawkins, *f*41, and Selita Paulk, *c*41. Kansas Debaters Will Tour Texas The schedule of the Kansas debaters includes a tournament at Austin, in which Texas University, Louisiana State University, Bayou State University will participate. Rhodes and McKay also will debate in high schools at Dennison, Temple, and San Antonio on Dec. 12, 13, and 14, respectively. Leo Rhodes, b'40, and Bob McKay, b'40, will tour Texas in a series of eight debates before the Christmas holidays. K. U. will observe its 75th anniversary in 1940-41. It's STILL the HILL at the BLUE MILL We Deliver Call 409 Plan Another For Eastern Student Service Fund Drive THERE'S Still Time! LET US CLEAN UP YOUR CLOTHES NOW so Mother won't have to during the Christmas rash. Independent Laundry 740 Vermont Phone 432 Plans for a third Far Eastern Student Service fund drive will be made at a joint meeting of the Y.M. C.A. and W.Y.C.A. cabinets at 9 o'clock tonight in Henley House. For Good Times and Good Things To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT KANSAN But the Holidays Will Be Here Before You Realize It. Sales, rentals, cleaning and repairing. lawrence Typewriter Exchang 735 Mass. Phone 948 THERE'S Still Time! 图 10-25 Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card Last year the faculty members and students contributed $400, enough to keep a student body of 400 in school for a month. From the entire movement, $45,000 was obtained for the needy students in the Orient. CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K. U. 66 RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. SKATES — SLEDS Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened Gustafson Optometrist 911 Mass. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mallin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-collaboration exposure meter. Certified f-4.5 (television Amateur 1/25 to 1/200 second shuttle speed). Movie film in standard cartridge. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing Film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 SUNDAY. DECEMBER 10. 1935. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREA Here on the Hill Although Christmas comes but once a year, the Yuliette spirit is heavily played upon by Campus groups. A time of peace and good-morning board men, Christmas offers opportunity for interactive interplay and mid-winter parties. Last night the kite of Kappa Alpha Theta gleamed brightly over the entrance to the Memorial Union building. In the ballroom Theta's, dressed in new and colorful formalts, their dates and a large staghead danced to the music of Dale Brodie's orchestra. Seventeen white Christmas trees stand with the mammoth blue candle; predicated on the decoration scheme. Districts II, IV became swing conscious at a party in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. Alpha Tau Onewa and Alpha Delta Pi entertaining at their respective houses further emphasized the approach of the Christmas season, while Alpha Kappa Psi, national commerce fraternity, laid aside thoughts of world trade to celebrate with a winter party. Glittering stars hung from the ceiling and a large neon hub-wheel set the stage for the Delta Upsilon Christmas party which was held in the chaperouse from 9 to 12 until the music of Clyde Smith's orchestra. Independent students, not to be left out of the whirl of pre-holiday activities, held parties on the Hill and at the Riverside. The ISA gave a dance at Ricker hall. Presents ranging from our muffs to hand-cuffs were given dates at the Phi Delta Theta party Friday night by Jack Abner, c'43, disgusted as Santa Claus. The same evening about 50 Owls, past and present, plus their dates attended the Owl Society party held in the Kansas room of the Union building, while all the glamor of a uniform was apparent at the Military ball attended by more than 600 persons. Alma De Oliva: Mary Latha Brown c.43; Mary Ann Lake c.72 Zita Anne Lowry c.42; Mary Locke c.1 F1; Mary Browne c., 1 F3; Mary Browne c., 1 F4; Beth White c. Guest lists for the parties are: Alba Tan Omexea; *481; Betty West, *482; Dorothy Westfall, *483; Mary Rebecca Scott, *484; Marlene Smith, *485; Jane Burrows, *486;艾丽 W. Burrows, *487;艾丽 Hinkle, *488; Bette Baker, *489;艾丽 Hinkle, *490; Bette Baker, *491 Virginia Orca, bc; 6431 Betty Albenni, bc¹ Virginia Orca, bc; 6431 Ann Murray, bc¹ Jane Bouchard, bc¹ John Mullins, bc¹ 4124 Virginia Grelzel, ed; 414 Pattie Blee 4157 Virginia Grelzel, ed; 4184 Pattie Linley, ed; 4204 Jay Stuinis, ed; 424 Felix Independence; Maracurio Kana- Kanai, ed; 4261 Jake Tuck, ed; 4294uck, and Jane Toold, Leewardworts WANT ADS Phi Dha Theta Tista: Sus Johnston, c'42; Darle Johnson, c'49; Fosse Pineur, c'44; Nanny Carvy, c'42; Jesse Fischer, Nanny Facher, c'42; Berry Clover, c'42. OPENING HOUSE for boys 113: Mississippi. Good meals, nice rooms. Rates to group of four. Phone 1151. -59 LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies' gold Elegin wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 28143 or迎到 1117 Vermont.-62 FOR RENT: To adults, good modern 5-room bungalow, sleepy porch, brutine, garage. Sack of University. Phone 1253R 1390 Rhode Island. Phone 253R 1250 PRACTICAL GIFT Jane Awartor, #28; Jean Dumont, #12; Jean Berton, #40; Jean Ebert, #36; Jean Faye, #59; Jean Gouffre, #47; Deyler Duley, #18; I. Elliott Meltzner, #42; Jean O'Hara, #26; Ian Lewis, #43; Jean O'Hara, #26; Ian Lewis, #43; Jon, Dunkle, sp; 4. Leone Wolterer, c. 42. Jane Collinn, c. 41; anne Nou Jollenham c. 41; Leen Hirschfeld, fa. 52; Mary Alley Elliot, fld. 4; Ann Murray, fa. 4; Betty Bell, fld. 3 CHRISTMAS WRITER For the College Student Come in and price our machines before you y o pass up the typewriter as to expensive a gift Ishara Koch, kc s; Ria Bichanes, e; c24 Margaret Wilson, nr; Sally Gounell, c8h Nathan Wylie, m; David Riess, d; Ivan Giovanni, fc; 51 Murray Burton, e; 64 Domin Hughes, fa; 51 Durand Dearn, e; 51 —A portable typewriter makes an ideal GIFT. We take your old machine at a liberal allowance Miriam Oegel, *cunei*, Norma Tibbatira c. 1613; Mary Biverr, c. 1451; Masim Mieler, c. 1407; Robert Crosby, c. 1398; Katherine O'Silliman, c. 2014; Jane Grieca, c. 144; Mary Jane McCoy, c. 140; Eileen Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 Jain, Barton, c.135 Mary Marrine Carewton Johnson, c.128 Theodore Curtis, c.135 Mary Jane Carewton, c.128 Theodore Curtis, c.135 Mary Virginia Rope, c.128 Betty Johnson, c.128 Ruth Moore, c.128 Betty Johnson, c.128 Ruth Moore, c.128 Betty Johnson, c.128 Louis Huffman, c.128 Louis Huffman, c.128 James Ann Huffman, c.128 Stuart Huffman, c.128 James Ann Huffman, c.128 Troust-Sout, c.128 Daniel Campbell, c.128 Daniel Campbell, c.128 Janne Knightie, c$41; Virginia Anderson, c$40; Mary Elizabeth Burr, c$42; Morgan Emmons, c$40; Mori Henry p., Ethnicity Burns, c$40; Mori Henry p., Ethnicity Burns, c$40; Mori Henry p., Ethnicity Burns, c$40; Mori Henry p., Ethnicity Burns, c$40; Mari Lynne Fannes, Neilson, c$40; Mary Langer Lockhart, Neilson, c$40; Mary Langer Lockhart, Neilson, c$40; Margaret Dillon, c$40; Louise Hoffman, c$40; Betty Jane Beddin- ness, c$40 Delta Upsilon: This, Fowler, c#4; Adekyn Curt, bk17; Suzanne Lowderman, c#2; Besson Jean, bk39; John Miller, in a35; Shirley Jane Robb, c#8; Straight, in a36; Starrie, c#4; Sturge, c#14; Straight, c#14; Muriel Ounsel, ounel; Foumy Murphy, c#10; Jana Van Marsh, c#14; Jane Moorhead, c#2; Derek Marshall, c#14; Jan Moorhead, c#2; Derek Marshall, Leathers, c#3; Helen Moore, c#2; Mary Leathers, c#3; Ally Macmillan, c#1; Ally Macmillan, c#1; Corn Heworth, Sunday Night Buffet Alba Chu Omnew will entertain the folio of Dr. William W. Brewer, m/421 c/o Balmoral, m/421 D. O'Connell Dumont, m/421 c/o Balmoral, m/421 Delbert Hyler, c/421 D. Schmitt of Lawrence, KS, m/421 c/o Balmoral, m/421 Jim Sawyer, Lawrence, KS, m/421 Jim Sawyer, Lawrence, JACK Hoppy, ed. 601 Friedinger, law firm, JACK Hoppy, ed. 601 Friedinger, law firm, DJ Diskrell, ed. 813 Reeves Roe Arthur Kehr of Kansas City, Mo. Fred inke, c'4; Ed Welford, m'4; Bill Hobrien, c'4; Johnl Wilson, c'4; Rob Boyer, c'4; and Eddie Vaukus, e'42. mice meets at the Sigma Chi Chi. Burray Hall night included the following John Lyleh, c$2; Frank Moody, c$4; John H. Welch, c$5; Robert E. Monson, c$4; F. M. W. Fuller, Kunamey, City, Kan. Mrs. John Noble was a dinner guest at the Pi'i Fihe Phi house Thursday evening. Helen Snapper, in 42, was a lunchroom guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Friday. --ant the Alpha Chi Omega house Saturday. Lorraine Peaseck, e'42, a hunter nearest at the Pi Beta Phi house Friday. Ruth Spencer, e-31, was a lanceon greet at the Alpha Chi Omega house Saturday. U-M-M-M SANTA Old-Fashioned CHICKEN DINNER with all the trimmings, 35c Today @ Car, Truck Collide; Jack Lee Injured The New Hill Hangout THE FERRY 1031 Mass. Across from the Granada M. M. HENDERSON CHRISTMAS TIME Is Dress-up Time When you will want to look your best Jack Lee, 17, of Lawrence was seriously injured and his companions, Robert Lee Amyx, gr, and Willard Muzzy, 64, Rhode Island, were unhurt, when their car, driven by Lee, was struck by a 3-metre truck and tractor用户 ternon three miles cast of Lawrence. ★ Our Alteration and Repair Dept. will make your clothes like new for the Holidays. Raymond Slusher, 20, of Martin City, Mp., driver of the truck, was uninjured. He reported that he saw the Lee car approaching the highway from the south, but, believing he was safe, he drove the highway, continued east. He saw the car drive onto the slab too late to avert the collision. Lee was taken to the Lawrence Memorial hospital, where his injuries were believed to be serious. He spent two months head in scraps and body bruises. Sheriff Charles Banning's men investigated the accident. Mr. Lawrence Earl Smith, IT, was a guest at the Sigma Chi house this week. SCHULZ THE TAILOR THE FAULTER Suiting you—That's my business Dollie Newton, e1H, was a honeymoon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gammon house Pri- dale. P. Hoff, B. Chubb of the department of political science will address the Young People's Forum of the First Christian Church at 6:30 a.m. clock tonight on the following topic: "In Time of War for Peace." A social hour for the young persons of the church will be held at 5:30 p.m. Anyone interested is invited to attend. Malott Returns From Speech Trip Chancellor Deine W. M. Malot, seven university staff members, and a student have returned from speak-out sessions in the excursion Springs, Mo., and St. Louis. Our staff members who made the trip were Fred Elsworth, alumni secretary; Dean Ivan C. Crowford of the School of Engineering and Architecture G. W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering; Dr. N. P. Sherwood, head of the department of bacteriology; Dr. Glenn C. Bond, professor of bacteriology; Louis Corilel, instructor in bacterial- GIFTS. A Small Deposit Will Hold It For You. USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN Select Your Christmas Gifts NOW. (You can make arrangements to pay after Christmas) Gustafson "The College Jeweler" I [ ] --- --- 2014 OL'SANTA SAYS That Roger's Fashion Cleaners Rings The Bell when it comes to cleaning clothes the quality way! Rings The Bell ROGERS' Fashion CLEANERS EIGHT EAST EIGHTH STREET Call498 HAPPY NEW YEAR! It's the time of year for gayey, for beauty . . . and what could better express that feeling than FLOWERS? - Violots Gardenias Lilies of the Valley Let Us Help Plan Your HOUSE DECORATIONS PHONE 363 Poinsettas Roses Orchids ALLISOR Flower Shop ARNSTRONG ology; and Dr. K. E. Landes, professor of geology and state geologist. PHONE 363 Donald E. Flanders, c'40, was the student on tour. Capper to Speak Here Tuesday Capper to Speak Here Tuesday Senator Arthur Capper will be the principal speaker at the regular meeting of the University Club Tuesday night. Fencing Club to Meet Monday Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Students and faculty members of the University who are interested in fencing may attend a meeting of the Fencing Club at Robinson gymnasium at 4:30 pm. Monday, Bill Tuxal, c'40, president of the club said yesterday. Truxal said that the meeting was an important one, and he urges the presence of all members. "And Here's Your Gift, OLD FAITHFUL!" T Santa Claus Give dad, brother, or the boyfriend something they have been secretly hoping for . . . a shiny, new gift for the car! Carter's has hundreds . . . low priced! Ready for winter! CARTS! The Mattei GIFTS For the Motorist CARTER'S SUPER SERVICE Phone 1300 1000 Mass. THE IDEAL GIFT FOR THE BOY FRIEND OR LITTLE BROTHER SK BY SWANK DUO-GRAM tie klip. tie klip. $1.50 up Custom made elegance SWANK JEWELRY FOR MEN with his initials in a proud crest-like design, available in cravat chain, cuff links, belt buckle, key chain and - Packed in gift boxes. - Stop in at OBER'S and see our large assortment of Swank gifts, Ole's farmstand outlet Parties Ahead? Boy !! We can surely make you look your best with our Deluxe Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service. 18 Why not send your clothes in EARLY next week and have them back as you want them, WHEN you want them. We Guarantee Satisfaction. Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1001 New Hampshire Phone 383 Is She Guilty or Not Guilty? Attend the Dramatic Club's Murder Trial--- NIGHT OF JANUARY 16th And Judge for Yourself This unique stage production sets to stage all the suspense, pathos, comedy, and drama of a courtroom where a beautiful woman is on trial for her life. You may be a member of the jury which convicts her or sets her free! Tues., Wed., Thurs., Fri. Dec. 12, 13, 14, 15 FRASER THEATRE Curtain 8:20 Exchange Activity Book Stubs for Reserved Seats Basement Green Hall Be A First Nighter! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1939. PAGE FOUR SIMONIZING SPORTS A few notes on Warrenburg's 33 to 31 overtime victory Friday night after sleeping off the effects. By JAY SIMON The town of Warrenburg may not have changed much in the 20 years since Dr. F. C. Allen used to coach the Mules, but his ability to turn in victories there has been somewhat altered. In the seven games he was at Central Teachers from 1913 to 1919 "Phog" won 197 games, last only 7, and won the conference title every time . . . The Walter E. Morrow "fieldhouse" turned out to be a right neat little gymnasium. It was a shame to put such a fine floor in such a fine stone structure and leave room for only one player. The final press claimed there were 2,000 at the game, including those who stood at each end and flowed into the halls. The game had been running seven minutes and a half without a field goal being scored when Charley Richardson, Mule forward swished a long one to knot the count . . . Kansas had been able to get but one group of thank you shots up to this time . . . The first period was half gone when Ralph Miller slipped in his only bucket of the game and the first for the Jawawks . . . Trailing by two yards, Dick Harp, who was rebounding beautifully, flicked the fabrics from way out and a moment later Don Ellingstreek under the hoop for a setup to hand the Kansas a 12 to 11 margin to rest on. Shortly after the second half commenced there was an omen as to what was to follow. The cords on the Kansas basket were knotted so the ball could not go through and time had to be called to remedy the situation. After they were cut, one of the Warensburg players tossed the ball at the hoop to straighten the strings and the leather stayed on the rim, snugging against the surface of the court so more long ones early in the second semester to keep the Jayhawks ahead, but with Crockett, Gibbs, and Law finding the range from the field the Mules kept right on their heels ... Bruce Voran came into the milling with the score tied at 18 and only six minutes of the period gone. He was in for the rest of the game and his being on friendly terms with the meshes was what kept Kansas in the hall game down to the final decision. The Philadelphia team accounted for 10 out of 13 of the Jahyawk points for the rest of the way ... A first half basket gave him an even dozen for the even and easily high point honors. With five minutes to go and the Jayhawkers sporting a one-point bulge, Voran took a beautiful pass from Miller and laid it in to make the count 26-23. . . Long John Gibbs took up some of the slack when he tossed in two charity shots on Engleman's infraction, and Heller put the Mules in the lead with a long one. . . Voran came through again with a left-hand shot from in close and the KU. boys were ahead, 28 to 27, with two and a half minutes remaining. . . Taking the ball away from the Missourians, the Jays went into a stall that was working to perfection until Ralph Miller plowed into Gibbs. "With pressure on aplenty the long one strudges the pellet and calmly drops the pellet through to the tip of the ball game." Captain Harp called time to think the situation over and the boys decided to hold the ball until the final second, taking a chance on beating out the Mules in the overtime period in case the final shot failed. . And stall they did for a minute and 15 seconds. . Just before the buzer sounded it was no good, but it was no good. . Frantic shouts from the spectators and both benches were necessary to stop play for neither officials nor participants had heard the buzer. . With five minutes to break the t1s, both teams started at break neck speed. Helms tallied first with a spinner shot and Crockett helped them by getting the bolt. . Getting hot all the time Law hit another basket and Kansas was behind 28 to 33 and the afterpiece was half gone. Harp missed a free throw when Law committed his four personal, but shortly after Veronan stole the ball on a pass-in play and drove under for his fourth bucket of the evening. . . Harp got another charity shot when Helms fouled out and his time was valuable to go and behind two points. Kansas stole the ball, swapped down the floor, and Bruce Reid took a crack at the goal. . . It was short and it looked like Kanea's last chance was gone. . . However, they did get one more try. . . Just one second before the gun Harp wounded, Kansas took time out, and decided to take the ball to Bobby Allen, to make the final shot, but it was no good. . . The game was over **DIADAY'S IGNORE SCORE** Kansas f, 10 (G) g, 2 Rodd, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Brown, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Miller, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Almany, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Alame, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Herbog, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Varan, guard f, 7 (G) g, 2 Verano, guard f, 7 (G) g, 2 Crookie, f, 8 (G) g, 2 Totals 9 13 16 Totals 12 9 1 Score at half : Kannan 1, Warrensburg 1, Free-throw: Kannan 1, Warrensburg 1 O'Briens; Ted O'Sillian (Missouri) and Parke Carroll (Kansas City). 32 Teams Engage In Opening Games The intracameral season got under way Thursday. By Saturday evening, 32 teams had taken part in 16 contests. Sigma Alpha Epsilon triumphed over Delta Upson 25 to 17 with Gene Hatt in the star role. He scored as many points as the entire DU five. Behind 8 to 15 at the end of the third period, Phi Delta Theta brought forth a timely rally downing Alpha Tau Omega 19 to 17. Charles Walker starred for the Phi Delta, Nelson and Lenhart were too much for the Delta Taus, so the Phi Fai outfit won 27-12. The Comets defended the Ohio Ichabods 24 to 10. Phi Gamma Delta led by Chain Healy, won from the Triangles 29-12. Rinchahn paced the Domitones to a 20 to 21 victory over the Sigma Nu coaches and beat the Sigma Nu coaches 25 to 20. The Rock Chalkers fell before a fine K.A.Fi队 18 to 29, "Lampghter" Johnson and Funk were the sparkplugs in the Fai's attack. Christmas PHOTOGRAPHS SANTA ALISHA RUBER Your Portrait A Gift ONLY YOU Can Give A portrait makes a lasting remembrance of your Christmas greeting. Give something personal... something only you can see on the photograph! Open Evenings, Till 9 CALL NOW FOR APPOINTMENT HIXON'S --if this Baker and Richardson Attend Legislative Assembly Russell Baker, c'42, and Ralph Richardson, c'40, were representatives of the University at a three-day session of the Midwestern Student Legislative Assembly held in Topeka this weekend. The Assembly was attended by more than 128 students from mid-western states. Legislation on national problems was debated and regular legislative procedure was carried out by the body. All sessions were held in the House of Representatives in the State Capital building. The department of engineering was organized at K.U. in 1870. $ ^{19} $ DICKINSON Adults 35c Children 10c TODAY One Entire week "STUDENTS!" Gather round for to- mance, rhythmic and roars in the thush-swing sensation of the century KAY KYSER ADOLPHE MENJOU THAT'S RIGHT! YOU'RE WRONG MAY ROSEGON • LUCILLE DALL DENNIS D'KREEPE • EDWARD EVERETT HOWEL • ROSCOE RANKS • MORGAN OLSEN KY KASYSER, DAND featuring QINNYSISIH-SMARRYB ABBNTT SULLY MASON IX KABIBANLE and "T" KABIBANLE musical "Knowles" GRANADA ALL SHOWS 25c ALL SHOWS NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY Continuous Today From 2:30 TYRONE POWER ...a wandering minstrel of a husband! R LINDA DARNEL L BUT THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT A SECRETARY! Day-time Wife PATEE WARREN WILLIAM BINNIE BARNES WENDY BARRIE JOAN DAVIS ADDED "INFORMATION PLEASE" (Radio's most popular program) "ART GALLERY" Color Cartoon LATE NEWS EVENTS 国画技法 PATEE Continuous from 2:00 p.m. TODAY 3 DAYS With 5 Million Dollars — "The Hardys Ride High" MICKEY ROODEY and the Hardy Family — 2nd Feature Meet Uncle Sam's Most Doring Agents! Ronald Reagan -- Latest News "Smashing the Money Ring" "The XYZ Research Bureau wants to know JACKSON, W. H., OF BALTIMORE. A LIFTING MAN IN THE CITY. Triple Test Worsted suit will hold its press as well as Hart Schaffner & Marx says it will" 满 Pretty soft for the fellow testing this suit! For the real testing of a Triple Test takes place long before it ever leaves the Hart Schaffner & Marx shops. And what tests these suits of ours have to go through before they're awarded their Triple Test labels! First they have to pass innumerable tests for Wear! And the experts who supervise these stringent operations are deadly at spotting poor fabrics. Next, comes the Style test, which assures authenticity of color and pattern. Finally Triple Test must pass the Value test—made by clothing merchants who say "no" oftener than "yes." Thus Triple Test gives you a positive O.K. on the three points—Wear, Style and Value—that are uppermost in your mind when you're in the market for a suit. And the marvel is that Triple Test delivers these three to you at a moderate price! Tailored by HART SCHAFFNER & MARX GIVE "HIM" A TRIPLE TEST SUIT FOR CHRISTMAS OR SANTA KLAUS YOURSELF--- CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1839 NUMBER 60 'January 16 Gives Crowd Leading Roles Z-229 "with accent sweet." Ingrid Frestadus, blond-haired lass from Stockholm, will give her broadest o's in the character of a Swedish maid. A highlight of the play is Barbara Daniels, c'40 one of the hip-singing ganger's molls imaginable. Emily Jean Milan, c'42, the "woman in black," wife of the murdered man, attempting to convince the audience and jury that Jean Brown is a husband-sealer. - Jury To Be Picked from Audience in Play Which Opens Tonight in Fraser Theater Jean Brown, c'42, goes on trial for her life tonight. In the Broadway run of the show, Doris Nolan, the actress playing the lead, could lift a skirt, cast a glance toward the jury and get a "not guilty" at every performance. This supposedly has something to do with Americans being opposed to capital punishment. When the curtain rises in Fraser theater opening the Dramatic Club's all-student production "Night of January 16th" the audience will become a part of the play. Jack Nelson, gr., as defense attorney for Jean Brown will attempt to convince a jury from the audience, that Jean is innocent of murder. Ingrid Frestadius As Maid Lies Hixon, 'eap, in the role of district attorney, will try to prove her guilt. Judging the whole affair will be crucial for any who handles the navel on the bench. A majority vote will be all that is necessary to convict or exonerate the secretary of the murdered man. It is possible that a criteria for acting ability might be set upon the verdict that the jury hands down, since the play is written in such a manner that evidence is evenly balanced in favor of and against Miss Brown. Majority Vote Will Convict Playing the role of father to Emily Jean Milan will be Jack Daiby, fa'40. Gangster Larry David, fa'40, will bring startling evidence to the court; evidence, c. 40, is an important state's witness in her role as a Negro servant. Others important as witnesses and officials of the court are: Gordon Brigham, c'40, Bety Strachan, c'43, Dave Watermudler, c'43, Lloyd Bell, c'41, Vic Amend, c'40, Beb Miller, c'41, Kevin Dunn, c'40, Harbin, c'41, Stanley McLeod, c'43, Reola Durand, c'43, Victor Leskot, c'43 and Gilbert Burmeser, c'43. The director says don't be surprised if the person seated next to you rises, shouts something, and then goes up to the stage. All the witnesses for the trial will be sitting with the audience. The technical staff for the production includes: Prof. Allen Cranston, director; Jessica Crafton, consultant; Don Dixon, stage manager; Larry David, f39, lighting; Ernestine Hodge, gr.promiser; Prominent Bleecker, f39, Music Director; the department of speech, and Robert Calderwood, associate professor in the department of speech. On the Shin "There was once a coy co-ea named Florence. =By Reginald Buxton= For publicity claimed an abhor- rance. 104. But when Life showed her posing, She wasn't caught dozing— She mailed one to each man in How some Kansan reporters get the news-Jay Simon, Harry Hill Gene Kuhn, and Roscoe (rhymes with Moscow) Born have made an astrological chart with which they can forecast coming events such as the next robbery, fire, theft, and blessed event. Simon must have he mailed one to each man in Lawrence."—Anonymous. Margaret Murray pitted with Johnny Begert during Thanksgiving vacation and returned his pin The status hasn't changed much since she was wearing the pin 'neath sweaters and stuff anyway. (Continued on page two) Magazine Venders To 'Get the Boot' From Campus Cop Mag paddlers who are "working their way through college" are only "shirking" their way through as far as possible. Snyder, Campus cp, is concerned. Westerday George shined up his badge and put his foot down on campus vending, which, he says, is illegal. And just to make sure that no one gets by him, he asks anyone approached by salesmen on the Hill to report it to him. Officially Open Carruth Contest - Three Prizes, Totaling $120, To Be Offered in Poetry Competition The thirteenth annual Willian Herbert Carnuth memorial poetry content has been announced by W. S. Johnson, professor of English chairman of the award committee Three prizes amounting to $120 will be awarded for the best poems submitted. Poems may be of any length or type and may be submitted by any resident students enrolled in the University. Only one poem may be turned in by each contestant. Previously published poems will not be admitted to competition. May Limit Awards First prize will be $60, second prize $40, and third prize will be $20. In addition, a volume of poetry will be received in immediate constant receiving honorable mention. Three copies of each poem submitted must be turned in to the Chancellor's office before April 8 1940, with the author's pseudonym. His real name and the exact title of the poem must also be given. The committee of award reserves the right to withhold any or all of the prizes if the poems submitter are not considered worthy of award May Limit Awards The contest is given in memory of William Herbert Carruth's service as student, teacher, poet, and leader at the University. After taking graduate work at Harvard he returned to the University to become head of the department of German. Carruth was also vice-chancellor for several years before becoming head of Leiden Stanford University to teach comparative literature. He remained in that position until his death, which occurred in 1924. Johnson Heads Judges The first day of the Y.W.C.A. Bazaar which opened yesterday morning in the lounge of the Memorial Union building was a success according to those in charge of the affair yesterday afternoon. Probably the best known poem of Carruth is, "Each in His Own Tongue," published in 1914. Since then he has had a great deal of poetry and several books published. Two of his most famous books are: "Kansas in Literature," and "Letters for American Boys." The long display tables are attractively arranged with trays, ash trays, and bowls made of copper, brass, and hand-carved Colorado stone. Brightly-dressed doles of foreign countries draw much of the attention. Hand-woven vases have appended to many as the ideal Christmas gift. W. S. Johnson, professor of English, who is chairman of the award committee; an alumnus of the University; and some man of letters who is in no way connected with the University will make a award committee. Announcement of winners will be made, May 1, 1940. Alice Ann Jones, c'41, in charge of the bazaar with Agnes Bytch Strachan, c'42, in charge of the selling, Shirley Jane Ruble, c'41, set up the display, and Joan Moorhead, c'42, invoiced the material. Successful Day For Y.W. Bazaar "It has been selling very well, especially the linens, brass and copperware, bracelets and eliminators for the Ella Fadicks, so retaliary of Y W.C.A. The Bazaar will close Wednesday evening at 8:30 o'clock, and until then will be open every afternoon until 5:30. Cloudy and continued warm today and Wednesday. WEATHER Fio Rito Brings $300,000 Fingers To Soph Hop - Regina Travers To Sing With Bond Coming Hero After Long Stay at Ben Merdan's N. Y. Riviera Three hundred thousand dollars worth of fingers will swing along the key board, when F迪 Friato and his orchestra play at the Sophomore Hope Friday, trop 9 pan. to LAm, in the Memorial Union building. Regina Travers will supply the vocal tractors, and Frank Flynn drummer, "jives" it with singing novelties. Thirty thousand dollars a finger is the value Frito Rito has set up with the hands which have picked out more than 150 compositions. The maestro's fame as an orchestra leader is matched by his success as a song writer with 85 hit tunes to his credit. "Alone At A Table For Two," published in 1935, was a prize winning song of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. The orchestra is making its first appearance here after a long engagement at Ben Marden's Riviera, New York. The leader's melodies have scored hits at the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chicago; and the Cocanut Grove, Los Angeles, as well as on commercial broadcasts. His latest guest appearance was on the Fitch Bandwagon. Recently on Fitch Bandwagen Ted swings it, but he saves, "Swing is merely the latest pattern of rag-time, the one-step, and the cake-walk." I played them all when each was most popular and it is real amusing to see them come back today with a new dress and new name. Yet the so-called sweet music is good forever; it is never out of date." Conductor at Eighteen Ted learned the "a-b-c's" of the keyboard before he reached his "teens". At the age of eleven he was a composer and conductor, his career as a composer-conductor. Organizing his first band in his home town of Newark, New Jersey, the leader began his climb to national fame. Since then Flo Rito and his orchestra have appeared in many screen productions. A few years ago the maestro started the dance world by substituting three violins for a single viola. While scores of other leaders regard the saxophone as the "hotest" instrument, Ted believes the lyrics are more important to "it" and constantly emphasizes it in arrangements. Crafton Writes Of Bloody Kansas For Jayhawker Alben Crafton, professor of speech and dramatic art, writes of the "Bloody Decade of Kansas" in the Christmas issue of the Jawhaker which will be出放. In his article he tells of the early clashes of the Lawrence settlers and the Missourians. Accompanying the feature are several realistic historical sketches by Andy Darling, fa'41. The activities and projects of the Hil's N.Y.A. students are the subject of a story by Russell Ekbor, c42, illustrated by pictures of students at work. Solo flight tests for students who have completed eight hours of flying instruction in the University Aeronautical training will begin today, according to Bill Adaircraft, instructor and co-owner of the air school for flight instruction in the University Aeronautical training. Seven Students Will 'Take Off' On Solos Today Jess E. Green, civil aeronautical region instructor, checked the University training yesterday and commended the instructors on their management. He rated the air school here all the other schools in his region. Mr. Green postponed checking the two other flight instructors of the Ascrafth company until Friday. If these two pass the tests the school will have five instructors in flying. Students who are scheduled to solo this week are: Kenneth Blim, *c*40; Richard Newlin, *c*40; John Green, *c*41; Randel Matthews, *c*41; William Zoldi, *c*40; Fred Lake, *c*40; and Robert Andrew, *c*41. Solo flights will reveal the ability of the students to take-off, fly and land. Students who take their solo tests this week are among the first 20 to enroll in the air course this fall. Town Hall Speaker Tonight--- Cameramen To Get Newspaper View University camera towers will hear what newspapers want in pictures when Hennard Ladd Smith, assistant professor of journalism, speaks on "News Photography" at a meeting of the K.U. Camera Club in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building tonight at 7:45. A. E. Professor Smith will teach a course in news photography next semester. Pull announcement of the course at www.photoshop.org. Graphic exhibition will be made. Sen. Arthur Capper who speaks at the Unitarian church at 8 o'clock tonight on the Lawrence Town Hall series. Senator Capper will be guest of the University Club at a dinner preceding the meeting. Student Council Passes Barred For Ted Fio Rito - Cause in Contract Forbids Honoring Any But Press Permits at Sophomore Hop According to Littoo Twenty-one Men's Student Council all but kissed goodbye to $2 last night when dance manager Fred Littcoy, 142 told them that it would take more than a student legislative pass to get them by the gates when Ted Fio Rito plays here Friday night. Littoy smiled, spoke a kind word, then dealt the blow that fairly made the Councilmen quake in their seats. Fito Rio, Littoy said, plays for the Music Corporation of America and a specific clause in the Corporation contract states that only bona fide presses will be honored. Councilmen visioned either scratched women or an empty wallet and didn't want to face the consequence of being rebelled rebukes at Littoy. He answered each with a calm "I don't quite follow you." Oakson Wants Consideration John Oakson, c 40, was a ring-leader in the movement to "get more consideration on the question." Oakson moved that the Council appoint each member a sergeant-at-arms for the dance and that they free "just to maintain order." Mr. Oakson, 142, Clinton president, refused to recognize the motion and ruled it out of order. Next Oakson suggested that some method be found to issue "press passes" to all Councilmen. The idea went no further when Littioy said that issuance of press passes problematically occurred." Oakson H heads Committee Though Oakson's first and second attempts to reopen the question failed, his third try won consolation prize. He was made head of a M.S.C. committee to investigate further with the business office to see if he'd be done." Explaining the pass-keepers position, Oakson said: "We made $70 profit from the Freshman Frolic only because we were white about it and didn't use our purses. It seems that we might get some consideration now." Cam勺仑斯 Explains Present standing in the rooming situation was explained to the Council by Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of health service, who said that 700 men were still living in unapproved houses while from 1000 to 1200 were living in registered rooms. Even approved rooms, however, Doctor Catusen said, still use double-deck beds, and double beds, while bathroom facilities are far from the best. "In some houses," he said, "as many as 20 men must use but one bathroom. If they are late to 8:30's they can hardly be blamed." The doctor described a dormitory as the remedy for the situation. "If a dorm we vision an improved diet, better studying conditions, keeping conditions and organized independent internals," he said. A P.S.L. majority turned down an Independent Student Association bill which would allow employees of the association to be paid. The negative answer was justified, League men said, because they as yet could see no specific instance where an IS.A. worker should be paid. Councilmen explained that they didn't want to give blanket permission for a salaried IS.A. job without knowing all the details. Present Second Organ Vespers Severely classical in nature, the second in this year's series of organ veepers was presented by Guy Cress Simpson, member of the School of Fine Arts faculty, Sunday afternoon at 4 a'clock in Hoch auditorium. Playing his first concert after a summer of advanced study at the University of Michigan, Simpson introduced to University audiences Reulke's approach with Psalm: "An angel approached us appropriately 30 persons heard the vperpers." The program opened with "D Minor Dorian Toccata and Fugue" (Bach). This was followed by "Can-tabile" (Dongen). Directs the Play- PETER C. ROBINSON Prof. Allen Craffton, who directed the Dramatic Club production, "Night of January 15th" which opens a four-day run in Fraser theater tonight. Thirty-four Seek Commissions - Applicants Include 14 Coast Artillerymen and 19 Infantrymen Thirty-four senior ROT.C. students are filing applications at headquarters for reserve officer commissions in the United States Army F. A. F. S. division, announced eckerday. Commission applications are due at regimental headquarters before the Christmas holidays in order that they may be checked by department officials before being sent to the War Department in Washington, D.C. for consideration and permanent file. The eligibility list includes 14 cons airtility members and 19 members of the infantry. Appointments for commissions will be announced by the officials together with other officers at the end of the accord semester. Applicants of the coast artillery are: Marvin Allen, c'41; Charles Beer, c'41; Donald Ford, c'41; Sam Forsyth, c'41; Clarence Hammond, c'40; Robert Marietta, c'40; James Mitchell, b'40; William Monroe b'40; Rymond Napier, c'40; Godfrey Ripley, c'40; George Ripley, c'40; Leo Schroeter, c'40; Kenneth Trump, c'40; Thomas Walton, c'42; Philip Wilkoff, c'40. Infant applicants are: Pat Bar- bell, c'4; Donald Rose, b'4; Alvin Grauerholz, b'4; Clavelle Hove, c'4; Daniel Hopkins, b'4; Howard Hostford, b'4; Stewart Jones, c'4; Ben Mandeville, 741; James Morris, c'4; Stanley Farr, c'4; Theodore Raymond, c'4; Clarence Robinson, l'40; Rex Sage, c'4; and Francis Sheridan, c'42. W. A. White's Son Escapes Bombing Helsinki, Dec. 11—(UP)—A Finnish transport plane flying from Stockholm with a number of passengers, including William L. White, son of the Emporia publisher, postponed a landing at Aako, on the southeast coast of Finland, today when Russian planes arrived simultaneously and started to hobble the town. The transport turned back to Sweden. It was picked up by 15 Swedish fighting planes and escorted to Stockholm. Later in the day it took off again from Stockholm for Aabo and landed there safely. The Russian bombers dropped only one bomb on Aabo. Westbrook Will Review Wolfe's Work Tomorrow Thomas Wolfe's book, "Of Time and the River," will be reviewed by Perry Westbrook, assistant instructor of the department of English in one of the year's series of English lectures tomorrow. Wolfe is also author of "The Story of a Novel," "Look Homeward Ang- el," and "The Web and The Rock." Although these lectures are especially designed for English students, anyone may attend Tomorrows lecture be at 3:30 in room 205. Fraser hall, Band Makes Formal Debut In Fall Conceri - Russell L. Wiley Directs 112-Piece Organization Before Attentive Audience In Hoch Auditorium Bv Russell Barrett, c'42 The University concert band made its formal bow to the University last right as Russell L. Wiley directed the 112-piece organization in its annual fall concert in Hoch auditorium. Playing before an attentive audience, the band opened with "Bravada," a Spanish melody time by Frederic Curzon. Next came the introduction of a new composition for symphonic bands, Ernest C. Williams" "Symphony in C Minor." The largetone-allegro and largetto movements of the recently-published symphony were played. Following this, Marshall Butler, fa 42, offered a sparkling piano solo presentation of "Reparate" (Bennet). Two return calls to the stage marked the players' efforts as out- come of the program. The play of tones became the musical key as the band next presented its second Bennett compo- lation, which inspired the Sistras, a Modern Tone Picture." The second solist of the evening took the spotlight as Dean Brooks, c40, played Sullivan's difficult arin, "The Lost Chord." The saxophone quintet followed this with the playing of a group of "Excerpts from the Life of Paul Sullivan," fa 41, Joe McAnarney, ed'd; Bul Batzer, jj; James Berkson, fa 42; and Clyde Combined efforts in playing a group of familiar compositions, especially arranged for the quintet by McAnarrey. Crabb Plays "Inflamatus" Eugene Crabb, fa'11, took the next solo role as he played on the cornet "inflamatus" taken from Rossini's opera "Stabat Mater." This was followed by a performance of Harry Afloff's paraphrase of the well-known "The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise," a concert marche. The cleverly presented "Mosquito's Parade" (Whitney-Yoder) brought a fabricated mosquito buzzing onto the stage, with a musician taking a video and the audience getting a good laugh. "Orward Kansas," written last year by Jack Laffer, "93 for the comedy-history production, 'Cum Laude.'" come next, with an arrangement by Bill Ward, fa 40, and drummer in the band, being used In "Memories of Stephen Foster" arranged by Lucien Callist, Dean Brooks, trombonist, and Eugene Crabb, cornetist, again took the spot to present solo parts of "Old Black Joe," "Oh Sunanna," and "Mussan'in in the Cold, Cold Grape," in the group's guitarist's presentation of the concluding section of the arrangement, "My Old Kentucky Home." Three-quarter time replaced the suail march tempo as Director Wiley ed the band in a smoothly-played group of waltzes from Strauss's "De biedermann." A song from the Warner's men, "The Walkykt," followed by a citrus of the "Crimson and the blue" concluded the concert. Xmas Seal Drive Into Last Week The tuberculosis Christmas seal drive moved into its last week with a steady increase in contributions. All social fraternities and Watkins, Miller, and Corin halles have bought $5 bonds according to Marion Horne, c'40, and Ruy Buzell, b'41, chairman of the drive. No check has been made on sororites yet. Ninety-five percent of the money obtained in the drive is used to fight tuberculosis in Kansas through a vaccination, education, prevention, and treatment. Seals will be on sale in the lounge of the Memorial Union building until the drive closes Friday night. Mrs. Lawson Is Recovering Mrs. Paul B. Lawson was reported today to be "getting along exceptionally well" at her home after a serious illness. Mrs. Lawson was taken to the Lawrence Memorial hospital, Nov. 9. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1839 Kansan Siege Lifts The recent attack of mus musculus musculus upon the sancity of academic halls happily has been terminated after a severe battle in which the invaders had the inside track all the way. The defense, literally was up against the wall. The retreat of the attacks was slow. It had been slow because the glorious, having more the appearance of a strifegle move than a forced one. The defense can only sigh in relief that at last the mice have none. For a time it was feared that Mount Oread was to suffer the long drowned out warfare to which Kern county, Calif., was subjected in 1827. In November and December of that year members of the family Muridac took the war path. They became a monarch on the highways and their number was estimated at $2,280 acre. Withdrawals of their attacks in the Kern area usually indicated the recruiting of new troops. In a scientific report of the California invasion, R. Raymond Hall gave a graphic description of the mite infestation. "In buildings that are mouse-proof, persons commonly have their sleep interrupted by the numbers of mice that run about over the bedding. On arising in the morning, mice are not infrequently found in one's clothing and shoes. During the day, even when going on primary tasks, mice on occasion enter one's clothing." Studies of the Kern县 mice disclosed the important fact that they were not inter-individually intolerant, indicating that they were not repellent to one another as is the case among individuals of certain species among some other mammals and birds. They not only "lived and let live" but liked each other. Migration from homes with consequent loss of property was a reason for the import as the reason for the mice's uneducated tolerance. The mice which so recently tapped for admittance upon the ports of Mount Oren and stealthily crept within were not mutually repellent to each other either. Numbers may be conceded to the California mouse but finer qualities of amity and good will shown by the Oren troops to their fellow mus musculus musculus will not be found. Indeed the mice which sought the crumbs of higher learning which fall from the desks of students at the Athens of the Middle West carried tolerance almost too far. They were friendly not to say intimate with Home Sapiens on whose desk they jumped in happy accord. While their ideas for editors们 were not always usable, they contributed much in stimulating companionship to what would otherwise have been a lonesome task. Although officially they were beheading the place, they could easily be induced to effect a truce for the purists' sake. But their views were similar groups. While somewhat disconcerting as conversationalists, they were never dull for a single moment. Of course they cried in challenging man's supremacy by their attempt to confine the University's property and its intangible assets known as professional lecture notes. But it is a human reality to aim too high. That they found they could not force a University professor permanently to evacuate his office no doubt contributed to their decision to withdraw and to seek their release. And that they could have a dangerous thing—for mice. Sampling a professor's lecture notes probably drove the lesson home. And so they left. --every industry and every man, woman, and child move inward a hundred or a thousand miles for safety. If attack is imminent, perhaps New York City should be moved to Kansas where "vital" heiresses, foreign expatriates with titles, Midison Square Garden, night clubs, and all other aid and important industries would be safeguarded. Kansas might profit from such a wholesale transplant, and New York City's industries would unquestionably gain from contact with the prairie state. Inland Move Is Nonsense A common-sense statement from military authorities upon the vulnerability or invincibility of the coasts of this country is in order right now before the raiding tide of midwestern sentiment towards moving the no-called U.S. into Mexico. In a time of international peace the suggestion for a change of industrial locale might be received with credence if made by the War and Navy departments, which function for the purpose of maintaining national defense. The present boom does not have that justification and moreover is made at a dangerous time. Either it is indicative of misguided civic sentiment or misdirected state pride. Even if since war and wholly innocent of commercialistic faint, it is brought up at the wrong time. It is the wrong time because its ultimate effect whether it succeeds or fails to add fuel to the "if we go to war" attitude. That it masks under the guise of public safety further discredits the plan. It is essentially important at this time to warn against any tendencies toward conditioning the public mind toward war. A string of fortifications, military training camps, and schools for officers extend along the Atlantic coast where the major share of the "war" industries are located. The Pacific coast has fortifications, one purpose of which, is to defend "vital" industries there. Both coasts have naval fleets and patrols. Over the Atlantic is more than two thousand miles and the Pacific more than three thousand miles in width. It is absolutely senseless to point to the vulnerability of our coasts under present conditions. If it is not senseless, the exponents of the proposed move inland should apply further logic and propose that Comment --by FAST RAILWAY EXPRESS! UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Tuesday, Dec. 12, 1939 No. 60 Notice due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 10 a.m. the next day. CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE LECTURE. Mr. Perry D. Westbrook will review "The Webb and the Rock" by Thomas Wolf, Wednesday Dec. 13, at 3:30 in room 265 Praser. Although this lecture is primarily for treenmen, upper classmen and graduates are correlated with W. S. Johnson, Chairman of Department of English. EL ATENOE. The Spanish Club Christmas party will be on Wednesday, Dec. 13, at 7:30, at Professor Shoemaker's, 1728 India. Please sign in the office if you wish. Members must be paid before signing—Louise Bush, president. FRENCH CLUB: La remiom de Noel du Cirele Francais aura aujour hiunch, a quatre heures et demie dans la salle 308 Fraser Hall. Tous ceux qui parent francais sont invites—Rosemary Jones. DELTA PHI SIGMA: There will be a meeting this evening at 7 at the Congregational church; pledging service, followed by regular meeting. Please be on time—Alice Ann Jones, president. GERMAN CHRISTMAS PARTY: The German Christmas party will be held in the little theatre of Green Hall Wednesday at 8:15—John Eboke, president. KU. SYMPHONY. The regular rehearsal will be Union ballroom at the usual time - Kara Kurzweil. NEWMAN CLUB. The Newman Club will hold a regular meeting in the St John's parish hall- C. Cillett or A. C. PHI CHI DELTA: Phi Chi Delta Christmas meeting will be held at Westminster Hall at 5:30. Marjorie Hetzel and Maria Walker will in charge of the music. For more information, visit the Earther Timer. Emily Jane Yount program chairmen. PI ALPHA: Pj Alpha will meet at $30 tomorrow at PI ALPHA; Pj Alpha will attend services will be held. Charlie Parker, via email. QUACK CLUB. There will be Quack Club practice at 4:30 today and at 5:15 Wednesday. Please be at one of the following times: SNOW HALL CLLS. The clubs of Snow Hall are having their annual Christmas party in the Kansas City area, building tough tonight from 6:30 to 10:00. All members and guests are admitted. Admission 35 cents. -Bertha Mendenhall, treasurer. SOCIOLYGY CLUB. Sociology Club will meet at 420 today in the Old English room. Use Media Center on Zoom to watch *The Social City* will speak on "Opportunities and Training for Social Work." The talk will be followed by a presentation. TAU GISA Alice Sherbon Bauman and her group dance with Tau Gisas tonight at 7:30. Please beware of the stairs. W. S.G.A. TEA: There will be a tea for all University women in the women's lounge of Frank Strong hall from 3 to 5 tomorrow afternoon. Pi Beta Phi sorority will be hostess—Ethylene Burns. Y. W.C.A. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR: The Bazar will be at 12 noon on Friday. The Union Building hangens from $30 to $50. On the last day it will continue until $80 in the evening. Units are—come to see the exhibit—Alice Ann Jones, chairman YM-YW.-Theo will be a joint Christmas assembly of the YM.C.A. and YW.C.A. on Thursday, in Fraser Theatre at 430 p.m. Dr. Perry will be the principal speaker, members are to attend -- all who wish to join the charity for Christmas! UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Law School MEMBER KANSAS 1000 PRESS ASSOCIATION Subscriptions in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per smatter. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class on Friday, June 4, 2018, at Lawrence office at Lawrence, under the Act of March 3, 1879. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Reprintsman N. Y. CINEMAS & LOUGhesis SAN FRANCISCO CHICORI & LOS ALAMOS SAN FRANCISCO On the Shin--by FAST RAILWAY EXPRESS! (Continued from page one) used the chart to predict Paul Christians' place on Grigorian line and am not sure he didn't know how else he could have so accurately unless he had read Collier's before he claimed the prediction. (Continued from page one) More pin troubles—Phi Delt “Chuck” McGee returned last week sans pin. His brothers don't know who has it and—worse yet—neither does “Chuck.” The pinless fellow evidently doesn't want to know for he vetoed his mother's suggestion to advertise for it. Law students handling the sad case of Willeford Montgomery omitted some the "jucier" testimony because of instructions from Above, Reason; publicity attending the case was considered to be bad for the University. Naturally we in school know the evidence in the case was pure fiction and that nothing like it has ever happened here but the people over the state don't know what we do. Happy personal! Sigma Chi brothers of Van Hertt曼 celebrated the informal announcement of his engagement to Helen Markwell by sending gum drops to the Theta house and passing cigarettes around the home place. Flibbersteged at the candy store, she said, "Why, I was so surprised I could have dropped my teeth if I had any—the dropping kind, I mean." Florida department—Theta Marilyn McBride's flagon of happiness was brimming over yesterday. Flince Bud Farley has returned on a visit from California and has decorated Marilyn's bosom with enough jewelry to keep a French general in celestial glory. Her happiness is well founded for seldom is found a gift beaver so handsome as Farley. WANT ADS CALL Bob Ramsay to fire your fur- nace during the Xmas vacation. Phone 1002 or 177. -60 FOR SALE Two tuxedo, one size 37, 19, pp; one size 32-40, $15.00, one size 40 full dress coat, $8.00. Call Postma at 2738W, after 7 p.m. LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies' gold Egin gilt watch, between 11th and 123rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 28143 or into 1117 Vermont. -62 FOR RENT: To adults, good modern 5-room bungalow, sleeping porch, built-ins, garage. 1130 Rhode Island phone 23581 - 60 $ 5 On Any Old Topcoat or Overcoat! WE WANT APPROXIMATELY Bring in any overcoat—we don't care what kind or what shape it is in. We are making this allowance on a new Obercoat. The coat you trade in will be given to the Social Service. They in turn, will give it to some needy person in Lawrence. LET'S MAKE THIS A MORE CHEERFUL CHRISTMAS Allowance THIS OFFER INCLUDES EVERY TOPCOAT AND OBERCOAT IN OUR STORE EXCEPTING ANGOPACA COATS. OBER'S SUIT SALE NOW IN PROGRESS WE WANT APPROXIMATELY 50 OVERCOATS BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS SEALS NOW THE GIFT STORE FOR MEN THE CITY COAT Ober's HEART TO LOVE OUTSIDE Modern Santa delivers the choicest Christmas Gifts... Weaver's Modern Santa delivers the choicest Christmas Gifts ... BAQMO Gloves BAGMO Gloves GOING HOME? SEND THAT LUGGAGE 图 Just phone the Railway Express agent when your trunk or bags are packed and off they will speed, direct to your home, in all cities and principal towns. You PETER GRANT can send "collect" too, same as your laundry goes. Use this complete, low-cost service both coming and going, and enjoy your train trip full of the proper Holiday spirit. When you phone, by the way, be sure to tell our agent what to call. 20 E. 9th Phone 120 Lawrence, Kan. RAILWAY EXPRESS Kan. NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE BAYSIDE COUNTY AGENCY KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 Latest in Hair Trims and Styles Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courant Card For Good Times and Good Things To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. 1 Sales, rentals, cleaning and Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. WOLFSON'S WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Gustafson Optometrist 911 Mass. SKATES - SLEDS Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Malin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread $12.50 ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-scaling exposure meter. Certified f4.5 tripod Anastigmat lens 1/25 to 1/200 second shutter speed, min. movie film in standard cordida. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing ?lim—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 Phone K.U. 66 for a Kansan Ad-taker Take a tip from a gent who's been around and take her to the I will be happy to help you with any questions or information you may have. Advance .. $2.00 Gate ... $2.25 Date or Stag SOPH HOP with America's greatest composer-conductor TED FIO-RITO and his orchestra MEMORIAL UNION BALLROOM FROM 9:00 TO 1:00 11 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THRE Here on the - Hill- The touch of spring that has been sweeping across the Hill is, to say the least, incompatible with the Christmas decorations on Massachusetts streets and outside of many of the organized houses. But despite unseasonable weather, holl- day shopping goes on and on, gift lists daily increase in size, while pocketsbooks flatten correspondingly. To enable students to claim vacations well-earned University professors are indulging in mid-mid-mesister quizzes, so that with tests, shopping problems, the Sophomore Hop, and homegoing to think about, the average adult with weaknesses needs to get the often recommended "hour of contemplation" into the daily schedule. Parties for Clubs Parties for Clubs Forgetting the formalities of "new and old business," departmental p.m. in the theater of Green hall. Speaking Spanish throughout the evening, members of El Ateneo will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday evenings for a home visit to the Annual Christmas party. At 4:30 today the Cercle Francais, the University French Club, will have a Christmas program of French poems and carols in room 306 of Fraser hall. At 6:30 p.m. the science clubs of Snow Hall will omit discussions of bugs, flora, and fauna to enter holiday festivities with a party in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. clubs on the Campus are now breaking into the social spotlight with Christmas meetings and parties. Peggy Schraeder, Leavenworth; Virginia Carmosm, Newton; Jean Shelton, Leavenworth. --c'40; Bentrice Witt, c'42, Lois Howse, c'43; Ritch Rice, c'41; Jerry Bubler, c'43; Suzanne Elmore, c' Jane Vesthe, f'43; Jo Ann Perry, Lawrence, and Mrs. McDonald, Topeka. A play by members of the department of German will highlight its Christmas party tomorrow at 8 Actives were completely out of the picture Saturday night when the pledges of Sigma Nu gave their annual Faddle party at the chapter house from 9 to 12. Guests participating in weekend activities on the Campus were the following nine lasses at the Chi O. onga house Saturday and Sunday: Ain Cain, Kansas City, Mo.; Nancy Todd, Leavenson Bay; Eleanor O'Reilly, Annie Fisher, Fort Scott; Pauline Auburn, Atchison; Pauline Rickenbough, Lyons; The following were guests: Betty Jeanne Hamie, c£4; Mariou Miller, c£4; Norma Tibbetts, c£4; Cally Fauburn, c£4; Ann Jones, c£4; Mar- Gina Gibbons, c£4; Glenn Chichele, c£4; Martina Oldham, c£4; Ann Hoffman, c£4; Jerry Wells, e'43; Cathleen Beyer Women's Club Entertains Highlighted by the singing of Christmas carols, impromptu chariades, and special dances, members of the University Women's Club entertained Thursday night in the building. Special guests were the husbands of club members and unmarried men on the faculty staff. Mistress of ceremonies for the evening was Helen Iboda Hoopes, assistant professor of English. The program was composed of carols directed by Mrs. Waldearm Gelich and led by women from Corbin hall; and dances arranged by Mrs. Henry Weyer and Jane Byrne. Mrs. E. H. Hollandis and Mrs. A. T. Walker were in charge of refreshments and Mrs., and Mrs. Paul Haney arranged for decorations, assisted by Mrs. E. L. Bayles, Mrs. R. H. Wheeler, and Mrs. Lawrence Woodruff, Mrs. C. F. Nelson directed the charades. (Additional Society on Page 4) STUDENTS GET READY for Winter Is Your Car Ready For Those Cold Days? DON'T WAIT for the Icy Snow or the Biting Blizzards . . . Get Ready for the Holidays NOW. the following Dealers of Lawrence have agreed to service your car for winter driving at REDUCED PRICES. ... Lawrence Automobile Dealers Are Economical and Dependable in Any Form of Service for for Your Car. DON'T wait until it's too late . . . ... Have it done NOW! PATRONIZE THESE DEALERS Are YOU ready for Winter Driving? Motor Tune-Up Body Rattles Lubrication Brakes Battery and Ignition DON'T WAIT! Have it done now . . . Certified Buick Parts and Service Our Service Department Is Economical and Dependable . . . Every Job Is Guaranteed. LAWRENCE Brick LAWRENCE Buick COMPANY "See Jimmie Moore for the Best" --- We desire to be recognized as the most reliable automobile dealer in Lawrence and our whole business policy is based on this desire. The HURD MOTOR Co. (Building a reputation for goodwill used cars) Phone 254 622-24 Mass. Winterize with Winter ANTI-FREEZE — HEATERS — DEFROSTERS Motor Tune-Up with "Sun" Analyzer CHEVROLET Trade your old car for a better used car--- Acres to choose from. Drive the New 1940 Chevrolet WINTER CHEVROLET Co. Just Changing Motor Oil To A Winter Grade IS NOT ENOUGH! We Offer You a Complete Seasonal Conditioning Service: 1. Winter-grade CITIES SERVICE or KOOL-MOTOR Motor Oil. 2. Complete chassis lubrication. 4. The proper quantity of Kold pruf anti-freeze. 3. Fresh transmission and differential lubricants. 5. A complete SAFETY CHECK on your car. MOTOR IN Fritz Co. Offers You These Distinctive Services--- 1. Complete winter servicing of your car. 2. Skelly Gas—(Tailor-made for Kansas). 3. Free Scooter service. Don't Let This Mild Weather Keep You From Preparing Your Car Now! ONE-STOP STATION MOTOR IN BE PREPARED: See Us for -- Storage -- Get Our Special University Rate Prestone -- All Types of Anti-Freeze Mech. & Wreck. Service Smashed Fenders a Specialty Taxi - - Phone 12 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. HUDSON SALES & SERVICE 920-22 Mass. St. PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1938 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SIMONIZING... SPORTS By JAY SIMON Kansas will be the only team in the Big Six this year that doesn't have at least one man towering at 6 foot 6. . . However, red-hot Iowa State will put the shortest team on the floor most of the time this winter. . . In their starting lineup the Cahokia have only one man over the 50-yard line, junior center, is 6 foot 3. . . In the first two games Cap. Dick Harp of the Jayhawks has played 85 minutes, which is somewhat like a pitcher striking out four men in one innning. . . You need a technicality to help you. . . In Harp's case it was 5 minutes of overtime play at home, but he didn't turn the trick. . . Bruce Vorm, the boy with the deft left hand, has played forward, center, and guard in both of Kansas' tilts. Oklahoma and Missouri, the only members of the Big Six that haven't opened fire in the current race, make their debuts Saturday night. . . . The Sooners will play hosts to Southern Methodist, while the Tigers scuffle with St. Louis U. in Brewer fieldhouse. S.M.U. will come on to Lawrence for Monday and Tuesday night tilts with the Jayhawkers in Hoech auditorium. Paragraph from the sports page of the Winfield Daily Courier: "Glass eyes are not modern inventions. They were used by the Romans, and before them, the Egyptians." So what? Chances for an indoor track meet in Kansas City this winter look bright. The Big Six moguls voted to hold their annual indoor affair in K.C.'s mammoth Municipal auditorium, probably in March, if a chance exists. City sportmen have been trying for some time to bring a big meet there . . . Dr. F. C. Allen is still in the dark as to whether he 610 Men Played Touch Football In Past Season Matches in team and individual intramural play in the minor sports for the fall season are nearing completion. Basketball season is getting well under way with 19 games already played. Dr. Ed Elibel, hend of the intramural football, made a statement yesterday that 610 men had taken part in 120 contests in intramural football and participated throughout the entire football schedule. Phi Delta Pi will oppose Betta Theta Pi in the tennis finals. Phi Delt队 won from Phi Kappa Pa 2 to 1, in match play Sunday. The Phi Pal's won the singles, but lost both doubles matches. Beta Theta Pi also made the finals of the team horseshoe tournament. The Galloping Dominice will be their opponents. In the handball ailing championship Earl Radford, Beta, will meet the winner of the Clifford Bank Tour and Foardch (G Bonneco) match. Malcolm Black, Delta Tau Delta won the fall title in tickets defeating Radford, Beta, in straight sets, 6-3, 8-6. WOMEN'S INTRAMURALS Jean Hinshaw, c'41 The I.W.W.'s play their opening basketball game with the T.N.T.'s tonight at 9 p.m. and Gamma Phi Hall at 10 a.m. by Omni Chira Opta. At the same time, The basketball games are still in the first rounds. Games leading to the finals will not begin until after Christmas vacation. All initial ping-pong sets and aerial darts games were turned in Saturday. Miss Hoover announced today that the second rounds are to be played by Dec. 16. Pi Beta Phi leads the intramural field at the end of the first season of activities with its nearest opponents trailing by 104-1.2 point With the second season now well into the first round of games and other seasons to come, nothing less than a spiritual seance could predict who will polish the championship intrumural cup next year. Organizations and points as they now stand are; Pi Beta Phi 369 Kappa Kappa Gamma 264½ Chi Omega 190½ Corbin Hall 176 LW. W 158 Alpha Chi Omega 165 T.N.T. 155 Alpha Delta Pi 154 Lambda Alpha 145½ Kappa Alpha Theta 154 Sigma Kappa 113 Miller Helli 111 Gamma Pi Beta 169 Alpha Omicron Pi 70 CC 66 Here on the Hill Watkins hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. (Continued from page three) The following were guests at the Fhi Kappa Pai house for dinner Sunday: Janet Robher, c'43; Martyn Alice Horner, c'42; Mary Louise Mintz, fa 33; Jane Floord, Hayes McIntyre, fa 41; Blaine Grimes Topken. Tony Bruck, Ft Leavenworth, was a weekend guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. To celebrate the founding of Alpha Omicron Pi at Barnard College in New York City, members of the local chapter held their Founders' Day banquet at 2 p.m. Saturday at the chaucer house. In addition to the active members the following alumnus attended the banquet: Mrs. Francis Brown, Kansas City, Mt.; Dorothy Dowell, Kansas City, Mt.; Mrs. W, Foreman, Kansas City; Ruth Elledge, Mrs. Washington Brown; Mrs. Charles Stone; Mrs. Julian Johnson; Mrs. Robert Koch; Mrs. Turner; Mrs. James Miller, Mrs. Walden Fayrean, Mrs. Ed Hu Katherine Green, c'43; and Jane Knusion, fl41, were dinner guests at the Delta Tau Delta house Sunday. Taking advantage of the usual Sunday quiet, members of District III of the I.S.A. held a skating party from 30 to 5 o'clock in the Roller-dresser. brig, all of the Kansas City, Mo; Mrs. Claude Hueyck and Mrs. L. V. Hill of Kansas City; and Mrs. Junious Underwood of Lawrence. Sarah Margret Glenmey, Lawrence; June Milne, Kansas City; Vlae Mca Allen, Kansas City; Bernice Zuer- cer, c41; Geneva Martin, Concordia; Mr. and Mrs. C, Hoover, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. G, Smith. James J., Kansas City, Kansas City, Mo.; Stanley Cummings Kansas City, Mo. The guest list for the Alpha Kappa Pai annual Christmas party held Saturday evening in the chapter house included: Evelyn Sabol, c41; Helen Pierce, c40; Faulline Snyder, c42; Betty Burger, ed42; Genevieve Harman, c42; Doris Nelson, fa40; McYair McLeod, b41. Mary Jane Petkins, c48; Marcia Fryer, c41; Bertha Scott, b30; Martha Ann Hall, c43; Ruth Weidemier, b41; Madge Jones, c4; c41; Margret Murray, c42; Barbara Daniels, c41; Rosalys McCrevey, c44; Ruth Garnett, b41; Maxine Patterson, c40; Marion Hodges, Lawrence; June Koenig, Kansas City; Maxine Atchison, Kansas City. DE IT ENACED BY THE WOMEN'S UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS (the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS) Section 1. To complete the number of activities of women students of the Uni- versity of Kansas, a point system to be administered by the system manager, a voting member of the student body and a committee of three girls from the student body at large appointed by the W.W.G.A. Ex- Section 2. The points shall be allotted as follows: --together with con- vient Click On key ring—in yellow gold finish. --together with con- vient Click On key ring—in yellow gold finish. W.A.A.-President 15, vice-president 15, secretary 15, treasurer 15, leadership 20, sports team 20, membership 5, W.C.A.-President 16, vice-president 5 W.S.C.A. Council President 20, view- ment of 30, secretary 20, collage 20, College 20, First Aid 20, sensitive 20, joint system manager 20, joint system manager 20, sensitive 20, class officer 20, repre- senta Our many years of experience means that we know what's right for a man's Christmas. We'll Gladly Help You With Your Gift Problems A FEW SUGGESTIONS Frequent daily schedule let you go and come as you like. One-day trip-trip service on many short trips. Our local Union Pacific bus offers low fares and convenient schedule. Shirts - - - - - 98c to $1.95 Lined Gloves - - - 79c to $1.39 Dress Gloves -- - 98c to $2.95 Ties - - - - - 29c to $1.00 Scarfs - - - - - 49c to $1.95 Hosiery - - - - 19c to 49c Hats - - - - - $1.98 to $3.85 Wool Robes - - - - - $5.95 Silk Robes - - - - - $3.95 UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Phone 707 There's greater comfort than ever aboard those mode- nial luxury cruises to thank year-round air condition- ment, warm and cool, warm and cozy, in big, red, recou- ned seats. No winterdriving headaches or traffic wortl LUXURY RIDER 811 Massachusetts St. DOLLAR-SAR Low one-way and round-trip fares are a boon to holl- day budgeters. It dazzles dollars to spend for budget holidays and valid June 1-Planning shopping tour—and in holiday days—this low-cost, luxury way The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" DOLLAR-SAVING FARES! UNION PACIFIC STAGES BEL AIR TRAVELLER NEW CONVENIENCE America's favorite keychain ..carrying your own initial, HECK THESE 3 ADVANTAGES before you plan HOLIDAY TRIPS DICKINSON Mat. 25c, Nire 35c Shows 2-30, 7-9 BY SWANK HOLLYWOOD $ $ 5 NOW! ALL WEEK MISS ROBSON LUCILLE BALL DENNIS O'KEEF EDWARD EVENETT NORTON ROSCOE KARNS MORGAN OLSEN Walter G. Oldfield Productions Company 750 W. 46th St. N.W., BOSTON, MA 02118 KAY KYSER ADOLPHE MENJOU THATS RIGHT YOU'RE WRONG NOW! WEDNESDAY Tyrone Power Linda Dornell "Daytime Wife" GRANADA Shows 2:30-7-9 10c-25c "Information Please" (Based on the Radio Program) Color Cartoon - News NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY "Meet Dr. Christian" JEAN HERSHOLT THURSDAY "Espionage Agent" JOEL McCREA S PATEE FATEE All Shows 15e Any Time ENDS TONIGHT MICKEY ROOSEYN "The Hardys Ride High" —2nd Feature — RONALD REAGAN "Smashing the Money Ring" WEDNESDAY 3 DAYS "Topper Tokos a Trip" Connie Bennett Roland Young Andrew M. McGraw "Private Detective" 30, secretary 30, treasurer 20, cabinet member 20. the Wilmington City—President 20, sen- ate president 19, treasurer 18, com- munity chairman 17, Orphaned House—Society president 40, vice president 10, secretary 10, treasurer, bank president 9, social chairman 10, house president 10. Independent Student Association—Executive council 10, school chairman 15, Statewide Student Activity Commission—Chairman 15, head of county club 5, caretaker Corbin, Miller, and Watkins--Corbin president and Watchman 30, vice president and Watchman 30, vice president and Watchman 10, social chairman 10, executive card member 10. W.S.G.A. committee on points 5. Music Organizations—President Glee Club business management chief office officer member elephants 10. Modern Choir 5. Band 5. GOTHIC KEY CHAIN Details 5. Freshman counsellors 5. TODAY'S Gift Suggestions Mufflers — $1 up The inexpensive gift that combines practicability with sentiment. Robes — $5.95 up Wools, Silks, Gabardines, in colors and styles that please boy friend and Dad. The Palace 843 Mass. 1930 STANLEY BROTHERS What am I bid? AUCTION off your die hard Arrows and get a load of new ones. Will admit Arrow shirts last too long . . . but after 78 years of experience making shirts and collars, what can you expect? We're in the brove so to speak, and turn out a beauty at every tick of the clock. Each one comes up gleaming with that limitable Arrow collar, anchored buttons. Mitoga fit, beautiful patterns, sturdy waxy fabric, Sanfordized shrinkage (less than 1%), the price to your gentlemen is only $22 . . . some higher . . . none less. See your dealer today — he's got the new ones in! COLLARS . . TIES . . HANDKERCHIEFS . . UNDERWEAR Tau Sigma, Jay Janes, Quack—President 20, other officers 10, member 5. Rifle Club—Cunan 15, marr. **Include:** Dramantis Club, Delta Phi **Inclined:** Theta Phi **Mort Hearth Board, Mu Phi Epsilon, Pel Chi, Pi Mu Epsilon, Quill Chi, Rhamnadiun, Theta Sigma Phi, Beta Pi, Phi Kappa not in 20, öber dickes 10. member 6. Hite Club - Captain 15, manager 20. manager 25. ARROW SHIRTS Publications—Jayhawk staff 10. Stour Publications—Jayhawk staff 10. board 5, Kaman staff 5, Kaman editor 10. Honorary Patterson and Departmental Chief-President 20, office item 19, memorial card 20. Section 3. When a girl exclaims the number of points as listed below, she will be required to resign from some activity of her own choosing; o require more 40 points,(resembls 30 points) Section. 4. Monthly report (from each organization shall be made to be Point of Contact) in a filling cabinet. Ebbility for active members. A GIFT THAT LASTS 100 2. Plays on D.C. 1. Plays on A.C. 3. Plays on it's own power wherever you take it. (no plug-in) "Miracle Tone Chamber" Choice of colors. 6-tube Superwhet- redyne. Large percussion magnet dynamic speaker. "Inner-Capitor" with a soft horn and other advance facteurs. $24.95 HANNA'S at Phone 303 Biles shall remain as heretofore ordered by the Commission on limitations. This Bill. This Bill shall be amended and effect from and after its publication in the United States 904 Mass. VELMA WILSON. VELMA WILSON. President, W.S.G.A. Council. VILLA, Washington W.S.G.A. Council. WINNIE JAMESON. Secretary W.B.G.A. Council. Approved. DEANE W.MALOTT. DEANE W. MALOTT Chancellor of the University. REMINGTON RAND ELECTRIC CLOSE-SHAVER AC or DC "Gets under your chin!" GIVE "HIM" He will love you forever-- for it gives you the smooth face you love to touch. The New Razors The New Prices Rend - - - $7.50 Speedok - $10.00 Remington $14.75 A Gift that is good 365 days in the year Glad to show you CAPUS GOOD CLOTHES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SANTA (old style) HALF-PRICE Note these: - Compacts, Pan and Pencil Sots, Shavors, Travel Kits, Perfume in Lovely Bottles. Do Come In. GIFT FOUNTAIN PENS BY SHEAFFER & BY PARKER (old style) UNUSUAL GIFTS - GLD SPICE: Old Fashioned Shaving Mug, Lotion in pottery bottle, cake mix, glove, washcloth, wooden scoop, etc. * compacts, and Pencil Safe, Travel Kits, Porta-Mug, THE SCALE OF METALS RANKIN'S Massachusetts at Eleventh THE STUDENT'S OWN DRUG STORE—CONVENIENT TO THE HILL THE CARD A MORE YOU ADVENT OF THE CUSTUMBER "Could you fix me up with a stack of Arrow Ties?" Girls - No doubt about it, your boy friend will appreciate getting Arrow Shirts and Nickeerwear and because he buys them at the store, you can buy them on the gift box. We also make our assortment of Christmas Girls - We have the ideal gifts for your boy friend, dad, uncle and grandpa. Come in and see our assortment of Christmas gifts—Wee come to us! We give a gift to our grandad, uncle and brother. All of the gifts in gift boxes. Olet's HISRATO FOOT OUT FLIFFERS --- TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1939 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SIMONIZING SPORTS By JAY SIMON ----team will get to compete in the Washburn cage journey during the holidays. . . . Conference rules say any person who goes on a court or on that of the opponent Kansas will be the only team in the Big Six this year that doesn't have at least one man towering on foot 6. 2. However, red-hot Iowa State will put the shortest team on the floor most of the time this winter. . In their starting lineup the Cyclones have only one man over the fence at center court junior center, is 6 foot 3. . In the first two games Cap. Dick Harp of the Jayhawks has played 85 minutes, which is somewhat like a pitcher striking out four men in one innning. . You need a technicality to help you. . In Harp's case it was 5 minutes of overtime play at Warrenburg that allowed him to boyfriend with the devet left hand, has played forward, center, and guard in both of Kansas' tilts. 1939 Oklahoma and Missouri, the only members of the Big Six that haven't opened fire in the current eagle race, make their debuts Saturday night. . . The Sooners will play hosts to Southern Methodist, while the Tigers scuffle with St. Louis U. in Brewer fieldhouse. . S.M.U. will come on to Lawrence for Monday and Tuesday night tilts with the Jayhawkers in Hoch auditorium. Paragraph from the sports page of the Winfield Daily Courier; "Glass eyes are not modern inventions. They were used by the Romans, and before them, the Egyptians." So what? Chances for an indoor track meet in Kansas City this winter look bright. The Big Six moguls would hold to their annual indoor affair in K.C.'s mammon Municipal auditorium, probably in March, if a board track is installed. . . Kansas City sportsmen have been trying for some time to bring a big meet there . . . De F. C. Allen still in Kansas City. . . Dr. F. C. Allen is still in the dark as to whether his 610 Men Played Touch Football In Past Season Matches in team and individual intramural play in the minor sports for the fall season are nearing completion. Basketball season is getting well under wry with 19 games already played. Phi Delta Theta will oppose Betta Theta Pi in the tennis finals. Phi Delt队 won from Phi Kappa Pi. 2 to 1, in match play Sunday. The Phi Pal's won the singles, but lost both doubles matches. Dr. Ed Elbel, head of the intramural office, made a statement yesterday that 61 men had taken part in 120 contests in intramural foot competitions, and that 44 squads participated throughout the entire football schedule. Beta Theta Pi also made the finals of the team horseshoe tournament. The Galloping Dominice will be their opponents. In the handball singles championship Earl Earl Redd, Betta, will meet the winner of the Clifford Banka tournament Packard (G. Domino) match. Malealin Black, Delta Tau Deltu, won the fall title in tennis singles defeating Radford, Beta, in straight vets, 6-3, 8-6. WOMEN'S INTRAMURALS Jean Hinshaw, c'41 The I.W.W.'s play their opening sackball game with the T.N.T., onight at 9 p.m., and Gamma Phi Brahma College in Mabhoja Qhena, at the same time. The basketball games are still in the first rounds. Games leading to the finals will not begin until after Christmas vacation. All initial ping-pong sets and aerial darts games were turned in Saturday. Misi Hoover announced today that the second rounds are to be played by Dec.16. Pi Beta Phi leads the intramural at the end of the first season of activities with its nearest opponents trailing by 104-1.2 points. With the second season now well into the first round of games and other seasons to come, nothing less than a spiritual seance could predict who will polish the championship intrumural cup next year. Organizations and points as they now stand are: Pi Betha Phi 369 Kappa Kappa Gamma 304½ Chi Omega 184 Cerberus Hall 194 I.W.E.K 174 Alpha Chi Omega 165 T.N.T. 155 Alpha Delta Pi 145½ Independence 145½ Kappa Alpha Pi 123 Sigma Kappa 113 Miller Hall 111 Gamma Phi Betha 111 Gamma Phi Beta 70 Alpha Omicron Pi 70 E.T.C. 66 Here on the Hill [Continued from page above] Watkins hall will hold open house tonight from 7 to 8 p.m. (Continued from page three) The following were guests at the Phi Kappa Pai house for dinner Sunday; Janet Robrue, c;43; Martin Alice Horner, c;42; Mary Louse Anne Cota, fa;35; Jane Flood, Hayes Ann Cota, c*41; and Blake Grimes, Mona Tony Bruck, Pt. Leavenworth, was a weekend guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. To celebrate the founding of Al Alpha Ironi PC at Barnard College in New York City, members of the local chapter held their Founders' Day banquet at 2 p.m. Saturday at the chapter house. In addition to the active members the following alumnus attended the banquet: Mrs. Francis Brown, Kansas City, Mo.; Dorothy Rosewell, Kansas City, Mo.; Ms. W. Foreman, Kansas City, Ruth Judges; Mrs. Waiden, Kansas City, Mo.; Ms. Julius Johnson; Ms. George Fell, Isabella Obsen, Jane Turner, Mrs. James Miller, Mrs. Waiden Foarev, Ed Hu- Mary Jane Perkins, c:40; Marcus Fryer, c:1; Burtha Scott, b:40; Martha Ann Hall, c:43; Ruth Welderman, b:41; Midge Jones, c:41; Marcur Murray, fa:42; Barbara Daniels, c:41; Rosalys McCreyer, fa:41; Ruth Garnett, b:41; Maxine Patterson, c:40; Marion Hodges, Lawrence; June Koenig, Kansas City; Maxine Atchison, Kansas City. Sarah Margret Gleem, Lawrence; Jamie MIlles, Kansas City, Vela Mae Allen, Kansas City; Bernice Zuer- cher, c41; Genevieve Martin, Concordia; Mr. and Mrs. C. Hoover, Lawrence City, Missouri; Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Brook, Kansas City, Mo.; Stanley Cummings, Kansas City, Mo. We'll Gladly Help You With Your Gift Problems The guest list for the Alpha Kappa Pai annual Christians party held Saturday evening in the chapter house included: Evelyn Sabol, c'41; Helen Pierce, c'40; Pauline Snyder, c'40; Botty Bury, ed'42; Genevieve Harman, c'42; Doris Nelson, fa'40; Mary McLoeid, b'41. Our many years of experience means that we know what's right for a man's Christmas. A FEW SUGGESTIONS There's greater comfort than ever aboard these modern luxury lhouses, than year-round air conditioners, than warm and cozy, in big, red recreational boats. No winter-diving headaches or traffic wristbands. Shirts - - - - - 98c to $1.95 Lined Gloves - - - - 79c to $1.39 Dress Gloves - - - - 98c to $2.95 Ties - - - - - 29c to $1.00 Scarfs - - - - - 49c to $1.95 Hosiery - - - - - 19c to 49c Hats - - - - - $1.98 to $3.85 Wool Robes - - - - - $5.95 Silk Robes - - - - - $3.95 Taking advantage of the usual Sunday quiet, members of District III of the I.S.A. held a skating party from 2:30 to 5 o'clock in the Roller- NEW COURSE Frequent daily schedule let you go and come as you like. One-day, trip-trip service on many short trips. Your local Union Pacific train low fares and convenient schedule. LUXURY RIDER 811 Massachusetts St. NEW CONVENIENCE! UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Phone 707 BE IT ENACTED BY THE WOMEN'S SELF GOVERNING ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA Section 1. To represent the number of activities of women students of the University of Kuwait, there shall be established a system manager, a voting member of the system manager, a voting member of the committee of three girls from the student body at large appointed by the W-SGA-Kuwait. Section 2. The points shall be allotted as follows. CHECK THESE 3 ADVANTAGES before you plan HOLIDAY TRIPS! DOLLAR-SAVING FARES! Low one-way and round-trip fares are a boon to holiday budgets—leave you extra dollars to spend for gifts and holiday thrills! Plan shopping tours—and all holiday trips—this low-cost, luxury way! TRANSPORTS CORPORATION W.S.Q.A. Council President, 56 views- prepared 10 secretary, 39 treasurer, 18 sensitive 2 point system manager, 14 reinitialize 2 point system manager, Katherine Green, c'43; and Jane Knudson, fa 41, were dinner guests at the Delta TauDelta house Sun- The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" UNION PACIFIC STAGES brig, all of Kansas City, Mo; Mrs. Claude Huey and Mrs. L. V. Hill of Kansas City; and Mrs. Junius Underwood of Lawrence. W.A.A.- President 15, vice-president 15, W.A.C., president 15, treasurer 15, business manager 20, sports manager 20, membership 5. Y.W.C.A.- President 49, vice-president 5. ✓ --together wint can click Onient Click key ring—in yellow gold finish. DICKINSON Mat. 25c. Nite 35c. Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 NOW! ALL WEEK MAY ROBSON LUCILLE BALL DENNIS O'KEEFE EDWARD EVREYET HORTON ROSCE KARN MORGAN OLSEN OLD GIRL WORKSHOP MUSEUM 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE MUSICAL "THE KAY KYSER" KAY KYSER ADOLPHE MENJOU THAT'S RIGHT YOU'RE WRONG CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES HISTORY OF MEDICINE GRANADA America's favorite keychain carrying your own initial. Shows 2:30-7:9 NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY Tyrone Power Linda Dornell "Davantage Wife" together with con- BY SWANK 30, secretary 30, treasurer 20, cabinet member 20. PATEE "Daytime Wife" All Shows 15c Any Time ENDS TONIGHT MICKY ROONEY "The Hardys Ride High" - 2nd Season - RONALD REAGAN "Smashing the Money Ring" retary-treasurer 10, representation 5; Organized House—Security president 40 president; security chief 30; if paid salary 15, unpaid 30; organised president 10, social chairman 10 "Meet Dr. Christian" "Espionage Agent" Pan Hellenie Council—President 20, secretary-treasurer 10, representative 5. "Information Please" (Based on the Radio Program) JOEL McCREA Independent Student Association—Exe- cute council 10, school chairman 12, Statewide Student Activity Commission —Chairman 15, head of county club 5, oure state office WEDNESDAY 3 DAYS "Tapper Takes a Trip" Connie Bennett Roland Young —And— "Private Detective" THURSDAY TODAY'S Gift Suggestions Mufflers — $1 up The inexpensive gift that combines practicability with sentiment. Robes — $5.95 up Wools, Silks, Gabardines, in color and styles that please boy friend and Dad. The Palace 843 Mass. Cobson, Miller, and Wattkins—Corbisr president 40, Miller and Watkins 50, vice president 20, secretary 18, treasurer 18, chief executive chairman 40, executive board member 10. S Color Cartoon - News JEAN HERSHOLT Debate 5. Freshman counselors 5. W.S.G.A. committee on points Music Organizations--President Gee Club chair of Modern choir member Gee Club chai 15, member chair 10, modern choir 5, band 1. GOTHIC KEY CHAIN 1939 TIE What am I bid? AUCTION off your die hard Arrows and get a load of new ones. Well admit Arrow shirt last too long ... but after 78 years of experience making shirts and collars, you can expect? Were in the groove to so speak, and turn out a beauty at every lick of the clock. One each comes up gluing with that limitable Arrow collar, anchored buttons, Mitoga fit, beautiful patterns, sturdy woven fabric, Sanford-shunk (thinness less than 1%), and the price to your gentlemen is only $2 ... some other ... none less. See your dealer today — he's got Tau Sigma, Jay Jane, Quack-President 20, other officers 10, member 6. Publications—Jayhawk staff 10, *Sour Owl* staff 20, Book editor 20, Kawanami Honorary Professor 30, Honorary Pratunies and Departmental Clubs—President 20, other office 10, menorca. COLLARS . . TIES . . HANDKERCHIEFS . . UNDERWEAR Rifle Club-Captain 15, manager 25 member 6. Includes: Dramatics Clah, Delta, Phi Dahl, Phi Chi Theta, Pli Lambda, Phi Chi Theta, Pli Lambda, Pli Chi Theta, Mu Equation, Quill Chail, Rhodanmathi, Theta Sigma Phi, Sie, Phi Kappa is not in ARROW SHIRTS See your dealer today — he's got the new ones in! Section 3. When a girl exclaims the number of points as listened to, she will be required to resign from some activity of her own choosing; Senior 60 point, junior 60 point, sophomore 40 point, freshman 30 point. All uniforms must be organized which shall be made to be Point Speech Uniform in a filling cabinet. Elegibility for active A GIFT THAT LASTS 10:30 1. Plays on A.C. 2. Plays on D.C. 3. Plays on it's own power wherever you take it. (no plug-in) *Miracle Tone Chamber* Choice of colors, 6-tube Superheterodyne. Large permanent magnet dynamic speaker, "Inner-Captop". Loop Antenna and other advance features. at $24.95 HANNA'S Phone 303 904 Mass. Bills shall remain as before ordered by the General Assembly on驶浮仪征. Section This H109 requires this bill and effect from and after its publication according to the constitution, and from and after its publication in the House. Signell VELMA WILSON. VELMA WILSON PERLA, W.S.G.A., Council, WINTER AMESON WINTER, W.S.G.A., Council. Approved. DEANE W. MALCTT, Chancellor of the University AC or DC "Gets under your chin!" REMINGTON RAND ELECTRIC CLOSE SHAVER for it gives you the smooth GIVE "HIM" face you love to touch. He will love you forever— The New Razors The New Prices Rend - - - $7.50 Speedsk - $10.00 Romington $14.75 A Gift that is good 365 days in the year Glod to show you HALF-PRICE CAPS GOOD CLOTHES JOLLY ★★★★★ Note these: GIFT FOUNTAIN PENS BY SHEAFFER & BY PARKER (old stuilt) UNUSUAL GIFTS *Compacts, Pen and Pencil Sets, Shavers, Travel Kits, Perfume in Love Bottles. Do Come In. - OLD SPICE; Old Fashioned Shaving Mug, Lotion in pottery bottle, cake shaving soap, both salts with wooden scoop, etc. MEDICINE RANKIN'S Massachusetts at Eleventh THE STUDENTS' OWN DRUG STORE - CONVENIENT TO THE HILL THE SANTA WORTH YOU WANT FOR CHRISTMAS "Could you fix me up with a stack of Arrow Ties?" Girls* No doubt about it, your boy friend will appreciate getting Arrow Shirts and Neckwear and because he buys them for girls, you should give him on the gift box. Come in and see our assortment of Christmas Girls*. We come with our for your boy friend, dad, uncle and niece. on the gift card to our assortment of Christmas Gifts—We have the jacket, a hat, a dress, and, dude, an umbrella! Our gift wrap is gifted in gift boxes. 1234 Ober's MEANS TO SCOOT OUT FIELD UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII Z-229 NUMBER 61 Dramatic Club Production Entertaining - Critic Finds Play a Poor Choice but Interesting; Believes It too Meidramatic in Spots By Jimmy Robertson, c'49 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1939 Now don't get us wrong. "The Night of January 16th" is solid entertainment. Of course, being the critic, we scarcely have a right to our own opinion. But the play, which at times verges on mollerdammerian, not the kind we need for movies, is a masterpiece. We prefer the Christmas goose type—with plenty or juice to meatie to tackle our critical pain and a lot of nice bones to pick with the cast and Director Alex Crafton Now don't get us wrong. It was a good play. At times through the first two acts, applause became so loud you could scarefully have heard a pin drop. But when we say the selection of this particular play was questionable, we do so with a particular reason in mind. Each Play Important In the first place, each offering of the Kansas Players is important. Call them home talent affairs if you like—and call us a cracker barrel cricket—but one fact remains. The Dramatic Club and Kansas Players garner It would seem that every member of the audience at "Night of January 16th" last night was himself a juror. Here are some of the verdicts from random members of the audience; J. B. Christand said not guilty and based his reasoning on the fact that there were no real eye witnesses; Bob Ebersole handed a guilty — "Admittedly, there was not a crime presented; she did not actually commit the murder; Mr. J. S. Daniels said flatly, not guilty, Maryline Malone like the defense best. She said, "The defense put over their story better." Fred Littoy, of the School of Law, gave a definite verdict of guilt—"The defense witnesses were obviously too prejudiced." Singularly enough, most of the men interviewed said guilty. Vincent Trump said there was too much lying by the witness and crooks just don't have the ability for such a fantastic plot as was submitted as evidence. She—guilty. Now don't get us wrong. As a critic, we've been described as a "sadist," and accused of being "childish." Therefore, it is as a childish sadist that we meekly put forth our opinion. ish 4813 University students their only opportunity to view legitimate stage productions. So when we accuse the Dramatics Club of wasting a shot on a mock trial that has been produced in half the high schools from the Kaw to Kokomo, we hope you'll understand. Jean Brown, as Karen Andre on trial for murder, could easily have been mistaken for a traffic violator in Judge Hardy's court until she got good and ready to emote. Then she emulated all over the place. Les Hison, as the District Attorney, is an exponent of the vocalize pause. An extra session with the script might not come amiss. Otherwise we give him credit for a goof performance. Jack Nelson, as Defense Attorney Stevens, showed further improvement in the way he goes about his stage performance. He perhaps the smoothest performance. Marvin Moon, the judge, would probably uphold your objections to any of our derogatory remarks about his ability. So we'll fool him, and say that for the first time we enjoyed one of his many performances in Fraser. Robert Miller, as clerk of the court, was okay. A bit high-schoolish per- haps, but okay. Ingrid Freedistad, as the Swedish maid, didn't have any trouble with dialect and for a good reason. She could speak to anyone who drew much personal applauses. The demonstrative crowd became suddenly quiet as the jury filed sack onto the courthouse stage. Clerk Thomas Arroyo asked the coronar of the jury, read the ver- Stanley McLeod, as Sigurd Jungquist, appeared to be one of the few new-comers who showed a lot of ability. (Continued on page three) Yes, No, Yes PETER T. HAWKINS Fred Littio, F42, dance manager, reversed his decision yesterday and announced that Student Council passes would be definitely recognized at the Sophomore Hop Friday. Senator Capper Speaks Tonight - Freedom of Speech Is Subject at University Club Banauet Senator Arthur Capper will speak informally on "Freedom of Speech" at a dinner meeting of the University's Center for Social Justice at the club house, 1433 Ohio street. Following the dinner, the senior Kansas senator will address the Lawrence Town Hall meeting at the Uttarian church, Twelfth and Vermont streets, upon the topic "Unarmed Farm Relief, and World Peace." Prof. E, O. Stene of the department of political science will preside at the meeting, which is the fourth series on the Town Hall program. Dr. E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology, made the arrangements for Senator Capper's appearance at the University Club. Bremen Docks At German Port Berlin Dec. 12,—(UP) The $200-000,000 luxury liner, Elenmer decked tonight at a German port, believed to be Bremershaven, after defeating Great Britain's sea blockade and escaping narrowly from a British submarine, the Nazi high command announced. The big liner came into port after a dramatic dash from the Russian port of Murmansk, 200 miles above the Arctic Circle. Circling German naval planes, which were said to have driven off an attempted attack by a British aircraft, accompanied the Bremen into port. Annual Union Xmas Party Announced The annual Christmas party given by Memorial Union building's student activities committee and faculty (or the students will be held Tuesday afternoon after breakfast on Wednesday, 12:24 chairman of the committee, announced yesterday.) The party will include entertainment by the Modern Choir, the Men's Glee Club, an English stunt or Corbin hall hall, and folk dancers from the department of physical education under the direction of Miss Jane Byrn, instructor. Prof. Allen Crafton of the department of speech and dramatic art will be master of ceremonies. Ku Kus and Jay James will act as hosts and hostesses. Refreshments will be served. McKay, Rhodes To Compete In Five Debates ★ University Argues Take Negative Stand in Texas Invitational Tournament Friday and Saturday Bob McKay, b'40, and Leo Rhodes, b'40, will compete in five debates in an invitational decision debate tournament at the University of Texas in Austin Friday and Saturday. They will take the negative stand on the question: Resolved: "That the state of Texas should adopt a system of socialized medicine." Today the men will take the negative on the above question in a deate before the high school assembly at Temple, Tex. and tomorrow they take the affirmative before a San Antonio, Tex., high school group. Yesterday McKay and Rhodes met a Texas team, at Denison, Tex. taking the negative stand on the same question. Seniors who will be graduated at the end of this semester, were urged yesterday by Dr. R. I. Cautenoss, director of the health service, to contribute to physical examinations at Watkins Memorial hospital. Physical Exams Irged for Seniors This is the third year the free examinations have been offered. The examination includes repetition of the tuberculin test, chest x-ray, optional Wassermann test, immunization for typhoid fever and small intestine disease, and access to make a complete examination, Doctor Canutensis said. Only 15 seniors have reported for the free physical examination thus far, Doctor Catunesse said. Although the examinaton is open to all seniors, the hospital is making an effort to complete the examinaton of the mid-year graduates before the Christmas holidays. Seniors will not be notified by mail of the examination this year, it was said, because of the expense involved. Kansas Magazine Features Alumni Several faculty members and alumni of the University are represented in the 1940 edition of the Kansas magazine which will be released Two persons taking writing courses through the University extension division also have articles in the issue. Ronald Finney, Emporia, a prisoner at Kansas State prison, is the author of an article which was submitted as a term paper in an extension course by Helen Ross, Seneca, also appears. Prof. Allen Crafton of the department of speech and dramatic art has the prologue to his play, "Yankee Crusade," in the magazine this year. He also wrote a memoir of John E. Hankins of the department of English also is included. Selections of verse by Arthur L. Douglas, Pittsburg, Kam., Eumice Wallace Beach, and May William Ward, alumi, are included in the Four students of advanced pale ontology and their instructors in a rock fall trip through southeastern Kansas. Fossils from rock formations in four states were found. Paleontologists Travel in Kansas Hall Ruppenthal, c. 42, needed his English gas mask yesterday when he opened his baggage that had been detained in France by the European war. It contained a large Dutch cheese not too well wrapped. Cheese Too Ripe Following Delay In French Customs The Cunard line advised him to leave Paris immediately and go to London. He did, but unfortunately his baggage remained in Cherbourg. For three months Ruppenthal received no word about it. Later he was informed that the baggage would be sent to him if it passed a rigid inspection by the French customs. Ruppenthal, after leaving Holland where he was a delegate to the World Conference of Christian Youth, shipped his haggage to Cherbourg, France, and after he arrived in France, war was officially declared. The Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers, Rockefeller Center, New York, offers five fashion fellowships, for the year 1940-41, to be awarded to women members of the graduating class of 1940 in accredited colleges and universities. Each fellowship covers a year's tuition of $700, and only one will be awarded in any one college or uni- tition. All applicants must register before Jan. 31. Fashion Careers Offered Through $700 Fellowships Application for a fellowship may be made by filling in and returning to the Tobe-Coburn School, the registration form on file at the office of Mrs Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser to women. A catalogue of the school will be mailed as soon as the registration is received. A set of qualifying test questions will be mailed to all applicants on Feb. 1. Replies must be returned in postmarked or on before Feb. 29. Those applicants whose replies to the questions show the most aptitude for fashion work will be asked to carry out a fashion research project. A list of subjects will be mailed on March 14, from which the applicant will receive the candidate's report. The candidate's report, containing not more than 2,000 words must be returned to the school post marked on or before April 15. Before the final awards are made, high ranking candidates will be asked to furnish biographical data, photographs, college grades, and letters of recommendation. Personal interviews may also be arranged. Announcement of the awards will be made April 25. Aptitude for fashion work will be judged by the following points: initiative, imagination clarity of presentation of material and fashion flair. The University alumni office has received an autographed copy of "Lawnet's Alight," by Chester Woodward, 96. The book, written after Woodward's return from a trip around the world this summer, describes his journeys abroad. The volume will be placed in the library of books written by University graduates. Alumni Office Receives Book by Graduate Author Mr. Woodward was president of the University alumni association in 1937 and 1938. The professional and service division of the Kansas WPA has asked permission of the University to transcribe into Braille, "Laurel Town," by the late Kate Stephens, author and former professor of Greek at the University. The book is of early-day Lawrence. May Transcribe 'Laurel Town' 200 To Appear In Christmas Vespers Service - Expect Large Attendance for Annual Program; To Present Tableaux Between Numbers More than 200 students and faculty members of the School of Fine Arts will combine forces to present the annual Christmas vespers with tableaux in Hoch auditorium Sunday afternoon and evening. To accommodate the expected large audience, which last year reached 8,000, two performances will be given. The first, at 4 p.m., is intended chiefly for those coming outside of our campus. The record will be taken at 7:30 p.m. Both will be open to the public without charge. For the past month, a chair of 100 voices has been working under the direction of D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts. The choir will present the candle-light processional and recessional as well as a group of four unaccompanied choral numbers. Karl Kuersteiner, associate professor of violin, will direct the 90-piece University Symphony orchestra in a special program number. He will also join the choir and organ in the processional and recessional. A group of four Christmas tableaux will be presented between musical numbers, with the departments of design and painting in the Music Department. Fine Arts scholarship fund will be taken during the vespers will be Seek Permission To Use School Song In Motion Picture Permission of University authorities to use parts of the song, "I'm a Jayhawk," in a motion picture being made by the American Telephone and Telegraph company was requested by the company yester- 1. was said that the movie would be of a historical nature and that the song would be used in scenes using lines "reaching into Kansa." Smith Explains News Photoqraphy Listing news value, human interest, and technical quality as points for judging the worthiness of a news picture, Henry Ladd SMIT, profofessor of journalism, last night discussed the new photographs he KU students Club in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. Professor Smith, teacher of a second-semester course in news photography, emphasized the differences between news and pictorial photography, saying that the news photograph must be produced much more quickly than the salon photographer, because of increasing quality in news pictures, attributed to better lenses, cameras, films, and papers. Professor Smith briefly outlined the rise to prominence of the news photograph supplementing his remarks with examples of news photography, good and bad. As a final requirement for the good news picture, he listed good taste, the standards which vary widely in accordance with the type of publication wristening the picture. The journalism professor offered encouragement for student photographers in news photography, saying he believed an interested person would succeed in that branch of the newspaper. of the newspaper. W. H. C. Leo Rhodes, b'40, and Bob McKay, b'40. University debaters, have gone to Texas where they will defend high schools on a tour of the state. Five To Compete For Peace Prize With Bob McKay--composers "coked," a 3-language letter written in German, French, and English, and one from three forest rangers which included the postage for sending pictures of the Kappa girls. - Will Speak over WREN Thursday on 'How To Keep America Out of War' Five students were selected in the preliminary tryouts in Green hall last night to compete in the Campus Peace Contest over WREN at 8 a.m. Thursday, "How to Keep America Out of War" is the subject for contest speeches. Students chosen were, Jean Crawford, c' 40, Karl Ruppenthal, 142. Eljah Cole, c' 40, Don Mitchell, c' 42, and Gladys Huber c' 48. The contest is sponsored by Prof. E C. Buchler of the department of speech and dramatic arts, and is carried out under the auspices of the Association for Theatre in Exon. # E2, chairman of the group conducted the trusses last night. A prize of $5 will be awarded the winner selected by three Lawrence judges and the audience. Awards are awarded in person or online, all affiliated with the Student Forum Board. This contest is one of a series of contests to take place during the school year which will put "student opinion on the air" Prof. J. W. Twente Serves In School Survey at Colby Prof. J. W. Twente, of the School of Education, left Monday to participate in the survey of Colby schools, which is being held at the Thomas Community High School at Colby. Two state high school supervisors, M. A. Callahan and J. P. Sheldon, both of Topaka, will be on the committee with Professor Twente. Rhodes to Texas--composers "coked," a 3-language letter written in German, French, and English, and one from three forest rangers which included the postage for sending pictures of the Kappa girls. The Junior Prom at Yale, house parties at Cornell University, the Intercollegiate Invitational ski meet at Lake Plaid, N.Y., the Alpha Chi Rho party at Cornell University, the Sigma Chi party at the University of Illinois were only a few of the occasions for which the Johnson sisters, The North Central association holds these surveys as a means of studying secondary school standards. The purpose of the meeting is to formulate an accurate and reliable evaluation of the school. The committees will assist from 30 to 40 schools with the proposed program. Doctor Twente, who will return to Lawrence tomorrow, is chairman of the University visiting committee. Sisters' Fan Mail a Problem at Kappa House The Johnson sister's fan mail is the biggest problem at the Kappa Kappa Gamma home since last Friday's Inaugural Celebration and sent their pictures far and wide. A. H. C. Doris and Helen, received invitations in more than 50 letters. Four pages of verse was the product of a poetic Williams College student. It was summed up in the opening stanza: Dear Helen of the K.G.K. I'll bet you get a lot of these (Letters are the things I mean from sandy rocks. From sundry guys you've never seen) Other interesting letters included one written on a napkin while the Cornell boys sent their invitations by long distance telephone, and following letters assured the girls that Glenn Miller, Jan Savitt, and Hai Kemp would play on successive weekends. And the invitationers didn't forget Two U.S. Naval Academy men were worried over a bet. The one who received the first reply from the sisters was to win the money. to send along their pictures. One New York University student sent his roommate's picture with the instruction to return him to New York as soon as he was spotted in Kansas. The N.Y.U. student traveler just couldn't stay away from Kansas after he saw the pictures. Probably the only letters the girls Numerous other letters were received by the chapter itself. Sally Connell, fa 43, received a letter with her picture, cut from one of the group pictures in the magazine oasted on the letter head. will answer will be those in which the writers included pages of the magazine for autographed. Doris disappointed letter writers in mass form when she said that "oct course" does not accept any of these invitations. Littooy Reverses Legislative Pass Decision for Hop - Dance Manager Believes He Waited Too Long To Tell Councils That Passes Void for Fio Rite Dance When the smoke cleared away, Littioy was still smiling but this time the politicians were smiling with him. Their passes, Littioy had decided, would be good after all and legislators would go up in preparation for the dance to get in free. Politicians relaxed their hold on pocketbooks (their own) yesterday in the wake of a ruling that [42] agreed to appoint Sophonome Hop gaten to school council passes. Peliticians Not Smiling Monday night Littoty smiled down two rows of assembled M.S.C-ers and told them that none but bona fide press passes would be good for the Fio Rito dance. Baldrhinus. Not Snailling. The class of '42 tightened its grasp on another pocket book—it's own. Politicians weren't smiling when they visioned either dates or themselves broke. Headed by John Oakson, c'40, a leading proteger, an M.S.C. committee drew influential persons into hurried conferences yesterday. Pass-holders claimed, and Littoy agreed, that the dance manager should not have waited until the seventh hour to inform them that heir tickets were invalid. 40 To Attend Free So it was yesterday that Lattoo decided to put on dark glasses when he looked at that portion of the Fio Rito contract which bars all but press passes. The band's managers, Lattoo wily thought, probably would never find out that some 40 old persons Sunn Homed beetle. Jim Postma, P41, one of the M.S.C. lawyers, had said Monday night that should the Music Corporation of America discover the contract breach the University might be blacklisted by the Corporation. Profit from the Hop would be divided between the Memorial Union coffer and those of the class of 42. Karl Kleoz, bursar, said last night. Those two parties will also divide a loss, Mr. Kleoz added. Announce Contest For English Majors Announcement has been made of the verse contest for English majors. The contest is sponsored by the Sigma Alpha chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho and English fraternity, at Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburg. University manuscripts are to be submitted, not later than Jan. 10, to W. S. Johnson, professor of English, in room 263. Formal hall. He is the secretary of the fraternity, Mrs. Middleton B. Cutter in Pittsburg. Rules of the contest are: 1. The contest is open to all junior and senior English majors enrolled 1929-40. 2. Poems may be written in any verse form. 3. All poems submitted will fall in one of the two groups: lyric cc narrative. 4. Each contest may enter as many as three poems in each group. 5. Each contestant will furnish three typewritten copies of each poem entered. 6. Poems must not have fewer than four lines, and not more than 60. 7. First, second, and third prizes will be awarded and the winning poems will be published in the "Collegio." 8. A committee of three judges will make final decisions. 9. All manuscripts must reach the secretary not later than Jan. 16. 1940. Envelopes must be admirable. 1942. 111 West Pollitzer, Pittsburgh. Peabody To Sing Strauss Melodies on KFKU Tonight Irene Peabody, mezzo-soprano and associate professor of voice in the School of Fine Arts, will sing a group of Richard Strauss compositions over her piano. She will be accompanied on the piano by Winifred Hill. fa'41. The selections are: Allersseilen (All soul's day); Die Nacht (the night); Befreit (Release); and Cacile (Cecily). PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Kansan Comment Campaigning Won't Be Late "Thumbs-down" was the answer returned by Republicans to President Roosevelt's suggestion that both party conventions be held in late July or mid-August. Political enemies of Roosevelt within his own party felt the same way. Late conventions would give the New Deal shiffthe and his cohorts a valuable advantage in the coming election. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1939 A late convention would fit the President's purpose to a "T," if that purpose is to be a third-term candidate or to name a liberal candidate. Given to breaking traditions, the President could remain silent all summer on the third-term subject. If he decided to lead the party ticket, the confusion resulting from his opponents' unpreparedness would make his task easier. At the same time, if he deemed it better to rest on his laurels, then the same confusion would make his selection of a successor comparatively simple, for opposing hopefuls would find it difficult to secure adequate support at that late date. Republicans would fare badly from a late convention. How could the Republican shining lights present their cases to the public in such a short period of time? Dewey would need five months at least to assure the people he knows more than how to break up vice-rings. Vandonburg, too, is relatively unknown and would need the entire summer to enlist the electorate. Taft is known to many only as a relative of William Howard Taft. "Bletzkreig" campaigning, brought about by late conventions, could be the death knell of any of these politicians. More than the time from August to November will be required to put Republican political machinery into action. Republicans will need time to lure Americans back to the G.O.P. According to a current issue of News Week, only six states have definitely swung over to the Republican party. Seven more are lukewarm. The six now shifting to the anti-New Deal ports are Kansas, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Colorado. The seven suspected of recanting New Deal ideals are Iowa, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, California, and Oklahoma. Since the New Dealers have been electionering for eight years, a week in November appears sufficient for them for the Republican point of view. The President's supporters feel that his suggestion of a "lightning" campaign would favor the Democratic cause. Interest in political campaigns probably influences which way the "fence straddlers" will jump on the question of early or late conventions. Either way the warm-up speeches have started, and the stage is being set for the grand show of a presidential campaign. --to Kansas of Dr. Paul Popene, director of the Institute of Family Relations at Los Angeles, who lectured and held seminars on social problems of this kind during Religious Emphasis week. Big Six Record Adds Prestige The invitation to two Big-Six teams to compete in major bowl games New Year's Day adds further to the immense prestige built up by the conference during football's now completed season. Coming as an expected choice in one instance and as a minor surprise in the other, the invitations to Missouri and Oklahoma brought national recognition to the conference and also serve as country-wide acknowledged of the unusual records of Big Six schools. Missouri's journey to the Orange bowl will match the league champions with Georgia Tech, co-title holders in the Southeastern conference. The choice the Miami promoters made, however was based more on the potential color and entertainment the eleven might offer, rather than primarily on their records, for neither team can boast of an undefeated season. By offering Oklahoma a bid to the Cotton bowl, Dallas sportsmen took a team that ranks high in the nation's leaders, although it finished only third in Big-Six play. The fact that the Sooners have declined the invitation is in support of the argument that there is a general trend in the Big Six toward de-emphasis on football. Begun more than a year ago, the movement as yet has had little influence on any of the half dozen schools making up the conference. Oklahoma itself conquered three league opponents, as well as strong non-conference teams Texas and Northwestern. But refusal by the Sooners of the bowl offer does show a marked change in attitude, it cannot be denied. Powerful Nebraska apparently will get no bowl chance. Despite a splendid record, bowl possibilities are of necessity limited. Desire for geographical representation is a salient factor in choice. But with its two bowl teams—and with the knowledge that at least one other possesses a record of sufficient excellence to merit a post-season contest—the Big Six is established as a leading football conference. This conclusion is strongly supported by the season records. Consistently powerful basketball teams, particu- Larly those of Dr. F. C. Allen at Kansas, already had made a place for the Big Six in the higher court brackets. The conference never has been without several track stars of national reputation. In the light of these facts, athletics in the Big Six—a ten-year-old project—appears now to have reached the full ripe bloom that a sturdy growth has long indicated for it. --to Kansas of Dr. Paul Popene, director of the Institute of Family Relations at Los Angeles, who lectured and held seminars on social problems of this kind during Religious Emphasis week. New Yorkers Collegiate? College boys who wear no hats may find a loyal supporter in Dale Harrison, New York columnist, who recently complained about the hat-check racket. Estimating that New Yorkers alone spend five million dollars yearly in buying back their chapeaux from check rooms, the indignant columnist explains that often the man who owns the check concession in a restaurant makes more money than the proprietor. As a solution, he suggests that men take up the practice which long has been regarded as the distinctive mark of the college man—the bare head. By the adoption of the collegiate style Harrison sees the hat-check villain foiled, the hat-check girls freed from despotism, and the college youth of America vindicated as the liberators of down-trodden and effete New Yorkers. The college men pioneered in the freedom of the pate—and held to their cause despite threats of increase in pneumonia cases. --to Kansas of Dr. Paul Popene, director of the Institute of Family Relations at Los Angeles, who lectured and held seminars on social problems of this kind during Religious Emphasis week. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Wednesday, Dec. 13, 1939 No.61 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on during the week, and at 11 a.m. on Saturday, at 10 a.m. CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE LECTURE. Mr. Pauley, who taught at the University of Rock' or by Thomas Wheat, today at 230 pm in 295 Fraser. Although this lecture is primarily for freshmen, upper classmates and graduates are cordially invited. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: The annual Cosmopolitan Club Christmas party will be held at $30, Saturday night, Dec. 18 at the home of Mrs. Mercedes Cole, 1015 Elkridge Blvd., Bethesda, MD. All attendees are invited to attend--Ruth Yeehn, secretary. EL ATENEO: The Spanish Club Christmas party will be held tonight at 7:30 at the Professor Shoemaker's kite institute. Please sign in the office if you plan to meet must be paid before signing. Louise Bush president. GERMAN CHRISTMAS PARTY. The German Christmas party took place in 8:15—billed Ebenezer, president of Greenwich Village. JAY JANES. There will be a meeting at 4:30 to the First Room. Please bring your receipt books. Write us. NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE INREGULAAN PAYROLL: All students on the irregular payroll, are requested to call at the business office and sign the Declaration before the Christmas holidays—Karl Kozur, bourn. NOTICE TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS: Dr E. K. Srivastava, hospital, hospital, hospital Tuesday afternoon for discussion with students about mental hygiene. Appointments may be made through the Watkins Memorial Hospital—Dr R. L. Cauzum. AI PALIA) Pi Alpha will meet at 8:00 a.m. at the Episcopal church. Installation services will be held on Sunday. QUACK CLUB. There will be Quack Club practice tonight at 8:15. Members who were unable to attend the practice yesterday, please attend—Mickey Learnard president. W. S.C.A. TEA: There will be a tea for all University women in the women's lounge of Strong Hall from 3 to 5 on clock this afternoon. Pi Beta Phi sorority will be hostes -Ethelmy Burns. Y. W.C.A. CHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Today is the last day of the Y.W.C.A. bazaar in the Union building lounge. It will open at 8:30 in the morning and continue until 12:45. Come to see the exhibit—Alice Ann Jones, chairman. YM.-YW.-There will be a joint Christmas assembly of the X.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. on Thursday, in Frankfurt. The delegation includes a local speaker. All members are urged to attend. Ernest Klinker, Marjorie Cook, membership chairmen. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief Uddy Warrell, Richard Roach, Randal Lifter, Feature Authors Mory Lou Raundall, Lilian Fahler Publisher ... Horry Hill Business Manager Edwin Brown Managing Editor | Walt Meinkeimer Sunday Edition | Lance Eichler Social Media Editor | Betty Coutson, Hugh Wright Society Editor | Elizabeth Kirch Tennis Editor | Sport Editor Makeup Editor | Dale McGeechan Telegraph Editor | Eugen e Kuhn Knight Press | Kate Reynolds Picture Editor | John Baldwin News Staff MEMBER KANSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Subscription rates in inewsme $1.00 per year, $175 per week, $35 per month. Subscription prices vary based on account and discount status. September 7, 2024 - 12:00 PM, on account; September 7, 2024 - 12:00 PM, on credit. Please contact us at info@inewsme.com for details. 'Education for Marriage' Is New Trend in Colleges Articles appearing in current literature on such subjects as marriage, "dating," and personality adjustment deal with aspects of a major problem under consideration as well as at other Universities. Courses in marriage and related subjects are now offered at 290 colleges and universities showing the trend towards preparing the students for social experiences after college. A typical course of this kind is the ten year-old one at the University of North Carolina where Prof. Ernest R. Groves of the sociology department who was greatly interested in the subject of the family initiated the course on marriage. The students at North Carolina asked the president, Harry W. Chase, for the course, wanted counsel and information that would assist them in preparing for successful marriages. General topics that were presented included "Courtship," "Choice of Mate," "Engagement," "Finances," "Marital Adjustment," "Conception and Pregnancy," "Birth Control," and "Divorce." The course met with such success that it drew many students who could not receive credit for it. Now two classes take the place of the former one. Foundations for a similar course have been laid at the University of Kansas. Under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A, and the Y.W.C.A. four lectures were presented in the spring semester of 1928. Student response to the first lecture was shown by an attendance of 800. Average attendance at the remaining lectures was 500. The Memorial Union ballroom was used to accommodate the crowd. The speakers were Dr. Margarel Dale, endocrine specialist; Dr. Raymond Wheeler, head of the psychology department; Judge Hugh Means; Rev. and Mrs. Carter H Harrison; and Mr. and Mrs. Mano Stukey. Some of the subjects treated in the program were "Marriage," "Emotional Adjustment," "Marriage and Divorce," and "Marriage Harmony." Last year added stimulus was presented to this subject by the visit ON THE OFF B-E-A-T By Roderick Burton This department is unable to confirm the rumor that the Communist party is going to purge all its members and be indicted on passport charges. Radio broadcasts from Geneva might start out with something like "Hi ho, Silver, HI ho," (Funny) or "The League of Nations writes again." This week's dramatic production is not to be confused with the mock trials held by the School of Law. The mock trials are to give budding students a chance while "The Night of January 10th" will give budding jurists practice. Add to Bits of Knowledge We Have Picked Up Hither and Thither: One hundred per cent of the people of the United States know that Texas is a big state and 98 per cent of them will say so within five minutes after they find out one is from here. SECRETARY TO CONGRESSMAN DRIVING EAST, in 1939 Oldam- obile, to Washington, D. C., via Indianapolis, Columbus or Pittsburgh. He wants one passenger, Tuesday, December 19th. Reasonable rate. Write Lt. W. S. Van Nostrand, Fort Riley, Kansas. -64 The sign on the wall in Frank Strong hall still informs us: "It's Easier to Keep up than to Catch up." We wouldn't know about that, but we can state authoritatively that it is very easy to do neither. FOR SALE: Two tuxedos, one size 37, 10 pp. one size 39-40, 15-19, one size 40 full dress cost, $6.00. Postmia at 2738W, after 7 p.m. LOST: On campus. Pair of ladies' wool mittens. Phone 2417. -61 He was a confirmed punster—words were merely playthings to him. WANT ADS LOST: Sunday afternoon a 'ladies' gold Elijn wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets on Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 28412 or return to 1117 Vermont. -62 A faculty committee headed by Dr. C. D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology, now is considering the recommendation of a course in marriage at the University. The first step taken by the committee in its study of the possibilities of such a course was to send questionnaires to 21 representative schools where specific courses in social relations or similar courses were given. Twenty answered with their own information concerning their courses. The list of schools included colleges and universities distributed through the country. Two hundred out of 672 schools have courses on marriage, problems arising within families, pre-marriage problems, and other related subjects. A large proportion of the courses are new within the past five years. They are taught at a wide variety of schools, including colleges, universities, denominational schools, and private schools. Many of the classes are opened only to juniors and seniors with an attempt made to keep class sections small, usually in groups of not more than 50, small enough for free discussion. Parental attitudes toward the courses as pointed out by Professor Groves at North Carolina is generally one of approval. Many parents view Professor Groves classes as supportive of their support of the innovation. Most of the questionnaires returned to the Kansas committee indicated that in the schools where the courses had been initiated and supported, the results were genuinely successful. DICKINSON Mat. 25c. Nite 35c. Shows 2-30 - 7 - 9 NOW! ALL WEEK THE SNOW THAT LET'S ITSELF GO! KAY KYSER + MENJOU IN 'THAT'S RIGHT YOU'RE WRONG' with KAYYSER'S BAND, featuring KAYYSER SIMS MARRY HARRY KAIBAN KABIBAN and "The College Musical Knowledge" GRANADA Shows 2:30-7-9 10c-25c Tyronc Power - Linda Darnell "DAYTIME WIFE" "DAYTIME WIFE" Information Please - News THURSDAY 3 DAYS 2—First Run Hits—2 Inspired by the famous rad program. "MEET DOCTOR CHRISTIAN" JEAN HERSHOLT DOROTHY LOVETT — Hit No. 2 — he most timely! The m The most timely! The most revealing of any offering in all entertainment annals! "ESPIONAGE AGENT" JOEL McCREA PATEE All Shows 15c Any Time TODAY 3 DAYS The Invisible Mon returns with a million injuries! "Topper Takes a Trip" Roland Young Constance Bennett 2nd Feature Just one step ohcd of the cops "PRIVATE DETECTIVE" We promise that this program will tap any thing we've shown in months! Jane Wyman Dick Foron NOTE W. S.G.A. To Meet After New Years "With nothing to discuss," the W.S.G.A. has suspended its meetings until after the Christmas holidays, according to Velma Wilson, president of the women's governing group. The next regular W.S.G.A. meeting will be Tuesday, Jan. 9. If you desire quality food, come to our cafe. We take pleasure in serving you. ATTENTION K.U. STUDENTS DE LUXE CAFE To Discuss Geology in Evolution R. M. Dreyer, instructor in Geology, will speak on "Geology in the Interpretation of Evolution" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 206, snow hall. The meeting is sponsored by Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity, and is open to the public. Open until 8:30 tonight and all week WOLFSON'S Optometrist 911 Mass. (1) WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 Sales, rentals, cleaning and Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT to you, the man in her life Gustafson MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. bags gloves perfumes fur mittens Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 here is your grand opportunity to make this a thrilling and memorable Christmas for "her" with a gift from Harzfeld's. Always the finest to choose from in our collection of handsome gifts. SKATES — SLEDS Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened all gifts attractively wrapped no extra charge. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U.66 robes calognes evening sweaters compacts Harzfeld's Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP N TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mailin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP 1237 Oread ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-coloring exposure mater. Certified f.4.3 triplet Amantascan lens: 1/25 to 1/200 second shuttle speed, movie film in standard cartridge. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing 71m—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1939 UNJVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill Two men are sitting at a table, eating and drinking. Double Mid-Week Steps, new to the dancers but old in the course of events, will be featured in the supplementary mid-week to be held tonight in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building from 7 to 8. Conducted by Jane Byrn, assistant instructor of physical education, the mid-week in the Kansas room will feature folk and country dances of America. The mid-week in the ballroom will be conducted as usual. Dancers themselves can choose the one they prefer; the usual mid-week or the country dance. The following girls were bumchewn guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house yesterday noon; Margaret McCoy, c'40; Margaret Murray, fa'42; Alys Magill, c'unc1; Beverly Brown, c'; and Mary John Miller, fa'43. The following were dinner guest at the Sigma Kappa house last night: Mr. and Mrs. Marson Mc- an account of Mt. Oread Society Elixabeth Kirsch, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Clungage, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Brown Mr. C. S. Skilton, Miss Mauel Elswar- d, and Miss Mabel Elliott. Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Marvel Johnson, fa'43. At the Aacraia house Sunday the following were dinner guests; Mr. and Mrs. Neal Carman; Harriet Goodwin, c'40; Caty Gumm, f'43; Melvin Hass, b'40; Raymond Tripp; Walton Kabler; and Monte Wood Alpha Omicron Pt entertained the following guests at dinner Tuesday night; Irivn Stoneback, fs; Frank Perkins, e43; Luther Lyon, gr; Scotty Kern, c43; Boyd Morgan, d4; Glenn Russell, b4; Marshall Butler, fa42; Charles Amry, gr; James Webb, w4; Bob Bradley, c41; Myrion Herons, e40; Dean Lemon, e41; James Pettee; Vincent Graves, e41; Elden Corkill, c40; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Thompson, Lawrence. Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Tau Omega house included the following: Bey Young, c'40; Virginia Grizzell, ed'41; Jean Bailey, c'43; Pat Owens, Kansas City, Mo.; and Barbara Felt, Leavenworth. CHRISTMAS A festive Santa Claus holding a large gift bag. --- COLLEGIATE SHOPPER With Christmas just that close, everyone is wearing that harried expression. Stop right here! Your troubles are over. We have been doing a little shopping on the side and we found some gift suggestions that will make you sigh with relief. --- At lost our worries about what to give little cousin Joe are over. The Book Nook, 1021 Mass, has a young-stage story that is as good as or "Ferdinand," the Bull. It is the story of the trials of a tug boat. But be careful when taking ecumenical gifts, as we also saw a beautiful Kwan Yin, Goddess of Mercy, statue for $5.00 at the Book Nook. Probably the sweetest things in things are the new soft, fur house seats at the Royal College Shop, 837-39 Moss. Bunny Scuffs we call them. Write to Santa about it. He can get them in blue or white for only $3.98. We are getting a pair for Mother too. She will love them. We were so tired of Christmas shopping we gave up, but we stopped at the Blue Mill, 1009 Mess., for a sandwich and a cake and felt so refreshed afterward we finished the rest of the gift buying in nothing flat. There is nothing like a snack at the Milk to give you an inspiration Have you seen the beautiful selection of Christmas Novelties and flowers at Allison-Armstrong Flower Shop? They will make really slick gifts for all of your friends. One of the best parts about the thing is that you can choose what is right, right right there if you want to—as who doesn't. Allison-Armstrong also carry the most complete selection of corsages at all times and with parties right and left—well, there you are. YOUR STORY "It's Drake for Bokes!" And this time of year for fruit cakes! Those yum, nutty, fun-filled corrections really hit the spot! Take one home for your celebration. - Lamp Here's an idea! Get Mother a gift the whole family can enjoy and you too, incidentally. *Shimmoons* is a brand of Mass, was a gift at $1.00 that really brings back that original oven crispness of biscuits, muffins, and coffee cakes. And another thing it fits snugly in your suitcase. It's a gift it'll fit into your suitcase. One thing that you can't do without is a dictionary and it is going to be a long cold trek up to the library of one a.m. when you are doing your paper calls—just as it closed then anyway. It's hard, but it's the Collector's 939 Most. It will make an invaluable Christmas gift. Price from $3.00 to $7. Girl! Solve the problem of what to get Him by shopping at Fischer's. 813 Mosa, the newest place in town for men's wear! Just to give you an idea they have snoppy Gloves japamats at $1.65 to $2.50. Wings shirts at $1.65, Osborne gloves from $1.95 to $3.50, and a grand selection of handkerchiefs, scarfs, and ties—all at unbelievably reasonable prices! Let Fischer's solve your "man-sized" shopping problems. We found a tricky combination of purse and gloves in the new winter shades at Coles, 815 $10 gloves, $1.00 to $2.98, and purse, $4.00 to $7.98. Sorry sorry he didn't see them first—so hurry. PURSE Dad's Christmas gift? That's no problem—get him one of these swanky lounges on the Gibbs, 811 Mass. They come in rayon, wool, and cotton, and are priced at $2.98 to $5.95. And, if you see those warm, snugly lined leather gloves Gibbs are featuring, you will take a pair of those too. Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house included: Sara Lou Connell, fa 43; Margarete Myers, fa 41; Becker Beeler, Bill Oort; Independence; Eugene Miller, Bill Norris, and Calvin Price; Salina Maurie Claseman, and Bill Herahier, Newton. --ment of their daughter, Jessamine, to James H. Arnold of Houston, Texas. Miss Jackson is a member of Alpha Omicron Ips coriority. Kappa Kappa Gigma announces the engagement of Diane Haas, c'42, and Wayne Clover, b'40. Clover is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. Emily Jean Milan, c'42, was a luncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house yesterday. Libby Metalf, fs, of Kansas City, Mo., was a guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Monday. Cecil King, c'41, was a lunchson guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday. Mrs. Helen Branich, province president of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was a guest at that house Sunday and Monday. Alpha Chi Omega entertained the following guests at dinner last night honoring Chancellor and Mrs. Denee W. Maltoff; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Werner; Dean and Mrs. J. H. Nelson; Miss Elizabeth Mepurit; Miss Sarah Ewing; Miss C. Crawford; Dean Paul B. Lawson; and Miss Pessia Cook. Pre-Xmas Tea The last W.S.G.A. ten before the Christmas recess will be given this afternoon by members of Pi Beta Phi, from 3 to 5 's lock in the womens lounge of Frank Strong hall Former Students Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Hoover o Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, June, 30 to John David Lobb, Jr. of Cleveland. Miss Hoover was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority while attending the University. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Jackson of Lawrence announce the engagement of their daughter, Jessamine, to James H. Arnold of Houston, Texas. Miss Jackson is a member of Alpha Omicron Ips coriority. Following the custom of buffer suppers, Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity entertained the following guests Sunday night: Mary Alice Elliott, fa 41; Diana Irvine, c 42; Mary Beth Weir, fa 41; Mary Alie Livingston, c 40; Jean Wilking, c 41; Joan Taggart, c 43; Lois Howell, c 43; Sara Fair, c 41; Patty Biglow, c 43; Jane Blanc, c 40; Margaret Ivy, c 43; Barbara Koch, c 43; Mary K. Brown, c 43. Mrs. John Hepler, graduate of Kansas State College and province president of Alpha Delta Pi, is a guest at the local chapter house this week. Virginia Bantleen, c'43; Ann Jones, c'41; Jane Veatch, b'41; Ruth Rice, c'41; Gloria Beichele, c'43; Emmet Parkls, b'41; Margaret Barber, c'40; Mary Fitzgerald, c'41; Anne Lewis, c'41; Rene Kiskaden, b'42; Norma Sloan, c'41; Becky Tremblely, c'43; Zibby Pine, c'42; Booris Kalin, c'43; Falconer, c'41; Margaret Neal, c'42; Nancy Prather, c'43; Cora Heworth, c'41; Dr. and Mrs. G. C. Remley, of Kansas City, Mo. Caroline Dell, Lawrence, and Meredith Dyer, Kansas City, Mo. were Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. Alba Delta Pi, sorority entrained the following guests at a formal dinner Sunday evening: Mr. and Mrs. George Foster, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Ashton, Mr. and Mrs. John G. Stutz, Mr. and Mrs. A. E Carrison, Mr. and Mrs. G. S Brown, Mrs. N. Christiansen, Miss Iva Isabel, and Miss Marie Schwartz, all of Kansas City, Mo. Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma Nu house included: Mrs. McDonald, Tapea; Ruth Kellett, fa'41. Alexia Marks, c'40; and Robert Lake, Kansas City, Mo. Muse. Hazel Potermeyer of Clay Center and Bob Montgomery of Kansas City, Mo., were guests at the Alpha Omni Pi house Sunday. --theater, 8:15 p.m. FRIDRID performance, "Night of January 6th", Fraser building, 8:15 p.m.; Faculty Women's Club dinner, Kansas room, 6:30 p.m; Sophomore Hop, Memorial Union ballroom, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Reinterpretation of Religion, Henley House, 4:30 p.m. Lois Wellell, c'43, was a lunchon guest at the Chi Omega house Monday. This Week--theater, 8:15 p.m. FRIDRID performance, "Night of January 6th", Fraser building, 8:15 p.m.; Faculty Women's Club dinner, Kansas room, 6:30 p.m; Sophomore Hop, Memorial Union ballroom, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Reinterpretation of Religion, Henley House, 4:30 p.m. Dinner guests at the Delta Chi Where To Go; What To Do ---On the Campus TODAY-Dramatic performance, "Night of January 16th," Fraser theater, 8:15; W.I.Y.C.A. Bazaar, Memorial Union, all day; F.D. Delta Kappa, Pine room, 3:30; Kausen Funeral, Kansan, all day; Student's dinner, Disneyland, 6:30; Midweek, Memorial University, bedroom, 7-8 p.m.; American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Men's lounge, 8 p.m.; W.S.G.A. tea for all university women, women's lounge of Strong hall, 3-5 p.m; Spanish club party, Prof. W. H. Shoaker's house. TOMORROW-Dramatic performance, "Night of January 16th", Fraser theater, 8:15 p.m. SATURDAY—Delta Sigma Theta, Kansas room, 8 p.m.; Kappa Kappa Gamma winter formal dress, Memorial Union bairnond, 9 p.m. HALF PRICE Plus $1 Our entire stock of high grade women's dress shoes included in this unusual sale Wednesday only - De Liso Debs Regular $8.75, sale price $5.88 Regular $7.50, sale price $4.75 - Knicker bockers Regular $6.95, sale price $4.48 Regular $5.00, sale price $3.50 Royal College Shop - Sport and evening shoes not included in this sale. - Aristocrats 837-39 Mass. house house were: Maxine Tainter Topeka; Barbara Benton, Kansas City, Mo.; Edna Givens, 'a'41; An Robbins, 'c'42; Peggy Pig Hennessy 'a'42; and Anne Woods, 'c'42. Bill Mills, c'40, and Jane Roberts, fo of Kansas City, Mo., were dimen- guest at the Pt Beta Phi house Sunday. Dinner guests at the Phi Gamm Delta house Thursday evening were: Jean Werner, fa 42; Rardorf Bechtel, fa 43; Eleanor Shockley, ca 41; and Joan Hinshaw, ca 41. Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday was Marjorie Siegrist, c'41 Virginia Anderson, ed'40 Ada Lee Fuller, f'41 Dotty Noble, c'43; and Elaine Lainey, c'43. Dinner guests at the Gamma Pl. Beta house Sunday were Leo Rhodes, b'40; Shields Haerie, c'43; Kenneth Rocky b'40; Bob Curt Tibets, c'40; Fred Johnson, c'43; Calver Pionert, b'41; J. D. Ramsey, c'40; Bill Reece, b'41; and Mary Nell Diett. Ruth Buchler, c.39, of Kansas City Mo., was a weekend guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Saturday evening guests of the Phi Gamma Delta house included William Buziick, Sylvan Grove; Bob McClure, c'42; and Bill Kirk, Hutchison. --- Sunday evening guests at Corbill hall included: Hester Meller, c'41 Mary Ardis Ewing, c'42; Milfred Krebiel, c'41; Glenn Stephenson, b'41; Louise Wilkes, c'42; Harry Smith, b'41; Bill Rigby, c'42; Ralph Almond, c'42; Herman Schmidt, c'41. Wanda Jo Reed, c'41; Ruth Ardith Bowman, c'40; Vie Corrine Corrine Martin, f42; Dole Ayers, b'41; and Susan Finland. --- Prof. and Mrs. Waldemar Geltch and William Burick, Sylvan Grove, were Sunday dinner guests at the Piih Gamma Delta house. Sunday dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were Curts Griffin, Kansas City, Mo; Mary Jane Koontle, Karsan City; William Johnson, Peggy Morris, Abilene; Bill Kule, Hutchinson; Henry Noller and George Bon Leonode. Luncheon guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Tuesday were Judy Cotton, Lawrence; and Bob Boyle, Topkea. --- Weekend guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were: Louise Taylor, Hutchinson; Jane Flood, Hays. --- UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1935 Made to Eat and not to keep They're Fresh— They're Different Old Time Chiefly Martha Washington Candies The New Hill Hangout THE FERRY 1031 Mass. 1051 Mass. Christmas Cheer Personified Margaret Myers, Kansas City, Mo; Meredith Dyer, Kansas City, Mo; and Mary Jane Shockley, Kansas City, Mo. KFKU SCHEDULE TODAY --- Fi Beta Phi entertained the following guests last night at a faculty dinner: Dean and Mrs. P. J. Moreau, Dr. Bryon Sarvis, and Mrs. H. E. Chubb, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Matrenshirt, Mr. and Ms. Spencer Bayles and Spencer Bayles, Jr. Miss Viola Anderson, and Mr. Norman Rehg. 2:30 French Lesson. 2:44 Campus News Flashes. 2:47 Spanish Lesson. 6:00 University of Kansas String Quartet, Walderman Geltch, first violinist; Karl Kuersteiner, second violist; Olga Elmer, violinist; Raymond Stuhl, violon- celloist. 0:15 Irene Peabody, mezzo-soprano, associate professor of voice. There's only one way to enjoy life — and that's to smile and treat your friends as friends. 2:47 Books and Reading 6:00 Your Health. "Something for Headache." Students & Faculty members — we invite you to try OUR SERVICE THURSDAY 2:30 German Lesson. 2:44 Campus News Flashes. 2:58 Backward Reading. You're sure to be pleased —we'll treat you as friends. FRIDAY Henderson. 10:30-10:00 University of Kansas Roundtable-The Reading Diagnostic Program. STOP IN AND FILL UP Try it --- and you won't care to change. Phillips 66 2:30-3:00 Music Appreciation Period. 6:00-6:30 Safety Program. Lawrence Liberty Memorial High School Auto Mechanic Class and the M. F. HUDSON CO. 800 N.H. Phone 825 A Worthy Gift LES PARFUMS WORTH PARIS be mout EXTRAIT An exquisite fragrance provocative while sophisticated Weaver's dans la nuit ('In the night') Dramatic Club. SUNDAY 4:00-5:00 School of Fine Arts Christmas Vespers. MONDAY, DEC. 16 2:94 Florida News Flashback. 2:95 Spanish Lesson. 6:00 Athletic Scrapbook. Dramatic Club- (Branched Class) (Continued from page one) GIFTS FOR EVERYONE ON YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST dict. Members of the jury were: Joe Leech, Lawrence; Rosemary Jones, *c*41; John Conard, *c*42; Pauline Snyder, *c*40; Harriett Van Zandt; Mr. Carl; Charles Hawes; Mrs. B. F. Shinkle; Margaret Wilson, gr. Ernest Pontius, Lawrence; William Kelley, *c*43; and Charles Cross, *c*40. - TOUGHER • SMARTER • WARMER —and at the price you want to pay—come into OBER'S and check your list against our gift items. The Original RUGBY by WILSON BROTHERS $2.75 Ober's Season's Greetings Everybody I hope you get a lot of good presents this Christmas and that you will have the health to enjoy them all next year. I hope, too, that someone gives you an I.E.S. Study Lamp. They are just the thing to study with, and they save your eyes, even though they are only $3.95. Reddy Kilowatt CITY COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL The insas Electric Power Company K CHICAGO SERVICE 7-16-129 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1930 SIMONIZING.. SPORTS By JAY SIMON Aside to Missouri university authorities who have asked other schools in the Big Six to help out with contributions to send their band to the Orange bowl. We are just poor folks over here in Kansas and Texas, and we aren't going to pay any hard cash, but we might loan you Sarahela Sherman so that you won't have to get a high school miss to lend your horn tooters. . . The Acacia actives won the annual Schilfer Shore challenge "cup" when they defeated the pledges, 6 to 0, Sunday afternoon. The series has been on annually for over 10 years. Bruce Voran, who threw a charley-horse in his left arm after pitchin' them through the hoop oven at Warensburg last week, injured his knee in practice yesterday evening when he and the "diabolically clever" Bob Allen crushed into each other. The M. U. coaches have a new scheme worked out for their eager-gridders Blaine Currence and Clay Cooper. They believe that it will be easy for them to play basketball in Madison Square Garden Dec. 28, then jump a train and rush down to Miami for the Orange bowl tilt with Georgia Tech three days later. June Bierbower, the gal sports up ed at Nebraska, writes a line saying that the Cornhuskers will not be so hot this year. At least not at first, she corrects. And I believe the correction is about right. With Don Fitz and Ai Randall, towering starters on last year's team return—he's one of them—and schoolers ready to go, Coach W. H. Browne is going to make tough for Kansas and Iowa State's almost stubby outfits. Negro Doctor Will Speak Tomorrow in Fraser Hall Dr. J. E Perry, Negro physician of Kansas City and founder of the Wheatley hospital for Negroes, will speak on the meaning of Christmas at a meeting of the M.Y.C.A and W.C.A. morning afternoon at 4:30 in Craven角落午夜。 *This is the annual joint Christmas party of the two organizations, and marks the start of a membership attendance campaign to try to get members active in the program of the two groups.* The reading of the Christmas story from the scripture and the singing of carols by the audience will open the program. Faculty members, students, and members of the Y.W.C.A. and Y.M. C.A. are invited to attend. Voran Injured In Long Practice Last Night Kansas' chances against Southern Methodist here next Monday and Tuesday nights were dimmed yesterday evening when Bruce Voran, high point man in the Warrenburg game, was carried from the floor after crashing into a teammate. He suffered a bad charley-horse just above the knee and may not recover in time to play against the Mustangs. The Jayhawkers went through a long session as Coach "Phot" Allen attempted to put some punch in the offense that looked so bad against the Mules last week. Bob Johnson, sophomore forward, went on a scoring rampage Mustangs Fear Harp, Ebling up 10 field goals. At one stretch he tallied six in a row without a miss. Dick Harp and Don Ebbing, senior mainstays of the K.U. quintet, starred against Southern Methodist last year and will endeavor to perform as brilliantly against the Musangs here. Harp, rugged guard, warmed up with five points in the first S.M.U. game last winter and then scored eleven points the next night to lead the Jayhawks in scoring for the second contest. Five field goals and a free throw were Harp's contributions in that game. Ebling, speedy little forward, led Kansas in the first game with twelve points, on five field goals and two free throws. The next night Ebling scored ten points on two field goals and six free throws. In the two games Kansas has played this fall, Harp has scored eight points in each contest, while playing a brilliant all-around game. Ebbins' fishing spirit has been an integral part of the play of the Jawhaws this season. S.M.U. Looked Impressive Bradley Tech's crack team lost to only two other teams all season, California and Long Island University. Their victories included a 39-24 decision in the ACC final and swept a two game series with Oklahoma before losing to S.M.U. After dropping the two games to Kansas last year, Southern Methodist went on to a fine season with their most impressive victories a win over Bradley Tech and a sweep of a two game series with Arkansas. Coach of the Southern Methodist team is "Whitey" Bacus, one of the youngest college basketball coaches in the country. Bacus graduated from S.M.U. in 1923, after starring in basketball, football and baseball. He became head basketball coach at his alma mater in 1837. Louis Banker, c'43, and Roy Wendel, c'43, under appended dactylose late Monday at Watkins Memorial Hospital. The two cases each was described as satisfactory. Two Undergo Appendectomies A man working at a desk. DEAR ST. NICK: (C/O my wife, my kin, my friends) I'm fed up with the gadget gifts I've received these past few Christ-mases. Think you could arrange to get me the following practical gifts this year? 1. Some of those swell Arrow Shirts —with the one-and-only arrow collar attached. They're Sanitized Shrunk —(Fabric shrinkage less than 1.). and they're as good-looking as anything! They're only $2, you know! (Some are more.) 2. And how about an Arrow Tie or too? The Arrows I own are the best- looking in my collection. $1 and $1.50. 3. Come through with some Arrow Shorts (the most comfortable shorts in the world—65$ up). . . and some Arrow Handkerchiefs (25$ up.) Many thanks for some. s for same. (Signed) ANXIOUS May Miss Mustangs CARL'S KANGA 13 KANSAS 13 HAPPY BIRTHDAY BRUCE VORAN The Jayhawkers' clever left-handed utility man was injured last evening when he and a teammate ran into each other during the training session, the Kansas team when they lost to Warrensburg last week. Six Independent Cage Teams Win Opening Games Fairfield, Me.—(UP)–Fish nets were used on the main street recently to rescue two recrucents that had limbed a telephone pole. - Squad of Football Stars Look Impressive in 50-18 Victory; Ghosts Continue To Triumph Monday night six independent teams went through their first basketball game of the current season. The most impressive team was the Buccaneers, a team composed of varsity football stars. The Buccaneers overwhelmed the Hexagon II five by a score of 50 to 18. Hubert Ulrich, Jake Fry, Marvin Vandever, Bourre, and Davis were outstanding in the Buccaneer victory. John Naramore, another grilron hero, tallied nine points for the Hexagon II. Kappa Ea Kappa downed ISA-1, 37 to 20, in an impressive win. McKe- kal and Brunton were standouts for the KE.K, outfit. Clawson led the Jayhawk Co-op to victory over ISA-4, 36 to 8, in a tight battle. The defending champions, Galloping Ghosts, started where they left off last year, winning from the Theta Tata 27 to 7. The Hollowbounds beat Alpha Chi Sigma 46 to 20, Liam Johnson, and Trichill were the leading scorers with 12, 11, and 10 points respectively. A beautiful long shot in the last minute by Zimmerman gave the Mississippi Metetsors a 19-17 win over the ISA-2 team. Henry Goes South On Speaking Tour Gwinn Henry, athletic director and head football coach, is leaving today for Dremont, Tex., where he plays on the women's football banquet tomorrow night. Coach Henry spoke in Miami, Okla., Monday night. He will address a group of Columbus High School students Saturday. Miss Zipple Convalescing Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Memorial Union building, who recently underwent an appendectomy at the Lawrence Memorial hospital, is convulsing at Corbin hall, it was reported yesterday. Malott Signs 200 Diplomas will complete signing the sheep- skins in the next few days. Dr. E. H. Lindley signed 15,718 diplomas during his 19 years as Chancellor. sales manager Chairman Dean W. Mialott Monday chiefed his first diploma as hanceller of the University. Heigned more than 200 Monday and thirty-four Tuesday. Will Not Aid Missouri Band Disregarding the leadership of the Oklahoma Daily, student newspaper Santa Claus Yourself to a New Coat — Wear One Home and Surprise the Natives. of the University of Oklahoma, the University Daily Kansan will not support a campaign to raise a fund to help the Missouri band go south for the Orange Bowl game, memorialize the Kansas board decided yesterday. 5 The question came up when Oklahoma students offered to help raise the estimated $2,500 needed to send the University of Missouri band to Miami, Fla. for the Orange bowl game on New Year's Day. CHRISTMAS SPECIAL THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY YOUR CHOICE OF ANY TOPCOAT--OVERCOAT IN OUR STORE AT A DISCOUNT OF--- All Sizes All Stylos All Colors Nothing Reserved Your Choice 20% THE PRICES $20.00 Coats $16 $22.50 Coats $18 $25.00 Coats $20 $27.50 Coats $22 All New Full Cases $30.00 Coats $24 $35.00 Coats $28 $37.50 Coats $30 $45.00 Coats $36 — Real Values EXTRA SPECIAL — 1 Group of Wool Suits Sole +ed from Our Stock Here Is Your Chance to Stock Up on Good Clothes at a Saving 33 $ ^{1} / _{3} \% $ Christmas Gifts Now on Display Arrow Silk Botany Wool Neckties, $1 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Ann Sheridan STARRED IN "YEARS WITHOUT DAYS" A Warmer Bros. Picture does her Christmas shopping early. A Welcome Gift One of the most attractive Christmas packages—see it in the and order your Christ- Christmas packages--see it in the stores and order your Christmas Chesterfields now. Chesterfields, with their real mildness better taste and delicious aroma, give real pleasure to anyone who smokes. Christmas You can't buy a better cigarette. hesterfields Copyright 1959, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. in attractive Gift cartons UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVII NUMBER 62 OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14 1020 Capper Strikes Foreign Activity In United States Z-229 - Senior Kansas Senator Speaks at University Club and Town Hall Last Evening "Too much foreign flag waving and goosestepping has been allowed in these United States," declared Arthur Cuppen, senior senator from Kansas, in an after-dinner discussion of "Free Speech." Robert Royer, a former member of Government" before members of the University Club last night. Senator Capper in defining democracy said that "to most of us a democracy means a form of government in which the state exists for the people, and not the people for the state." He pictured American democracy as attempting to provide the greatest possible amount of individual liberty with a minimum of governmental interference. As threws to this democracy Senator Copper listed excessive public debt, unbeatable taxes, unemployment of millions of people, inability of farmers and business men to make a decent living, and war. Speaking of the European war, Copper said, "If we should take part in this war, that is not our war, I fear it might be a death-knell of our democracy."[39] Strength, Liberty Capper stressed both political and economic freedom as necessary in democratic government, but said that freedom of speech should stop when it began to advocate destruction of individuals or of the government. Capper denounced the communists and fascists, and described the Dies Committee as "doing a valuable public service." Senator Capper has observed "a very healthy reaction" to the European war. He thanked Stalin and other leaders for helping to produce this reaction. The senior senator from Kansas saw not so much danger in agitation as in "allowing certain undead to be buried" and in the system to continue unchecked." Senator Capper spoke of these problems in particular later in the evening before the Lawrence Town Hall, presided over by E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science. Discusses Three Problems Speaking in the Ustianian Church, Senator Capper discussed three problems confronting the United States, including a farm problem, and unemployment. He declared that the war being fought in Europe is not this country's war, saying "The only side for the United States to take when Europe goes to war is the outside" Regarding the farm problem, the senator said that "Secretary of Hull, through his agency, agrees to supplying to revive world trade . . . at the expense of American farmers." public discussion Capper pictured unemployment as "the most sinister word in our language today other than the world war," declaring that unemployment could not be stopped by law. He suggested that the answer to the problem could best be found through public discussion. On the Shin =By Reginald Buxton: Trouble with dating a reporting student is that she'd rather date that personality platron, Bill Jensen. Many a gal has crossed and uncrossed her knees in the Melan-ohly Dane's classes but to no avail, neither grade nor date do they get. A group of more prassicors are ready to instigate an allocation of affections suit against him if he doesn't stop smiling so purity at the girls. Looking over the proofs on the coming Jayhawkier, I was professionally entranced by the attractive make-up of the entire magazine. Editor MacCain has put a lot of work into this issue and has come up with a magazine any high-salary editor would be proud to claim Gray Dorsey, the printer's devil while walking along behind two Lawrence high school boys over-heard the following conversations First boy Say, old So and so sure (Continued on page two) New York (UP)-The European war will help to "Americanize" women's styles in this country, believes the Cooper Union art faculty. War May Spur Women To Originate 'American' Styles Eccentric hats and other frivalities of women's dress will be out, Miss Hutten said. "A parallel influence to an emphasis on Americanism in women's styles," she explained, "will be utilitarianism or functionalism. In no Helen said that she wasn't nervous flying alone, but did notice the lightness of the plane due to the absence of the weight of the instructor. "The plane seemed to want to take off of its own accord and was difficult to keep on the ground," she said. Helen gained advance flying experience last month when she flew one of the training ships all but 20 miles of the distance here from Cincinnati. Ashcraft Reports First Students Solo Satisfactorily After soling the students are progressively instructed in landing the plane cross-wind, with the wind, and with a dead motor, said E D H. Hay, professor of mechanical engineering and head of the aero-navational trailing unit that their pilot license they must be able to handle a plane and perform figure-eight turns, climbs, and vertical banks. Green was the first of the two students to take off for the test flight, but he was followed immediately by Helen Hay. Both students flew for about 20 minutes and practiced take-offs and landings. The solo test flights were supposed to have begin Tuesday morning. Because of the low ceiling that morning they were postponed. First students of the University Aeronautical training class to solo, John Green, m 42, and Helen Hay, c'40, took off for their test flights yesterday morning "Both were satisfactory," reported Bill Asheraf, instructor and co-owner of the Asheraf Air School. (From the Oklahoma Daily) Exercise is the logical way to trainlined furure. Coeds Can't Lose If They Diet No amount of dieting can transform a hefty coid into a slim nymph without regular exercise to keep the lines firm and to prevent Just as exercise may aid the plump woman to regain her school-girl figure, so may tennis playing or the daily dozen help an under-weight femme to put on weight, not fat, but muscles. One of the primary requisites for exercising the way to beauty is that the exercise be pleasant to the individual. Herein lies the greatest fault of the daily dozen, for when a coed touches someone with an outstretched hand through a sheer sense of duty she forgets all the joy of using her muscles. This should be good news to students: Walking, for the normal individual, is one of the best forms of exercises. Provided that one wears comfortable clothes, and especially sensible shoes. For persons who are troubled by posture defects, the ideal method of walking is through touch of the body be always in perfect alignment, the shoulders, head and hips in one line. If this is done enough, good posture will become habitual. Mr. Dreyer illustrated his talk with slides showing the methods by which geologist surrime the age and evolution of the earth and the signal importance of fossils in thedetermination of age change could be used as a conclusive proof in determining evolutionary development. Dreyer Discusses Importance Of Geology in Evolution "The Importance of Geology in the Interpretation of Evolution" was discussed last night by R. M Dreyer, instructor in geology, at a meeting of the Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity. way can we escape allogether the direct result of the war on world fashions. There will be in America reverberations of the utilitarian mode born of necessity in Europe, such as the fashion displays of jewelry and all types of frivolity in dress, for instance, virtually will disappear." The war will not only bring about changes in the type of the clothes women will wear but will result in a wider use in styles of American design, inspiration, and motif, according to Miss Hutton. Pitch Pennies In Frank Strong To Aid Families It's just a drop in the bucket, but it will help to make some child happy this Christmas. The "Old Oaken Bucket" now hangs in the center of the rotunda of Frank Strong hall. To try your aim, all you need to do is pitch a penny (or a nickle or dime if you like) from the second floor. All the coins that miss will land in the coin box, and the coins in a day the coins will be counted and the amount of money collected indicated on two fifteen-foot thermometers. While students are having a good time pitching pennies, they will be helping 10 Lawrence families to really enjoy Christmas this year. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, has chosen this means of gathering money to make the Yule-tide brighter for the families. Chancellor Deane W. Maiot expressed his satisfaction in the project by saying, "This effort to cooperate in helping the less fortunate people of Lawrence merits the support of the whole student body." Lindleys in China Until January 1 The Lindleys have found the Chinese to be quicker mentally than the Japanese although their knowledge of hygiene is much lower than The letter was written Nov. 11 and said that they had received no mail since arriving in Pekin the first of that month. Sluss Returns From Philadelphia Chancellor emeritus, E. H. Lindley and Mrs. Lindley will remain in Pekin, China, until the first of the year according to a letter received here yesterday written by the former Chancellor from the Grand Hotel des Wagons-Lits in that city. Dr. Lindley wrote that his daily salary was $36 in Chinese money or $3.60 in United States money. Other prices are on about the same level according to the letter. Sluss Returns From Philadelphia A. H. Slusss, professor of machine construction, returned Tuesday from a meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Philadelphia. Workmen have been busy the last three days tearing the steps down and rebuilding on a new foundation of rock and concrete. They should be completed by the end of the week. The museum was condenined in 1932 and has had two government loans. The work now is being financed by the division of buildings and grounds through state appropriations. Along with Comanche, Custer's famous horse, and the rest of the building, the steps of Dyche museum are being reconstructed. Repair Work on Steps Of Dyche Nears End Littooy Limits Tickets Sales For Soph Hop To Name Lewis Contest Prizes at Commencement Listening to Ted Fio Rito from the Memorial Union lounge rather than from the ballroom may be the fate of Soph Hoy tickets in his purchase of Soph Hoy tickets. - Fio Rito To Use Two Piano To Take 'Vigilour' Out of Music When He Plays Hero Friday Fred Littot, 142, dance manager, last night said that only a "limited" number" of tickets would be sold for the dance Friday night and that late comes may be out of luck. Those who get in will get to hear Fio Rib's proof that the saxophone is not the sexiest of all musical instruments. In this leader's band the viola has replaced the sax in that position. Essays for the Hattie Elizabeth Lewis Contest must be between 5-300 and 10,000 in length and must be submitted, complete with footnotes, bibliography, and references, to the office of the Chancellor by May 1, 1940, according to Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology. Three copies of the manuscripts should be submitted. Three prizes of $100.00, $75.00, and $50.00 will be awarded by the committee at commencement. Back of all this is Fio Rito's contention that swing is seeing the hand-writing on the wall and that only sweet music is here to stay. The pianist's musical philosophy is "give the listeners what they want when they want it" and he says he knows what they want. In five years, Fio Rito says, there won't be any more swing bands. To aid him in his job of "taking the vulgarity out of hotter music," Fe Rito will have another piano and another pianist who he plays here. Fri Flo Rito started his musical career by banging out piano melodies for "Petals of Pauline" and the wild west adventures of Bill Hart. That was when he was 16. Since then he has played through raag-time, one-step, cake-walk, walk-up, hip-hop, playing those. Flo Rito claims that swing is "nothing more than music of 20 years ago dressed up in a pattern." On the other hand, he says, sweet music can't be changed will never be out of date. Though Fio Rito himself is a veteran from "way back," the band that plays with him on Friday has not come all the way in his company. Not long ago he decided that what the Fio Rito enterprises needed was new blood and he set out to reorganize the band. The new outfit he finally gathered is the Fio Rito band of today. The general subject for the contest is "The Application of the Teachings of Jesus to Some Problem of the Present Day." Some of Two Pianos With Band Three men and two women students will speak in the Campus Peace Contest over WREN at a 6 o'clock onstage on the topic "How to Keep America Out of War." The winner, selected by three Lawrence judges and the audience, will be awarded a $5 cash prize. When Ted Fie Fin Rito turns from the podium to the piano, the man you will see weilding the baron is Norman Botnik, who plays the band's pit instrument, the viola. Botnik has played with bands in England and America and has furnished incidental music for numerous movie shorts. Has New Band The contest is under the direction of the campus peace action group, a.d. will give radio listeners a chance to hear campus opinion, according to department of E. C. Barbier of the department of apache and dramatic art. Five To Compete In Radio Forum the topics which have been suggested are: Students competing in the contest are: Jean Crawford, c'40; Karl Rippenhalt, 43; Elizaj Cole, c'40; Dor Mitchell, c'42, and Gladys Haker. Denominationalism, the future of foreign missions, the liquor traffic, race conflict, ethics in business and the professions, dictatorship versus democracy, the American foreign policy, propaganda and pressure groups, treatment of prisoners and problems of the migratory workers. Members of the committee in charge of the contest are: Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology; Elise Neuenchwander, professor of romance languages; H. L. Smith, assistant professor of journalism; and Alice Winston, assistant professor of Alice Winston, assistant professor of London, Dec. 13.-(UP)-The House of Commons, in its first secret session since the last war, tonight debated behind locked doors opposition charges that the government is bungling the production of vital war supplies. British Commons Debates 'Bungling' In Secret Session While the House was in secret session, there broke out in the House of Lords a debate concerning peace overtures which threw at august body into an uprase and prompted Foreign Secretary Viscount Hailux speaking loudly to speakers by declaring their speeches "dungge the notion's cause." Emsie Ivo Bligh, holder of one of the oldest British peerages, touched off the fireworks by asking whether the government wouldn't take ad- dition to the rule of Belgium and Queen Wilhelmina of Holland to mediate the Eur- Blondes Preferred But Brunettes Are More Trustworthy Moscow, Ida. (UP) —Gentlemen may prefer blondes—but they trust brunettes, if experiments in superstitious beliefs carried on at the University of Idaho disclose the truth. Dr. Allan C. Lemon conducted a quiz on superstitions among psychology students ranging from freshmen to graduates, and learned 1. Number "13" is unlucky 2. People with greenish eyes are not as trustworthy as people with blue or brown eyes. 3. A high forehead indicates superior intelligence. 4. Long, slim fingers indicate art artistic nature. 5. Fat people are always good-natured. 6. Blondes are less trustworthy than brunettes. However, the professor believes there is some hope for the superstitious. "I find that college does much to clear up these superstitions," Doctor Lemon said. "The percentage of superstitious beliefs decreases steadily up to the graduate level. It's 25 per cent with freshmen; 18 per cent with sophomores; 12 per cent with juniors; 9 per cent with seniors, and 5 per cent with graduate students." Life Publicity Brings Questions From Easterners Whether persons on the Campus like the recent pictures in Life magazine of Kansas women or not, they are excellent publicity for the University, according to a report from the Registrar's office. Miss Mae Rubble, secretary in the office, has received an unusual number of requests from the East for catalogs and information since the magazine was published. Letters have come from Syracuse, L. N.; Charlestown, W. V.; Rochester; Minn., Beaver, Pa.; Lancaster, Mass. Bronx, N. Y.; and several other eastern states. Most of the girls stated that they had seen the pictures in Life, and that they desired more information concerning the University. Some asked about possibilities of taking special courses, but the general questions were about living expenses and fees. Embargo on Japan Is Topic Of Town Hall Discussion A discussion of the question: "Should our policy toward Japan be an embargo or renewal of the trade treaty?"27 is the main topic on the program for the joint exercise in 1980 but in the main lounge of the Memorial Union building. The group will discuss the controversy after listening to the broadcast of Town Hall of the air on which the same question will be argued by William R. Castle, former ambassador to Japan and commander-in-chief of U.S. Asiatic fleet, Dr. Judd, medical missionary to China from 1934 to 1938. Col. Karl F. Baldwin, professor of military science, and former military attache at U.S. embassy in Japan, will be the resource man at the meeting. The "group debates" are sponsored, by the Social Action commissions of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. ocean war, if the offer is still open, in order to secure a "freely negotiated peace." "I am opposed to the defeatism of those who thought there was no remedy except war," declared S3-year-old Lord Darnley. "Understanding, or a reasoned way of approaching the problem, must demand that people be educated in result than the old method of revenue producing victory." Darnley said Britain had not done enough "in the years after Versailles to conciliate Germany and something of the same kind will arise in the future." He said Chancellor Adolph Hitler's actions were "aimed partly to make his country free and prosperous but chiefly and mainly absolutely to free it from any danger in the future, and with so every threat we made him think that aggression was more necessary." Feature Pi Phi's In Cover Picture Of New Jayhawker The Christmas number of the Jayhawk will be issued at 1:30 today, instead of tomorrow, as was previously announced, it was learned from Richard MacCann, c40, editor of the annual, last night. Copies will be available at the book exchange in Melbourne, contribution of the Mailbag Building, building Among the main features of the Christmas number are the pictures depicting Campus life and class pictures of women in organized houses. Others of interest are the cover pictures, featuring a few of the Pi Phi's and photographs of "atmosphere" at football games. Allen Crafton, professor of speech and dramatic art, contributes "Born in an Idea," a story of the bloody years in early Kansas politics before the founding of the University. Illustrations are by Andy Durling, fa42. "The Bitten with the Sweet Stomach," a play with tributes of sorority life, with drawings by Betsy Dodge, fa43 is the contribution of Betty Coulson, c'41 Other stories are, "A Review of KU.'s 400," by Russell Baker, c'42 concerning the NYA at the University, a review of the football season by Jim Bell, c'42 with a write-up of one-set plays of a last month by Bill Fey, c'41, and a comedy by R. L. Schatz. Interviews with prominent independent students, and pictures, also included. "Covers will be issued when copies are obtained," MacCann said, "and students who do not yet have previous classes in the MCAwley may buy them for 75 cents." AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday, Dec. 15 Sophomore Hop, ballroom of Memorial Union. 1 a.m. Fireside Forum, party at Congreational Parish house, 12 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16 Campus house, dance at Evans Hearth. 12 p.m. Corbin hall, Christmas party a hall, 12 p.m. Cosmopolitan Club, party at 1011 Indiana, 11:30 p.m. Dance at 1140 Louisiana, 12 p.m. Delta Sigma Theta, dinner-dance in Kansas room of Memorial Union 12 p.m. Pledges of Kappa Eta Kappa, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Christmas formal in ballroom of Memoria Union, 12 p.m. Kappa Psi, dinner-dance at Weide mann's, 12 p.m. Ricker hall, semi-formal party a hall. 12 p.m. Westminster hall, dinner-dance Colonial. 12 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20 Beta Theta Pi, dinner-dance chapter house, 12 p.m. Phi Kappa Psi, dinner-dance a chapter house, 12 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Adviser of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, dinner- dance at Eldridge hotel and chap- house, 12 p.m. Elizabeth Meguiar, Advisor of Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs Rotary Club Will Feed Grid Team Next Week Members of the varsity football squad will be guests of the Lawrence Rotary Club at a banquet at the Eldridge hotel Wednesday, Dec. 18. Hova Hanna is in charge of program arrangements. Famed Essayist Will Discuss Reading Habits - Louis Untermeyer, Noted American Poet and Critic, Is Speaker at Convocation This Morning Resigned As Vice-President Mr. Untermeyer, now giving a five-week lecture course at the University of Kansas City, will arrive here early this morning. He will look on after his order in lecture before his class in Kansas City. Louis Untermeyer, poet, critic, essayist, and anthropologist, who was unable to graduate from high school because of his failure to understand geometry, will make his second appearance on the Campus when he addresses the all-University conversation on "What Americans Read and Why." at 10 o'clock this morning in Hoch auditorium. He appeared here on the lecture course in December. 1934. Modern poetry has been the very life of this noted writer. He resigned as vice-president of a jewelry firm to devote all his time to writing. Since then he has written and compiled more than 30 volumes of prose and verse. He has gained international recognition in artologies. Among them are: "Modern American Poetry," and "The Book of Living Verse." One of Untermeyer's latest books, "From Another World," he calls an autobiography, Critics, however, call it a book of memoirs written about the "Twenties." Since he The class schedule for today First period 8:30 to 9:05 Second period 9:15 to 9:50 Convocation 10:00 to 10:50 Third period 11:00 to 11:35 Fourth period 11:45 to 12:05 new, personally, public figures, and was familiar with all the movements during the period, the book presents a vivid picture of life between 1920 and 1930. Personality sketches of such authors as Vachel Lindsay, Amy Lowell, and Sara Tendale, are presented in a manner that brings them to life in the minds of those who knew them. (Mary E. One of his works, "The Dowkey of God," won the Emit prize for the best book on Italy by a non-Haliian. He now contributes criticisms and reviews to such magazines as *Aquarius* and *The New Republic* and *The New Republic*. Some of Untermerny's widely known verse works are: "Challenge," "These Times," "The New Adam," and "Food and Drink." Poetry, he once said, is universally scorned in public. He says that everyone makes fun of it, and yet everyone writes it at some time. "It is essential in man, and was embodied in him from the rhythm of nature which surrounded him as he developed." Untermeyer defines poetry as, "The power to describe the inde- scribable in terms of the unforgett- table." "What Americans Read and Why," the lecture Untermeyer will give today, is basically serious, but is expected to be a lively appraisal of the impulses which cause persons to read. Play Jury Rules Heroine 'Guilty' The jury drawn from a capacity audience at the Dramatic Club play "Night of January 1848" hot night returned a verdict of "gain in the trial" to c32. The prosecution will be shown length and tomorrow night. The jury members were: Don Taylor, gr; Betty Jean Sayles, c'43; Charles Owens, c'43; Jack Wassner, b'40; V. K. Bruner, Lawrence businessman: The Reverend Joseph C. King, pastor of the Congregational Church of Christ in New York; the Reverend Pete Osmond, Pete Osmond, c'43; Mrs Ted Paulin, Lawrence; Lawrence McMhine, fa'40; Margaret Hogan, c'41; and Anna Jane Hoffman, c'43. Twente Finishes School Survey Prof. J. W. Twente, of the School of Education, who has been participating in a survey of Colby schools with M. A. Callahan and J. P. Sheldon, high school supervisors of Topela, will return today. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1939 Kansan Comment Need Housing Improvement Present status of the rooming situation at the University as described by Dr. R. I. Canuteson at a meeting of the Men's Student Council Monday night leaves much to be desired. When 700 men live in unapproved houses and many of the approved rooms barely pass inspection, action on the rooming question should not be delayed. Plans for a low cost cooperative dormitory such as the proposed Alumni Place probably would provide rooms for those students whose situation is most critical, but it would not take care of the whole number of students now inadequately housed. It would take several large dormitories to house 700 students. Corbin Hall, the largest women's dormitory, has 118 students while the combined number of Watkins and Miller halls is 78. It leaves the question of how to provide low cost yet livable rooms for those students who can afford only a minimum rental. It is here that more rigid and repeated inspection is needed. At the present time men students are not forced to live in inspected houses as are women, principally because the houses which these men students can afford will not pass inspection. Essentials for any student's room are adequacy of heat, light, and cleanliness. Any house in which students live could be inspected for these essentials and recommendations for improvement made. Important however is a follow-up plan of re-inspection when recommendations are ignored. A plan to provide student rooms elsewhere in cases of this kind is badly needed. Smaller cooperative houses might be the answer. It is time for student and faculty members to attack the housing situation with common sense and courage. Certainly present housing is not good advertising for the University. --- Toys Change For Junior Of all the big businesses in the United States the toy business is perhaps the most enchanting to the eyes of the consumer and surprising to the eyes of the economist. During the pre-Christmas shopping season it is estimated that Americans will band one hundred and seventy million dollars over the counters of toy shops. The total toy price for 1939 will be approximately two hundred and fifty million dollars, ten per cent above that of last year and matching the high of 1929. The reason for the increase in a time when incomes are lower is that the toys have been given a more serious purpose. The man most responsible for this change was Joseph Lee, a wise and kindly person who spent a long life learning from children about their play. He summed up the results in a book published in 1915 which stimulated educators and many parents to a new attitude. The basic points brought out by the book, "Play in Education," were that play is to the child what work is to the man and that toys are to children what tools are to adults. Much of the work done in the past twenty-five years toward providing better toys for children owes its impetus to Lee's observations. The move for improvement of toys has had to combat the popular conception of a toy as a brightly painted novelty to be wound up and watched by parent and child. Such toys amused the children by motion and bright coloring but tired the parents who did the winding so that there was small complaint when brittle springs gave way. A walk through a typical toy store today shows how closely playthings are related to everyday living. They are innovations rather than improvements as they duplicate designs of automobiles, airplanes, trains, and cook stoves. The true place of toys in a child's development is not yet fully realized, however, when half of a year's toy sales are compressed into ten hectic days before Christmas. For that reason Junior's parents must continue to exchange the toys sent by doting relatives who have purchased for a five-year-old boy without regard to that boy's individuality and tastes. --- Hull's Program Faces Attack The hue and cry now rising over Secretary Hull's reciprocal trade program under the Trade Agreements Act, an Act which has been under constant attack since it was passed in 1934 and extended in 1937, leads to the belief that representatives of private interests are turning on the heat in Washington. In the 18th century, mercantilists felt that they must sell more than they had purchased from one another in order to receive a favorable balance in gold. This theory led to Protectionism, whereby nations erected walls of tariffs around their countries. Even now the influence of the 18th century mercantilists and the later protectionists impedes the free flow of the world's goods from one country to another and allows industries to grow up within countries under a system of imperfect competition. When a sufficient number of nations built tariff walls, free trade ceased. When free trade thus was changed to expensive trade, the peoples of the world were forced to pay more for a lower standard of living in order to protect the industries which had grown up artificially within their own boundaries. No nation can engage in foreign trade without being willing to exchange goods for goods. The false idea that a nation can sell but not buy has hurt the economy of every country. Secretary Hull's program of reciprocal trade agreements is an attempt to repair some of the damage done in the past by high tariff walls. Reciprocal trade agreements, furthermore, encourage international good will which in turn makes possible world economic readjustment. While Hull's policy may hurt some specific protected industries, in the long run it will help all industry by giving cheaper goods and increasing the buying power of consumers. --subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas; daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second case matter September 12, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. Are Seniors Indifferent? The turn-out for senior physical examinations indicates that seniors are indifferent either to their health or to their pocketbooks. Only fifteen have appeared at the hospital for the free physical examination offered to seniors. Lack of response may be due in part, however, to the fact that seniors are not being notified by mail this year because of the extra expense involved. It is up to the individual senior to make his appointment at the hospital. Prompt action will benefit both the student and the health service. As freshmen or new students, the seniors have had a physical examination before entering school. For those who entered as freshmen, four years have elapsed since the examination. The physical examination assumes a financial value for all seniors since it includes tests and immunizations which are expensive. These are a repetition of the tuberculin tests, a chest x-ray, optional Wassermann, and immunization for typhoid fever and small pox. All seniors who will finish at the end of the semester should make their appointments before they leave for the Christmas holidays. Other seniors should plan for their examinations as early as possible to avoid the last minute spring rush which has taken place in the past. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Thursday, Dec. 14, 1939 No.62 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and notices due by next Thursday. --subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas; daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second case matter September 12, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. A. I.M. & M.E.: There will be a meeting this afternoon at 4:30. Dr. Stephenson will speak. Please be present as we are planning to make a group picture—Eugene Maxwell. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB. The annual Community Club Christmas party will be held at 8:30, Saturday night. Dec. 16 at the home of Mrs. Macdonald Cole, 1011 W. 27th Street, Boston, MA. Attendees are invited to attend—Ruth Weynock, secretary. NEWMAN CLUB: The Newman Club will hold its regular Communion breakfast after 7:30 and meet with him in room 11. All Catholic students wishing to attend please 338 for reservations—James C. Gillez, vice-president. NOTICE TO ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. D E F I G H T. The hospital is open Tuesday for discussion with student members of mental hygiene. Appointments may be made through the Watkins Memorial Hospital—Dr R. L Cai. NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE INREGULAM PAYROLL: All students, on the irregular payroll, are required to call at the business office and sign the Petition before the Christmas holiday—Karl Buszar, bourst. NOTICE TO SENIORS GRAUDATING IN FEBURARY. You may have a complete examination at the Health Service. Please make your appointment as soon as possible —Dr. R. I. Canuthes. WESTMINSTER STUDENT FORUM. Everyone is invited to come to Westminster Hall after the Christmas Vesper Sunday evening for an informal social gathering, and a morning of refreshments arrived—Charles Yummons, president. XM.-YW. There will be a joint Christmas assembly of the V.M.C.A. and W.Y.C.A. in Fraser theatre at 4:30 o'clock. Dr. Perry will be the principal speaker. Al. Merritt will be the greatest Kiera, Maria Cook, membership chairmen. SCABBAR AND BLADE PLEDGES. All pledges to the game will be held this afternoon at 4:50. Fowler Bay School. DEANE W. MALOTT, Chancellor First period 8:30 to 9:05 Second period 9:15 to 9:50 Third period 10:00 to 10:45 Fourth period 11:45 to 11:55 Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MORNING CLASS SCHEDULE Housemothers Attend School In Purdue Summer Session The housemothers, those women who have planned our meals for four years; who have listened to our tales of woe; who have relentlessly turned the lights at closing hours, are now going to school. Ninety-five housemothers for fraternities, sororites, dormitories, and cooperative houses met for four weeks this summer in one of Purdue's new residence halls. They discussed, with the help of nationally known authorities, such subjects as housing, house management, cooperative buying, budgeting, meal planning, the psychological foundations of human behavior, the development of social competence and socially desirable attitudes, counseling, in its varied aspects—social, moral, educational, vocational, and the housemother's place in the community. Because of the success of the first meeting, a similar course will prob Because of the success of the first meeting, a similar course will probably be given in 1940. The women who attended came from: Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Tennessee Missouri, Oregon, Minnesota, Tennessee Missouri, Oregon, Minnesota On the Shin- tossed us a tough quiz didn't she? Second boy: Yeah, she sure did. First boy: Say, who was the first man on earth? Aacach's social chairman, Ted Grainger, accompanied pledges to a Sigma Kappa hour dance 'lother night. Dancing with Betty LoMech, he started off on her wrong joot and at the conclusion of the dance Miss Mechem glared and curtly remarked, "Oh, Lord!" Later he was tripping around with another girl who asked, "Did you hear about that terrible dancer who is here?" Whereupon Grainger introduced himself as the offending culprit. (Continued from page one) Crafty Dance Manager Fred Litchie, alias the Fox, sang "Yamh yamh, yamh, youh's afraid of you?" to the MSC Monday but now he's meaning low on "You Turned The Tables On Me." Taking Soph Hops passes from the politicians is just going to take at first and you have to give it back ultimately to stop the screening and sobbing. The hunting club chappies are going to have pink coat n'everything. Ken Posthitewha confides his secret ambition to be Master of the Mutts, and to have a red coat, a hunting cap with a detachable feline feather, and breeches with wide flares. If bald-pate Ken takes off his hat and bolsters "Yokes" right loul, I allow as how the horses and mutts will recognize him and not throw a fit. Shades of Dale Carnegie: Professor and Mrs. Preyler pay a social call on George Daggitt, new piano instructor, the first of the semester; Daggit opened the door a short way, peered out, and gruffly said without knowing the identity of his callers, "Go away. I can't be bothered." I'm busy." Wonder what would have happened had it been a Fuller brush salesman instead of Professor Preyler. At the Fli Delt party Stew Gray gave Alma Chi "Fran" Anderson a rope with the ominous warning "If I give you enough rope you'll hang yourself." With a mose on the end of the rope no dangles from the scaffold of Miss Anderson's room, a constant reminder to do naught but good. That handsome lawyerman, D.U. Glen McCann received a dozen roses with an enclosed card saying "To God's gift to University freshmen—man women." (Editor's note: Buxton, McCannon just called to ask that you not say that the Sigma Kappa's sent the posies. Thanks.) PHOTOGRAPHS from negatives in HOTOGRAPHS of Homer Fremack Studio will be filled and may be callied before January 1, 2015. Call 225. SECRETARY TO CONGRESSMAN DRIVE IN EAST, in 1939 Oldsmobile, to Washington, D. C., via Indianaapolis, Columbus or Pittsburgh He wants one passenger, Tuesday, December 19th. Reasonable rate. Write LL W. S. Van Nostrand, Fort Riley, Kansas. -64 WANT ADS FOR SALE: Two tuxedos, one size 37, $10; pp. one size 39, $10, 45; one size 40 full dresses, $0.00. Call Postma at 2738W, after 7 p.m. LOST: Sunday afternoon - a ladies' Gold Elgin wrist watch, between 11th and 23rd streets of Vermont or Massachusetts, or 16th between Vermont and Tennessee. Reward. Phone 28413 or into 11717 Vermont. -62 gon, Kansas, California, Louisiana Montana, New Jersey, and Ontario Canada. Of the 79 who filled out questionnaires the average length of experience was 3.36 years, eight reported no previous experience, and the longest term of service was 24 years. The salaries reported varied from $500 to $1,200 per hour board and room. The average salary was $84.99 in addition to living. Other statistics obtained showed that one college paid the entire salary of the housemother of one Greek letter organization and in several other cases the college paid a portion of the salary. Dorsey, 15 Others In Recital Today Sixteen students will present a varied recital program at 3:39 this afternoon in the auditorium of Frank强牢 hall. The following numbers will be given: Ensemble, *Pseudolium* and Gavotte (*Philip James*) Jean Klusman, fa 41, flate; Robert Forenant, fa 42, flate; Robert Tillman, fa 42, clate; Jean Moyer, fa 42, basson; Edward Aiwa, fa 43. *Capriccio* (Winfrid Sanderson) by Eltrude Ellott, f41, 41st; *Spanish Dance* (Granados-Kceler) by Eugene Mingenni, f42, 42nd; *Virtuist* (Dost Thou Know That Fai Land*) from *Mignon*; Ethylene Burns, f40, 40th; *Variations on In the Wild* from *Lord Loreal*, f42, 42nd; *Vision Putative* from Herodude (Masseter); Gray Dorsey, f41, vocal. "Minuet, Melodie, and Gavette" (Cecil Burmer) by Eileen Martin, fa'42, and Marshall Bashir, fa'42,琴仲; "Old French Gavotte" (Pochon) and "Drink to Me only With Thine Eyes" (Pechon) by Eugene Ningerin; first violin; Lorraine McIntyre, fa'40, second violin; Vincent Bleeker, fa'40, vioia; and Saral Mohier, fa'41, cello. 2 KEY-KNIFE BY SWANK A knife with blade and file, and the additional feature of a key-blank, $3.50 quickly to fit to it your lock... With Chain, $5 CARL'S ...WISH HIM GOOD GROOMING! CHICAGO WAREHOUSE CHICAGO WAREHOUSE LENTHENIC contributes an urge to maculine vanity in their Three Musketeers—a trio of good grooming requisites. After Shove Lotion, Eau de Cologne, and Sculp Simultan in triangular flocons, are presented in a band box sensually decorated with scenes from strictly maculine activities Your Christmas compliment to him! Set - $1.95 Weaver's --- 197 GIFTS That will be cherished for many Christmases to come. Select Your Christmas Gifts HERE You can make arrangements to pay after Christmas Gustafson "The College Jeweler" I --- A K. U. 11 Christmas THE JAYHAWK SENDS GREETINGS! H Wall-plaque JAYHAWKS KANSAN Fritz Co. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U.66 In K. U. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 KU Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 367 Ask about Our Courtesy Card 35c each Colors For Good Times and Good Thing To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. Sales, rentals, cleaning and WOLLESON'S ON SALE AT TANK MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale. WOLFSON S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Optometrist 911 Mass. SKATES — SLEDS Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened Gustafson RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 TAXJ TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-calculating exposure meter. Catalyst 4-1 fifth Anilogent Aperture lens 1/25 to 1/200 second spray speed. A movie film buffer in standard cartridge. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing ?im—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 Phone K.U. 66 for a Kansan Ad-taker THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREL Here on the Hill Two men sitting at a table. an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizobeth Kirsch, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 "You'd better watch out, you'd better not cry; You'd better be good: I'm telling you why—" Santa Claus is coming to the Memorial Union building next Tuesday afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock, when open house will be held by the Memorial Union Activities Commission. Entertainment will be provided by the Modern choir; the Men's Glee Club, Corbin hall girls; Folk dancers from the de- Dr. Allen Crafton of the department of speech will take his place as master of ceremonies for the party. and Christmas carols sung b the group. An evening of swing tied up in Christmas spirit will be given by Dale Brodie and his boys tonight to members of Gamma Phi Beta at the hour dance following the annual Christmas dinner in the chapter house. Stun Stauffer, c'42; Martin Thomas c'40; Jason Yordy, c'42; Herc Bedlo I40; J. D. Ramsey, c'40; Dick Causley, c'40; Armstrong, c'43; Hulper, h/41. Cary Jones, c'41; Herbert Roberts c'uncil; Douglas Miller, b'40; Bade Case, c'41; Bob Richardson, c'41 Bob Doolett, c'40; Bill Reynolds c'42; Bob Lucy, c'40; Carl Moritz c'40. The guest list includes: Kemeth Nelson, b40; Dick Ash, d54; J. R. Jones, c42; Harry Crowe, b41; Lane Davis, c42; George Goddine, c42; Kemeth Rockhill, c40; Jack Card Cade, order Rankin, c43; Fried Gedeus, c43. Kenny Maricle, c'43; Bud Weir, c'43; Shields Hairy, c'42; Charles Solder, c'42; Weaver McCallin, c'40; Ewr John Ewers, gr.; Carlos Vogeler, c'41; Bill Douce, c'41; and Don Mitchell, c'42. --- Mary Frances McAnau was a luncheon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house Tuesday. Ruth Spencer, c'41, was a lanceeer guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday. Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity announces the pledging of Robert II Ebersole, e'42, of Hutchinson. The annual Christmas party for students of all nationalities will be given Saturday at 8:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Mercedes Cole, 1011 Indiana, by members of the Cosmopolitan Club. Spanish Club Party With Christmas decorations carried out in the Spanish manner, members of the University Spanish Club met Tuesday evening at the home of Prof. William Shoenker for a pre-holy holiday party. The group sang songs and the singing of old Spanish songs preceded the serving of refreshments. Lorraine Murphy, gr.; Leon Reynolds, gr; and William Smither, gr. were in charge of the gr. Dinner guests at the Triangle house Tuesday included the following: Stanley Yost, e43; Charles Ossley, e43; Bob Earnhart, e43; Exx Sage, e41; and Robert Sams, e41. Pi Kappa Alpha will have a buffet supper and dance this evening at the chapter house. Clyde Smith's orchestra will furnish the music. Alpha Tau Omega announces the pledging of Delhert Neis, c'43. Scientists Sans Microscopes Sediments 306-308 Combining forces, the Extomology, Botany, Bacteriology and Zoology, Clubs of Snow hall held the first See Exhibit of GORGEOUS GIFS GUARANTEED FOR LIFE The one and only guanina Parker VACUUMATIC $4.75 for 10 Miles or $7.50 Fat and Salt Sale $5.50 to $15 Other Parker Pencil—all with 14K Gold Points—low us $7.75 Special Biggest $5 Bet Value on the Mile Distance moussie $3.50 Parker Duofold supply appl and $3 Doodle set to match, complete set to match, complete value-only $5 GORGEOUS GIFTS GUARANTEED FOR LIFE Spiral Highest $5 Bet Value on the mouse $3.20 Parker Duffel Pen with biometric ink appl cuff to match, complete set in Gift box-$5.95 55 H. W. STOWITS Snow hall Christmas party in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. Following an hour of dancing a parody on Dickens' "Christmas Carol" was presented by seven of the authors. Brad Padfield, c41, says "Sea Fever." "The Rexall Store" 847 Mass. The committee in charge of arrangements was composed of: Isabelle Baird, gr. Ruth McNair, professor of zoology; Edward H. Taylor, professor of zoology; Richard A. professor of zoology; James Sprague, assistant instructor in zoology; and Florence Dill, technician in botany. Members of Triangle fraternity entertained the following at an hour dance Tuesday night: Warren Spalding, c'43; Margaret Replogle, c'43; Mary K. Morrow, c'41; Betty Ann Leasure, fa'41; Virginia Hizzo, Lois Balle, fa'41; Marilyn Dunn, fe'48; Florence Armstrong 48; *phyllis Gausset*, fe'49; *Lea Edmonds*, fe'42; Mary Emily Stunhahn *or*; Helen Jenkins, fe'43. Pledges of Sima Phi Epallon not a taste of the power and glory of activists yesterday while observing Hundredth Day. Upper-classmen were compelled to serve as freshmen, and pledges had the privileges of actives. Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma will hold their annual Christmas banquet tonight at 6 o'clock. Kings For A Day Pbi Beta Phi members were hostesses at the W.S.G.A. ten held yesterday afternoon from 3 until 5 o'clock in the women's lounge of Frank Strong hall. The Christmas theme was carried out in decorations and refreshments. Mrs. June MacLeon cooked. Dollie Newlon, c 41, was a lunch- concert at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Wednesday. Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. mel will be guests of the Faculty Women's Club, Friday, December 15, at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Monarchal Unions building. Deans of the schools will also be After dinner the guests will be taken to the Faculty Women's Club house at 1200 Louisiana, for an informal evening of entertainment. Mrs. R. H. Wheeler and daughter, Lois, were dinner guests at the Pi Beta Phi house Tuesday night. Carried cut in the Christmas theme, the members of the Social- This Week-- Where To Go; What To Do ---On the Campus TODAY — Dramatic performance, "Night of January 18th", Fraser theater, 8.15 a.m. MERCHANTS Hosp. FREYLY-Dormatic performance, "Night of January 16th", Fraser theater, 815; mfam. Women's Club dinner, Kansas room, 6:30 p.m.; Sophomore Hop, Memorial Union ballroom, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.; Reinterpretation of Religion, Henley House, 4:30 p.m. SATURDAY—Delta Sigma Theta, Kansas room, 8 p.m.; Kappa Kappa Gamma winter formal dance, Memorial Union ballroom, 9 p.m. It's News! and it's by Remington Rand- 1st name in electric shavers! 1st VEST POCKET SIZE SHAVER BREMINGTON SPEEDAK $10.00 BREMINGTON SPEEDAK PACKED WITH SHAVE POWER COMPARE This New REMINGTON SPEEDAK: FOR SIZE More power per cubic centimeter of displacement than any other shaver. For 110-120 volt AC current only. Shaver A...30 sq. inches Shaver B...25 sq. inches Shaver C...24.5 sq. inches SPEEDAK = 1.55 sq. inches FOR APPEARANCE FOR CLOSENESS FOR POWER "30% Closet" than ordinary electric shavers. Exclusive Brand Shaving Head for every type of beard. Chromium trimmed, black pin seal grain coat with white moss lining and black velvet base. Rich gift package TODAY: End your shaving worries forever. Come in. Take home a REMINGTON SPEEDAK for a 15 DAY FREE TRIAL! CARL'S GOOD CLOTHS ory Club held their bi-monthly meeting Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Coupon ___ ___ Miss Nadia Thomas, who is connected with the Social Securities commission of Jackson county, Mo, spoke to the group on "Opportunities in the Field of Social Work." She read from a book she played Christmas carols. Later, tea was served to the group. Mrs. Soba dredged pleure. Sigma Alpha Epsilon will hold initiation services for Bill Kern, c'42 and John Kern, c'42, at the chapter house at 5 o'clock. Following the services, the annual Christmas banquet combined with the initiation banquet will be held. Officers of PI Kappa Alpha for the remainder of the year are: president, Howard Dunham, 141; vice-president, Lester Pojenzy, b40; secretary, Bob Price, c41; house manager, Harry Caldwell, p40; rush captain, John Dum, c43; social chairman, Pledge class officers are: pres- ident, Walt Needle, e41; vice-pres- ident, Roland Shaw, e43; secretary, Stephen Bauer, e44; parliamentar- mentarian, Jack Shafer, e43. Richard Graymur, p40; alumni secretary, Bob Berridge, c42; internment manager, Morty Bodenley, b40; historian John Baldwin, c41; historian John Baldwin, c41 Mrs. Paul Garrison, Ottawa, was a guest of Mary Garrison, c'40, at the Alpha Omicron Pi house Wednesday. Corbin hall will enter the list of participants in the Christmas festivities with open house tonight from 7 until 8 o'clock. Journalists To Sing. Dance Student newsmen will combine two annual social events Tuesday night when they hold a Christmas Carol party at the Ferry Cafe. It is an annual custom of the jousting tradition usually after the Daily Kaman has run been put to bed - for a caroling visit to Campus organized houses. Another annual affair is the diurnal magazine sponsored by the K. U. Press Club. On the suggestion of Kenneth E. L. Postlethwaite, p.e.c., (for perennial) president of the Press Club, the two events will be held together. Also Postlethwaite's borrowed from the midweek management, was the decree fining stakes 10 cents, and admitting men with dates free. Before they start on the caroling tour, the group will dance. "The combination of the two events is a good suggestion." Postlethwaite said. "We cordially invite all students and faculty to attend." He is also an employee and employees of the Journalism press. It should be a successful party." Betty Hancock Slightly Improved Bette Lou Bokum, c.43, who was admitted to Watkins Memorial hospital Dec. 7, suffering from pneumonia, was reported slightly improved yesterday afternoon. Y.W. Chirstmas Bazaar Ends Three Day Sale The Y.W.C.A. Christmas bazaar, held in the lounge of the Memorial Union building, ended last night after three days of sales. After the Midweek varsity last night students lingered to look at the display and make "last chance" purchases. The bazaar is an annual event on the organization's program, and is the only one to be held at the university this year. Gentlemen: These things which proved most popular were the hand woven necklaces from the Zapotec Indians of Mexico. Copperware from Syria, India, and America, and the jewelry from China also sold very well. Alice Ann Jones, c41, was in charge of the bazaar and was helped by Shirley Jawie Ruble, c41; Agnes Baty Strüter, c42; Detailah Talbot, Mary Ewers, c42; John Jeoon Mc-earl, c42; and Verda Lou Miller, c41. Are you puzzled about what gifts befits the HER in your life? Let Dorothea Welch and Helen Bubler at our Cosmetic Department help you. Come in and describe your HER to either of these girls and they will suggest the appropriate gift for her type. Your puzzle has been solved. Here below are a few suggestions. JOY DE JEAN PATOU PARIS Candle "Joy" by Jean Patou. This is the World's costliest and most exclusive perfume. . . . really exciting and lovely. It will excite her, it will excite you. "Joy" by Jean Patou LaCross Manicure Set La Cross Manicure Kit. You know that all women love to have lovely finger nails and they take pride in having them harmonize with their costume. Here is the Kit that contains all the necessary preparations for the perfect manicure. 3. 00 10. 00 MELBOURNE LaCross MANICURE KIT A perfect "Goodbye" Gift Looking Glass Beauty by Elizabeth Arden This Looking Glass Beauty Box is of course made by Elizabeth Arden. Roe career girls . . . commuters . . . week-enders . . . winter cruisers . . the neatest gift of the year! It contains the 10 most popular Elizabeth Arden preparations and a big stand-up mirror. 6. 50 Lentheric's "Boursette" Lentheric's "Boursette" evening bag will delight all femininity from the school girl going to her first formal to the sophisticate who has a whole wardrobe of evening clothes. It is dainty sized and yet so capacious that it holds a petite flacon of "A Bientot" perfume and allows space for your own vanity and lipstick. 7. 50 12. 50 BOUGLÉEITE & LENTIER An Appeal to Feminine Fancy Weavery UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR THURSDAY. DECEMBER 14, 1939 Four Teams Are Serious Threats in Big Six Battle This Year By Jay Simon Kansan Snorts Editor) Although Missouri and Oklahoma, the defending champions, have yet to fire a shot in the 1939-40 Big Six basketball campaign, it doesn't seem too early to give the circuit the one-over in regard to man-power on hard and a bit about what each team lost from last year. So far the loop has been for the Bucks, the Knicks and the night's Iowa State-Denver contest not included) but by Kansas when the Jayhawks lost an overtime tilt to Warrenburg Teachers. NEHRASKA—The Huskers have not been bragging much this year, but they didn't look too bad in thumping South Dakota, 39 to 15, in their openers. Coach W. H. Browne lost all Otter Werner and Bill Kavonda by graduation and that would be quite a blow to any team, but coming back are his two towering sophomore last year, A. Randal and Don Fitz. In the inerer Randall rang up 11 points from his center position and Fitz tilted 8 from guard, Randall is 6 foot 7 and Fitz is only two inches shorter. Another experienced cagen is Harry Pitcaithely, who will explain the team from forward. OKLAHOMA—Coach Bruce Drake still has a few of the original "boy scats" to chief of whom are Jimmy McNett, red-hot forward who has al- JIMMY M'CNAIT MARVIN MECH PACIFIC STATE NATIONAL GOLF CLUB venty made the all concurrence team twice; Marvin Mesch, fine scoring guard, and Marvin Snoodgrass, defensive star. The Sooners will be missing Garnett Corbin, their clever sophomore of a year age, because of scholastic difficulty, and Vernon Mullen and Ben Kerr, graduated guards, but in their stead have come some fine prospects from the freshman team. The sophas are Bill Bently, Oliver Curtis, and Dale Caulle, the latter of which has been running on the first string during most of the practices. Herb Scheffler, the big boy who transferred to Oklahoma last year and proved one of the finest rebounders in the league, scored 24 points and Hugh Ford is a 6 foot 6 junior who will give opponents lots of trouble. IOWA STATE—The Cyclones have been going like a house afire so far and will be a serious threat in the race. In the first four names Coach Louis Munze had three men averaging 20 points per game, while State has four registers but not last year and one of the best sophomore crops in the league. Returning regulars are Bob Harris, red-thatched junior and all conference forward who tallied 39 points in the first two games; Gordon Nichols, second; Gordon Scooner;Scoreer; Bobby Menzel, son of the coach and a fine scoring guard, and Fred Gordon, steady defensive man. These four with A1 Buddolphon, sophomore sensation, should be the quintet that does most of the work against him. The buddolphon averaged 21 points through his prep school days and in his first RAB MENAE BAR MENZE GARDON NICOLAS WILLIAM DUBBLE four college games chalked up 43 points. MISSOURI—With John Lobiger, one of the fastest cagers in the loop last year, ready to captain the Tigers for the second year in a row, Coach George Edwards should be able to put one of the best starting lines on KANSAS-Despite the lack of height, Coach "Phop" Allen has a hustling outfit returning that should give a good account of itself in the loop. Nine lettermen give the club a chance to play. The only all conference guard, was the only BRUCE REID DICK HARD BRUCE REID regular from last year's third place team to be lost by graduation. Ralph Miller was being counted on heavily to spark the Jayhawkers this year, but so far is still being bothered by the football knee that held him H. W. "Bill" Hargiss, coach truck returned yesterday from an eight-day trip to Hollywood, Fla. 12 miles outside of Miami, where he attended the NCAA basketball tournament With Hargiss were five other colleagues from the Missouis valley area Cooper and Currence are members of the football squad and have been dividing their time until they know for sure whether they will play basketball in New York or football in Florida during the holidays. When the team finally settles down, Cooper will probably team up with Harvey and Tiono, both of whom played with Cruz and Tiono alternating at the pivot Watson is a boy who would be welcome on most squads and will see lots of action. Hargiss Home From Convention down so badly last year. Dick Harp, Don Elenon, and Bruce Reid are a trio of seniors who will be valuable in the manufacture of the 1980-90 Kansas team. Harp should rank as the sixth seniors in the Big Six. Kansas Relays Date Announced by Henry Other lettermen are Bobby Allen, regular center; Howard Engleman, clever, junior篮 shooter; Bruce Voran, junior star who plays all three positions; Johnny Kline, 6 foot 2 1-2 inch guard; and Jack Sandus, 6 foot 3 inch guard. More crop is extra this year with Bob Johnson, a dead eye-forward, given the most chance of breaking into the lineup. Mizzou lost a pair of fine players in Harlan Kiernan and Hal Halstead, but a transfer from Hanibal Junior College by the name of Loren Mills is doing a fine job making Coach Ed-wards forget about the losses. Mills is teaming with Lobsiger in the back court. the floor of any in the league. Helping the all conference sentinel will be Haskell Blaire and Blaine Currence, a towering pair of centers; Bar Harvey, starting forward last year; and Clay Cooper and Arch Watson, lettermen who were first rate reserves last season. The eighteenth annual Kansas Relays will be held Saturday, April 20, 1940. it was announced yester- day Swain Henry, director of athletics. As is customary, the big truck and field carnival will be held the week before the Drake and Penn relays. KANSAS STATE. The Wildcats have a new coach in Jack Gardner, and that is about all. Honer Wesche, last year's conference scoring champion, is gone. Ervin Reid, hulking center and a running mate for Wesche a year ago, is State's chief threat. Three other lettermen, Mervin Seelye, Ernie Miller, and Joe Robertson, will form the nucleus of the team. The thirty-sixth annual University of Kansas interscholastic track and field meet, which annually draws more than 2,000 high school athletes to Lawrence, will be held day 19 during the Relays, April Beginning Friday, Hargiss will on- bark for a football banquet speaking tour which will take him to Pretty Prairie, Dec. 15; Syracuse, Dec. 18; Colby, Dec. 18; and Frankfort, Dec. 18. Teams will be to high school squads. Alpha Chi's Down Gamma Phi's; TNT's In Win Over IWW's Alpha Chi Omega held its place in the basketball intramurals by a scant two points by defeating Gamma Pi Beta, 10 to 8. Tuesdays evening in Robinson gymnasium, the T.N.T.'s took a three point lead in the first half over their opponents, I.W.W., and won out 13 to 8. Technical foils were intermittent through the entire Alpha Chi-Gamma Phi gene. None of the foils had cleavage, clear passaging, or fast playing. Dorothy Smith was high score for the TNFX, shooting three field goals. Marcia Hulenbrook, Gammel scored all the points for her team. morning at Watkins Memorial hospital. Her condition was described in "very good" by hospital attendants. 98 Styled Like Expensive Shoes! with flexible hard leather solest Yelled Like Expensive Shoes! Lovely Slippers She'll appreciate every detail of these exquisite slippers—styleled with as much care as $3 and $4 shoes! Soft red or blue skidskin on the new knot-toe just Blue or wine rayon satin with embroidered cuffs. MONTGOMERY WARD Tackle Named Captain At Iowa State for 1940 Ames, Ia., Dec. 13. (Specail) Tom Smith, veteran Cyclone tackle, will captain the Iowa State football in 1946, it was announced today. Winner of his second major football letter this year as a junior Smith was regarded as one of the strongest men in a weak Iowa State team, called signals from his tackle during most of the season. Hayes Condition Is 'Very Good' Hazel Hayes, fa'41, underwent a minor surgical operation yesterday Haynes' Condition Is 'Very Good' DICKINSON Mot. 25c Nite. 35c Shows 2:30 - 7 - 9 NOW! ENDS SATURDAY A sensational new note in screen entertainment! KAYYES WYFS DAN, Sharing GINNY YYES MANDY + HARRY JIM HARDLE AND JEN HARDLE AND THE Cities of Musical Knowledge in screen entertainment! KAY KYSER ANDRIS MENJOU "WHAT'S RIGHT YOU'RE WRONG" MARK OSSOM LUCILE BALL DENNIS DYKEE - EDWARD EVERETT HORTON - ROSCOE KARNAS - MODRIA OLSEN SUNDAY FRANK CAPRAS Mr Smith Goes To Washington ARTHUR - STEWART PATEE GRANADA NOW! TODAY AND FRIDAY "Topper Takes a Trip" Constance Bannett Roland Young -2nd Feature- "PRIVATE DETECTIVE" Jane Wyman Dick Foran SUNDAY 3 BIG DAYS 10c-25c "JESSE JAMES" ENDS SATURDAY 2—First Run Hits—2 — Hit No. 1 JOEL McCREA BRENDA MARSHALL "DESIGNATION AGENT" "ESPIONAGE AGENT" - Hit No. 2 JEAN HERSOLT DOROTHY LOVETT "MEET DOCTOR CHRISTIAN" Added—Color Cartoon - News M GIVE "HIM" A ROBE FOR CHRISTMAS—GOOD FOR EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR—— All Wool Flannel Robes Plain colors $6 A Fine Selection For Your Approval Botany Wool Radio Jackets you can't go wrong with gifts from Carl's. Do your shopping now while the sales are happening. $10 Botany Wool Robo The Finest in America $10 to $15 SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Your choice of any Topcoat in our store 20% DISCOUNT $5 Rayon and Silk Dressing Gowns Extra Special CARLS GOOD CLOTHES MILTON AND SONS. Pure Silk Dressing Gowns Real values $9.95 to $11.95 Arrow makes "Soup & Fish' easy as Pie! **ARROW SHOREHAM $3.** No pain in the neck—this shirt. The starched collar attached is turned down, the semi soft bosom is pleased and just the thing for tuxedo wear. Mitge cut—Sanfiorenzo. Shrink (fabric shrinkage less than 1/8%). mar. d. age ARROW LIDO $3. Though more on the formal side, the Lido is smart and comfortable with its narrow bosom hold in place by suspender loops, buttons, or zip ties. Dress shirts from $2.50 up. Arrow dress ties -1. $2. Collarless -35c. ARROW ★ D R E S S S H I R T S VIRGINIA MAY GIFT SHOP "A CARGO OF GIFTS" XMAS GIFTS Distinctive Reasonable We have gifts for everybody. Only Clean Clothes SHOW THEIR REAL BEAUTY Have your wardrobe clean and tip top for the coming HOLIDAY SEASON Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE Ed Young WARNING: ! The Ticket Supply is limited. Kill two birds with one stone: insure a place by buying your ticket now; save two bits for the -with America's greatest composer-conductor TED FIO-RITO and his orchestra SOPH HOP MEMORIAL UNION BALLROOM FROM 9:00 TO 1:00 SANTA'S SECRET CHILDREN "If he hasn't called he will. It's a super gift." Advance... $2.00 Gate . . . . $2.25 Date or Stag UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVII OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS NUMBER 63 Z-229 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1939 Poet Offers Reasons Why People Read - Untermeyer Says Americans Seek Escape from Reality in Books; Live Adventures of Characters Though both his lectures here have been entitled "What Americans read and Why." Louis Untermeyer denied before 3,600 perimeterarium yew trees that he should be called one lecture Untermeyer." "As a matter of fact," the poe said, "I have two lectures. Some day I hope to give the other one." The speaker insisted, however, that the repetition was as bad as it seemed. "The first time I talked here was five years ago," he said. "and at least half of the students are still asking me now." Gives Two Answers Untermierney deagnaged "Cinderella" type books as fulfilling this desire. "We all feel an inferiority," he went on, and we rise from the ashes of our obscurity to triumph in the person of fairy-story heroes." The book's title is safe from the prying gaze of reality No Stuckbed by "Tobacco Road" To get more of life, rather than to escape it, was Untermerk's second reason. "Here we read to know life by experiences other than our own," he explained, "and use books as a clue to that life. In fairy-story heroes we see artificial characters, not human beings," he said. "Perfumed ink, not blood flows in their veins." On the subject again, Untermeyer gave two answers to the question his subject asked. His first answer: to escape reality. The reader wants to isolate himself, the poet said, wants to get "solidly behind the walls of a romantic, therefore remote, realm." Untermeyer was not shocked by books such as "Grapes of Wrath" and "Tobacco Road," "They may be hard, truthful, and ugly," he said "but they bring out the beauty and strength of America today." *Vulgarity Means Common People* "We mustn't be ashamed to look at our vulgar elements," he went on. "Vulgar means 'common people' and that is part of America." Steinbeck's book mirrored a part of the American scene and did it brilliantly, be said. The poet said he was shocked when he discovered that "Grapes of Wrath" had been banned in Kansas City. "I was more shocked by the ban than by the book," he added. Untermerkern told of the Italian Fascist ban on detective books. This was done, he explained, because in such books evidence and proof of guilt is necessary before a person can be convicted; the other hand, the "invested and most random person" is arrested at random. Hygiene Class Visits City Health Departments Tuesday Thirteen members of the personal hygiene class and Miss Jole Staplen of the School of Physical Education visited various health departments in Kansas City, Mo. Tuesday. One place visited was the open air room at Woodland School. The clues also visited the R. J. DeLano School for the Crippled, noting particularly the physical therapy and occupational therapy At Bell Memorial, the class was directed through the University of Kansas hospitals by Miss Mariannowe, a medical social worker. "only 4 shopping days 'til vacation!" Music from Its Silent Tower-at last. THE CASE OF THE PLAZA Carols from Dead Dyche Spark Season Spirits Dyche museum will come to life at here. Plants are being completed for a broadcast of Christmas carols at 7 p.m. daily from its tower during the Christmas season, according to C. G. Boyles, superintendent of buildings and grounds. The music will be transmitted from the KFKU studio to the tower. It will be amplified by a public address system. The plan was proposed by Ray. Four To Attend Language Session Four professors from the departments of German and romance languages will attend a meeting of the Modern Language association of America Dec. 28 to 30, in New Orleans. Miss May Gardner, and Miss Amia Stanton, associate professors of romance languages; William H. Shoemaker, professor of romance and Otto Springer, professor of German, all plan to meet the meeting. Prof. Shoemaker is a member of the bibliography committee of the Renaissance group. Mrs. Shoemaker will also accompany the group on the trip. They will leave Lawrence Dec. 26 and return Jan. 1. Exhibit New Rayon Types In Memorial Union Building No definite decisions have beer made by members of the department of English concerning their attendance at the meeting. Illustrative material showing the process of manufacture of different types of mayon is being displayed in the museum. A bidigit in the Memorial Union building. Methods of testing both silk and ayon are also included. Samples of one of the newer textile fabrics are hown including the much publicized "eyn" *ywnyl* as well as *vinyon* made from rosin), cassein fibers, fiber-plas* and a paper slip plow, fiber-plas* and a paper slip plow, Miss Ruth Parker, instructor in extiles in the department of home economics. Sophomore Hop, ballroom of Mc memorial Union. 1 a.m. Fireside Forum, party at Congregational Parish house. 12 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16 Campus house, dance at Evans Heath, 12 p.m. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Christmas formal in ballroom of Memorial Union. 12 p.m. Saturday. Dec. 16 Corbin hall, Christmas party a hall. 12 p.m. Cosmopolitan Club, party at 1011 Indiana, 11:30 p.m. Kappa Psi, dinner-dance at Weidemann's, 12 p.m. Pledges of Kappa Eta Kappa, party at chapter house, 12 p.m. Dance at 1140 Louisiana, 12 p.m. Deltasigma Theta, dinner-dance in Kansas rqom of Memorial Union 12 p.m. mona Carr, University electrician The University electricians are donating their own time to operate the programs. Westminster hall, dinner-dance at Colonial. 12 p.m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, dinner- dance at Eldridge hotel and chapte- house, 12 p.m. The exact nature of the programs is not yet known. However, the plan is to broadcast musical programs under the direction of Dean Swarthout and recordings of Christmas cards. Ricker hall, semi-formal party at hall, 12 p.m. Phi Kappa Psi, dinner-dance chapter house. 12 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20 Wednesday. Beta Theta Pi, dinner-dance at chapter house, 12 p.m. Elizabeth Meguar, Adviser of Women, for the Joint Committee on Student Affairs The broadcast will begin Sunday, if they do not conflict with the Christmas Vespers. They will continue daily throughout the week. featuring the "11 Parade" and a new society column "Tales and Tails," by Betty Coulon, c41, The Sour Owl will cover the Hill today according to Jimmy Robertson, c40, editor of the magazine. Sour Owl Features Glamor Girl Photo, Column by Coulson The monthly glamour-girl feature is continued with a full page photorah by Hixon. The cover, designed by Andy Darling, c41, is ultrumodernistic in its make-up and design, said the editor. In addition to a variety of pictures two full pages of gossip are featured. Ted Fio Rito To Entertain Soph Hoppers Newsletter Available To English Majors Copies of this week's University Newsletter are now available to English hall in room 201 Fraser hall, Miss Evelyn Lewis, secretary of the department of English, announced yesterday. This issue of the Newsletter was edited by a committee of faculty members from the department of English. Those serving on the committee are: G. N. Bebout Jr., instructor in English, Mull Lu Gardner, professor of English, C. K. Hyder, associate professor of English and J. H. Nelson, associate dean of the College. Copies have been sent to English teachers of high schools and colleges throughout the state. The purpose of mailing this particular issue to various schools of the state is to furnish new and better information about the department of English in the University. first meeting of the committee is being held today for the purpose of accrediting engineering schools throughout the United States. At the second meeting it will be held that committee will make recommendations for changes in engineering curricula. Ivan C. Crawford, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, is in Chicago attending committee meetings of engineers and engineering educators today and tomorrow. Crawford Attends Meeting - Annual Dance Tonight Starts at 9 O'clock in Memorial Union; Viola in Spotlight Ted Fo Rito with his "swingy busy sweet" orchestra will play from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. tonight at the Sophomore Hall in the Memorial Union hallroom. Featured along with Fio Rito is Regina Travers, who supplies the vocal refrains, and drummer Frank Flynn who "jives" with his swinging novelties. In taking the "vulgarity" out of hotter music, Fio Rito has added another piano and pianist to play with him. Tonight Norma, Botnick. Fio Rito's viola player, will attempt to show how the viola has replaced the saxophone as the musical instrument with the most "yumph". Botnick will also swing the baton when Fio Rito's fingers glide over the piano key board. Each finger, estimated by Fio Rito at a value of $30,000, has helped to pick out more than 150 compositions. with 85 hit tunes to his credit the maestro's fame as a composer leader has spread far into the musical world. Recently this band has played before gay crowds at the Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago; the Coconut Grove, Los Angeles; and on commercial broadcasts. Fio Rito made his latest guest appearance on the Fitch Bandwagon. A Famed Composer Where Fio Rito formerly used three violins, he now utilizes a viola. Fio Rito believes that the viola offers deeper and more resonant qualities, and at the same time blends with the oras instruments. Several of his arrangements emphasize the viola. As a boy, Ted started his climb up the ladder of musical fame. In his hometown of Newark, New Jersey, he pounded out melodies in a "honky tonk" theater. At the age of 18, he began his career as conductor and composer. Shortly, he organized his own band. Fio Rito then broke into Hollywood where he appeared in productions for M.G.M, R.K.O., Warners and Paramount studios. Broke Into Movies Tickets are still on sale for tl Sophomore Hop at the Memori Union building. Alumni Office Completes Pamphlet on University A seven-page mimeographed pamphlet dealing with various aspects of University life and activities has been prepared by the Alumni office for delivery to students among students, faculty members and alumni. The booklet contains material on enrollment, living conditions on the Hill, expenses, recreation, employment, the health service, scholarships, college programs, buildings, and state services. Information also is given concerning the seventy-fifth anniversary of the University and University traditions. Arrest Two Kansas City Boys Two Kansas City boys, Jack Timm, 12, and Donald McKenzie, 14, were arrested Wednesday night by Sheriff C. E. Banning, Under-sheriff L. B. Read, and two city police officers who shot a man stolen from Kansas City. An hour after the car was stolen the arrest was made in Lawrence. Promising Outlook For Business School Seniors This Year The outlook for graduates at the end of this semester is brighter now than it has been in several years, according to a report by Frank T Stockton, dean of the School of Business. He says that the number of graduates for periods during the last few weeks. In the last 10 days 5 firms have made inquiries. Six company representatives are now interviewing seniors, and many other firms have made dates for interviews in January and February. The requests have been mostly for accounts, saleemens, and women office workers, Dean Stockton said. Okay Advanced Flying Course University Is One of Thirteen To Receive Extra Training The Civil Aeronautical authority has announced that the University has been chosen as one of the 13 schools in the United States to offer advanced aeronautical training. The course is to be given as a test of advanced training for student pilots. If successful, it will be given on a nation-wide scale next year. Nine students in the University took a preliminary course last year and are eligible for this advanced training. Each student in the group expressed his desire to enroll in the courses offered by the university of the class that ranked second in the nation's civil astronautical classes last year. The advanced course will train approximately 90 students throughout the entire United States. Instruction will include 40 to 50 hours of flight training in a regulation army training plane with a 150 horse power motor and tandem cockpits. The ground school work requires 60 hours of classroom instruction. Flight training includes a regulation preliminary army pilot's training and instruction in stunt flying. The authority will pay flying school operators $750 for each student for the flight courses and $50 for any further ground school training, given by the operator. College Expert Suggests Women Cook to Music Emmensburg, In. (UP) - If you're tired of cooking, try doing it in waltz time. That's the advice of Miss Ruth Swanton of Emmetsburg, who is an instructor in home economies at the Country Day School at Philadelphia. She says that cooking is all a matter of counting. "And counting to music makes the actual work seem easier," she adds. That's why she suggests baking to the blues, stewing to Stravinsky and peeling potatoes to a waltz tune. She says: "To bake the perfect cake, we cream the butter and sugar until it's light and fluffy--about 400 strokes. It mixes well. To be a bit tougher, to Sweat the Wizard the Wonderful Wizard of Z. We beat the eggs 300 strokes to 'Come Love,' and 'Stairway to the Stars' sifts four slowly and with the correct motion. There's No Santa Claus--They Say--But The Weather Kansas: Continued clear and cooler. Charles Sanford Skilton Leadership Class Plans Meeting Professor Taggart discusses inflation in the United States since the World War. He concludes his article with the statement that if there is an ice cream in which credit expands or if a consumer purchases substantial price increase. He believes that such a period is already in progress. Prof. Sevile Chapman, instructor in physics, recently organized a research seminar which meets to discuss current topics in physics. Talks about results in physical research and related subjects are presented by members of the group and outsiders. Professor Chapman said that the chief advantage in the seminar is that it provides for a period of informal discussion on the most recent advances in physics. Ry Mary Schultes, e^42 Campus Dresses Up for Christmas By Mary Schultes, c 42 Are Joe and Betty College sitting smugly by glowing firesides beaming like little cherubs and writing their letters to Santa Claus? No, not by any means—all their industry and ambition, which seems to be super-abundant as Yuletide season progresses, has been directed toward making the University Campus radiate with magnetic Christmas spirit. Plan Graduate Reunion Chapman Organizes Seminar Taggart Writes on Inflation For Bankers Magazine Questions concerning the possibilities of infiation in this country are discussed by Joseph H. Taggart professor of economics in his article "Inflation Possible Factors." December is issue of Banker Magazine. Plans for a reunion of the class of 1915 will be made today by a committee of graduates of that class with the assistance of Fred Ellsworth, alumna secretary. The committee is as follows: R. A. Dummie, Spring Hill, and Major Raymond Edwards, Ethyl Ulrich Brownlee, and Charles Holmes, all of Lawrence. The scope and purpose of the group leadership training class will be interpreted by Lewis Irwin, grat at the first meeting of the claus in the lounge of the Memorial Union at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon. That essence of Yulelet festivities — the Christmas tree — merrily winks and gleams from every fraternity, sorority, and dormitory on M. R. E. H. 200 To Present Annual Vesper Program Sunday ... Yes! Santa Claus can well b Object of the class is to teach group leadership to students and to place them in camps at teachers at the beginning of summer vacations. They will study the skills subjects as child psychology, camp skills, recreation leadership, elementary astronomy, elementary botany, and camping-out. The group leadership training class is a project under the direction of Irwin, a graduate in the School of Computer Science at the University of his thesis is "Summer Camps." Sororites have their best representatives in the Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Chi Omega houses. The front and sides of the Pi Phi house are decorated with eight large red cardboard candles topped with ar- proud of the decorations that have made the Campus glitter as if it had been touched with a magic wand. Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity wins our vote for the largest Christmas stocking, however. The glittering white two-story pillars of the S.A.E house have been transposed in columns of celestial blue, lighted wreaths in every window from an aesthetic background of crimson. Sigma Phi Epsilon has a "Merry official blue glowing flames. The Pi Phi arrow, illuminated with red and green lights, adorns the south side of the house while ropes of entwined pine hooks and pine beams frame a captivating decoration for the entire house. A myriad of colors decorates the Alpha Chi house. The white house itself, makes a scenic background for light blue wreathes in all windows. An immense wreath adorned with silver bells and pine cones decorate the front doorway. Two multi-colored Christmas trees and a blue-lighted hedge add a variety of color to the scene. Girls dormitories on the campus have responded to Christmas atmosphere with appropriate decorations. Corbin hall's exterior has received a trimming of brightly colored lights and pine boughs. Miller hall has an archway of cedar boughes entwined with colored lights and topped with a blue and silver star. Hoch auditorium features a moribund building, the only build-around the Campus proper to have selected Velvetia garments. Christmas" sign announcing greeting to holiday visitors. Members al so plan to welcome 1940 with a farewell to the city. The guests in the first greeting after Dec. 25 By Russell Barrett, c'42 By Russell Barrett, c'42 The sixty-third all-musical vespers will be presented Sunday afternoon and night, when 200 students and members of the School of Fine Arts faculty combine efforts in a program of Christmas vespers which last year drew more than 8,000 persons. Arranges Basque Carol Written especially for this year's Christmas vespers, a choral composition by Laurel Everette Anderson, faculty member of the School of Fine Arts, will be introduced in the programs which will be presented in Hoch auditorium at 4 c'clock and at 5:30 p.m. An arrangement by Prof. Charles Stanford Skilton of a Baoise Christmas carol for the 100-voice chair and a separate number by the 100-piece University Symphony orchestra are included in the program. Anderson's composition has been written for the chorus, directed by Dean D. M. Swarthout, and includes solo parts for three women's voices, a trumpet trio, and an organ solo. "Hodie Christus Natus Est" (Christ is Born Today) are the words around which the choral composition is written. Professor Skilton's arrangement of the Basque carol is for a soprano voice accompanied by the University string quartet and the organ. Meribah Moore, a member of the School of Fine Arts faculty, will sing the solo part of the arrangement. Besides the special number, Karl O. Kuerstein, associative professor of violin, will direct the University symphony in accompaniment with the processional and recital. Plan Four Tableaux A group of four tableaux, has been planned and arranged by the department of painting and design. Tableaux to be given include "The Carriage," "The Wheel," "Imm." "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear," and "Madonna and Child." Of the two programs given, both open to the public without charge, the first is intended primarily for persons coming from outside of Lawrence. A brass quartet will play Christmas carols from the balcony of the auditorium for 20-minutes preceding both programs. Expect Students to Attend Dean Swarthout has received word that a group of 70 students and faculty members from the Tongoxie schools will come for the 4 o'clock class from the Kansas City, Mo., schools also will attend. During the special number played by the Symphony orchestra, members of the Jay Jane, women's pop organization, will take a collection which will be added to the Fine Arts scholarship fund. As in last year's program, the candle lighting ceremony will be presented by Dolph Simons, Jr., and Whitfield Anderson of Lawrence. Chess Tournament Scheduled To Start This Weekend Entrants in the chess tournament will don their thinking caps this weekend when the matches get under way. Winford Ferry, e4, head of the contests, plans to have the schedule completed by today. Each player will be matched with every other player twice. Games are to be played at the Memorial Union building or at the homes of the competitors, and the results turned in at the hostess' desk in the lounge of the Memorial Union building. The checker tournament, which was also scheduled for this week, has been canceled because of lack of interest. Y.W. Commission To Visit Lawrence Mexican Youths Mexican children from the settlement in Lawrence will be entertained today at 4:30 p.m. at the annual Mexico American Service Commission of the V.W.C.A. Four members of the commission will take popper balls, Christmas candy and apples to the children and spend an hour with them playing and singing songs. Nearly 30 children are expected to attend the party. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1939 1 Kansan Bouquets For Dr. Burdick During his brief term as Acting Chancellor of the University, not a student was flunked nor a football game lost is the chuckling boast of Dr. W. L. Burdick, dean emeritus of the School of Law, whose latest book, "The Bench and the Bar of Other Lands," appeared recently. An issue of The Kansas City Star this week highlighted Dr. Burdick's scholastic ability in a featured review of his new book. Tribute is offered here to the great personal qualities of Dr. Burdick, who is not only an unimpeachable authority in his subjects in the School of Law but after forty years as a professor, remains a fascinating and popular teacher, possessing a salty wit relished by his students. He has held more chief administrative posts in the University than any other man. He became Chancellor in 1925 for three weeks during the suspension of Dr. E.H. Lindley, now chancellor emeritus, by Jonathan M. Davis, former governor. He has been vice-president of the University since 1916. He became professor of law at the University in 1898, received an appointment as acting dean of the School of Law in 1919 and became dean in 1922. He retired as dean in 1935, but he has continued to teach a class in Criminal Law to freshman students to whom he is a constant source of encouragement and inspiration. Although he will observe his eighth birthday on March twenty-second, he is old only in years. That his industry has not flagged nor his wit diminished is revealed in his newest book, the latest of a long list of published writings. Tradition has it that his favorite method of study is to spread his law volumes upon a table, draw out a well-thumbed deck of cards, and proceed to the laying out of a game of solitaire. Many a younger man would fail in a test for concentration under these circumstances. Dr. Burdick often has chided gently The University Daily Kansan when it has suffered what he has described as an attack of "sophomoritis", but he has remained a steadfast subscriber and reader of the newspaper which arrived on the Campus at about the same time as himself. His presence on the Campus as a teacher is a source of pride and enjoyment to all students and faculty members both through direct acquaintance and reputation. It is the hope of all that his long period of service continue for many years. --- Missouri Bowl Game The failure to consult student opinion in acceptance of an Orange Bowl bid by University of Missouri officials is the subject of attack by The Missouri Student, official student publication. In its latest issue the student publication suggested calling the Orange Bowl the "Dollar Bowl" and, after pointing out that Christmas holidays will not be lengthened so that students may attend the game, charged that the profit motive was stronger than athletic interest. A quotation from the paper follows: "... the Orange Bowl game is not a University of Missouri student affair, but a Memorial stadium-Brewer fieldhouse bond retiring party. The bid was not accepted as a result of massed student enthusiasm to play in a bowl, but as a deliberate and uncompromising move of the athletic committee to 'cash in' on a good football team . . . Comment The student case is based on the revelation that the athletic department of the school has notified bondholders it will retire $20,000 worth of stadium and fieldhouse bonds January 1. Bonded indebtedness on the stadium is $75,000 and on the fieldhouse is $155,000. The redeeming will be effected from the estimated $37,000 profit of the regular football season. Revenue from the New Year's Day game may permit retirement of additional bonds next July 1. Practical monetary considerations at Missouri probably have superseded student interest to the extent that officials have overlooked the primary factor that, after all, the Orange bowl event is a game. Without the game, there would be no stadium or fieldhouse to be paid for, and without the student body there would be no game. A game without Missouri student rooters will be a game without school spirit and tends to affirm the charge of commercialism. Verdict on the question rendered by a court of student opinion at any university must favor the student body as plaintiff at Missouri. Damages against the defendant should be assessed at the sum of a few days' extra vacation so that students may journey to the Orange bowl. --from our hill-top shop UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Friday, Dec. 15, 1929 No. 63 Notice due at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 7 p.m. on Friday. --from our hill-top shop COSMOPOLITAN CLUB. The annual Cosmopolitan Club Christmas party will be held at $30, Saturday night, Dec. 16 at the home of Mrs. Mercedes Cole, 1011 S. Cedar Street, New York, NY. Visitors are invited to attend—Ruth Yeehua, secretary. NEWMAN CLUB. The Newman Club will hold its regular Corporate Communion breakfast after 7:30 AM Mass Sunday morning. All Catholic students wishing to participate for reservation...James G. Cillipson, vice-president. LUTHERAN STUDENTS: Don't forget the Christmas party at the 60th night. Visit us, meet me at the party and have a coffee. Mrs. president. NOTICE TO SENIORS GRADUATING IN FEBURARY: You may have a complete examination at the Health Service. Please make your appointment as soon as possible — Dr. R. I. Canuteson. NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE IREGULAR PAYROLL: All students, on the irregular payroll, are requested to call at the business office and sign the Declaration before the Christian holiday—Kach Kloz, bourn. WESTMINSTER STUDENT FORUM. Everyone is invited to come to Westminster Hall after the Christmas Vespers Sunday evening for an informal social gathering, with refreshments and refresuits served—Charles Yeomans, president. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lewinsco, Kansas Subscriptions rate, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class mate between September 17, 1900, at the post office at Lawrence, KS. GET PERSONAL THIS CHRISTMAS 45 Personalized Jewelry GIVE HIM SWANK Chain and Knives $1.50 to $3.50 Cuff Links ------- $1.50 Necktie Chains $1 & $1.50 Key Chains --- $1 & $1.50 Money Klips ------- $1.50 Necktie Guards ___ $1 Swank Novelties That Will Please — $1 Belt Buckles $1.50 & $2 Fitted Cases $4 to $7.50 Cigarette Cases $1.50 N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Store open Saturday nite Store open Saturday nite till Christmas FLOWERS Of course there is no time for flowers like Christmas. Door wreaths of English Holly with bright red ribbons say welcome appropriately. And don't forget mistletoe. Christmas German Department Holds Annual Christmas Party The cast included: John Ebbelle, instructor in the department of Ierman, as Heinrich Hassler, regiermaster; Myrtle Moyer, assistant instructor, as Mama Hassler; Evelyn angerbear, grm, as Ida Hassler; Ia Hagemann, assistant professor; Jessica Bertscher, springer, as Babette Bonholzer; and jolbert Talmudge, c'41, in the part f Max Schmitt PHONE 363 From our delicate Roses Choose: The plot of the short comedy is entered around a daughter, Ida, of Hassler family, Mrs. Hassler is born in 1920 and lives fax Schmitt, a young merchant. Roses Gardenias Orchids Violets Corsage Conscious Coeds Those attending the party also changed Christmas carols during the evening and Mrs. Jan Chiappuse gang two solos, "Weihnachtleid" (Schumann) and "Marias Wiengen- bent" (Max Regor). Climax of the short production comes with the arrival of personal grudge holdings from the country. Schmitt, quite ill at ease, suggests he leave; but all complication is an intangle and the play vividly happens. PHONE 363 Former Student Wins $5,000 Flower 二-hundred students and faculty members of the department of German held their annual Christmas party in the Little theater of Green hall Wednesday evening. "Die Kleinien Verwandt," a oneact comedy written by Von Ludwig Thoma, was presented by students and faculty members of the department. Former Student Wins $2,000 Mrs. Julian S. Hollman of San Franklin, '19, has received $5,000 for her entry of 10 words in a com- munication with Washington, receiving manna from Heaven," said Mrs. Shaw. Now we can pay off the debt on our new house more quickly. ARMSTRONG ALLISOR Flower Shop WANT ADS AAA Shop VERY DESIREABLE, clean, well-furnished modern residence in KU. district, $30.00. Also, attractive new rooms, twin beds, venetian blinds, etc. Small Apartment, $14.00. Inquire 1780 Tennessee, call 2105. LOST: Pair of gold-rimmed glasses in gymnasium. Tuesday night. Reward. Phone 2152. -63 HOTOGRAPHS from negatives in files of *Homer Frenking Studio* for the finished and may be called for before January 1. Call 225. . . . . SECRETARY TO CONGRESSMAN DRIVING EAST, in 1039 Oldamobile, to Washington, D. C., via Indianaapolis, Columbus or Pittsburgh He wants one passenger, Tuesday, December 19th. Reasonable rate Write L. W. S. Van Nostrand, Fortiley, Kansas. -64 FOR SALE: Two tuxedos, one size, $17, $10; tip $39 - 40, $15- one size $40 full dress coat, $6.00, *Call Postman* at 2738W, after 7 p.m. Methodist Choir To Give 'Messiah' The vested Wesleyan choir of the First Methodist church will present "The Mussiah" by George Frederick Handel at the morning service Sunday starting at 10:45. The choir attended 34 University students; Solists will be 'Hortense Harris, 5'41; a`491 soprano; Mrs. Carla Shafer, contralto; Robert Myers, assistant instructor in anatomy, tenor; William Henderson, 5'41; bantione; Alfred Gallup, 6'41; bass. Mrs. Dorothy Enlow Miller, 2'11, is director and organist for the choir, The presentation of the oratoric will last more than an hour. No sermon will be given. Baguio, Phillipines, is the recreation center of the orient. DUKE UNIVERSITY School of Medicine DURHAM, N.C. Four terms of eleven weeks are given each year. These may be token consecutively (graduation in three and four terms) or may be token each year (graduation in four years). The entrance requirements are intelligence, character and three years of college work, including medical school, medical schools, Catalogues and application forms may be obtained from the Admission Committee. DICKINSON Mat. 25c Nite 35c Shoes 2-30 7 - 9 NOW! ONE ENTIRE WEEK FRANK CAPRA'S GREATEST He even tops "He Happened on Tight" "Mr. It Saved Town" "Lost Horizon" You Can't Take It With You" JEAN ARTHUR * WIN GLAUDE BRAINS EDWARD ARHOLD GUY KIBESE FRANK CAPRAS Mr Smith Goes To Washington "You Can't Take It With You" CAPRA AT HIS BEST! Also Cartoon - Latest War News SUNDAY Continuous From 2:30 Special Owl Show 11:15 Saturday ROBERT TAYLOR LEW AYRES GREER GARSON BILLIE BURKE "REMEMBER" OWL SHOW 10c & 25c Acknowledgements and Correspondence P.S. This article is copyrighted by the publisher of Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved except for the use of academic research and teaching purposes only. ISBN 978-1-3406-2156-8 © Cambridge University Press 2018 Editorial Statement Cambridge University Press reserves the right to make changes to this publication without prior notice. Cambridge University Press respects all copyright holders' intellectual property rights, including the right to redistribute,改编、出版或发表作品. All photographs are provided by the copyright holder. This article may be reproduced and distributed for non-profit purposes only, with the conditions specified in the License. The material presented in this article is not intended to constitute a substitute for professional advice or legal counsel. Harzfeld's choice inexpensive GIFTS I 2. 00 THE TURTLE. fantasy in snowflake for tuxury young Amanda to help you watch movies, sports, dances and twirls twice the price. favourite gift Omar pearls phone and mail orders multi-strand twisted or straight necklaces of seaming pearls of fashion or jewelry for any age or at night 1. 00 day or night bunny mittens phone and mail orders store open until 8:30 Are You Going to Swing Out to the Soph Hop? Come in Today and get your New Suit, Topcoat and Hat — Go to the dance in style and feeling your best. We carry a complete line of accessories GIFT HOSIERY FOR MEN G 六安市公安局交通警察支队 CANADIAN LITTLE BOOK M Genuine Give him a set of Westminster Hosiery in distinctive colors and patterns. There isn't a smarter gift the men on your list will appreciate more. THE PRICE 3 Pair $1 and up Westminster HOSIERY 3 Pair $1 and up WESTMINSTER HOOSIERY EXCLUSIVE WITH LIFE IN LUXURY. Ober's HEART OF OUR MENU GRANADA NOW! ENDS TOMORROW Hit No. 1 Shown 2:30-7.15-10:10 ALL 25c ALL SHOWS Shown 4:00-8:45 ROBERT TAYLOR JOEL MCCREA "ESPIONAGE AGENT" ROBERT TAYLOR LEW AYRES - GREER GARSON "DEMAFERED 3!" JEAN HERSOLT "MEET DOCTOR CHRISTIAN" Cullen Cohen SUNDAY 4 DAYS "REMEMBER?" SATURDAY ONLY OKLAHOMA FRONTIEI Johnny Mack Brown Bob Baker "JESSE JAMES" —and SUNDAY 3 BIG DAYS PATEE ENDS TONIGHT "TOPPER TAKES A TRIP" Constance Bennett Roland Young Zadro Follie "PRIVATE DETECTIVE" Jane Wyman - Nick Foron All Shows 15c Any Time "DEATH OF A CHAMPION" KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 357 Ask About Our Courtesy Curtsey VENUS BEAUTY SALON Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Latest in Hair Trims and Styles Sales, rentals, cleaning and repairing WOLESON'S Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Clothing, for sale. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Gustafson Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 SKATES — SLEDS Optometrist 911 Mass. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c $ 941 \mathrm{~} \% $ Mass. Phone 533 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-collimating camera. Certified for 4.5-triple Annotatior lens 1/23 to 1/200 second speed shots. mmm, movie film in standard cartridge. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing Film-Paper-Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 Phone K.U. 66 for a Kansan Ad-taker FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Here on the Hill- It may be the warmest December on the Hill in history, and the University may have a new Chancellor, and the R.O.T.C. be drilling in a formation it has never used before, and the plans and progress of the I.S.A. may be an innovation to the University — but Jayhawkers find still as timeless and changeless as ever the excitement and thrill that precedes the Sohomore Hop. Although this traditional, semi-formal dance is the hub of the Campus activities tonight it is only the beginning of an important weekend of parties of all sorts. An evening of many parties and activities is the forecast for tomorrow. Climbing to a high peak the social thermometer will reach upper points. Kappa Kappa Gamma will hold its annual mid-winter party in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. As a following the Ricker hill dance. But informal are the parties to be given by Westminster i at the Colonial tea-room and the dwellers of 1140 Louisiana. Fledges of Kappa, Eta Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, will forget induction coils and high voltage current at a dance in the chaperite room. Another professional fraternity, Kappa Psi, prussyure, will have a dinner-dance at Widemoor's, as far as her street residents of Campus house will swarm out at Evans hearth. Bill Read, Jude Rebg, F. N. Raymond, George Waggoner, Louise Doolittle, Blanche Yeomans, Raymond Nichols, Evelyn Lewis, Adeline Brown and G. N. Bebout. Sara G. Laird, Myra Hull, John E. Hankins, John Virtue, E. M. Hopkins, Clarice Crawford. up for the faculty dinner given on Wednesday night, Corbin hall will hold its annual Christmas party. Author Entertained "Femi-formal" will be the dress regulations issued to those attend- Following his verbal workout in the all-University concession yesterday morning, Louis Untermeyer, well-known poet and critic, was entertained at lunch in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building by the faculty of the department of English. manor, and Lorena Grizzel, ed'41, who was dressed as lord of the manor. Corbin Hall Xmas Party Those present at the luncheon included: W. S. Johnson, L. E. Sisson, CORBION HILLS With 163 persons present and 50 girls appearing on the program, Corbion hall entertained with its traditional Christmas dinner Wednesday night. Guests were received by Eva Ruth Mieke, f40, president of Corbim, dressed as lady of the The living rooms were decorated with garlands and wreaths of pine a Christmas tree, and about 50 burning candles. Girls on the second story sang songs from open windwalls as the guests arrived. Costumed Corbitties served hot sawnail to assembled guests in the living rooms while amused by the jester, Helen Edlon, fn'42, song the Old English Wassall song. As the jester led guests to the dining room, the women sang "God Rest Me Merry Gentlemen." The dining room, decorated with wreaths, held 20 tables and seated 163 people. The fireplace was mounted with a group of seven red candles surrounded by heather in a group of singers, were designed, and hard painted by the art students from Cerbib. After the guests were sent, singers entered changing "Duck the Halls with Banga of Holly" and carrying holly and greens. As singers reached the center of the room, Ado Kadriarra Croill, fa32, announced the lord of the manor who then welcomed the guests. STUDENTS GET READY for Winter Is Your Car Ready For Those Cold Days? DON'T WAIT for the Icy Snow or the Biting Blizzards . . . Get Ready for the Holidays NOW. the following Dealers of Lawrence have agreed to service your car for winter driving at REDUCED PRICES ... Lawrence Automobile Dealers Are Economical and Dependable in Any Form of Service for for Your Car. DON'T wait until it's too late . . . ... Have it done NOW! PATRONIZE THESE DEALERS Are YOU ready for Winter Driving? Motor Tune-Up Body Rattles Lubrication Brakes Battery and Ignition DON'T WAIT! Have it done now . . . Certified Buick Parts and Service Our Service Department Is Economical and Dependable . . . Every Job Is Guaranteed. LAWRENCE Buick COMPANY "See Jimmie Moore for the Best" A We desire to be recognized as the most reliable automobile dealer in Lawrence and our whole business policy is based on this desire. O The HURD MOTOR Co. (Building a reputation for goodwill used cars) Phone 254 622-24 Mass. Winterize with Winter ANTI-FREEZE — HEATERS — DEFROSTER'S Motor Tune-Up with "Sun" Analyzer Trade your old car for a better used car--- Acres to choose from. Drive the New 1940 Chevrolet WINTER CHEVROLET Co. Just Changing Motor Oil To A Winter Grade IS NOT ENOUGH! We Offer You a Complete Seasonal Conditioning Service: 1. Winter-grade CITIES SERVICE or KOOL- MOTOR Motor Oil. 2. Complete chasis lubrication. 3. Fresh transmission and differential lubricants. 4. The proper quantity of Kold pruf anti-freeze. 5. A complete SAFETY CHECK on your car. Fritz Co. MOTOR IN Offers You These Distinctive Services--- 1. Complete winter servicing of your car, 3. Free Scooter service. 2. Skelly Gas—(Tailor-made for Kansas). Don't Let This Mild Weather Keep You From Preparing Your Car Now! MOTOR IN ONE-STOP STATION BE PREPARED: See Us for -- Storage -- Get Our Special University Rate Prestone -- All Types of Anti-Freeze Mech. & Wreck. Service Smashed Fenders a Specialty Taxi - - 24-Hour Service Phone 12 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. HUDSON SALES & SERVICE 920-22 Mass. St. 475 CH3IM UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1939 SIMONIZING SPORTS Bv JAY SIMON Before the sun goes down tonight the Kansas basketball squad should know whether it will get to compete in the Sunflower invitational tourney at Topeka during the holidays. Dr. W. D. Davis, the University's Big Six faculty representative, has asked all the members to wire their votes here and they should be in today. Approval from four of the other five schools is necessary to allow the team to compete with a neutral match. AG against "yes" to Missouri's request to play in the Orange bowl). I can't see how they can refuse the Jayhawkers permission to go just 28 miles away to compete in a basketball tourney. Sig Sig Six gridders will play in the annual East-West game in Frize Jan. 1. Third place Oklahoma will be represented by its two great edhcs, Frank Jay and John Shirk, and Dick Favor, the blocking base with the educated toe. Don Crumbaker, end; and Bill Beezylee, guard of Kansas State and Sam Swartzkopf, Nebraska tackle, complete the sextet. After reading about the way the MU, Student lambasted the Missouri athletic篮 hats for allowing the Tigers to play in the Orange Bowl, can't help but wonder how much they would be howling当 the coul-turned thumbs down on the trip. Or if the bowl authorities had overlooked the Missouri team in making the selections. Cagers.Prepare For S.M.U. Tilts With Stiff Drill - Whites Down Reds, 35- 25, as Miller and Hogben Each Rock up 13 Points; Voran Still on Sidelines "The whites," which opened with Howard Engleman and Ralph Miller at forwards, Bob Allen at center, and Dick Harp and John Kline at guards beat out the "reds," 35 to 25, after a hard struggle. The losers' starting lineup was Bruce Reid and Dong Ebeling, forward; Jack Sands, center, and T. P. Hunter and Bill Hogben, guards. The Jayhawker cagers warmed up for their two-night stand against Southern Methodist University next week with a long intersquad game in Hoch auditorium yesterday afternoon. Miller Bags 13 Points Miller, who has been putting a lot more pressure on his injured knee, found his basket eye for the first time this season to rack up 13 points for the victors. Hobgain tied Miller for the minutes to keep the "reds" in the game. Bruce Voran, injured star, was not in uniform and watched the practice scrimmage from the sidelines. He hopes to be in condition to play against the Mustangs, but it is still doubtful that he will. S. MU, which got only an even break in its opening two-game series with Earl Texas teachers, will stop playoffs on Thursday for the Hsuan Satar'i night before continu- For a PLEASANT Holiday Trip Ride the Streamliner "CITY OF SALINA" *On the Streamliner, you get mile-a-minute speed . . . and warm, "living-room" comfort all the way, regardless of weather. For greater pleasure and economy, ride the "City of Salina." Ask your Union Pacific agent about new lower round trip farest To Kansas City Daily Fare - $1.45 Week-end, Fare $1.00 ROUND TRIP THE PROGRESSIVE UNION PACIFIC TO LADIES 一 who'd like to spend more but have to spend less: ARROW handkerchiefs for men look expensive, yet they cost only 25c, 35c, 50c, and $1. Pick them from our wide and handsome selection . . . plain whites, initialed whites . . . and patterns that team up perfectly with a man's ties and shirts. For preferred names on your budget Christmas, you can't go wrong with Arrow handkerchiefs. Come in today. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES ing on here for the Monday and Tues day night scraps. A 6 Foot 4 Star Jayhawker Seeks Talent For Next Year's Staff Coach Forest "Whitey" Bacus, one of the youngest mentors in the land, lost a lot when graduation took Bill Clinton. He was one of the Texans, but returning is Virgil "Country" Wilkerson, a 6 foot 4.155-pounder who upwift off in the Southwest conference scoring parade last year. He will be the ringing bell for the team. Last year Kansas took two games from the Ponies at Dallas, winning by scores of 46 to 40 and 52 to 45. Looking to preparations for the new year's staff, Chad Chase, c'41, business manager of the doywahker manager of the doywahker secretaries and business managers. Case said that besides the regular editor and business manager positions, the secretarial post will be vacant next fall. He asks students who are interested in applying for the position to work at the Jaywalker office in the sub-basement of the Memorial Union building. Fine Riding Boots For Women and Men $7.50 und $8.00 Tan or Black Calf Also a big showing in Cowboy boots $6.85 819 Moss. St. Phone 524 HAYNES & KEENE Phi Delt, Sig Alph Cage Teams Win; Siq Nu's Shut Out Phi Delta Theta cage team won its second straight game, downing Phi Kappa Psi, 31 to 23. Wednesday night. Charlie Walker's ability to hold Nelson, Phi Pi, scoring in check proved the deciding factor of the content. Staffer, Phi Delt, and Arbuckle, Phi Pai, were the leading scorers. Gene Hiatt paced Sigma Alpha Epsilon to their second win of the year, tallying 14 points as his team defeated the Alpha Tau Omega five, 22 to 17. Bill Walters, A. T. O. guard, suffered a head injury and is now confined in Watkins Memorial hospital. One of the most unusual games took place when the members of the Sigma Nu “B” team could not score a single point throughout the duration of their game with the Austria “B”. The Ávicias won 22 to 0. In the "C" team league Sigma Phi Epilion "B" was victorious over Phi Gamma Delta "C" 31-12 with Rudy Savleta making 15 of his "IT'S A GIFT" 300 Men's Suits and Topcoats Trench Coat Selected for Christmas gift 'selling, taken from our regular stock— VALUES TO $35.00 $ 21^{85} $ The Suits are in worsteds and tweeds, 3 button or double-breasted. Sizes 34 to 46 The Topcoats are fine balmacaan models fly front—stitched bottom and cuff in all colors— camel, green, brown . . . The Palace 843 Massachusetts team's points. Delta Tau Delta, "C" won over the Phi Dilt "D" 25 to 17 Phi Dilt "C" defeated the Phi Gam DO YOU WANT A GOOD LOVING? If You Do—Give Him A Group of Fine--wear on all the Plain Lies 35c 6x3 Ribs 50c Fancy Half Socks 35c Fancy Silks 50c to $1.00 Fancy Wools 50c to $1.65 THE LADY AND THE MAN ARROW SHIRTS The kind he wears the year 'round. Fancy's $2 Whites Arrow Tit to Match CAPES GOOD CLOTHES Open Saturday June 11 Xmas "D" team 20-17. The Sigma Chi "C" fell before the Phi Pai "C" 2 to 18. Give him a Box of Interwoven Socks for Christmas Because it won't be Santa Claus for "Him" unless he gets a bunch of interwavens, the socks he All Styles—All Sizes CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Over-Sunlight. All Size XL GOING HOME? SEND THAT LUGGAGE by FAST RAILWAY EXPRESS! Just phone the Railway Express agent when your trunk or bags are packed and off they will speed, direct to your home, in all cities and principal towns. You 1000 can send "collect" too, same as your laundry goes. Use this complete, low-cost service both coming and going, and enjoy your train trip full of the proper Holiday spirit. When you phone, by the way, be *sire* to tell our agent when **to call**. RAILWAY EXPRESS NATION-WIDE TOLL AIR SERVICE 20 E. 9th Phone 120 Lawrence, Kan. ndry vice our rit. all BALKENY ADAMS NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE 1. ___ CAMELS PRINCE ALBERT CAMELS 200 CIGARETTES (Left) America's Number One Cigarette ... Camels. This gay, new Christmas package contains 1 boxes of Camels in the "flat city" area. Dealers are featuring them now. Season's Greetings (Below) All Christmas- wrapped and ready to give — 10 packs of 70°c — 500 mild cool Camels — the cigarette for giving! (CRight) Check the pipe-smokers on your list and count on Prince Albert — world's most popular smoking tobacco. This attractive one-pound package of cooler-smoking Prince Albert is sure to please! Camels LONG-BURNING COSTLIER TOBACCOS 200 101 Camels Camels Prince Albert There's a finer fit for those who smoke cigarettes that Camels. You can be sure your choice is wise—for more people enjoy Camels than any other brand. And when you give Camels you're giving the milder, cool smoking of Camel's matchless blend of long-burning costumes tobacco. Dealers are featuring Camels in a choice of two attractive gift packages—200 Camels in each. There's lots of cheer in smoking Camels—and in giving Camels G MERRY CHRISTMAS If he smokes a pipe he'll be bound to appreciate a gift of Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco—the largest selling smoking tobacco in the world. Prince Albert is the famous cooler-smoking pipe tobacco that made extra mild and extra tasty by special "crimp cut" and "no-bite" treatment. There's so much pleasure in giving Prince Albert because you know your gift will please. So for pipe-smokers, this Christmas, give Prince Albert—the national Joy Smoke! fts that are sure to please in beautiful Christmas wrappers 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVII OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Z-229 。 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1939. NUMBER 64. DAN HAMILTON TO RECOVER Funeral Set For Victim Of Accident - John Battenford To Be Buried in Kansas City After Services Tomorrow; No Inquest Planned Battenfeld died of a fractured skull on the way to the hospital. Hamilton was slowly regaining consciousness last night in Lawrence Memorial hospital where he was suffering either concussion of the head or skull fracture. X-rays will show the exact nature of the injuries. Dan Hamilton, fs, who was critically injured in the auto crash which yesterday killed John Battenfield, c'41, will recover "unless something unexpected develops," Dr. H. T. Jones, Hamilton's physician, said last night. The accident occurred early yesterday morning when the car bearing the two men skidded out of control into a lift on highway 10 one and one-half miles east of here. Battenfeld's body, which was taken to Funk's mortuary after the accident, is now in Kansas City Mo., where Battenfeld lived. Dr. Louis Zimmer, county coroner, said he might that no insult would be made. Funeral Is Tomorrow The funeral will be at 11:00 to tomorrow morning at the McClure funeral home in Kansas City, Mo. The car, a 1938 Ford tutor deluxe, was completely demolished. Sheriff Charles E. Banning said the car was apparently headed east when it lurched on the skid on the left side. The machine skidded 200 feet in the ditch and rolled over and for over 80 more feet. Both men were thrown clear of the wreckage. Hamilton was 10 feet east of the machine while Battenfeld's body was found 75 feet west of the wreckage. A car seat was found 40 feet away. One headlight was burning and the radio operating when the wreck was discovered. All four tires were still inflated after the accident. Sherif Banning said that the car, which was Battenfeld's, showed no mechanical defects prior to the crash. No other car was involved. Battenfeld was driving the car at a high rate of speed. Hamilton's luggage was found in the car. Both men had just left the Beta house and were heading for Kansas City. Battenfeld's watch, torn from his wrist, had stopped at 6:30. Luggage in Car The men may have planned to stay in Battleton's home in Kansas City but it was considered possible by friends that the two were trying to catch a California-bound plane out of Kansas City. A ticket office worker in the Municipal air terminal in Kansas City said that a man identifying himself as the son of John Hamilton called shortly after 6 a.m. yesterday and asked plane reservation for himself and a friend. The tickets reserved were to Los Angeles but were never called for. Elder Hammer Arrives John D. M. Hamilton, Republican national chairman and father of the injured child, arrived here last night by plane from Washington. D.C. Mrs Laura Hall Hamilton arrived yesterday morning from Topeka. J. R. Battentfield, president of the Battentfeld Grease and Oil corporation, came to Lawrence yesterday morning when he was notified of Both victims were members of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Hamilton had left the University earlier in the fall. At the time of his withdrawal he was a senior at College. Hamilton has been in Teopema. He came to Lawrence Friday afternoon and had dinner at the Beta house. Price Cut Seen as Aid to Dorm Crumpled Car in Which Student Rode To Death PLEASE WAIT FOR UPDATES. Wreckage of the car in which John C. Battenfeld, c'41, was killed and Dan Hamilton, fs, was critically injured at 6:30 o'clock yesterday on Highway 10 about one and a half miles east of Lawrence. The car left the road apparently traveling at a high rate of speed, the Douglas county sheriff's office reported. S.M.U. Brings Colorful, Hot And Tall Team for Series Kansan Extra Scoops All Others On Accident Story An extra edition of the Daily Kansas, carrying a complete story and a graphic picture, appeared only a few hours after the accident in which a University student was killed yesterday morning. The picture, showing the mangled Ford car which carried John Battenfield to his death, was taken by Duke D'Ambra, who rushed an engraving to the Kansan. With the issuing of the extra edition at noon, the Kansan was several hours ahead of all other newspapers in bringing a complete account of the tragedy to students and townpeople. Six to Topeka S.D.X. Meeting John J. Kistler, assistant professor of journalism; William Jensen, gr; Harry Hill, c'41; Stewart Jones, c'40; Gene Kohn, c'44 and Jay Simon, c'40, representatives of the University chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity, attended a luncheon meeting of the Topeka alumni chapter of the organization Friday in Topeka. J. howard Rusco, 38, was electe president of the Topeka alumni chapter of Sigma Delta Chl. ization Friday. At the meeting, Professor Kister presented Kirke Mechern, secretary Historical society, dramatist, and novelist, a key signifying Mechern's official initiation as national honorary member of Sigma Delta Chi for 1939-40. Professor Kister, as a national executive councilor of the fraternity represented the national organization in making the award. J. Howard Rusco, '38, was elected (Kansan Sports Editor) By Jay Simon (Kansan Sports Editor) The state of Texas is sending to Mt. Oread a basketball team as hot as its climate, as colorful as its history, and as tall as the stories told about it. Southern Methodist University, with players fleet as the Mustangs for whom they are nick-named, will meet Dr. F. C. Allen's claass jay-love Wednesday, Monday and Tuesday nights. Both games start at 7:30 p.m. Besides being fast the S.M.U. garers are built like the football players who have made the Dallas school nationally famous. Only one man in the starting lineup is under 183 in weight and 6 feet 2 in height. Ringleader Is 6 Foot 4 (Continued on page four) A pair of buries will start at the forward bench. Grover Keeton spins the dial to 190 and stands 6 foot 2, and his running mate is Arvil Jones of 3. Both Jones and veterans, Jones rounding out his third campaign. Coach Forest Bacus, one of the youngest basketball coaches in the country, is building this year's team around Virgil "Country" Wilkerson, a Mustang who is 19 heights and blocky. Wilkerson took fifth in the national championship of the Southwest conference last year and is a clever floor man. The starting guards will be Charley Sprague, football star who weighs in at 215 and is 6 foot 2, and J. W. Coppedge, the only small man on the team. Coppedge is 5 feet 10 inches and more than 155. Miller's Killer Improves Doctor Allen was not quite sure yesterday he will start in two positions. Ralph Miller, junior star whose knee seems to be getting stronger day by day, will get the call at one forward. Bob Allen will New K.U. Flag Flies From Tower Of Fraser Hall The new flag of the University, designed several weeks ago by Eleanor Grider, fa 43, was raised to the pole atop the north tower of Fraser hall yesterday morning for the first time. The flag has a blue field with crimson border and crimson letters. K 'U' Air slots in each corner of the flag, the probability of damage in high winds. Acacia Bondsmen Reduce Figure On Alumni Place Miss Grider's design was selected from a group of 250 student designs. Bill Douce, e41, succeeded Greta Gibson, f41, as president of the University's Young Republican Club at an election of officers yesterday in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. Other officers elected were John Crouch, 'I41, first vice-chairman; Charles Stutz, c'43, second vice-chairman; Maurine Mourn, c'40, third vice-chairman; John Sumnur, c'42, minister; and Reginald Baxton, c'46, secretary. - Endowment Association Still Needs Assist $5,000 To Purchase and Remode Proposed House Wilbur Leonard, 142, state president of the collegiate political clubs, informed the young Republicans of a banquet to be held in Baldwin, Jan. Bill Douce Heads Young Republicans In his acceptance talk, Douce presents plans for an intensive membership drive, which will start in January, with a minimum goal of 200 members. Memberships can be by seeing any of the club's officers. By Gene Kuhn, c'40 A men's dormitory, envisioned last spring, yesterday appeared a step nearer realization with the announcement that Acacia fraternity bondholders of the property had made an unexpected and substantial reduction in their selling price. Fri. Olin Templin, secretary of the Endowment association and chairman of the committee which has been seeking to restore the old Acacia fraternity house to a dormitory for self-supporting men students, said "much more favorable terms" had been made by the property owners. He declined to state the exact amount of the reduction. It was understood, however, that the price of $15,000 from the original selling price of $15,000. **Bid:** $10,000 Prof. Templin said that more than $4,000 is needed before the committee can take definite action in purchasing the property. More than $10,000 already has been pledged to the committee, but the additional funds are necessary before the grounds and house can be purchased and the building restored. Brynwood place, near the summit of Mt. Oreed on Fourteenth street, will be rechristened "Alumni Student Vacation Period Starts Wednesday Night John Noble's painting, "Morning in the Flint Hills," has been purchased by the University for permanent display in Spooner-Thayer art museum, the Chancellor's office announced yesterday. ★ Purchase Will Be on Permanent Display in Spooner-Thayer influence yet another. The Flint Hills scene was purchased by the University from a balance in grant made several years ago by the Carnegie fund for art education. The selection was made by Chancellor Deane W. M. Malot, Miss Minnie S. Moodie, curator; and Prof Alberto Bloch, director of the department of painting. University Buys Noble Painting Concerning Noble's work, Pro- 1920. Unless some of the 48 U. S. state governors have political beliefs that conflict with those of Santa Claus, the whiskered Arctic gentleman's decree that Christmas will be celebrated on Dec. 25 will stand. And, unless they stay in Lawrence to study, or are afraid to go home, or just don't want to, the University's 4,800 students will start their holiday vacation Wednesday evening. With the Wednesday morning edition, the Daily Kansan will complete its publications until students return after the holidays. The vacation period starts after a full day of classes Wednesday and ends Jan. 2. 1940. Classes will be reserved at 8:30 a.m. Jan. 3. Alumni Place, whose present owners have slashed their original price from $125,000 to buying purchase by the Endowment as soon as appear more imminent. Place" and presented to the University during its Seventy-fifth Anniversary next year, if the necessary funds can be raised through the efforts of the alumni committee. The original Brynwood place was built shortly after the Civil War on grounds acquired from Governor Charles Robinson, then governor of Kansas. Later, the property was sold to Brinton W. Woodward, a Kansas City wholesale druggist. The house was remodeled, and in 1919 the Aecia fraternity purchased the grounds, consisting of about three acres, and house. They added several other rooms. In 1937, the fraternity moved to its present house, 1541 Tennessee street. House Has Long History This Soph Hopper Firmly Believes lessor Bloch said, "He is the finest, and in many respects, the most interesting painter whom Kansas thus far has produced. "Our Flint Hills painting is small in size, modest and unpretentious in scope, and of extreme simplicity in treatment, but filled with lyrical charm that characterizes all of John Sloan's typical work," said Professor Bloch. Variety Fio Rito's High Entertainment Note The painting is now on display in Spooner-Thayer museum with several other pieces of Noble's work as the December exhibit. The display will remain unchanged until after the Christmas holidays. Closing hours are 12:30 o'clock Tuesday night for all University women. NOTICE! "Fio Rito plays it sweet and we By Dolores Hiller, c.42 A medium sized flock of Soph Hoppers journeyed to the ballroom of the Memorial Union building Friday night a bit dubious about the "line hatch" in the Ted Poor Liftoo, Liftoo, 3rd super-fisherman, had cooked up for them. They stayed to enjoy one of the finest musical feasts ever served by a dance manager. want it hot," shouted the jitterbug followers of "hot" swing before the dance. Well, Fio Rito did play it "sweet" and he also bleit him "He mixed it up in exact proportions until both the jitterbugs and the "sweet" conservatives were having the time of their lives. "Candy," the bass fiddler with the triple larynx, kept the crowd in a hilarious state with his one-man duet and trio conditions of such By Dolores Hiller, c'42 numbers as "Oh, Johnny," and "The Three Trees." Next to "Candy," Regina Travers reigned in popularity as the evening's featured entertainer. Each time the singer, rumored to be only 10 years of age, approached the microphone the males dragged their formalized partners near to the rostrum. Fio Rito had more evidence that his band had class than the fact that he spotted two pianos. His Ravel's "Boloer" would have convinced the most skepetic of skeptics. Probably the real reason of the party's success was that Fio Rito did not wear his dancers down with an unvaried program. There was a surprise in every set. Now it was "hot" and then it was "sweet." First "Candy" would appear to put the crowd in stitches and then Miss Trawvers would put over a number. Flo Rito didn't take enough cheiruses at the piano to suit a lot of persons, but then there is just so much you can crowd into four hours. The. Sophomore Hop was two things: an entertainment success and a financial flop. Too many students relied upon her, but she stayed away. Litterty had it for them but they wouldn't bite—the poor suckers. Expect Larger Audience For Vespers ★ Program Features Choir, Symphony Orchestra and Tableaux. To Give Two Performances By Russell Barrett, c'42 Audiences expected to exceed 8,000 persons will fill Hoch auditorium today to see and hear two performances of the sixty-third Christmas Vespers service, presented by students and faculty members of the School of Fine Arts. Performances will be given at 4 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m, with the former intended primarily for out-of-town visitors. Combining efforts to produce the program will be a 100-voice chair under the direction of Dean D M. Swarthout; the 100-piece University Symphony orchestra, conducted by Karl Kuersteiner; the University string quartet; and a group of seven soloists. Four Tableaux On Program Twenty minutes before each performance a brass quartet will play a group of Christmas carols from the balcony of the auditorium. Eugene Crabb, fa'41, and Leo Horecane, fa'41, cornetists; and Lloyd Reist, fa'41, and Dean Brooks, c'40, trombonists, make up the quartet. A group of four Christmas tableaux, planned by the departments of design, will be presented. During the tableaux a group of Christmas carols will be sent by a quarter-Chapel noirnoir; Mrs. Alice Moncriéff, contrato; Rolland Maddox, tenor, and DeLloyd Tibbs, bass. Director of the quartet is Mrs. Moncriéff, associate professor of voice. Orchestra in Spotlight Written by Laurel Everette Anderson for this year's vespers, "Hodie Christus Natus Nativus" will be his first concert choir, directed by Dean Swartz. Meribiah Moore and Minerva Davis will take a soprano solo with a trumpet trio and composer Andersen at the organ accompanying. For the first time since the series of Christmas vessers was started, the orchestra will play a separate number. Karl Keuserstern will design an orchestra as they play the romantic Symphony' (Haward Hanson). An arrangement by Prof. Charles Sanford Skilton of Stokenin Nim's "Villancico Vaco" will be presented by soprano solen Merthiër foore, laurel quintet and string quartet and Laurel Everett Anderson at the organ. The vesper program ballet 'Bulletin' choreographed by Tate Cune tune 'Hyrtyrod' (Vaughan-Williams), Laurel Everette Anderson, organist; Cedar-lighting, Whittledale; and the ballet 'Ave Maria' (Bach-Goodn) , by an ensemble composed of Waldomar Gelfch, colmist, Roymond Studi, choreographer; John Henderson, vin Anderson, harpist, with Anderson at the organ; "O Come All Ye Men" (anonymous), University Theatre. "Bodie Christus Natus Est" Lauterre (Everette Anderson); University Press; Swarthout; Meribah Moore and Miracopoulos; soprano soloist, uncompeted by Horacec, and Eugene Whestone, cornetists with the composer at "The Carolers" (tableau) Rose Richardson, fa2'42 Don Fitzgerald, fa2'42 Alice Schwartz, fa2'42 and 43 John A. McKee and Lily Brown and Joe Crow; "Romanic Symphony" (Howard Hanson) University symphony orchestra conducted by Karl Rueckerstein; "What Perfume Says" (University) Weiner, Sally "No Room for them in the Inm" (tablue), Mary, Justine Hopper, Mary Hopper, George Leather, imkeeper, George Leather, fa 40 imkeeper's wife, Freda Lawson, fa 42; Charles McDonald fa 41; Robert Sudlow, fa 41; Robert Sudlow, fa 42 "Septet, Opus 65" (Saint-Saure), by an ensemble composed of Wal- ters, Schallergaert and Kuerstiner, second violin; Olga Eitner, viola; Raymond Stubl, cell; Keneth Johnson, contra bass; Loo Hawke, piano. **Howard C. Tayor,** piano "The Shepherd's Story" (Clarence Dickinson), chorus, Joseph Wilkins, (Continued on page four) PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY. DECEMBER 17, 1930. Kansan Comment Letter Letter To Santa Dear Santa Claus: Old Serooge said, "Christmas—humbug" but an editor of the New York Sun once said in a letter to a little girl named Virginia that you lived forever in the hearts of men. This Christmas is not a very happy one for the world, Sante, but for that reason, we choose all the more to address you optimistically in the mood of the great New York newspaper rather than in the spirit of Serooge. Our Christmas list of ten items, Santa, with some intangibles and some tangibles requested, includes the following: First: please send the students here at Kansas University a cooperative book store. They have asked for it many times, but they have never received it. Second: a new museum of natural history. The one that is here can't be opened. Third: a new dormitory for men, Santa, and if you have more than one on hand, please send two. Fourth; please remember the Negro students, Santa, with additional social opportunities here on the Campus and with provision for participation in more school events, such as dramatic, physical training and other extra-curricular activities. Fifth: for the independent men and women, please send a better system of housing inspection and regulation. A new model is needed. With it should come provision for committees from W.S.G.A. and M.S.C. to hear and act upon student appeals when specific problems arise. Sixth. please send a plan for better meals at the cafeteria at lower cost to students. Seventh: any new buildings you have to give away this Christmas will be welcome, but needed particularly are a new medical building and a single improvement for the journalism building. The poor medic students are crowded together without sufficient laboratory space; and in order to take examinations, they must scatter all over the Campus in whatever lecture rooms are left vacant. The improvement for the journalism building is important. Santa, and not very costly either. It is a downstairs women's lounge needed both for women employees and women students. It needn't be very large, Santa, but make it complete with plumbing. Eighth: this is important. Santa- it is higher minimum wages for working students and better regulation of working hours. Ninth a new course at the University, Santa, with two sections, one a general course in hygiene and personality adjustment for freshmen and sophomores, the other a preparatory course for marriage for juniors and seniors. Tenth: the last thing, Santa, is not for toys or oranges but for more concrete action on some of the needs mentioned in our list which could be taken care of here at home. Send us that, Santa, and we will not ask you to worry about the other things. The need is for more committees of the kind which follow their recommendations through with definite action to replace those which study endlessly and never come to any decision. Sincerely, The Editor. Should Labor Incorporate? When the Circuit Court of Appeals at Philadelphia handed down a recent law decision, there appeared anew a contradiction in Federal laws保护 the free flow of trade. This decision upset a jury verdict awarding the Apex Hosiery company 711,932 in damages as a result of a sit-down strike in its "most aggravated and illegal form." The Circuit Court ruled unions not liable under the anti-trust laws for illegal strikes, unless there is proof the strike was called with the intent of restraining commerce. No illegal restraint was found in the Apex case. It was considered a restraint when members of the bosiery union seized the Apex plant, smashed machinery in it, and then refused to permit shipments of bosiery from the plant. If an employer fires an employee because that employee belongs to a union, the employer is liable for obstruction of the free flow of commerce, under the National Labor Relations Act. If he pays his labor less than 40 cents an hour, he may be "interfering with commerce", this time under the Wage and Hour Act. The discrepancies between these laws are themselves an obstruction of the free flow of commerce. While unions are immune to the anti-trust laws, they cannot be held responsible for violence and damage which may happen during their sit-down strikes. Morely being illegal does not make a strike a restraint of trade; but such damage as that done at the Apex strike holds up business, slows down production, and acts as a barrier between supply and demand, even though the court may not consider it a restraint of trade "to an unreasonable degree." Hence it seems rather improbable that, even though unions are not exempt from the antitrust laws, these laws can be used to check union activity when there is need to prove restraint of commerce. Perhaps a better remedy would be to allow the unions to incorporate under the law. The unions are willing to do this; evidently they see the value of such a move. But the government frowns upon it. The Department of Justice at present is carrying on an anti-trus drive against unions, particularly those in the building trades. Yet with unions immune to the anti-trust laws, as far as restraint of commerce is concerned, the department of justice can make no headway in holding unions responsible when it becomes necessary to show "substantial effect" on commerce. If unions were incorporated however, they would thus be held legally responsible for the acts of their members, and much of the contradiction of the federal law would be dispelled. American Refugees --in technicalol When his sympathy is involved, the average American citizen's hand diss deep into his pocket, a national characteristic now being demonstrated in behalf of Finland. Governor Payne H. Ratner has proclaimed today as Finnish Day "for the invoking of divine protection for the Finnish non-combatants and for encouraging contributions to their aid." The program for aid to Finland has arisen spontaneously from many quarters in this country. The administration has not recognized a state of war in Finland in order to exempt the country from bans imposed by the Neutrality Act. Semi-annual payment made on its war debt by Finland Friday will be held in a separate account for later relief work for the Finnish people, a move which will require action by congress. Herbert Hoover has organized the Los Angeles headquarters of the Finnish Relief Fund, Inc., to which contributions are coming from all over the country. All of this is important work and gratifying to the national pride as well as a tribute to the esteem in which this country holds Finland. Nevertheless the gathering of contributions makes a strange commentary on American thinking, an acceptance of the idea that money will take the place of brain work. An equally strange anomaly is created when consideration is given to the fact that the nation faces an acute relief problem within its own boundaries this winter with Cleveland just past a critical point, and a real crisis forcesen in Denver, Atlanta, and Birmingham. This country has been sending money to Spanish refugees, Chinese non-combatants, Polish, Jewish, and German refugees, and in fact to every war torn locality where need has been acute. Too much praise cannot be given for this activity in behalf of foreign suffering—at the same time, Americans should be willing to give equal consideration to their own homeless and jobless people. --in technicalol OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Sunday, Dec. 17, 1839 No.64 ALPHA PHI OMEGA. There will be a very important meeting of the National Service Furterance on Monday afternoon at 4:30 in the Pine Room of the Union Building. All members and pledges must attend this meeting. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION The regular weekly meeting, open to students, graduates and faculty members, will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in Room C Myers hall - Jack, Dickay, etc. ATTENTION. All cases to appear before the Student Court should first be appealed to the Clerk of the Court, Bob McKay, telephone 2903—Gene Buchanan, chief justice. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB. The Home Economics Club will have its annual Christmas party Monday, Dec. 15 at 4 p.m. in room 110 Fraser. Will anyone have to bring them to 104 Fraser? Audy Bateman, president NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE IRREGULAR PAYROLL: All students, on the irregular payroll, are requested to call at the business office and sign the Declaration before the Christmas holiday.-Karil Kobzar, bursar COLLEGE FACULTY: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet in the auditorium on the third floor of Frank Strong hall on Tuesday, Dec. 19 at 4:30 p.m. Dana W. Moltz choreographs. NOTICE TO SENIORS GRADUATING IN FEDERAL ARY: You may have a complete examination at the Health Service. Please make your appointment as soon as possible—Dr. R. I. Canutson. WESTMINSTER STUDENT FORUM. Everyone is invited to come to Westminster Hall after the Christmas Yepsen this evening, for an informal social gathering. You are welcome and retreats served - Charlotte Yeemans, president. LUTHERAN STUDENTS: Don't forget the Christ- ain parade insight at Vogel's. We will meet at the north entrance. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: Mr. Glenn Sheppard will speak on the topic, "Slow Neuron Beams," Monday at 4:30 p.m. in room 203 Blake Hall. Anny interested is cordially invited—Seville Chamber, secretary. ROGER WILLIAMS FOUNDATION. The Roger Wiliam Foundation will have open house this evening from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. at Mississippi Street. The girl of Theta Epsilon will serve as hostesses. Come with a friend—Gordon Kohman. Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year expect Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class office at Lawrence, office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Lansing Prisoner Writes For Kansas Magazine Ronald Finney of Emporia is the man, and his story in the magazine is the result of assignment No. 20 written for a course in the short story offered by the correspondence study of the University. The Emperia banker, who is serving a prison time in connection with the Kansas bond scandal of a few years ago, has a real ability in writing, according to his correspondence instructor. A graduate of Cornell Finney had devoted his time to banking, and his ability and determination to write are recent developments. Back of a short story in the Kansas Magazine, the 1840 edition which was published Friday in Manhattan, lies a story of a man in prison at Lansing who wants to learn to write—and is learning through correspondence lessons from the University. The story appearing in the Kansas Magazine is the second one that Teachers of chemistry, physics, astronomy, and geology in Kansas high schools have been invited to attend the second annual Physical Science Conference to be held at the University Saturday, March 6, according to an announcement yesterday by the extension division. Invite Teachers For Conference The purpose of the conference is to acquaint students with the vocational possibilities in the application of these sciences to many fields of industry and commerce. The departments of chemistry, physics, astronomy, and zoology are co-operating with the extension division in preparing the program, which will feature two general sessions in the morning and lecture demonstrations in the afternoon. Complete programs will be available early in January. The science teachers also are ask to bring outstanding students with them to the meeting. Sessions will be held at school or teachers and students, it was said WANT ADS FOR 3 BOYS at 1235 West Campus Road, room and board. Across street west from Snow Hall. No hill to climb. Phone 1445. -66 LOST: Sigma Phi Epsilon jewelled- heart fraternity pin. Peward. Phone 1144 or 2183J. Floyd Smith pdd. PHOTOGRAPHS from negatives in files of Honor Frecking Studio will be finished and may be called on or before January 1, 1940. Call 225- -66 SECRETARY TO CONGRESSMAN DRIVING EAST, in 1939 Oldenbould, to Washington, D. C., via Indianaapolis, Columbus or Pittsburgh He wants one passenger Tuesday December 19th. Reasonable rate Write Lt. W. S. Van Nostrand, Fort Hill, Kentucky. -64 Books for With MAGIC Margin , most scenar- tual of all typewriter improvements - you set the margin automatically - easily, better. With DuoCase. CHRISTMAS 1021 Mass. St BESTLY, EVERYTHING WITH BLUE-CASE. THE BOOK NOOK IT'S Christmas Magic! IT'S THE NEW Lawrence Typewriter Exchange --in technicalol New Fiction, Biography, Travel Children's Books, Fine Bibles Webster's Collegiate Dictionary MAGIC* MARGIN ROYAL PORTABLE 735 Mass. Phono 548 Phone 666 Finney has placed. Not long ago he had one accepted by the Christian Science Monitor. In accepting it the paper wrote, "We are accepting this salary on our merits and we have to submit patent material from time to time." Finney's story, which has rained a flood of protests on the publishers, is not regarded as his best by the correspondence bureau, but is regarded by the bureau to possess literary merit to be published. The five writing courses offered by the bureau of correspondence which are proving popular for hundreds of salads are the short story and feature writing in the department of journalism, and narrative description and English Composition V in the department of English. Housewives, doctors, mechanics—men and women in all walks of life—are enrolling in larger numbers each year, the bureau secretary said. Some want to write because they feel that they have a "message" to tell, others want to earn money, and others just want to learn to写 DICKINSON Prices 35c. - 10c. 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"DEATH OF A CHAMPION" Lynne Overman Virginia Dale Dean's Choir Sings Special Christmas Program Today The Westminster A Coppella Chair and Minerva Davis, fais 42, contralto, will give a special program of Christina Prebysther church. The choir will sing "A Christmas Evocation by * Charles G. Vardell, Jr.,* director of music at Winston-Salem College in North Carolina and the University of Russian composer, Paul Teleschenko. Last minute shopping made easy DOCUMENTS M FOR ... Some ARROW fancy shirts in those swell new patterns with those dandy Arrow collars. Sanforized-Shrunk, fabric shrinkage less than 1%! $2, up Miss Davis, who recently joined the chair, is a pupil of Joseph F. Wilkins. She will sing "The Vision of the Shepherds" (Lucius Jewel). FOR Some ARROW white shirts, perfectly tailored, always smart and scIaplooking. $2 up FOR Some ARROW Ties—made of fabrics that you find in much costlier ties. 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RUTTER'S SHOP Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened CHRISTMAS SUITS YOU — And Us Too — Have A Real Holiday SKATES — SLEDS RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Bell self-calculating exposure meter. Certified of 4.5 triplet Aniston lenses 1/28 to 1/200 second speed aperture, motion film in standard partition. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing Film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateur Hixon's 721 Mass. Phoné 41 SUNDAY. DECEMBER 17, 1839 PAGE THREE Here on the Hill- A man and a woman sitting at a table. an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizabeth Kirsch, Society Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 "Dear Santa! I just want Candy for Christmas!" is the way more than one letter to St. Nicholas from Hillers will begin this year. For after the Sophomore Hop Friday all attenders are finding it a mite difficult to forget the triple-pitched voice of Ted Flo Rito's bass-slapping comedian, known as "Candy." Ten parties last night and more to come will hinder home-ge ine preparations not a little and * Ten parties last night and mo- ing preparations not a little and keep minds off of coming days of leisure. M. Otread socialities will complete their calendar of Christmas social activities with two dinner-dances scheduled for Wednesday night, after a weekend that has included parties, dimers, dances, and the Sophomore Hop. Because of the Hop, the Hill's social wheel was forced to take a single-feature whirl Friday. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS It will be difficult to acertain whether the concentrated dietary will wheat or satiate the palates of the social-goers. After this fling, life will slow its march so that Oreadalne can walk out of step with final examinations. Wreaths of spruce, large poinsettias, and an extra-large Betty Petty clutch in white above the orchestra contrib- tured the sparkle of the Christmas season to the well-filled ballroom. Stepping from the cover of his magazine, "Mr. Esquire" denoted his best bib and tucker last night to attend the Kappa Kappa Gamma mid-winter formal in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building. Kappa's "Key"-Up George Lindsay, 38, is a weekend guest at the Phi Delta Theta house. On the bandstand Dale Brodie, his trumpet, and his orchestra alternated between sweet and swift materials by Kajpa's and the 250 males attending. Friday evening the Fireside Forum held its Christmas party at the Congregational Parish house. Kappa Alpha Theta announces the engagement of Dorothy Noble, c'13; to Jack Cogrove, b'40, of Kappa Sigma fraternity. Dinner guests at the Phi Delta Theta house Thursday evening were Mary Jean Miller, f4; Louis Wills *'40; and Kathleen O'Sullivan, c4; *'40. --for vacation days. Try it Yourself An unexposed letter from Hamburg, Germany, to the Delta Upsilon fraternity announced the engagement of Claus Holtzenen, former exchange student to the University. During his year of study on the campus, he was in the School of Law. Aline Herndon, 38, was a guest at the Pi Beta Phi house Saturday. Dorcille Wyrick of Leavenworth is a weekend guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Miss Joie Stipleton will entertain about 40 guests at ten this afternoon following the Christmas vespers in Hoch auditorium. Miss Esther Garrison of Ottawa was a dinner guest at the Alpha Omicron Pi house last evening. Friday evening dinner guests at the Alpha Omicron Ip house were Alma Bigelow, Altoona, and Delores Sutherland, Ottawa. Members of Phi Kappa Psi held their annual Christmas dinner Thursday night. Alpha Delta Pi held its annual formal Christmas dinner last night at the chapter house. Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Miss Elizbeth Mengiar, Mrs. Flora Boynton, and Miss Marie Miller will be dinner guests at the Watkins hall Christmas dinner tomorrow evening. Dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house today will include: Paul Hornung, *c*4; Jackson Dee, *c*4; Kenneth Troup, e4; 40. Ned Martin, e2; 42. Fred Harmon, Alexis Skinner, e4; 40. Charles Waler, v4; 42. Dick Hallman, Hailum, and Howard Dumal, '714. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Crofton received informally yesterday afternoon from 5 to 5:30 o'clock in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Nuckles. Kirk Owen, Is, a student at the University of Colorado, in a week-end guest at the Phi Kappa Pai house. Chi Omega sorority will hold its annual Christmas dinner tomorrow evening at the chapter house. Jona Lewis, c'47, was a burcheon guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Thursday. Luncheon guests at the Pi Beta Phi house Thursday were: Glorie Bierche, c'38; Ruth Riehe, c'41; Anna Jane Hoffmann, c'43. Mr. Jesse Denious of Dodge City was a dinner guest at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Wednesday evening. Della Upson fraternity entertained the following guests at dinner Thursday night by Mary Louise Lockburk, c:43 Lopez Hoffman, c:40 Melissa Johnson, c:42 Nelson, c:43 Jimmy Walker, c:43 and Mr. W. P. Williams. --for vacation days. Try it Yourself Dean Frank Stockton of the School of Business and George Docking. 30, were guests of honor at Delau Toul Delta's annual Christmas banquet held at the chapter house Thursday night. The "sweetheart of Sigma Chi" wasn't there, but certain faculty members wore when members of Sigma Chi entertained with their Gentlemen: 20 Do you know what the Jittermitt is? Well, anyway, it makes a clever gift for HER. We assure you that she will like it. Jittzmann It's a Bacmo colorful contrast idea . . . done up in brown and natural and cream and walnut. Wool whipstitching binds the pigskin panels, with an elastic insert for wristshape. It's really going over with the young women and it costs only $2.00 at-for vacation days. Try it Yourself Weaver . S Ready For the Holidays and How! We were smart and let ROGER'S FASHION CLEANERS dress up our appearances Roger's Fashion Cleaners annual turkey Christmas dinner a the chapter house Wednesday. The guest list included the following: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Calderwood,Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nichols,Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wagstaff,Mr. R. B. Wagstaff, Mice Helen Wagstaff,Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Heary,Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Heary,Dr. George Waggoner, George Lennerd, and Bill Johnson. Mrs. Gordon Brigham was a luncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Thursday. Mr. P. J. Johnson and daughter a Kansas City, Mt., and Mrs. Margaret Trester of Herremont were guests of Alpha Omenicron Pt Wednesday. Pi Kappa Alpha entertained with a buffet supper at the chapter house Thursday evening from 0 to 8 p.m. and then with the orchestra furnished the music. Guests were: Evelyn Gunn, c*43 Nell M. Clark, c*40; Beryl E. Ben- bous, c*42; Lois M. Balley, fa*41 Jeanne Myhre, c*43; Jeannie Neely c*41; Ruth Elaine Linley, c*43; Geor- gia Ferret, M. Miriam E. Pallil Jane Krauss, c*43; Janet Jankes, c*42; Mary K. Brown, c*43 Cecilia King, c*41; Janice Welb, c*43 Mary Brower, c'43; Patricia Gumm, fa43; Mary Tanner, c'43; Vera Knosekler, c'41; Jeanne Broach, fa43; Mary Louise Stout, c'43; Bettie Bonnet, Virginia Lea Tom, fa43; Martin Lynch, c'43; Better Cour Current, c'42. Ruth Rodgers, c'43; Leah Ed. STILL HILL at the BLUE MILL We Deliver Call 409 Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the engagement of Joan Voigt, c'41, and Bob Shaefler, b'10. Shaefler is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. mondé, #42; Helen Anderson, #41; Jamie Lee Lewis, #41; Joan Moorhead, #42; Bette Jane Boddington, #42; Elizabeth J. Jarrett, #40; Betty Lon Shook, #43; Mrs. Kenneth Shook, Lawrence; Dr. and Mrs. W. Duis, Lawrence; Mrs. William C. Hall, Lawrence. --party at Watkins hall from 9 to 11:30 o'clock last evening. Red and green balloons, Christmas roses, and red candles contributed to be a multi-effect effect. --party at Watkins hall from 9 to 11:30 o'clock last evening. Red and green balloons, Christmas roses, and red candles contributed to be a multi-effect effect. Mary Margaret Cosgrove. c'40 was a funcone guest at the Pi Betu Phi house Friday. Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pledging of Lovona Morgan, c'42. Annabelle heeves was a dinner guest at the Pi Beta Phi house Thursday evening. About 85 members of District III of the LSA. attended he holiday L. S.A. Xmas Dance Make Your Selection from Candy Christmas Mrs. Stover's Candies **MOGRATIFY COMPLETELY**, each individual person's taste, give individual music by the artist or art form. Fitted to perform on an instrument can make such heartwarming gifts only with Victor Recordals, on which the title of the world's greatest pop is immaterialized. Or with Victor popular Recordings, which offer the newest hits bale by the greatest popular bands. More than 7,500 recordings in the Victor Record Catalog make your choice as you immerse itself. Come in with your gift list, and make your wjections! GLENN MILLER Boxes from 25c to $7.50 Whitman's Chocolates GLEEN MILLER S om Homemade Candies - - 70c per lb. Marjorie Gaines, c'41, went to Manhattan, Kau, Friday evening where she attended the annual Mimi Bi-nd in Kansas State College; CANDY NOVELTIES Leave Your Order and We Mail it for You in Holiday Wrappings WIEDEMANN'S Frank Grogan, '39, was a visitor at the Sigma Phi Epallon house Friday. The Gift that Keeps on Giving Give the heart-delighting gift of favorite music by the World's Greatest Artists on She Huckabee, e.m., Clarence Christian, and Lee Benton of Boston, Maas, were dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Thursday evene- Mr. and Mrs. Polia Nuckles and Alice Mitch were dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house Thursday evening. VICTOR RECORDS 835 Mass. Phone 84 SOME OF THE MOST POPULAR VICTOR RECORE MARKSMAS OISEE Adult Fides in Licea and the Pains (Adust) (With Priory Chorus) in Choral Music No. 6087 No. 6087 Blue Dawn Waltz (Just) And Takes from the Violin Woods-Waltz (Jonathan Strauss) and Takes from the Violin Orchestra, Record No. 19538 op. 452 op. 452 Alpha Delta Pi announces the pledging of Marilyn Duncan, in'43, and Mary Arden Ewing, c'42. Ave Maria (Schabert) and Aulten- naitl (My Abode) (Schabert). Marlan Anderson. Record No. 14210. KASTEN FLAMBEAU JOHN HODGES WESTYPTT VICTOR JASONA HEFTES LAWRENCE THATCHER March of the Torn, and By the River St. Marie, Station Dinner, Disney Record No. 28.166 Marie, and Wand to be the HAI Mister, Station Dinner, Disney Record No. 28.166 Lover. Come back to Mr. ("New Moon") and Wanted you ("New Moon"). Lawrence Tibbett, Record 1056. $1.50 AUSTIN HASTAG BARRY KOVENHITT VICTOR LABEL JASCHA NETTETZ LAWRENCE TRIBETT BUSTIN GRAHAM Make sure the records you give have the VICTOR LABEL It is the most precious seed in recorded music. For your desire and on more than 40 million records the country's greatest artists having chosen Victor for presiding is their performance. This feature that the Victor record is the most precious brandary in the most precious music Make sure the Victor Label is on the records you give. Bomanian Rhapsody No. 1, in A. (Majece) Partit 1 to A. Eugene Ornamy and Mamounis Symphony Orchestra. Records No. 120, 131, 142. Jeb Liebe Dich (I Love Thee) (*Griech*) And Ie Traum (A Dream) (*Griech*) Kirsten Flagsted. Record No. 1844. 81.50 --for the 2014 series. Larry Ellison, Harry Klein, and two other big names record their own wins on Vintage pop screen. A selection of interviews with the other celebrities will be published later. Symphony No. 5, in C Minor (Burser, Ong 67), Berg Kreisweg (Merkel 42), M-435, Burger (M-435 for automatic numbers of 10 pieces, with a booklet), $10.99 Bluenbird Records featuring popular dance bands are only 35¢ THE WORLD'S GREATEST ARTISTS ARE ON VICTOR RECORDS Eutritella (Pongo-Hainte) and Valje Blootte (Drido-Aurer), Jascha Heifetz, Record No. 1332. $1.50 VICTOR POPULAR RECORDS 75c ASK FOR YOUR COPY OF THE VICTOR RECORD GIFT SELECTION BOOK the face paint this horror minority literary bed is MARILYN ANGERSON For hard radio performance... RCA Victor Radio Tubes, for heat tests, use Victor Needles. Give Children Their Own RCA Victoria Junior: Outs 54.50 Teach your children their own music in their own room. Imagine the gap between the digital photograph and mountainous landscape illuminated by some cave AC only. The Gifs That Plays Records Through Raam Sets! Through Radio Sets 10 RCA VICTOR Record Player R-100 Bell's Music Store Here are more low-resolution live sessions from the Nintendo Wii. Record music. The RCA Victor Record Player can be connected to a computer for full control of a nonlinear input. It plays records with close comparisons that of the radio. Only $9.95 --- 24 GENTLE HINT TO LADY GIFT GIVERS: 1234567890 An Arrow will go straight to his heart Make big gift an ARROW and packed in a gift box with an OBER label on it. Come in - ask to see our fine assortment of ARROW shirts. Make sure his gift comes from the store where he always buys his shirts and neck wear. **ARROWS** are made for the University man, worn by the University man, and sold by OBER'S. Packed in Gift Boxes Priced $2.00 up Ask to see our complete Christmas selection of gifts. Open Evenings Until 9 p.m. --- SOLID TIE TIES Ober's HEADYFOOT OUTFITTERS The Gift Store for Men Remember SANTA FE TRAILWAYS XMAS BUS FARES WILL SAVE Remember — SANTA FE TRAILWAYS XMAS BUS FARES WILL SAVE YOU MONEY! Santa Fe TRAILWAYS For that holiday trip... take a Santa Fe Trailways Bus and use the money saved for extra fun, or presents for the family. Ride in restful, roomy comfort in the sleek, speedy bus that bears this great name in transportation—SANTA FE. Round Trip Bargains Kansas City ... $1.20 St. Louis ... $9.30 Wichita ... $6.05 Topaoka ... $1.00 Emporia ... $3.00 Ottawa ... $1.00 Tulsa ... $7.20 Chelanoma City ... $10.55 Dallas ... $13.60 Chicago ... $13.35 New York ... $30.05 UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Phone 707 Santa Fe TRAILWAYS V Santa Fe TRAILWAYS Santa Fe TRAILWAYS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17. 1939. SIMONIZING... SPORTS Late last night Dr. W. R. Davis the school's Big Six athletic representative, was still in the dark as to whether the Jayhawkers will get to play in the Topeka basketball tourney. For the benefit of those schools who have yet to cast their ballots, I would like to suggest that Nebraska's cage schedule calls for the Huskers to play Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Dec. 20. The University of Wisconsin, so I am told, is looser than the Big Six. I went away. Bitter as the Badgers are toward Morrquette they surely wouldn't call Milwaukee their "home grounds." Charley Sprague, the burley guard who will perform for the Mustang tomorrow night in Both auditorium, is the last of the famous Spragues, athletics do luxe. One of the brothers Spragues starred at West Point a few years ago and another gained national recognition as a leading halbback on the S.M.U. team in 1935. In addition to his basket-ball prowess, Charley played football this fall. Idle thought dept. Wonder when some smart college writer will start calling T. P. Hunter "Wigwam." Aide to our public in Downs who claims a new state scoring record for a Fortis high school boy who tallied 35 points the other night; that is plenty salty, but he still has quite a way to go for a new mark Kansas' Ralph Miller scored 42 points against Iola when he was playing at Chamute, and that is not even a record. Horace Mason, sports publicity man here, says there was a boy back in the early part of the century who went over the 50 mark I believe Gene Kemper of The Topeka Capital could probably give you the exact answer. Anatomy Lab Technician Suffers Broken Ankle Miss Margaret Shumman, laboratory technician in the department of anatomy, is suffering a broken ankle as the result of missing a step following an Eastern Star dinner at the Masonic hall last night. Miss Shumann is in Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where she will remain indefinitely. Starters for Kansas--S.M.U. Opener--- S.M.U. vs. Kansas 7:30 Tomorrow Kansas Height Pos. Height Southern Meth. Ralph Miller 6-1½ F 6-2 Grover Keeton Howard Engleman 6½ F 6-3 Arvil Jones Bob Allen 6-0 C 6-4 Virgil Wilkerson Dick Harp 6½ G 5-10 J. W. Coppedge John Kline 6½ G 6-2 Charley Sprague Official Dealer N/A Officials: Don Elser, Notre Dame, and John Carmody, Mid- Place: Hoch auditorium Place: Hoch auditorium. Time: 7:30 p.m. (Continued from page one) start at "quarterback," and Captain Dick Harp will hold down his usual sentimental post. Long John Kline will likely be in at the other guard because his height will be needed to rebound with the tall Tecas. However, Bill Hogben, has a fine basket eye, has been born but him all wee for the starting call Opposite Miller, the conch was undocured whether to start Don Eglinton scrapy senior, or Howard Engleman, junior basket-socket. Both Bruce Vorm, all around man who suffered a severe "charley horse" after crashing into a teammate last summer, was out for practice yesterday and only an out side chance of seeing any action in the two-game series. Score Is Even; Jury Says Brown Again Not Guilty Jean Brown has been "gully" of murder twice this week — not guilty of the murder charge twice. Both the defense and the district attorney in the Dramatic Club's "Night of January 16th" are satisfied—each won his case two out of the four nights' run of the play. Foreman of the jury on the case at the final performance Friday night was John Callaham, clerk of the Douglas county district court. Other judges in the trial were Abel, editor of the Dountas County Republican; George M. Doogit, instructor at the University of Gortrude Welch, c:39; James L. Cox, c:42; Sucurz Elmire, c:43; Bernice Balocea, c:43; Corrino Martin, c:40; Alex Mtet, c:41; Glennald Pennington, c:43; Denzel Witter, f:30 The Lawrence Rotary club will honor players and coaches of the 1030 Kansas football team with a trophy tomorrow at the Eldridge hotel. E. C. Quigley, famous official of major baseball, basketball and football attractions will speak to the team during his career during the past, 25 years. Football Team To Be Honored With Luncheon After the luncheon members of the varsity will elect an honorary captain for the year and also cast their ballots for an all-opponent team from the five other schools of the Big Six. TOMORROW-Alpha Phi Omega, Pine room, 4:30 p.m.; Social Activities committee, Pine room, 4:39 p.m. Corbin Hall Trims Opponent, 45-3; A.D.Pi's Also Win TODAY--Annual All-Music Christmas Vespers, Hoch auditorium, p.m. and 7 p.m., ISA Council. Pine room: 230, Teo. English room: 8 p.m. With an ever pressing attack, Corbin hall awooped down on its opponents. Sigma Kappa. Thursday evening in Robinson gymnasium to win a basketball game, 45 to 3. Al Caterpillar Pi. He hold to one free throw in the first half, some back in final period to defeat Alpha Omicron Pi. 8 to 3. WEDNESDAY -Christmas recess begins at 5 p.m.; class work resume at 8:30 a.m., Wednesday, J. 3, 1940. TUESDAY - Memorial Union Christmas open house, 3-5 oclock; Philadelphia Chi Theta, Pine room, 3:30 p.m.; Kappa Pai, Pin room, 7:30 p.m.; Delta Phila Deta Christmas party, English room, 8 p.m.; Modern Choir舞, Medici Christmas party, English room, 8 p.m.; College Faculty meeting, Strong Richard auditorium, 4:30 p.m. EVERYTHING ANY MAN WANTS FROM Expect Large--- CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Tableau : Madonna and Child, Madema, Justice Hopper, fa '40; king Charles Toberen, fa '40; woman Jean Louis Ridgway, schlepard, Alfred Muzenick, fa '40. Recessional: "Hark, the Herald Angels Sing" (Mendelsohn) by University vesper choir. Tableau: "It Came Upon the Midnight Clear." Angela; Alta Armstrong, fr. 49; Alice Harrington, fr. 42; John Johnson, fr. 43; Nancy Kerber, fr. 42; Roberta Smith, fr. 41; Shepherdis Harold Burn, fr. 42; Jones O'Neal Lenora Grizzell, outstanding forward for Corbin, led her team in scoring with 20 points. Mildred Wells and Vergie Ray completed the forward lineup and aide with excellent passing. —Arrow shirts to Interwoven socks —While you're here —we're proud to show you gifts that will make him happy. —Now when you get home and you can't find just what you want —Phone, wire or a card to us and we personally fill your Santa Claus order! (Continued from page one) tenor, Edgar Haage, baritone, Meri bah Moore, soprano, soloists. AARON SCHNEIDER Soprana Solo "Villantecoco Vaceo" (Queque Moe) by Joonique Njm (Queque Moe) by Woldemar Gelich, first violin; Karl Guerenstein, second violin; Raymond Stull, cello; Laurel Everette Anderson, organ (arranged for sitting quartet and piano); Janice Kowalczyk. OUR STORE OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL CHRISTMAS Although one of the shortest men of the squad, Don Ebling, senior forward, enshrines many who have come it comes to hutting the ball. DON ERLING - FORWARD Organ: Improvisation by Laurel Everette Anderson. The Alpha Delta Pi-Alpha Omicron Pi game was more slowly played, although the teams were more evenly matched. Chorus; Norwegian Crade Song arranged by Martin J. Luvana. Soprano solo by Irene Peebody; backtracks on her songwinter wuester chord D. M. Swarthout. This Week--- Where To Go; What To Do ---On the Campus Fine Rebounder--- Helen Moore, c'42, was a luncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Friday. YOU CAN'T GO WRONG WITH GIFTS FROM CARLS G Bob Williams, Is, is a guest at the Delia Upsition house this weekend. Wednesday night the Nebraska Cornhuskers, losers to Indiana Friday night, 40 to 30, entertain Stanford University, and Saturday will go to Minneapolis for a tilt with Minnesota. Iowa State, the pace-setters in early non-conference competition with five consecutive victories, does not play again until Dec. 30 when it meets Drake at Ames. Missouri, getting the biggest workout this week, goes to St. Louis Thursday night to play St. Louis University and remains there for a Friday night contest with Washington. - Missouri Plays Three Games, Kansas and Oklahoma Have Doubleheaders with SW Teams Oklahoma travels to Fayette;vieil for the first of a two-game series with the Arkansas Razorbacks of the Southwest conference, Kansas stays home for a similar duble-header with Southern Methodist, and Missouri plays Denver in Columbia. Big Six Tackles 9-Game Court Card This Week Starting with three games tomorrow night, the Big Six conference swings into a 9-game card this week before tapering off for Christmas To Henley House For Xmas Party Y. W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. cabinets will go to Henley house for their annual Christmas party after attending the University Christmas Vesper service today. The party is in direction of Edna May Parks, c40, and Kerrick Franks, c40, presidents of the two organizations. COLD WEATHER IS COMING Miss Eida Paddock, secretary of the Y.W.C.A., will review Doctor Burris Jenkins' autobiography, "Where My Caravan Is Rested," for the Social Service commission at 4:30 p.m. house doctor, Dr. Jenkins was pastor of Kansas City's Community church, which burned this fall. - Mobilgas - Willard Batteries HAVE YOUR CAR SERVICED RIGHT FOR WINTER DRIVING - Lubrication - Goodyear Tires Prestone - Washing DON'T WAIT TO GET YOUR WARDROBE LOOKING SUITABLE Better Call There's still time before vacation. CHRISTMAS VACATION MEANS 432 SOCIAL ACTIVITIES WITH PARTIES--GAY TIMES Carter's Service Initiate Two Into Sigma Xi Independent Laundry 740 Vermont The two debaters left last Monday, for Austin, where they debated teams form the Universities of Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Texas A. and M, and Tulane. The question for de- Moreau To Discuss Chandler Act Dean F. J. Mourene of the School of Law will discuss "The Chandler Act" at the legal institute of the Miami county Bar Association to be held in Paola, Jan. 15, it was learned today. initute Two Incl Dr. G. E. Abernathy and Raymond Whitla, both of the Kansas State Geological survey, were initiated into Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, at the December meeting of the organization Thursday night. Leo Rhodos, b'40, was ranked highest individual speaker in the debate tournament at the University of Texas in the past week, Prof. E. Burkher, said yesterday. As a co-host for the debate Bob McKay, b'40, placed second. Rhodes Leads In Texas Tourneu - Ranked Highest Individual Speaker in Debate Meet; Team Places Second WHEN IN DOUBT— GIVE SWANK JEWELRY "He will like it" Necktie Chains ... $1.00 Key Chains ... $1.00 Cuff Links ... $1.00 Belt Buckles ..$1 & $1.50 Money Klips ..$1.50 Tuxedo Sets ..$1 to $6 Full Dress Sets $2.50 to $6 Necktie Guards ..$1.00 777 bate was, "Resolved: that the state of Texas should adopt socialized medicine." Rhodes and McKay will return to Lawrence today. Also Swank Leather Novelties $1.00 $7.50 35c TODAY'S THE DAY AT BRICK'S ROAST TURKEY Store open Saturday nite till Xmas Dressing — Giblet Gravy and all the Trimmings Gifts that will please CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES BRICK'S CHURROS ON THE HILL That Will Fit Right Into Your Budget Plenty of variety of patterns in either long or short styles with elastic tops. A servicable gift economically priced. SMART Gift Suggestions 25c V Hosiery Dependable Merchandise at our usual low prices TIE and HANDKERCHIEF SETS 95c He'll enjoy wearing one of these sets. Tie with bandkewcheif to match put up as an attractive set. SUSPENDERS 49c He can always use a spare pair of suspenders and you'll find plenty to select from at this price. Button on or snap ends. DRESS Gloves $1.49 WATERPROOF You can buy a goodlooking pair of servicable gloves at this low price, or just plain gray. Gray. Snap wrist or pull on style. Boxed free. 62.06 98c WARM-LINED GLOVES A worm servicable glove that makes a dandy for driving. Black or brown in snipwist, pull on or strep styles. SCARFS 98c Scarfs that will add color as well as comfort to a man's wardrobe. See our large selection. Boxed free. 120 SHAPELY Shirts $1.49 You can make it easy on your wearables by wearing a with Shapely shirt. A complete assortment of now patterns - non-winkly collars. Blend free. E & W SHIRTS 98c The A wild variety of smart new patterns in the famous E & W shirts with non wrinkle collars. All sizes for men. MEN'S TIES 49c Smart new pattern in full wool lined ties that were made to sell for 65c. Also smart wrinkle-proof wool ties. Others 25c to $1.00 The Gibbs Clothing Co. "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 Massachusetts Street Shop in the evening -- Open every evening this week UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS VOLUME XXXVII Z-229 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1930 NUMBER 65 Hot Jayhawks Down S.M.U.,63-31 Battenfelds To Give Memorial To Their Son Miller and Ebl ing Four Tableaux Highlight Vesper Services Sunday - More Than 8,000 Persons Attend Annual Christmas Vespers; Music by Choir, Orchestra, and Ensembles By a Member of the Kansan Stafil Silent pictures are not passe. At the annual Christmas Vespers held in Hoch auditorium here Sunday afternoon and evening, four paints hang high spots in the entertainment that attracted more than 8,000 person to the University campus. The first life-picture presented the "Carolers" and showed a group of old-English carolers at the door of an English home, being greeted by the owner. "No Room at the Inn" reenacted that scene from the life of Joseph and Mary when they were forced to sleep in a stable because of the crowded conditions in Bethlehem. Tableaux By Design Department "It Came Upon a Midnight Clear" presented a group of angels pointing out the Star of the East to a group of shepherds. The last of the four tableaux was a representation of the "Madonna and Child." The tablesaux were designed and executed by members of the department of design of the Fine Arts school. The coloring of the backgrounds, the lighting and the costumes of the actors were correct to the originals. Music, of course, constituted the main diet of the Vespers program Featured was the 100-voice Vespers choir which sang under the direction of Dean D. M. Swarthout The choir made its entrance and exit at the rear of the building, filing down the long ashes in two rows Each member of the choir carried a small cross symbol to their they sang "O Come All Ye Faithful." The recessional was "Hark the Herald Angels Sing." Laurel Everette Anderson, University organist, appeared in the role of a composer at the Vespers service. The choir sang his "Hodie Christus Natus Est." With one of the largest organs in Kansas at his command, and aided by a trio of trumpets, the composer succeeded in blitting out the 100-voice choir to the extent that it was difficult to ascertain the merit of his work. Choir And Solos Sing The choir also sang: "What Perfume This, O Shepherds Say" (Liddle); "The Shepherd's Story" (Dickinson); and "Norwegian Cradle Song" (arranged by Lavasus). Soilists included; Meribah Moore, of the School of Fine Arts; Minerva Davis, Lawrence; Prof. Joseph Wilkins, of the School of Fine Arts, Edgar Hage, Lawrence; and Irene Peabody, of the School of Fine Arts. For the first time in the Veper's (Continued on page three) On the Shin By Reginald Buxton Ye oldsters may recognize this quote from the Kansan's review of the yule vespers last year. Jimmy Robertson, former pain-artist and present editor of the campus heeh magazine, authorized it. "In playing the prelude, Mr. Anderson made comparative comparisons," he wrote, at average on the console was around 300 and is considered a very good average—for batting—the Messers, Geltch and Anderson soured to new heights." Robertson wrote. In self-defense, the School of Fine Arts decided to eliminate such witty peeyoing by inviting the caustic critic to take part in the vespers this year. Those who did not be the bearded funnyman was to be in the chair and consequently went to the program, report that as a choirboy Robertson batted about .100 which is considered a very poor average—for batto Robertson. The very best that can be said for Jimmy is that his bass voice (Continued on page two) Alphabetical Order Results in Marriage Thanks to Flint Prof. L. N. Flint, chairman of the department of journalism, has a habit of seating students in his classes in alphabetical order which appears to have had the same results as a matrimonial bureau. Flint. Flint has received a letter from Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sass of Ann Arbor, Mich., both former students in his classes. Seven years before, the two became acquainted when Flint Flint seated them together and at the time remarked that alphabetical seating could start all sorts of things. Mr. and Mrs. Sass, who have just celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary, give all the credit to the match-making teacher. Mrs. Sass was Freda Schaeffler before her marriage. Malott Names 4 Law Requisites ★ Chancellor Speaks before 120 at Law School Convocation in Little Theater There are four requisites for a good legal training, Chancellor Deane W. Malott said in an address before 120 law students and faculty members at the law concoction in the theater of Green hall at 11:30 a.m. yesterday. The first point stressed by the Chancellor was a broad training. An education including study of sociology, psychology, business, philosophy is necessary to enable to understand and handle the varied problems which face the lawyer of today, he said. Second, curiosity is necessary. Malott said. Every student of law must be more than just a storekeeper of facts, he must be bubbling over with interest in everything. As his third requisite, Chancellor Malott stressed simplicity. The lawyer should have clear, simple concepts. He endorsed codifications and simplification of the law. Objectivity was the speaker's final requisite. He advised the students to view their work objectively in order that they might obtain the correct view of the relationship of events. Frank Thompson, I40, president of the senior class, addressed the convocation explaining to freshman law students the honor code and how it is operated without supervision. For outstanding work last semester, Phillip Buzick, *l*41, Arnold Gilbert, *l*42, John Crouch, *l*41, Eugene Buchanan, *l*41, Charles Ward, *l*40 and Eugene Ricketts, *l*41, each resides a volume of a current legal series. Students' Plate Designs On Display in Frank Strong One hundred ten variations of plate designs made by the students in the department of design are now on display on the third floor of West Frank Strong hall. Miss Rosemary Goodman designed of design, announced yesterday. The class project resulted from a request of the Syracuse China company. Syracuse N. Y. maker of the microwave and microwave-ridified chinaware, for plate designs. Air Raid Specialist----Hoop Scorcher SUNDAY NIGHT John Kline, veteran guard, who used his 6 feet $^2$ inches to help the Jahawkers overcome the summer height of Southern Methd. JOHN KLINE Ralph Miller sank eight of ten free throw tries and poured in four field goals to take high point honors with 16 points. No R.O.T.C. Drill Tomorrow/ Would Conflict with Recess The regular Wednesday R.O.T.C. practice drill will not take place tomorrow afternoon as scheduled, because of Christmas recess, Col. Bennett, head of the division of military science announced yesterday. The drill, which usually takes place from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. would run past 5 p.m., the time set for beginning of Christmas vacation Wheeler Returns From Trip East The next regular drill will be Wednesday, Jan. 3 at 4:30 p.m. in the fields behind Fowler shops. Dr. R. H. Wheeler, professor of psychology at the University, returned to Lawrence Saturday night to meet with students at Newark, N.J., and New York city. Doctor Wheeler spoke at the Newark State Teachers' College on "The Application of Gestalt Psychology in Education" and "Education for Tomorrow." In New York, Doctor Wheeler was a speaker at the Durt Treat Club, which is composed of editors, news commentators, radio columnists, and non-academic scientists, on "How Climate Affects Human Behavior." New Orleans (UP)—College men at Loyola University prefer their education without co-eds, but admit that the girls are "a necessary evil." The Lovola Maroon, student publication, said most of the men polled complained about girls making a lot of mistakes in taking their minds off their work. AMSA Loyola University Men Express Opinions on Women Lip rouge on the drinking fountain, incessant racket of high heels and general falsoftet foolishness, creating the sanctity of study halls." Other things they objected to were: RALPH MILLER Florence Kelly, Alumna, Dies ★ 'Dean of News Women' Wrote N.Y. Times Review and Eight Books Florence Finch Kelly, graduate of the University and dean of American newspaper women, died at her home in New Hartford, Conn., at 11 c'clock Sunday morning, according to word received here. The 81-year-old journalist whose autobiography, "The Flowing Stream," was completed during the war has been in ill health for some time. Mrs. Kelly was graduated from the University with an A.B. degree in 1881 and three years later completed work for her master's degree here. The University was mentioned frequently in her many books and articles. Although Mrs. Kelly was born March 27, 1858 in Girard, Ill., the Finch family moved to Kansas when the journalist was young, and she claimed this state as home. Much mention's made in the autobiography of her early family life near Louisburg. (Continued on page four) Mrs. Kelly's husband died in the East in 1916. The only immediate family survivor is a son, Sherwin Finch Kelly, who lives in Toronto, Canada, and is employed by the Geophysical Exploration Inc. Severely ill. Ms. Kelly was included Mrs. Harry Narnamore, 1201 Kentucky street, Lawrence. The last 30 years of Mrs. Kelly's career had been spent writing book reviews for the New York Times book section. Before that she had worked on various papers in Chicago, Boston, Troy, N. Y. Lowell and Fall River, Mass. New York San Francisco, and Los Angeles. In 1905 she visited Australia and New Zealand to study social conditions and economic legislation. Wrote Many Books A. Son Survives Besides contributing articles to many magazines, Mrs. Kelly wrote Greetings Gates--- Chicken Pox Is Pi Phi Xmas Gift - Parents of Crash Victim Suggest Friends Add to Fund for Working Men's Dormitory heir Son Miller and Ebl ing Are Pace-Setters; Go Again Tonight Family of Student Killed in Wreck Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld of Kansas City, Mo., announced Sunday night that they plan to establish a home for self-supporting men in the University as a memorial for their son, John C. Battenfeld, c'41, who was killed in an automobile accident here Saturday morning. The family suggested that friends help in giving the home to the University students instead of sending flowers to the funeral yesterday morning. The Battenfels heard of a similar plan while visiting Stockholm last summer. Known as "Flowers, Inc." the plan was that friends of a family in which a death occurred contribute what they would send for flowers to a fund to be used in caring for the needy. Students Toss Pennies To Aid Charity Drive This will be the first home for self-supporting men ever established on the Campus. A flower fund will be created as a part of the University Endowment Association to handle additional subscriptions. The hitting average increased greatly the second day with 140 out of 655 "bucketed." The 15-foot diameter registers pennier tossed. Students who feel they don't have enough pennies to throw in the bucket can do their part by bringing some article of clothing, new or used, to put below the Christmas tree, to aid needy families. Yes, 86 out of 650 pennies pitches at the "old oaken bucket" in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall hit a grand slam. The Alpha Phi, Omega Christmas drive. Jean Crawford Wins Radio Peace Contest Miss Kruzdone became ill Sunday and her sorority sisters, living in the same house, were exposed to the chicken-pox. As a result Dr. R. I. Canutes, head of the student health service, ordered that the entire chapter would have to submit to vaccination. "It is required that Jean Crawford, c'40, was awarded first prize of $5 yesterday in the Campus Peace Contest held last Thursday night over WREN on the subject "How to Keep America Out of War." Gladys Huber, c'41, placed second in the contest. Awards were given by a selection of the winners was made by three Lawrence judges and the radio audience. The contest last week was the first of a series of student programs to take place this season in an effort to put student opinion "on the air." 'Kansas Clays Only' Say Rules of Pottery Contest Topeka, Kan., — (UF)—The Kansas State Teachers association and the Kansas Industrial Development commission will sponsor a pottery-making contest for all Kansas high school students, it was announced here. Rules of the contest stipulate that only Kansas clays may be used in making the pottery. morial hospital. every such case shall be subjected to the same quarantine restrictions as small-pox" he said. Santa Claus came to town this week leaving Jane Knudson, fa 41, with chicken-pox and her Pi Beta Phi sorority sisters with the alter-ego of a small-pox or quarantined in their house for the duration of Christ-mass vacation. They were all vaccinated yesterday at Watson Me ---Let's Vaccinate To the curious who wondered what a small-pox vaccination had to do with a case of chicken-pox, Dr. Canuteson said, "Since Chicken-pox in adults is rare, it is frequently a mistaken diagnosis of smallpox." Adequate precautions must be taken, he added. A Christmas vacation at home in Albert Lea, Mim., may be possible for Miss Krusdon. Hospital authorities optimistically said "Miss Krusdon will well enough to make the trip home for Christmas in a private car." By Jay Simon (Kansan Sports Editor) The scorching summers in their home state never hurt the Southern Methodist basketball players more than the heat turned on by them by the Jayhawkers in Hoch auditorium last night. The Kansans were hotter than the proverbial monkey stove as they more than doubled the score on the visitors to win 63 to 31 in the opening game of the two-night stand. Dan Hamilton Improving Fast After Accident Ralph Miller and Don Ebling had a picnic as they racked up 16 and 15 points respectively to lead the attack on the Mustangs. Miller hit the receptacle 8 times out of 10 from the charity line and poured in four field goals to take high point honors, but Ebling was only a step behind. Young Don rustled the netting seven times from the floor and hit once from the circle. Twice he ★ Automobile Crash Victim May Receive Limited Number of Visitors with Physician's Permission Dan Hamilton, fs, was on the way to recovery last night in Lawrence Memorial hospital where he was taken after an auto crash which early Saturday morning killed his companion, John Battenfeld, c'41. Hamilton suffered a brain concussion and was unconscious until Saturday night. Battenfeld, the driver, died from brain concussion and skull fracture on the way to the hospital. Hamilton's father, John D. M. Ham- tilon, chairman of the Republican national committee, flew here from Washington, D.C. Saturday night He left at approximately 2 o'clock Sunday morning. only with his doctor's permission, into the number of visitors is read off. He was a 300 Saturday morning on highway 10 one and one-half miles east of here. The car a 1358 Ford tutor belonging to Battenford, skidded out of control while being driven at a high rate of 20 feet per minute for 200 feet on machine rolled over and over for 80 more. Both men were thrown clear of the wreckage. Visitors may see young Hamilton only with his doctor's permission, and the number of visitors is restricted. Both men were members of Beta Theta Pi social fraternity, Hamilton, who has been employed in Topeka since his withdrawal from school early this fall, had come to Lawrence Friday afternoon. It was believed that the men were trying to catch a Los Angeles bound plane in Kansas City. Hamilton had previously called the Municipal air terminal at Kansas City to reserve two tickets to California. Thieves Work For Second Night A second night of thieving kept local police busy last night as they looked for an auto spotlight and the owner of a stray car they picked up. Fred Lake, b'41, reported to police that a patio bird from his car while he attended the basketball game last night. At 7:10 p.m. police picked up a 1935 Chevrolet sedan, which was stolen from 4041 the Pasee, Kansas City. Mio. on Dec. 13. Police think the vehicle was far car. can steal here last night was done by the same person. Hospital Open for Holidays Last Kansan Tomorrow Watkins Memorial hospital will be open from 10 until 12 o'clock on Thursday, Dec. 21 to Jan. 2, inclusive, with the exception of Christmas and New Year's Day when the hospital will be open by R. Carsonage district of the student health service announced yesterday. Wednesday morning's Kansas will be the last before vacation. threw the ball back over his head and had the crowd cheer wildly as it sailed through. Kline Hawks Backboard Turning most of the scoring chores over to the rest, Johnny Kline played a whale of a game outstulting the taller and heftier Mastigans in taking the ball off the backboards. His running mate, Dick Harp, also performed nolly, especially in the first period when he camned four field goals to keep his mates ahead. . From the outset the Jayhawkers began running the bulky visitors ragged. Bob Allen, dashing quarterback, drove in for the first goal and Miller followed right along with another. However, S.M.U.'s two front line aces, Jones and Wilkerson combined to tally five points and give them their only lead during the game. Ebling, Miller, and Allen ran the Kansas lead to 14 to 7 with the contest only one-fourth gone. Rallying desperately the Ponies climbed within a point, but Harp came through with three beautiful long shots to show the Jayhawks ahead. Kline bucketed his only goal just before the intermission and Kansas went to the dressing room with a 23 to 15 margin. Millie and Kilne climbed. Miller and Ebling Race Held to two goals each during the first half, Miller and Ebbing suddenly became torrid and it was practical their game for the next week. Miller hit from the side. Ebling drove under, Miller connected on a **Kansas (62)** gf ft mit tpf mp 350 Ebling, f 7 1 2 15 1 1 Feld, h 7 1 0 0 1 1 Fenham, f 3 0 0 6 1 4 Krum, f 3 0 0 6 1 5 Kruum, f 4 0 2 15 1.0 Engleman, f 4 0 0 6 1.5 Woodward, f 1 0 0 0 0 1.5 Allen, c 1 0 0 7 1 31.5 c 2 1 0 7 1 32.5 Floyd, c 1 0 0 0 0 1.5 Harp, g 4 2 9 0 10.0 g 1 0 0 2 2 10.0 Hartman, g 1 0 0 2 10.0 Kline, g 1 0 0 2 1 35.0 g 1 0 0 1 0 1.0 Arnold, g 1 0 0 0 1.0 The box score: Totals 25 13 6 63 9 200.0 S.M.U. (31) fg f tff mtf pt pf mP Keith, f 1 0 2 1 2 3 16.5 Keeton, f 1 0 2 2 2 2 21.0 Bebek, f 1 2 1 0 2 2 29.0 Jores, f 1 4 0 5 0 2 28.0 Bombham, f 0 0 0 0 0 32.0 Wilkerson, c 3 4 2 1 0 34.0 Maddox, g 0 0 0 0 0 2.0 Coppedge, g 3 0 0 0 0 27.0 Clement, g 0 0 0 0 0 34.0 Sprague, g 0 0 0 0 1 24.0 Clements, g 0 0 0 0 1 5.5 Totals 13 5 5 31 16 200.0 Score at the half: Kansas 23, Southern Methodist 15 Officials: Don Elser, Notre Dame, and John Carmody, Midland. spinner, and Ebling dribbled all the way down for another. Harp broke monotony with a free throw to the two hot forwards were at it again. Ebling sped under the hoop and threw the ball in from over his head. Miller tossed in a free throw, and that's the way it continued until Doctor Allen began shooting in with five minutes left in the game. Given a 51 to 28 lead, the rest of the club didn't just protect it, they began adding to it. Bob Johnson, speedy sophomore forward, banged in three goals during his trick, and Jack Sands, Billy Hogben, and Bob (Continued on page four) PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY DECEMBER 19 1930 - Kansan Comment Dormitory Nearer With a reduction of several thousand dollars in the terms offered by property owners of Brynwood Place, the old Acacia fraternity house, plans for the establishment of a men's dormitory on the site may go forward more rapidly. It was understood the price of the property has been reduced six thousand dollars from the original selling price of fifteen thousand dollars. This step makes the dream more real. But it must be borne in mind, as emphasized by Prof. Olin Templin, chairman of the purchasing committee, that more than four thousand dollars still are needed before the committee can take definitive action in purchasing the property. Already more than ten thousand dollars have been pledged, but the additional money is needed to complete purchase of the house and grounds and restoration of the building begun. While raising of the funds will be primarily the task of the alumni committee, the campaign should have the support of every well-wisher of the University. Only through such concerted moves as this, toward men's dormitories, can there be any alleviation of the below-standard living conditions of some seven hundred men students. --from that county, was elected governor. (Interesting side light.) Chancellor Malett also from Dickinson county was two years old when his fellow countrymen were organizing at the University). The Kansas law requires a motor car to have brakes sufficient to stop it in 30 feet at 20 miles per hour on dry, even pavement. --from that county, was elected governor. (Interesting side light.) Chancellor Malett also from Dickinson county was two years old when his fellow countrymen were organizing at the University). Skakespeare In Swing Time Pity Will Shakespeare. Bill, the Bard, isn't resting easy any more. Because the poor Poet has had to do much turning in his coffin lately, the pine boards are split wide open and the Stratford-on-Avon daisies are being uprooted. Shakespeareana, boiled down to modern curves, is rocking to the jumping jive. It all started a couple of Eroadway seasons past when a young dramatist with revolution in his eye, by name—Orson Welles—astounded the audience of his Mercury theater with "Julius Caesar." This was a new Julius which wrigled with streamlines and smacked but little with the flavor of the old Globe. Played on a stage devoid of scenery and stepped-up to night club pace, it left the Shakespeare patron completely baffled. Old Will, 'tis said; shifted uneasily at this treatment. Then, last season, Will had his first taste of musi-comedy with "The Boys from Syracuse," and did he howl. Soon, however, the Bard settled back and was a model corpse until the theater's most capricious pair—Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine—cocked on eye at "Taming of the Shrew." Lunt and Fontaine got Katharina tamed as never before. It was a Shakespeareal circus in swing tempo with a covey of midges, a liberal dosage of jugglers, and a goodly sprinkling of dancing and tumbling acts, all set to a pace that had the audience dizzy. Poor Old Will. He had just squirm into a belatedly restful position after the Shrew, when "Swingin' the Dream" hit Broadway like a tornado a couple of weeks ago. Then and there, the collin boards at Stratford parted at the seams, posies popped loose, and Shakespeare summersaulted out of his shroud. When Gilbert Soldes decided to do a swing version of the "Mid-summer Night's Dream," the bard blew the lid. "Swingin' the Dream" resulted. The show recently closed but too late for comfort to Billy S, and his wilted daisies. The Dream took its locale in the deep south of New Orleans in the late 80's when swing music was getting its start. The show was liberally punetulated with negroes--jitterbugs, groove artists, and "gates" aplenty. While the music blasted out from three sources, Mendelssohn begged the Bard to get over and give him room. At right stage—Benny Goodman, clarinet, and sextet slicing out a mean downbeat; to the left—Bud Freeman and band; and down in the pit—Don Vorbees, just to keep the music grooved. But the highlights of "Swingin' the Dream" came in the cast of main characters: Louis Armstrong, hottest trumpet man in the country, played "Bottom" to a "Titania" by Maxine Sullivan, the dusty gal who swum "Loch Lomond" to fame last year. And not the least of these was Butterfly McQueen as Peck. There you have the torrid nightmare which caused some thirteen days of heat wave in Gotham. Lacking financial backing for the most elaborate and expensive Broadway production in years, the management buckled. Small wonder the Bard has caused a mild earthquake on the usually placid Stratford meadows. But wait until next season when Rome sidles up to Juliet with a sly, "hi Yay, cutie. How's about us ditchin' the families and wooin up a batch." Peace By Radio Peace Scuttling of the German pocket battleship the Graf Spee, in the harbor at Montevideo could have far reaching consequences in publicizing the grim subject of war. First intimation of the sinking of the doomed ship is reported to have sent James Bowden, N.B.C. foreign news commentator to the radio to describe the German disaster to a news-hungry world. Realistic description of war through radio is one more aspect peculiar to the 1939 conflict which was not present in the last war. "Bomb by bomb" description of major war incidents may well serve a pacific purpose by driving home the futility of war. Through radio hookups it may be possible to transmit the horrors of modern warfare, civilian bombings, screams of the injured and dying, and the needless destruction of property. To wage war successfully, the public must be enlisted. In bringing the war to the people, radio has here the opportunity to become the greatest single deterrent against war. Censorship of the air waves might not be as easily achieved as censorship of the news reports. YOU SAID IT EDITOR'S NOTE. The editors are not responsible for opinions or facts given in the letters published in this column. Letters more than 300 words are subject to revision and may be amended, although the name will be withheld if the writer desires. For More Music—Less Time Out The Christmas vespers on Sunday afternoon were beautiful and inspiring, but we became rather tired of having an intermission after every number. After the first three, we stayed in our seats and were very glad we did. Had we observed each of the intermissions, we would never have seen the wonderful technique exhibited by the students of the fine arts department. They certainly know how to sway those music stands! We always wondered what the students learned over there. Had the hour of elumgy intermissions been omitted we could have thoroughly enjoyed the one-hour hall of fun. But let us return to the program. There was certainly a fine variety. The same boy didn't always carry out the conductor's stand. . . . Every performer in the orchestra was given the same role. We hope that all the friends of the instrumental ensembles saw the performers. Of course, there would be many more. If we had been seated in the orchestra pit. However, we will forgive them for wanting to play from the stage, for we know that music is a work of art. We confused wandering of the choir across the stage for the singing lineup and back to the chairs after each number resembled the poorly rehearsed maneuvers of the orchestra. ROBERT A. BRADLEY, c'40, VICTOR E. AMEND, gr. EUGENE G. ANDERSON, c'40 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Tuesday, Dec. 19, 1939 No. 65 *Notices dos at: Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 10 a.m.* --- --from that county, was elected governor. (Interesting side light.) Chancellor Malett also from Dickinson county was two years old when his fellow countrymen were organizing at the University). CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION: The regular weekly meeting, open to students, graduates and faculty members, will be held this afternoon at 4:30 in Room C. Myers hall—Jack Dalby, secretary. COLLEGE FACULTY. The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will most in the auditorium on the third floor of Frank Strong hall today. Deane W. Malott, chancellor. NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE IREGULAR PAYROLL: All students, on the irregular payroll, are requested to call at the business office and sign the Declaration before the Christmas holidays.-Karl Kobz, bouris TAU Sigma; Tau Sigma will meet tonight at 7:30. Gcairdine UM; president. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas In-depth Chief Editor-Ulrich Chieff Editor-Richard Boccone Editor-Richard Boccone Feature Editors Mary Lorey Randal, Lilian Fisher Monaco Editor | Walt Meininger Lake Superior | Ken Young Canon Editions | Bettie Cotton, David Society Editor | Elizabeth Krach Jay Simcoe | Sappors Editors Dale Henkelman | John Rafter Telegraph Editor | Eugen e Kühn Twelveite Editor | Koy Bizbesch Fuji Press Editor | John Zou Editorial Staff MEMBER KANSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Publisher ... Harry Hill Business Staff Business Staff Echwin. Remum Menendez     82     x 72°00′    72°00′00″ National Advertising Service, Inc. Knopf Publishing Corporation 26 MAIDEN AVE. N.Y. CHICAGO     70 LOALES ANAEL     53 TAMARACO Business Manager Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $175 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year. Entered as second class master 17, 1910, or the office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. County Clubs Originated in 1900 At Home of Prof. Sterling By Mary Lon Randal, c'11 Not altogether businesslike was the meeting of the first County Club in the home of M. W. Sterling, retired professor of Latin and Greek. Far back in 1900 the students from Dickinson county decided to become better acquainted with each other and for that purpose planned a party on May 12 with Professor Sterling, also from Dickinson county, as sponsor. Dickinson County Colony was the official title and Addie Light, eoed Chess Tournament Gets Under Way Thoughtful silences while figuring a "See if you can get out of this" move, and the voicing of "check", marks the chess tournament begin each week under the direction of Winford Ferry, e'40. Tournament games may be played at homes of the contestants or in Memorial Union building. The only requirement is that the results of the game be turned in to the hostess' desk in the Memorial Union building the evening of the dead line for each match. The first dead line has been set for Wednesday at 10 p.m. A double-round-robin, with each entry meeting every other entry twice, will be played to decide the winner. Each match consists of one game. The victor will gain two points. In case of a tie the points will be divided. Contestants who do not make arrangements to play their games will be marked zero for each unplayed match. In order to speed the tournament, competitors may play anyone as long as they do not get behind schedule. Pairings for the initial games are: Arnold Weidman vs. Fred Stubbuck, Jimmie Eads vs. W. A. Hudson. V. L. Courtright vs. George Osgood. Donald Dunham vs. Lane Wilson. Donald Estes vs. David Holmes. Howard Lee vs. Tom Bowles, Joe Potte vs. David Banker. College Women Say Place Is in Home, Not Politics Two chess sets are available in Memorial Union building. State College, Pa. (UF)-If the experience of the Pennsylvania State College is any criterion, Betty co-eyed toward home economics as a major field of home economic sciences in a minor. Until several years ago, according to dean of women Charlotte E. Ray, women students at Pennsylvania State were divided almost equally among home economics, economics and liberal arts courses. But more recently, the economics has gone into a definite lead in the number of co-eads. Sleeper Is Ruled Not Responsible For His Actions The woman was injured in an automobile accident which, she charged was caused when Ralph J. Pack suddenly pushed against the rear of her seat, causing her to lose control of the vehicle. That was the ruling of the state supreme court in refusing the appeal of Elinor Lobert from an Allegheh county court decision. Philadelphia (UP)—In Pennsylvania you are not held responsible for what you do while asleep. El Paso, Tex. (UP)—Floats depicting the history in the history of the Americas from the voyages of Christopher Columbus to the present day will move in the Pageant of Americans Parade staged here New Year's day as part of the fifth annual Southwestern Carnival. The high court ruled that it could find no reasons for holding a person responsible for injuries inflicted while in a state of unconsciousness. Other events of the carnival—which will serve as the heralding event for New Mexico's Coronado Cuiroto Centennial celebration—include a concert by the El Paso Symphony orchestra, Army Day, coronation of the Sun Queen, Old Timers' Day, Pan-Civie luncheon, and the National Square Dance contest Dec. 30. To Depict History of Americas In Sun Carnival Parade SKi for Credit at Nevada Twenty-five of a limit of 40 floats have been entered in the parade, a prelude to the annual Sun Bowl football game. Pack said he fell asleep and knew nothing of the accident until he woke up in a hospital. Remo, New. (UP) — For the first time in its history, the University of Nevada now includes sking in the campus. University credit is given for it. The colony met again the next year. Then other counties began to form groups of their own for the group of all. All were clubs by this time. These early clubs influenced many people over the state. The Dickinson County Club, which was perhaps the most active, led in the enrollment of students at the University. From Frank Strong, chancellor of the University in that year, the County Clubs received their first impetus, although later in his period of office, they became quiescent. A revival was made in the 1920's when Dr. E. H. Lindley, now chancellor emeritus, took office. Now during the first year of office for Dr. E. H. Lindley, more students met for the purpose of perpetuating their County clubs than ever before. The general aim of the clubs started in 1900 has continued in the later revivals embracing such activities as sponsoring speeches in high school assemblies, window displays, and dinners and dances to promotive students On the Shin- (Continued from page one) sounds like that in a man getting vocal results from a bromo-selitzer. (Aside to Robertson: Cast your bread upon his head.) The song's sad-fold—a句子 soggy perhaps.) Some class: the fox-hunters had to bail the caretaker of the fox (econ) hounds out of jail before they could begin the hunt Sunday. Which reason? The fox was a predator, and wrote that if those dudes in red cost ever got in his pasture that Remus DICKINSON Mot. 25c Nite 35c Shows: 2:30 - 7 - 9 ONLY ONE MORE DAY ENDS WEDNESDAY ENDS WEDNESDAY FRANK CAPRA'S Mr. Smith Goes To Washington a-starring JeanARTROU* with CLAUDE RAINS EDWARD ARNOLD GYMY KIBREE Jean ARTHUR * James STEWART CAPRA AT HIS BEST! Thursday - 3 days PAUL MUNI "WE ARE NOT ALONE" Shows 2:30-7-9 10c - 25c The Season's Gayest Hit! ROBERT GRANADA ENDS WEDNESDAY TAYLOR·GARSON ROBERT TAYLOR GARSON William BURKE Gwen CWEN Oliver Stooge Comedy - News Color Cartoon Remember? PATEE LEWAYRES All Shows 15e Any Time ENDS TONITE "JESSE JAMES" Tyrone Power - Henry Fonda Nancy Kelly — 2nd Feature — "Death of a Champion" "Death of a Champion" Lynne Overman Wednesday—3 Days Dead End Kids "HELLS KITCHEN" and "CONSPIRACY" Allan Lana - Linda Hayes (the bull) would soon have them hunting shelter instead of foxes. Note to Dick Amerine: Best you resolve to cease dismissing classes without the permission of the professor. Mr. Faust is somewhat liked about your turning his economics class loose last week before he got there, "Taint funny, Amerine" remark a few other professors who had similar experiences with you last year. Phi Pii Phane Knudsen come down with chicken-pop Sunday. Yesterday all the Phil Pii were vaccinated for small-pox. One thing leading to another, this reminds me of an action taken by a University official to throw several students out of a good meal job by declaiming against one hour jam sessions as conducive to fast living among students. The doctors undoubtedly have a logical, scientific reason, however. Fred Lloydt should resolve to continue his swell work as dance manager in offering bigger and better variation and class parties to the stunters, and make to make the class parties by cleaning non-essential free masses. This being the season when New Year's resolutions are in the back of our minds perhaps a few suggestions—to do—and then again, perhaps they will. Certain non-student big-a-shots should resolve either to stop meddling in dance business affairs and to carry on in his own capable way. The University should resolve to send the band on a concert tour of western Kansas. This fine organization is best public relation counsel we have. Twould be well for independent students to resolve to take a look into Oakden and Whitney's LS WANT ADS A VACANCY FOR 3 BOYS at 1532 West Campus Road, room and board. Across street west from Snow nail. No hill to climb. P4142. - 06 LOST: Sigma Phi Epsilon jewelled- heart fraternity fraternity. Peward. Phone 1144 or 2183J. Floyd Smith A. and see what's happening to their "democratic" organization. The Germans were too busy with their perms and look what happened to them! WANTED: Ride to Denver, Colorado or vicinity for Christmas holiday. Share expenses. Phone 407, Dorothea Thompson. -66 In conclusion, the Shinster wishes everyone, including himself, a merry, merry Christmas and a nice day to hitch-ike him (if you're broke like he is). May Santa Claus durn your socks when he puts candy in them! WANTED: Four boys at 1911 Indiana Street to board and room during second semester. -68 The Jayhawker and the Sour Owl should resolve to keep their gossip a little straighter than does the Shin. The Jayhawker has Irving Kuraner jellying around with Dorothy Schroter, a girl he doesn't even know. The Sour Owl has Mary Robeline Scott leaving school at the end of the school year. He and Stew Jones with Stew Jones when everybody knows that Louis Focke is too busy it Chicago U. to get married and hat Jones is an atheist. -66 by FAST RAILWAY EXPRESS! Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. GOING HOME? SEND THAT LUGGAGE NATIONAL MARINE SERVICE SKATES — SLEDS WOLFSON'S BAILMUX ADMINISTRATION AGENCY PHOTOGRAPHIS from negatives in files of Homer Frekking Studio will be finished and may be called for on or before January 1, 1940. Call 225. -66 Sales, rentals, cleaning and remoiring RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 **PARKER JOHN KEENY** Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened or Good Times and Good Thin To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale. Just phone the Railway Express agent when your trunk or bags are packed and off they will speed, direct to your home, in all cities and principal towns. You 10 can send "collect" too, same as your laundry goes. Use this complete, low-cost service both coming and going, and enjoy your train trip full of the proper Holiday spirit. When you phone, by the way, be sure to tell our agent when to call. Latest in Hair Trims and Styles ATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 RAILWAY EXPRESS VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card 20 E. 9th Phone 120 Lawrence, Kan. Optometrist 911 Mass. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 I am not sure what you mean. I'll just transcribe it as a whole. The image is very blurry and lacks any discernible text or graphics. It appears to be an abstract or non-visual representation with no clear elements to describe. Gustafson IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone12 Drakes for Bakes ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Built-in self-calibrating exposure meter. Certified f.4.5 triple triangler.autolat.art lens 1/20 to 1/200 second shuttle speeds. motion movie film in standard cortisole. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing In—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the amateurs Hixon's Mass. Phone 4 721 Mass. Phone 41 TUESDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1939 PAGE THREE Here on the Hill. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS an account of Mt. Oread Society Elizabeth Kirsch, Societ Editor Before 5 p.m. call KU-25; after 5, 2702-K3 Taking time out from the fervor of homegoing activities more than 400 students will at sometime today attend the Christmas party to be held from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Memorial Union building. Wih Prof Allen Crafton to act as master of ceremonies the program will be headed by special folk dances, directed by Jane Byrn of the department of physical education. The Modern choir and the Men's Glee Club will be on deck with special songs and voices well tuned. As the afternoon's entertainment draws to a close, guests at the party will sing Christmas$^2$ Don Newlin, fs, was a luncheon guest at the Pi Beta Phi house yesterday. carols, while Jay Janes and Ku-Kus serve doughnuts and hot spice cider. Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Hal Rupenthal, c'42; Burton Hodgden, c'42; Bd Raufil, c'43; and Dick Behner, c'45. Saturday evening dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were: Jeanne Quiring, Hutchinson; and Margaret Peacock, Ottawa. Jean Neely, c'41; Ruth Inkles, e'42; Jeynn Ann Green, c'41; and Mariann Lacey, ed'42 were dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house for dinner Sunday. Delta Upson fraternity entrained the following guests at dinner sunday; Muriel Oschmey c'40, Martha Oldham, c'43; Dorothy Bond, c'43; Willa Jean Coffman,拓-paik, Mary Katherine Brewer, Kansas City Mrs. H. M. Harbur, Kansas City, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wright, Lawrence; Muriel Henry, ph'42; Mary Elizabeth Kirch, c'43. Sunday dinner guests at the Phi Delta Theta house included the following: Billie Meltive, c#4; Nancy Prather, c#2; Reola Durand, c#4; Herman Smith, and Mr. and Mrs. Fat Maloney, Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Wright, Concordia were guests of their daughter Ruth Wright, la43 for lunchon Saturday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Betty Laubengayer, Salina, eroute from Smith College, was a Sunday night guest at the Kappa Gamma house. Janet Turner, Kansas City. Mo was a dinner guest at the Alpha Omi eron Pt house Monday night. Sunday dinner guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house included: Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Irwin and Ray Irwin J; Bob White, fs Kansas City, Mo. M.B. Kline, fs Louisville, Bill Mundy, Boek Keel, Bill Lynch and Jack Clark, Manhattan. Alpha Omieron F1 will have their annual Christmas dinner tonight at 6 o'clock. Six men were initiated into Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity Saturday night. The men initiated were: Albert C. Reed, c'42; Howard Linecoln, gr.; Ernest Klema, c'41; Henry Holtzclaw, c'42; Jay Stewart, c'42; and Luther Lyon, gr. Frances K. Seeley, Russell, and Betty Boyer, Kansas City, were Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Botty Barnes, fs, Leavenworth; Helen Geis, fs, Salina; and Athella Ann Woodbury, fs, Kansas City, Mo. we were weekend guests at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Jean Edbert, c'42; Ann Browning, c'40; Mr. and Mrs. R. J. LaShelle and Miss Lois LaShelle of Djunction City. were Sunday dinner guests at the Sigma Chi house. Dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Sunday were: Don Palmer, e'41; Jack Maier, gr.; and Dr. and Mrs. G. L. Harrington, Independence. Azalea Burnett, Hutchinson; and Mary Katherine Brewer, Kansas City. Mo., were weekend guests at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Monday the following were guests at the Sigma Chi house for lunch Hortense Horton, fs; Mr. and Mrs Lucian Hollister, Chicago; and Jim Sherman of Topeka. New Donnell, ls, who has just returned from Leeland Stanford University, is a guest at the Sigma Nu house. Sunday dinner guests at the Chi- omega house included: Frances K. Siegel, Russell; and Betty Boyer, Canasan City, Mo. Chi Omega sorority held its annual Christmas dinner last night Following the dinner motion picture "A Christmas Story" at Montreal, Conn., were shown. Sunday guests at Miller hall included: Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Evans, Conway Springs; Mrs. and Mrs. M. A. Martin, Paola; Mr. and Mrs. R. V. O'Neill, Wellville; Miss Katherine Upstairs, Maryville; Miss Grace Marvleyville; Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Trantwein, Mrs Marjorie Trantwein, and George Trantwein all of Topeca. Connie Rutherford, fs, was a week-end guest at the Chi Omega house. Bill Mundy, Bill Lynch, and Bob Keel of Kansas State College were weekend guests at the Phi Gamma Delta house this weekend. A program, dancing, and refreshments will be the order of procedure for the annual Christmas party of the school. At 8 o'clock at 1438 Ohio. Profs to Party Hosts and hostesses for the evening are: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Paulillin, Mr. and Mrs. John Blochey, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hagmor, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Kobker, and Mr. Sevilla Chapman. Sunday dinner guests at Stigma Phi Epison house were: Mr. and Mrs. L.J. May, Mr. and Mrs. A.S. Walker. Mrs. Laura Hunter, Topeka, was a guest at Miller hall this weekend. Louisiana house announces the engagement of Billie Wilkinson, fa'12 to Howard Haims, fa'40. Dinner guests at the Phi Gamma Delta home Sunday were: Prof. and Mrs J. N. Howell, Bill Cavert, c'43; Miriam Bartlett, c'41; and Bill Lilych Sonna Claus and members of the Home Economics Club collaborated yesterday afternoon to give a party for 43 under-privileged children of Lawrences. The party held in Fresno, Calif., on Friday at the tree and the presentation of gifts. Xmas for Kids The following committee chairmen made arrangements for the afternoon: Invitations, Elsie Ottamman, c'41 decorations and enchantment, Norma Sloan, c'41 transportation, Ruth Clickenier, c'40; gifts, Flora Rehner and Ernestine Menges, c'40; and refreshments, Martha Sharma, c'4. Pi Kappa alpha fraternity held a formal stag banquet Sunday evening, as a Christmas party and a farwell celebration for the February graduates. Dr. E. H. Tylor, professor of zoology, Boyd Morgan, e'40, and Jackson Dean, e'40, the two graduating seniors, spoke. Howard Dunham president, was totamaster and Santa Claus. Friday guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were: Feanne Fontaine Kansas City, Mo; Jane King, Jane William, and Moredith Dye, '30, Kansas City, Mo. Members of Acacia fraternity held their annual Christmas dinner last night. Dinner guests at the Acacia house Sunday were: Anne Robbins, c'42; and Fay Jearl Glish. Dinner guests at the Dala Tau Delta屋食堂 Sunday were; Mary Tanner, c'43; Margie Road, f'43; Kathleen O'Sullivan, c'43; Viginia Gray, c'43; Elizabeth Barclay, c'49; Virginia Elliott, c'41; Helen Sheaffer, fa'43; Chuck Elliot, c'43; and Jack Han-couch, Manhattan Dinner guests at the Gamma Phi Beta house Sunday were: John Weatherhaw, c'42; Jim Nelson, c'40; Murrell Alberty, c'42; John Campbellc'42; Jack McCarty, c'42; Bill Johnson, m'42; Marge Ree, Kansas City Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Rohrer, Kansas City, Mo. Jessie Francis Daw; Jean Wilkins c'41; Belen H琳 Stransky; Ruth Stransky; Ruth Kellert; f'44; Dorothy Teacher Shannon; c'43; Jerry Bucher; c'43; Betty Bell, c'43; Marie Read, fa'43; Margaret Barber; c'48; Ruth Inken, c'48; Hortense Horton, for Nancy Leathers, c'43; and Virginia Hillix, fa'43. Cigma Alphon Epsilon entertained with their regular buffet supper Sunday night with the following as guests: Wilma Scwartt, c'43; Sara Chail, f'41; Jane Geiger, c'41; Bethe Annie Baker, f'42; Gloria Biechele, c'43; Norma Lloan, f'41; Betty Rose Johnson, c'43; Tinnibelt Bcets, c'43; Nancy Prather, c'43; Katherine Green c'43. Marrant Neal, e'42; Betty Rogers e'40; Jane Irwel, e'40; Cora Hepworth e'41; Billy McIntyre, e'42. Dorothy Wise, b'41; Marjorie Heinbrock, n'22; Mary Fitz-Gerald, c'40; Lois Howell, c'43; Denny Lemeline, c'40; Nancy Kesley, n'41; Virginia Townsend; Jane Blane, c'40; Danny Jenkins, c'45; Francelle Zentline, c'40; Caroline Alkine, Lawrence; Bettilou Meyer, Kansas City, Mo; Dimna Irvine, c'42; Patty Biglow, b'41; Marie Louise Lockhart, c'43; Jean Perry, c'40; Kind Kihak, c'40; Eleanor Croeland, c'41; Eleanor Croeland, c'41; Betty Miller, c'41; Jeanne Cody; Virginia Barthen, c'40. Fir Alnhs Dine And Sigma Nus Also Mrs. C, H. Laude; Mrs. Hurbert; Mrs. Howe; Mr. and Ms. William C. Mosher, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr, and Ms. Rolla Nuckles; Bob Mead, Kansas City, Mo.; Michael Sheridan, c; 42; Vinol Sundgreen, n; 42; Jack Townsend, 79; Jack O'Hara, c; 42; Bill Bevin, c; 42; Bill McKinley, c; Harold Jones, c; 40; Jack Nourse, and Courtney Crum. Dinner guests at the Sigma Nu buffet dinner Sunday evening were: Helen Heard, c'4; Marjorie Thomas, c'4; Joe Jean Hiraw, c'4; Mary Beth Wick, c'4; Jean Edwinston, c'4; C2, c'4; C2, c'4; Jean Neckey, c'4; C2 Georgia Ferrel, c'4; Kathleen O- 'Sullivan, c'4; Betty Banker, c'4; Becky Tremeson, c'4; Barbara Koch June Grisela, c'4; Betty Blue, c'4; Ann Murray, c'4; Ann Robbins, c^ c'4; Katieben Beyer, c'4; Elizabeth Evans, c'4; Elizabeth Barday, c^ c'40. The December meeting of the University Dramatic Club will be held tonight in the Little theater in Green hall at 8 o'clock. A one-act play directed by Jack Nelson, gr., will be played by club members and friends. Students interested in window displays advertising the University for their individual communities will meet this week, according to a committee of faculty members who met Thursday. Window Display Committee Meets To Advance Plans Members of the committee are J. J. Kistler, department of journalism; T. D. Jones, department of design; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the Chancellor; R. A. Heedy, director of the News Bureau; and Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary. This Week--said today that no definite word has come to him from Washington as to when the training would start. Week--- Where To Go; What To Do ---On the Campus TOADAY— Memorial Union Christmas open house, 3-5 o'clock; Chi Theta, Pine room, 3.38 p.m.; Kappa Pal, Pine room, 7.38 p.m.; Delta Phi Delta Christmas party, English room, 8 p.m.; Modern Choir舞,Memorial Union hallroom, 9 p.m.; College Faculty meeting, Strong arm outfits. WEDNESDAY—Christmas access begins at 5 p.m.; class work resumes at 8:30 a.m., Wednesday, Jan. 3, 1940. M H We Wish You A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year We Hope to See More of You Students in 1940 Weav WHY Hibernate FOR THE HOLIDAYS? WHY Hibernate FOR THE HOLIDAYS? It's so easy — so inexpensive to go places by LUXURIOUS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 No need to "hole in" for the holiday! That's the time to get out and enjoy yourself — especially when you can "go places and do things" this easy, modern way! Luxurious, warm, air-conditioned Super-Coaches can help you on Christmas shopping trips — take you home for the holidays, out-of-town parties, winter vacation spots — cill at money-saving fares that leave you extra dollars for gifts and holiday fun! You'll have loads of fun on the trip. UNION PACIFIC SUPER-COACH! New Convenience! 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 Frequent daily schedules let you go and come as you like. One-day trip-ride service on many short trips. Ask you how far and how long the low fares and convenient leave times. UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mqss. Phone 707 الطريق للفورم في مدينة نيويورك النقشة والديكو CROSSING BY FOUR BOYS PENHURST BAY 638 Mass. Phone 707 LOOK WHAT YOU SAVE! One Round Way Tri St. Joseph $1.50 $2.70 Kansas City .65 1.20 Salina 2.80 5.05 Denver 9.35 16.85 Salt Lake City 18.35 33.05 Los Angeles 26.50 46.25 Los Angeles 26.50 46.25 Flying High--said today that no definite word has come to him from Washington as to when the training would start. UNION PACIFIC STAGES INTERSTATE TRANSIT LINES Kansas Up on C.A.A. List; Five Fliers Make Solo Hops Rv Ruth Spencer, c'41 University flying students, who so-called recently under the amuages of the Civil Aeronautics Authority, were the highest ranking in the state and among the first in the United States. The University flying school's instructors and training facilities are foremost in this region, according to Jess R. Green, C. A. A. inspector. Helen Hay, 40, was the first of the students to fly dual and first to solo. Helen Gamma, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma and former student of the University of Colorado, plans to start a KU, chapter of the Women's National Aeronautical Association next semester. "We would like to get all of the girls interested in aviation to join," she said. She expects to hear from the national president of the organization soon. Kansas has nine of the 50 students qualified in 13 universities of the United States to take advanced flight training. These pilots who took the primary training last year under the C. A. A., will receive from 40 to 50 hours of stunt flying similar to army instruction in a 150 horsepower plane with tandem cockpits. Prof. Earl D. Hay, University supervisor of the civilian flying course, John Green, m'42, a member of Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, was runner-up to Miss Hais, when he soiled Tuesday. Last summer Green attended the medical school at Ann Arbor KK, and graduated biologically the upper 10 per cent of the School of Medicine. After landing the ship, he exclaimed that he felt like a "true amateur flyer." Cruising in for a perfect threepoint landing, Kenneth Blim, c'40, made the third solo flight, Blim, formerly of Kansas State College and the College of Emporia is majoring in geology. When asked how he felt as a soloist, he answered "I felt a little nervous," but because he could gain altitude so much faster than usual. But, the only real difference was the realization of that 'empty seat beside me!" To Discuss New England Tradition Dean R. A. Schweiger of the School of Education will speak at the annual dinner of the Sons and Daughters of New England Thursday night in the Colonial techoon. His subject will be "Culture of the New England Tradition." Four Tableaux- (Continued from page one) history, the University Symphony Orchestra appeared on the program. Under the direction of Prof. Karl Kuersteiner, the orchestra read one movement of Hanson's "Romantic Symphony." During the orchestra number a collection was taken, also for the first time in the history of the service. The proceeds of the offering will be devoted to aid needy Fine Arts students. The ensemble also accompanied a solo by Merilah Moore, soprano, of the School of Fine Arts faculty. She sings, "Villancico Vasco" (Mini). The song is performed in string quartet and organ by Prof. Charles S. Skilton, of the University. An ensemble of strings contributed two numbers to the program: "Ave Marii", (Bach); and "Septet, Opus 65" (Saint-Saon). Included in the groups were: Professor Waldemar Geltch, Raymond Stuhl, Morryne Eluser, Howard C. Taylor, Eluser and Howard C. Taylor of the University; Jack Stephenson, Lawrence; Curtis Johnson, Ft. Collins, Colo; and Loreo Horacek, Topeka. Presenting both programs Sunday, a brass quartet played Christmas carols from a balcony high above the entrance to the auditorium. Members of the quartet were: Eugene Crabb, McPherson; Loo Horacek, Topeka; Dean Brooks, Lawrence; and Lloyd Lead, Oberlin. OPEN EVENINGS GIVE HIM ARROW SHIRTS AND NECKWEAR -- in gift boxes -- from OBER'S TIE Arrow shirts and cravats—an excellent gift for boy-friend, dad, the favorite uncle or for big and little brother. Ober's carry a complete line of gifts for everyone on your Christmas list. Let us assist you in your selections. SANTA Come in—see our assortment of shirts in smart colors and patterns—priced $2.00 up—cravots $1.00 up. Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS THE GIFT STORE FOR MEN STUDENTS Here's Wishing You the Merriest and Finest Christmas of All from the dispensors of that fine Phillips 66 GASOLINE and lots of happiness to you all during the coming New Year. M. F. HUDSON CO. 800 N.H. Phone 825 --- PARTY SQUEEZE There's nothing like Christmas vacation for embraces at family reunions and the like. . . not to mention the hometown girl-friend when she gets that gift from you. MERRY CHRISTMAS But... If you're in a squeeze for a gift —send him a Fritz gas booklet and guarantee more car rides. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS Fritz Co. --- PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1939 SIMONIZING... SPORTS By JAY SIMON A few notes taken off the cut while waiting for last night's Jayhawk-Mustang basketball thriller Loyola University of Chicago, the team Kansas plays in the big Colosseum Jan. 8, next year, hasn't lost a game at home in 26 start . . . Last season the Windy city boys chalked up 21 straight before losing to Long Island U. in their finale at New York . . . Washington, D.C., fans really put on the old college try at the recent pro-championship clash . . . Fifteen thousand Redskin band trekked to Gotham with a piece band Trekking to Gotham with Sammy Baugh and his mates do their stuff . . . E. C. Quigley, who put away his whistle and striped shirt last winter to allow a injury to mend, says he's ready for assignments again, but will limit himself to one game a week. Statistics show that field goals were the margin of victory in 72 football games the past season . . . The longest one was booted by Freed Powers of Denver in a game against Idaho . . . Ellsworth Wines , the tennis star , proved he is no one sportman when he carded a night 68 in the recent Pasadena golf tourney . . . Officials in charge of the Rose Bowl have offered their big arena to the Democrats for their national conference. Allen has reached the second generation stage in his coaching. Wood Bob, sophomore forward on this year's squad, is the son of Earl C. Woodward who played under Dr. Allen in 1908 and 1909. Elmer Hackey, the big muscle man at K-State, adorns the cover of the current "Amatur Athlete," publication put out by the A.A.U. . . . Bill DeCorrent and Erwin Madsen, football stars at Northwestern, have been Xmas trees outside Dyke stadium for the past few days . . . Frank Spence of the Oklahoma日报 tells you that Brake wants some more bounce for his team and he has one boy 6-6 and another 6-1 in the starting lineup . . . Kansas would sure give its opponents fits this year, if "Phog" chose to send Bruce Vrum, T. P. Hunter, and Jack Sands into the game at the same time . . . All three are left-handers. The Portis High School boy whom this department mentioned Sunday, is Max Kissell, and in his first six games this year he scored 160 points. He has gone into the 30s on three occasions . . . The Big Six Missouri gridman will have to submit to a two-hour "study hall" every day during their trip to Florida for the Orange Bowl game . . . Kansas State lost to Colorado State 52-44, in the second game at F. Collins Saturday night after winning the opening . . . Five hundred more student basketball tickets have been sold this year than ever before, according to E. L. Falkenstein, financial secretary of athletics. Our Store Will Be Open Tonight to Help You Select Your Man's--vetted infobox captain of the football team at a gridiron lancebon at the Eldridge hotel yesterday moon. The Lawrence Rotary club gave the lunch-celeon for the varsity players and the coaching staff. CHRISTMAS GIFTS Name Sullivant Captain of '39 Football Team Why not--- Arrow Shirts Arrow neckties Silk Pajamas Silk Robes Flannel Robes Swank Jewelry Interwoven Socks - Mates Elect the Scroppy Signal-Caller at Rotary Lunchon Yesterday; E. C Quigley Speaks Milt Sullivan Milton Sullivant, plucky senior Milt Sullivant E. C. Quigley, supervisor of umpires of the National League, was the main speaker. He related some of his outstanding officiating experiences during the last 25 years. Chuck Deane W. McMahon thanked the players for their efforts and determination on the field this year. When you get home and can't find what you want— Wire Phone Postal to us, will bring to your door our quick personalized service. Gwinn Henry, director of athletics, praised his team, saying it had done its best, and that was all that was expected of any team. He also acknowledged his appreciation "exceptionally fine coaching staff." Mr. Quigley made the following presentations at the end of his speech: CARLS GOOD CLOTHES STORE OPEN TONIGHT Sullivant, newly elected captain, acquired a baseball from the World Series which was autographed by the president of the National League. Dick Amerine, left halfback, is to be given a small-sized baseball for making the All-American glamour team picked by Sonja Herne. Amerine left before the presentations were made. Gwinn Henry, Vic Hurt, and Mike Gettie, coaches, and Klar Kleon, University bursar were presented fountain pens which were autographed by major league baseball players. How's the Weather Up There, Hugh? This 6 foot 6 inch junior is giving the Oklahoma Oklahomaers plenty of height for the coming Big Six race. Ford has taken the pivot job and pushed Herb Scheffler, last regular center, back to guard. HUGH FORD Berkley, Cal. (UF) - A survey of freshman students at the University of California, both on its Berkley and its Los Angeles campus, shows that a majority of freshman students want to become teachers. Freshmen Favor Teaching Hovey J. Hanna, presiding chairman at the bancheu, received a large book which was a "Who's Who in Major League Baseball." Ghosts Swamp K.E.K.'s, 47-21; Delta Tau's Win - Renko Paces Daco Chi's to Victory; Kirk Leads Theta Tou's to First Triumph of Year The Galloping Ghosts, defending champions, won their second victory of the current season with an impressive triumph over the Kappa Eu Kappa Eva, five to 12, Friday night. Shuve and Johnston, at last year's outfit, led the scoring with 12 and 10 points respectively. By Cint Kanaga, c'42 Prior to the Ghosts' win, Delta Tau Delta downed a fighting Acea ball club, 34 to 19, while the Delta Chi team won from Delta Upsilon, 23 to 14, in a contest marked by its ragged and particularly impressive, sinking four looping shots from about the center of the court. Theta Tau succeeded in gaining its first win of the year Saturday, whipping the Ohio Icahbeds, 36 to 19. Kurth, Theta Tau, in tallying 75 points for his teammates, set a new individual high scoring mark for this year. Rock Chalk won over the Warriors 26 to 12, in an even battle. ISA-2失 it's second game of the season to the Hexagon II, 11-19. ISA-4 moved into the victory column as a result of a 20-17 win over the Dunakin Club. Rows 5 and 6 defeated the Saiqud fell before the Phil Dhi 5-18. The Phil Chi "B" turned in a fine game, scoring their second victory as they defended the Sigma Chi "B" 20-9. Hunter Has Marriage Course (UP)—As a result of numerous suggestions by Hunter College students, a series of four lectures on marriage, family relations, and the home is being initiated this term. The lectures will seek to meet the problem of "What is the honorable approach in thought and conduct to the union of man and woman?" --- It's smart to give something from The Palace 'More of a Lift to a Palace Gift' Store Open Evenings Until 9. The Palace > Check this for the most timely sale you've ever seen . . . 197 ROBES (1, 2 and 3 of a kind. All styles, all prices, all fabrics) while they last Hot Jayhawks-car was in the possession of Eugene Lyman, l. 17, 921 E. Fourteenth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Yyman will be prosecuted on a federal charge. Sorry, no mail or phonar orders. It's first come, first served. Sales final. 1/4 OFF PRICE (41) $ 6.95 Flannel Robes ...$5.21 (15) $ 7.95 Flannel Robes ...$5.96 (19) $ 8.95 Flannel Robes ...$6.71 (17) $10.95 Flannel Robes ...$8.21 (15) $ 6.95 Silk Robes ...$5.21 (14) $ 7.95 Silk Robes ...$5.96 (21) $ 8.95 Silk Robes ...$6.71 (27) $10.95 Silk Robes ...$8.21 (21) $13.50 Silk Robes ...$10.13 (7) $15.00 Silk Robes ...$11.26 (Continued from page one) Woodward helped out with on apiece. 17 Flannel robes to $10.95—$5.00 During the first half only three fouls were called on each team, but the second canto increased in roughness as well as scoring. Kansas counted 12 times out of 16 from the charity line during this period. At one time Miller got three pairs of free throws in a row as the visitors kept roughing him under the basket. The Chanute ane was drawing a bead on the hoop and made five of these six. --- Begin Roughing It Big "Country" Wilkerson paced the S.M.U. attack with 10 points and was closely trailed by Ariv Jones, forward, who bagged 8. Conuteson To Present Paper In New York Next Week Dr. R. I. Canuteson, director of the student health service, will present a paper, "A Standard Examination Record for Use in College Health Services," at the annual meeting of the American Student Health association in the Hotel New Yorker, New York, Dec. 28 and 29. Doctor Canuteson is chairman of the health service committee of the association. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Canuteson. Kansas May Enter Topeka Tourney, Big Six Rules The Kansas basketball team was granted permission by the Big Six conference to play in the Sunflower invitational basketball tournament at Topeka during the holidays, according to announcement made last night by Dr. W. W. Davis, the University's faculty representative. Eight teams will participate in a tournament to be held in the Washburn field house, Dec. 28, 29, and 30. Among the teams that will compete besides the Jayhawkers are Emporia Teachers, Washburn, Colorado State, New Mexico Mines, Southwest, McPherson, and Baker. Recover Student's Car in Kansas Citu An automobile, reported stolen Sunday night from Sara Fail, c'41; was recovered yesterday morning in Kansas City, Mo., after Lawrence is phoneoned a description of the car to Kansas City and Topeka police. Miss Fair reported the car was stolen from in front of a Lawrence cafe about midnight. Kansas City police said that the Florence Kelly-needed tobacco he probably went to the tobacconist in his community and had a lot of fun blending different types of tobacco together and trying out the different mixtures. (Continued from page one) at least eight books, including "Hoops of Steel" in 1900, "The Delafield Affair" in 1909, "Rhoda of the Underground" in 1900, "Emerson's Wife and Other Stories" in 1911, "American Dare," in 1913, "What America Did in 1919," "The Dixons" in 1921, and her biography, "The Flowing Stream," published in August. Although visiting here infrequently, Mrs. Kelly retained an active interest in the University and was a loyal alumnae. Her autobiography stresses the years she spent completing her education in an era when not many young women went to college, mentions several of her professors, and discusses her friendships with several prominent Kansas personalities. In 1916 she returned to the Middlewest to campaign for Wilson preceding the presidential election. Mrs. Kelly's life sketch is in the last issue of "Who's Who in America." Funeral services are incomplete. They probably will be held in the East. Edmonton, Alta., (UP)—City officials are planning to establish a center for training war pilots. It was Hit or Miss in Grandfather's Day When BOTTLE SHOP When your grandfather HE MAY HAVE FINALLY HIT on a combination of tobaccos that was pretty much to his fancy ... that tasted all right to him and wasn't too strong. So the tobaccoist, with an eye to future business, would make up this private blend and keep some of it on hand for him. THIS HIT OR MISS METHOD of tobacco blending was never very satisfactory. But it proved a thing to both smokers and manufacturers, that you must have a blend of tobaccos to get better smoking results, because no one tobacco by itself has all the qualities necessary to a good smoke. THE CHESTERFIELD tobacco buyers select and bid in at the auction sales the tobacco types that best fit the Chesterfield blend, which is the right combination of exactly the right amounts of Maryland, Burley and Bright with just enough Turkish. These tobaccos and the Chesterfield way of blending them make Chesterfield different from any other cigarette. THAT IS WHY there are millions of enthusiastic Chesterfield smokers clear across the country. They find Chesterfield COOLEER, BETTER-TASTING and DEFINITELY MILDER...just what they want for real smoking pleasure. You can't buy a better cigarette. Chesterfield Copyright 1939, LAGCORTT & MYERS TOBACCO Co. Chesterfield UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXVII OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Z-229 NUMBER 60 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20, 1939 Jayhawkers Sweep S.M.U. Series School's Out; Xmas Recess Starts Today ★ Writer Has Tough Time Knocking Out Story as Editor Keeps Swiping His Candy Bar By Roscoe Born. c'41 - So the managing editor turns to me and says, smiling: "Write me a column, feature stuff, on the Christmas vacation." So I say. "A column, chief? What is there to say?" So the m. loses his temper and tells me, between bursts of four-letter words, that there's a lot to say about Christmas vacation. "For example, he says, 'this is the last week.' You can do it for two weeks." "That's your story." So the chief bites off half of the candy bar I just bought and turns back to his work. The chief taking half of my bar makes me think of her, but I don't free giving. So I write a message that will contain this beautiful thought. But then I remember how many of my candy bars the chief bit in half and I don't like my lead anymore. Changes His Mind So I try a few more ideas about students and Christmas and vacation and still no results. I turn to the chief: "Do we really have to have such a big story about Christmas vacation?" (meekly) So the chief gaps and drops the other half of my candy bar. “There’s no news,” he shouts, “and unless we’ll have it, we’ll print ‘Thanatopus’.” So I consider that and decide that Dickens's "Christmas Carol" would be more appropriate. I am about to say so when I decide that maybe the chief wasn't serious about "Thanatopsis." So I shut up and buy anoth candy bar. Bring Some Candy, Boy But after 20 more minutes when my head buried in a typewriter, the paper and my mind are still blank. I remember the year's files and discover that on the last day before Christmas last year we ran a bus and train schedule So now I'm happy. By courtesy of the transportation agencies I have my story. I'm happy because have my story. I'm happy because I've done a public service. Now all I'm going to do is how to get for home. Christmas. I am happy, too, because the chief is pleased with me. I know because he just took all of my new candy bar. You can always tell when the chief is pleased. He takes all your candy bar instead of half. Former Student Writes Book Reford Newcomb, f10, dean of the College of Fine and Applied Arts at the University of Illinois at Urbana, has completed a book entitled "Old Kentucky Architecture" which is the first book on architecture ever printed for the public on that state. The book was between the Blue Grass State between 175 and the Civil War. Newcomb's home was Independence, Kan. where he was born in 1886. After attending the University he took work at the University of Illinois and the University of Southern California after which he took a teaching post at Illinois eventually receiving an appointment as professor of architecture. In 1837 when the College of Fine and Applied Arts was created he was made dean. His College includes the School of Music, the department of architecture and landscape architecture, the bureau of community planning. The author has published several books, some of which are: "Outlines of the History of Architecture" in four volumes, "The Old and Historic Houses of California," and "In the Lincoln Country." Merry Christmas--for the next three years Fraser auditorium was filled with curious curtain time. Hundreds of people were turned away as the fame of the Christmas Vespers spread throughout the neighboring towns. Final Examination Schedule EXAMINATION SCHEDULE THURSDAY A.M. January 25 P.M. FRIEND A.M. January 26 P.M. SATURDAY A.M. January 27 P.M. MOONDAY A.M. January 29 P.M. TUESDAY P.M. January 30 P.M. WEDNESDAY P.M. January 11 P.M. THURSDAY A.M. January 1 P.M. Plan County Club Picture Exhibits - Material Available at Alumni Office for Further Displays Two large window displays are being prepared by the Alumni office to be set up in communities in the state by County Club groups. Thirteen large pictures including one large airview scene of the campus and two units of printed factual paper will be mounted on beaverboard. The boards will be arranged at right angles and will have a cross strip connecting them at the top. Background for the display will be crimson with a blue border on the left and bottom. A white Jayhawk will be in the bottom righthand corner. A night view with the blue sky line of the campus on a crimson sky will appear on the cross strip A large white moon with KU. pained in red on it will shine over some of the buildings. Students desire to make their own displays may obtain from the alumni office a great deal of material such as magazines, music and song sheets, pamphlets, concert and lecture programs, information on the University, Jayhawk stickers, posters, as well as eight different prints which have appeared in the Jayhawker. Two motion picture films, "A Tour of Mount Oread" and a coverage of the 1938 Homecoming activities, have also been prepared in both plain and colored film for showing by club groups. Both are 15 minute reels and will require explanation while being *s*jnw. "A Tour of Mount Oread" is an old film which has been brought up to date by the addition of material concerning Chancellor Malett. Michigan State To Alter Famous 'Who's Who' Hous East Lansing, Mich. (UP)—Mt gan State College has decided to convert the red brick house at the head of College Union Square into a laboratory for home economics students. It's a house with a noteworthy history. Every former occupant is or has been listed in "Who's Who." The house was built in 1857 and served as the home of the college's first president, R. Williams. 25 TO FEB. 1, 1940 INCLUSIVE 2:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 2:30 to 11:20 2:30 classes, 2,1 hours, at 2:30 to 12:00 1:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 1:30 classes, 2,1 hours, at 2:30 to 4:20 9:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 10:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 10:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 4:20 11:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 11:30 classes, 2,1 hours, at 2:30 to 4:20 8:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 8:30 classes, 2,1 hours, at 2:30 to 4:20 3:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 3:30 classes, 5, 4.3 hours, at 8:30 to 11:20 4:30 classes, all hours, at 5:20 Attendance Up as Fame Of Vespers Spreads Whether a legislature has the power to reconvene itself was argued yesterday afternoon in the House of Representatives field this year by the School of Law. Lawyers Debate Constitutional Law In Mock Trial More than fifty students and race- members of the department of journaism attended their annual Christmas Carol party last night at the Ferry safe. The evening was spent in a rehearsal tour of Hill organized houses. KU Postlentinewa, gr, president of the K.U. Press Club, was in charge. A tiny chorus performed and a small audience watched the first yuletude performance in the auditorium of Fraser hall. The organist pumped the organ as he played. But the handful of people went away humming "Silent Night" and with renewed feeling for the meaning of Christmas. Arguing that it is constitutiona for a legislative body to call itself into session are: Ernest Deines; [P4] and Virginia Miller, [P4]. Fifty Journalists To Carol Party Judge William A. SMITH, a justice of the Kansas supreme court, spoke informally on the relationship of the press to the courts yesterday morning to members of the law of the press class taught by Henry Ladd Smith, assistant professor of journalism. High Wind Snaps Rope Holding New Flag The University yesterday came close to losing its newly-raised flag which flies over Fraser hall. The rope which held it broke and the student was about 8 am. Soon after, it hauled down to safety and repair. Journalists Hear Judge W. A. Smith Judge Smith said the correlation of the courts and the press existed in their dealings in human relations and facts. J. B. Smith, professor of law, i presiding over the mock trial. This first attempt at a Christmas Vesper service was followed, the second year, by a larger chair and the addition of living tableaux. That year The Jawahyer office in the Memorial Union building will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. today and feature a sale of magazines and covers. Judge Smith, a former attorney general for the state, said that during his career in politics he had been accused of raping a man who had violated a confidence. Christmas brings thoughts of happiness, good wishes, soft colored lights on fragrant pines, crunching snow, melodious tunes of carolers singing of the coming of the Christmas Vespers service 17 years ago. This year in two performances, 8- 000 persons jammed Hoch auditorium Sunday for the annual renewal of the program. the auditorium was filled to capacity (Continued on page two) That Christmas two long, awaying lines of vested chisteres marched up the isles carrying lighted candles. A miniature stage was built by the members of the art department and placed in the center of the huge auditorium stage. Soft lights were focused on the students on the small stage who were appropriately costumed to represent scenes of the toming of the Savior. In 1927 worries were over for awhile. Hoch auditorium was completed, a building which would seat as 4,000 people. Professors To Vacation Meetings At least 19 faculty members will be away at conventions, conferences, and meetings during the Christmas vacation. These meetings will be held from Kansas City, to Washington D.C. - Many Will Read Papers At Various Conventions During Holidays; at Least 19 Will Go Expenses will be paid for the first 13 men by a University fund for those who present papers at such conferences, specifically with University work. Amkun those making trips are: J. F. Brown, department of psychology, is going to the Society of Dynamic Psychologists, at Urbana all of which Society, he is chairman of experimental psychology. Brown will present a paper on "Position of Psychoanalysis in Science of Psychology." The society will meet Dec. 27 to 29. H. T. U. Smith, department of geology, will attend the Geological Society of America, in Minnesota Dec 28 to 30. He will read a paper entitled, "Sand Dune Cycle of Western Kansas." Smith To Minneapolis Amonk those making trips are: Allen Crafton, professor in the department of speech and dramatic art will attend the National Association of Teachers of Speech. He is also going to the National Collegiate Players in Chicago, Dec. 27 to 30 Crafton will give a paper on "Producing Plausus" "Mechanical." Otto Springer, professor in the department of German, will go to the Modern Language Association of America, New Orleans, Dec. 27 to 29. His paper is on "German and West Germanic." McCracken To Report On Texts Arma McCraw, instructor in philosophy, will head for the Southwest Philosophical conference, in Dallas, which will be held Dec. 27 to 29. She will give a report on "A Survey of Text Books and Similar Materials for Thirty-Six University Colleges in 10 Southwest States." W. H. Horr, associate professor of botany, intends to be at the American Association of Plant Taxonomists, in Columbia, Ohio, Dec. 26 to 30. He will give a paper entitled, "A New Species of Hartmannia." R. C. Moore, professor in the department of geology, will attend the Geological Society of America, and also the Paleontological Society of America, in Minneapolis, Dec 28 to 30. His specific duties are to read two papers, one entitled "The Carboniferous—Permian Boundary," and "New Crinoids from Upper Pennsylvania and Lower Permian Rocks of Oklahoma of Kansas and Nebraska." Robert M. Dreyer, instructor of geology, will attend the Mineralogical Society of America, Minneapolis, Dec. 28 to 30. He will give a paper on "Spectrographic Study of Cinnabar." W. E. Booth, instructor of botany, will represent the department of botany at the Ecological Society of America, in Columbus, Ohio, Dec 27 to 30. His paper is on "A Dormant Role Played by Algea in the Retardation of Soil Erosion and Initiation of Plant Succession on Badly Eroded Land in South-central United States." Booth Represents Botany Oept. R. H. Beamer, from the department of entomology, will go to Columbus, Ohio, to the Entomological Society of America. A paper enclosed in Uhleriella, and Diorona' will be her job. Malto To Washington (Continued on page two) A. B. Leonard, department of zoology, will leave for a meeting Dec 27 to 30, at Columbus, Ohio. The James C. Malin, professor of history will go to Washington, D. C. for a meeting of American Historical Association members of the association will present their work and Professor Malin will correlate the discussion work. Four in Watkins To Eat Christmas Dinners in Bed Christmas vocation officially begins at 5 o'clock this afternoon for 4,000 students in the University but to the other four students 5 o'clock means only that it time for their visit at Watkins Memorial hospital. These four, James Lee, c'40; Bertharra Garrett, c'40; Jane Knudson, fa'41; and Mattie Pugh, ed'41 will be in the hospital for the duration of the vacation, and Robin Van Meter, c'40, will enter the hospital Christmas night with a major operation scheduled for the next day. The hospital has scheduled an appendedectomy for Lee and a minor operation for George Leather, fa'40; today; a tonillectomy for Gertuwe Hollis, c'41, and minor surgery for Dwight Ebert, e'43, tomorrow; and a minor surgery for Bob Spangier, c'43, Friday. Two other students may undergo operations during Christmas vacation, it was said at the hospital yesterday. Highway Patrol To Interview Dan Hamilton Dan Hamilton, fs, was pronounced "virtually" out of danger yesterday by his physician, Dr. H. T. Jones, of Lawrence. Hamilton is in Lawrence Memorial hospital suffering from brain concussion received in an auto crash here early Saturday morning. John Battenfeld, c41, who drove the car, was injured fatally. Sheriff Charles Banning said yesterday that permission had been granted for the State highway patrol to interview Hamilton in his district. The police will ask Hamilton for details of the accident, the sheriff said. Name Committee's For '15 Reunion A permanent committee to make arrangements for the reunion of the class of 1915 at commencement time was chosen last Friday evening. Arthur B. Weaver of Lawrence was chosen chairman. Other members of the committee include James, Ms. Bruce Hurtl Topeka; Miss Agnes Engel, Kansas City, Mo.; and Don Joseph, White-water. The temporary committee consisting of R. A. Dummon, Spring Hill; Mrs. Ethyl Browning, London, England; Major Ray Edwards, Lawrence; and Charles Holmes, Lawrence, will assist the permanent committee. General plans for the grads of 15 back for this 25th graduation celebration consist of having graduates in the various schools of the University write their class-mates. Most girls want a tall man but there is one exception at least. "He can be short and fat so long as he is my man," says Bass Kirby, c'43. Herta Eichaterscheimer; c'42, a German student in the University, is interested in finding a man of the collegiate type who can be serious Joan Bradley, c'43, wants a brown-eyed man who likes music and large families. While discussing the University publicity Virginia Rose, c'40, described the man she was looking for as "a clean lookin boy, but I don't like these mutached things. He must be a good dancer, and an intelligent sense of humor would be a help," she continues. Many Marketable Men--- Campus Women Form Ideas About Their Future Husbands Ebling High Man In 37-26 Victory Not at friendly terms with the hoop like they were in the series opener, the Kansas basketers proved their versatility by changing to a methodical, defensive game to down the Southern Methodist quintet, 37 to 26, in Hoch auditorium last night. "The social interest of K.U. girls in K.U. boys," may Life magazine in the Dec. 11 issue. However, men were given very little room in the pictorial world. Both teams slowed down considerably from the fast pace they set the night before. So was the crowd that had a hard time working itself into a cheering frame of mind. KANSAS (37) Don Ebling, senior forward who trailed Ralph Miller by a point in the Monday night game, led the scorers with four field Harp Starts It S. M.U. (28) ans, but Voran came right back to add a single on Sebeck's violation. goals and two free throws. Bruce Voran, injured center- guard-forward who didn't play in the first tilt, came in second with eight counters, all in the opening period to keep the Jay hawkers ahead, 19 to 11. Totals 10 6 Sprague and Jones hit from close quarters to bring their mates within five points, but Voran, Allen, and Ebling found the netting and the Jahyawkers were leading by 8 points at the half. Coming back after the rest, the Mustangs rallied and almost caught Kansas after Wilkerson scored two times from the field, Coppedge swished a long one, and Sprague made good from the foul line. The Jays were only three ahead after this, but Kline came through with a long shot and Harp drove in for another. Joss, f f f f p Joss, f f f p Higgintotham, f 0 0 0 Keeton, f 0 1 3 Sparge, f 2 2 2 Wilkerson, c 2 2 2 Coppedge, g 3 1 1 Wikester, g 0 0 0 Seebek, g 0 0 0 Clements, g 0 1 0 Keith, g ... ... ... Mustangs Rally | | lg | ft | pf | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ebling, f | 4 | 2 | 0 | | Johnson, f | 4 | 0 | 0 | | Miller, f | 2 | 2 | 0 | | Voran, c | 2 | 0 | 2 | | Allen, c | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Sarda, c | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Harp, g | 1 | 1 | 4 | | Heuer, g | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Klune, g | 2 | 0 | 2 | Table 17.1 Dick Harp led off with a free throw on Keeton, but a long field goal by Jones of S.M.U. and a charity toys by Keeton put the visitors ahead. Voran took a pretty pass from Miller to tally from in close and that was the last time the Kansans trailed. With five minutes to go Bob Allen counted twice, and Miller, Ebbing, and T. P. Hunter each once the locals to win going away. Miller fed Voran and, again, Kline, Milne, and bibling all合装 10 minutes, with 10 minutes glue. Coppedge bucketed a long one for the Tex- once in a while. "I want him to be my intellectual superior," she said. Mary Alice Plym, c'43, is looking for someone a little older—and definitely tall. "No intelligent Summer," she says, but added that he must be canabile. Some girls still want their man to be their master, Joyce Standiford, c42 hopes for just such a man and he will be able to get the point of jokes too. Only one girl wants to meet a farmer; and professional men are most in demand. Mary Ellen Roach, c'42, says "he can look like a mud pie so long as he is not sloppy." Dorothy Hendrickson, fa'41, and Genevieve Harmon, e42, want to meet some enterprising journalists to catchin' eyes" says Miss Hendrickson. As for the writer, "Oh lord, any thing." HILTON DON EBLING - FORWARD Senior forward scores 10 points to take the searing honors in last night's game with S.MU. Microfilm To Cut Graduate Students' Theses Expenses Science has come to the aid of graduate students whose advanced degrees require the publication of theses with the use of microfilm, which produces the thesis at a fraction of its former east, E. B. Stroffer, dean of the Graduate School, announced today. Theses which originally cost up to several hundreds of dollars for the required 50 printed copies can be microfilled for $15, including the abstract of the thesis and card indices, which are sent to libraries. The scientist or student wishing to have a copy of the thesis may purchase prints of the master film for a cent and a quarter a page. In some instances, theses are several hundred pages in length. The adoption of microfilm reproductions of theses was approved by University officials this fall. Housing Bureau Approves 314 Out of the 371 houses · investigated by the University McHousing bureau last summer, 314 have been awarded as rooms, and 23 as apartments. At present, there are 1071 students living in approved homes and a total of 327 students living in 246 of them. No work had been approved by the bureau. The bureau's check-up reveals hat there are 864 men students liv- that there are 844 men students living in fraternity houses; 401 living in Lawrence; 69 commuting; and 21 living at various University (if e. Myers hall, and Watkins Memorial hospital). Of the 2,944 men students attending the University, 1,619 students are living in rooming houses. The bureau reports that 63½ per cent of the men students are living in approved houses. The program of the inspection bureau is financed by a $150 state appropriation, and $100 from both student councils. The big problem confronting the housing inspection bureau is that its authority lacks "teeth" to make its objective effective. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS Kansan WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20, 1939 Merry Christmas and Come Back Again Vacation starts today. (Of course you didn't know that, did you?) Vacation will end at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 3. 1940. (Of course you didn't know that either, did you?) (Of course you didn't know that, did you?) A lot of things will happen ... this vacation. For example, there's Christmas. (This almost invariably occurs during Christmas vacation.) And then there's New Year s. (This almost invariably also.) (You can listen to the game on the radio—if you're interested.) Missouri will play Georgia Tech at the Orange bowl. And then there's all that studying that you plan to do— (You aren't, are you?) (Well, maybe we'd better skip that right now—of course you won't do it, but it's nice hoping you will.) Yes, this will be a big vacation. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. It's a Dull War That Never Kills (From Boston Transcript) Official communiquies from the Western Front continue to be those cryptic, emotionless things, devoid of passion. We learn that "lively contacts were achieved today," that "scouting and reconnaissance operations were conducted," or that "the French continued their efforts to dislodge guns near Forbach." We read these messages and perhaps yawn and conclude that it is a dull and inactive war. Yet almost every day men die. Behind these communics, the world of some man is ending. The war has been for him as devastating as it could be if a hundred thousand men were killed. Men are quivering in holes listening to the scream of shells coming smack toward them, and they are digging deep into the earth to gain protection. Men are cringing flat on the ground as bare lights burst and machine guns chatter their insane language of death, like teeth in a skull. Shells are bursting and pieces of steel are finding human flesh and tearing it into tortured wounds. Behind those communicans men are screaming in an agony of pain as steel cuts them so horribly they forget they are soldiers. We don't hear much about it, but hopeless cripples are being made. Men are falling through the air, wrapped in flames and vomiting their insides out, before merciful oblivion overtakes them. We do not find the war dull, despite the communiques. We find it horrible and stupid and we know that it has written already a record of acute misery and loss for thousands of people. But even if only one man fell, his case against the rulers of the world would be as great as could be that of a million men. It doesn't take a million deaths to make a terrible war. The wife that loses her husband in "scouting operations" or the girl who loses her sweetheart in a "reconnaissance flight," can read no greater horror in the war. The boy who planned a life rich in art of peace and falls during "lively contacts" has his full measure of tragedy. Why Not Pay Those Who Play (From Washington U. Student Life) "Wherever I get the best offer," was the candid reply of a local prep school football star when asked where he planned to attend college by an interviewer for a newspaper. A recent article in a St. Louis paper stated that local colleges do not produce big time basketball teams because local basketballers receive more attractive inducements elsewhere. In a like manner most topnotch collegiate athletic organizations are gathered. The question of subsidizing athletes has been the subject of many controversies. Alumni, when Siwash has taken it on the chin for the tenth consecutive occasion, howl and complain that Alma Mater should rise on its hind legs and go out and get players. Stanford alumni have reformed the "Buck of the Month Club" for the purpose of collecting a fund to aid football players. The part of educational leaders in this controversy has usually been one of ostrich-like toleration. A third party interested in this question is the group of bankers holding bonds of huge athletic stadia built at 1926 prices. One angle of subsidy, however, seems to have been overlooked; that it is merely one part of a trend to make higher education available to all and only those who are worthy of it. This trend has been evidenced in the increased number of free state universities, in increased fellowships and scholarships offered by endowed Comment universities, and by governmental aid in the form of NYA grants. Inasmuch as scholarships have been offered musicians, drum majors, and members of high school newspapers, there should be little objection to openly aiding athletes provided they maintain a fair scholastic average. It seems safe to say that commercialized collegiate football will remain for many years, at least. The sooner colleges shed hypocrisy and recognize this by adopting uniform athletic standards, the sooner will they have more time to spend on really important problems. --professors. Indignant over the number of articles deposited in the college's lost and found department, Dr. Werner took advantage of the situation to lecture three wide-eyed students: "Just look at these car keys left here," he exclaimed as he fished through drawers of the lost and found desk. "It's a sure thing no one can do without them. And yet they are left here for days." Looking at the keys a little closer, the president stammered, "Why, these can't be my car keys, can they?" The students, of course, shook their heads. The average American man has a clea- shaven face, but if the news-reels continue to amphasize famous mustaches, the electric razor advertisers are going to have a fight on their hands. Hitler, Chamberlain, Stalin, King Carol, Lloyd George are all advocates of various types of hirsute adornment. Maybe the old custom of announcing one's political penchant by the shape of the beard will be resumed. --professors. Indignant over the number of articles deposited in the college's lost and found department, Dr. Werner took advantage of the situation to lecture three wide-eyed students: "Just look at these car keys left here," he exclaimed as he fished through drawers of the lost and found desk. "It's a sure thing no one can do without them. And yet they are left here for days." Looking at the keys a little closer, the president stammered, "Why, these can't be my car keys, can they?" The students, of course, shook their heads. YOU SAID IT EDITOR'S NOTE: The editors are not responsible for opinions or facts given in the letters published in this column. Letters more than 300 words are subject to the editor's discretion, although the nouns will be withheld if the writer desires. Howard Sells, freshman dance manager, is to be inaugurated for his efforts toward carrying out the school's commitment to produce a freshman舞. His work is bringing results, and with good cooperation from the freshmen the art will go. And speaking of platforms, didn't someone mention long, long time ago something about an independent student quiz file? With the funds coming up in the back, they had to update up old quizzes 'n stuff," and as always before independent students have only that information which they, themselves, have saved. How about having a research project where you could write what can be done about the situation? Perhaps the file would not be of much immediate benefit, but anyone who cannot see the good in such a project over a long period will be a "little" leashed in the hand! let's have some action. JOHN C. CONRAD A group of us independent girls decided to spread a little Christmas cheer among independent boys. We went on a trip in Europe and met some of semirides for independents during the Christmas season. However, to be greeted by hand greedies and hostility, we were so happy that one one's cheerfulness. Yes, we came home to hang up our stockings—but not in the traditional manner; we Maybe our harmony doesn't rate with that of the Merry Macs, but after the appreciation that was shown at the majority of houses, we feel that the Hillside Club is a good idea of good idea will Merry Christmas-Bahl Humburg. Maybe we're old-custodian, but we thought that the impression still in stat is worse. We were impressed with a "Balkan Carol" were found only in Dicken's Christmas Carol, but it seems they are found in bunches at certain boys' boarding schools. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Wednesday, Dec. 29, 1939 No. 66 Noticees doe at Chancellor's office at 2 p.m. on 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issue. at 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issue. NOTICE TO SENIORS GRADEUATING IN FEBURARY. You may have a complete examination at the Health Service. Please make your appointment as soon as possible. Dr. R. J. Cauteson. NOTICE TO STUDENTS ON THE IRREGULAR PAYROLL: ALL students, on the irregular payroll, are requested to call at the business office and sign the December payroll before the Christmas holiday. -Karl Kiener UNION YOUNG PEOPLE'S GROUP: The Union Young People's Group of Lawrence Churches will go caroling Friday evening, December 22, meeting first at Westminster Hall at 7.15. An informal party will be held in the library during vacation to charity activities will be held during vacation - Charles Yeemans. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS London, England Managing Editor Lakewood Walt Mengerigger Lakewood Kettering Campus Editors Belle Coutson, Huck Wright Society Editor Jay Simon Jools Sports Editors Mike Editor Dale Moore Telegram Editor Eugene K. Kuhn Rewrite Editor Kevin Beazer Picture Editor John Baskett Publisher ... Harry Hill Editor-in-Chief Udo Sherra Assocate Batteries Richard Beauchamp Stewart Jones Mary Lou Rondt Hamilton News Staff Business Manager ... Edwin Brown MEMBER KINSTONS PRESS ASSOCIATION REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. College Publishers Representative N.Y.C. BOOZIER • LOS ANGELES BAR SAN FRANCISCO Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class on Wednesday. Published at Lawrence, office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Professors- (Continued from page one) organization is the American Society of Parasitologists. His paper is "Intestinal Phase of Immunity to Giardia Lamnii," in G. Baley Price, associate professor in the department of mathematics, is attending the American Mathematical Society, in Columbus, Ohio, Dec. 26 to 29. His paper is, "On the Theory of Integration." Rev. Joseph F. King, who is going to the Tri-Annual Religious Workers Conference, Chicago, Dec. 27 to 30. Dean Swarthout and several of the School of Fine Arts professors will go to Kansas City for the National Music Teachers association, an event that Dean Swarthout has been national secretary for the past 15 years. Other faculty members who are Dean Moreau, Prof. J. B. Smith, Asso. Prof. L. T. Tuppe, Prof. P. W. Visselman, and Assist. Prof. H. H. Lesar are going to Chicago to the meeting of the Association of American Law Schools. Dec. 28 to 30 Prof. J. D. Stranthan, professor of physics, will go to Columbus, Ohio. Dec. 28 to 20 to the American Physical Society. Aassoc. Prof. of band, R. L. Wiley is going to the National Band Clinic in Urbana, Illinois, the first of January. Dr. R. I. Canutseman director of the student health service, will present a paper, "A Standard Examination Record for Use in College Health Services", at the American Student Health association in New York, and Dr. R. I. Canutseman is chairman of the health service committee association. Last year the auditorium was filled for both performances and many people were standing. Some people sat quietly, some stood. Many teachers brought their classes. Attendance Up— Soon this large auditorium would not seat all of the people who came to hear the carols and see the tableaux. In 1937 two performances were given. One in the afternoon for visitors from out of town, and one in the evening for students and residents of Lawrence. By Roderick Burton ON THE OFF B-E-A-T Yesterday we found out the Pi Phi don't know us from the Shinster. Things We Don't Understand Department: Those dispatches the censor rejoices after every air battle enemy is losing ground in the air." Fainted hair is the latest beauty fad. The idea is that when the girl lifts her hand to straighten out her hair, she can wiggle up ugly her fingerlings curls in fashion. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and if it will make you any happier we'll let you in on the secret that we are going to campaign for two Christmas vacations next year for a vacation and one for study. Paintings of John Noble, pioneer Kansas painter, are now on display in the museum and will be so until Dec. 24. This department is unable to confirm the rumor that the Dies committee will confirm its rumors before they're hatched. The Spooner-Thayer museum will be closed only on Christmas day, Miss Minnie S. Moody, curator, announced yesterday. Spooner-Thayer Museum To Be Closed Xmas Day WANTED: Ride to Denver, Colorado or vicinity for Christmas holiday. Share expenses. Phone 407, Dorothea Thompson. -66 Merry Christmas. WANTED. Four boys at 1011 Indiana Street to board and room during second semester. -68 LOST: Sigma Phi Epsilon jewelled- heart fraternity pin. Reward. Phone 1144 or 2183J, Floyd Smith WANT ADS PHOTOGRAPHS FROM negatives in files of Homer Froering Studio will be finished and may be called before January 1. Call 225. -66 Woodcutting and scrollwork are assisting one University man in financing his way through the School of Engineering. The man is Harold Hamm, e'43. *Hamm* work is an outgrowth of a hobby and takes the form of cutout pictures, wood刻本, monograms, ceramics, and inkjet. Wood Helps Frosh Student Saw Way Through University Before doing the cutting Harold makes his patterns, many of which are original. These are drafted on the wood and then the cutting begins. Typical articles that he makes are cut booktops, cigar boxes, handchiefed boxes, picture and mirror cases, various natural colors, fraternity and sorority shields, wooden names, and earrings. He also has made heavier RENT: Rooms in remodeled house near K.U. new furnishings, veneer blinds, twin beds; also 1, 2 and 3 rm. apts., 5rm. modern house, convenient to K.U. Call 2105. Inquire at 1700 Tennessee. -68 "I owe it all to my alarm clock," the Jamaica Plains, Mass. sophomore said. Students in an accounting class complained that every period there was 10 to 15 minutes too long because the instructor said he was unable to hear the bell ending the period. Evanson, III. (UP)—John Seery's Northwestern University classmates no longer will be subjected to over-doses of learning. To remedy the faintness of the school bell. Seery brought an alarm clock to class. Promptly at 3:50 p.m., she turned the alarm off behind its barricade of overcrowds. Alarm Clock Clangs To Warn Instructor Salinas, Calif. (UP) -Dr. Richard J. Werner, president of Salinas Junior College, fearlessly adds his knowledge about absent-minded professors. Absent Minded Prof Sticks His Neck Out "By golly, they are!" he concluded and the students were dismissed. articles of furniture such as beds and tables. Biggest work for Harold are the wooden names that he turns out. His largest single order was 50 initials of a fraternity for party favors, turned out hundreds of names of girls for boys who give them as gifts. One of the finest plaques he has done is a large mantel-sized piece depicting a covered wagon with six horses complete with driver and an accompanying horseman. Even the reins and whip are represented. A Chinese garden cutout of his For Good Times and Good Thing To Eat CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Typewriters We have complete typewritten service. Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 Ask About Our Courtesy Card Sales, rentals, cleaning and KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 On the Hill Harold is a pledge of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, and secretary of the Fresh Pep club. MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 Optometrist 911 Mass. Guns — Ammunition Skates Sharpened DUTTER'S SHOP SKATES — SLEDS Gustafson represents rare beauty. Pagodas, oriental bridges, and shrubbery are all shown realistically in this piece of art. RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 Hasan began this type of work over six years ago under the direction of his father, Harry S. Haas of Herington. Mr. Haas did this kind of work as a hobby. The two partners, father and son, have since sold more than 5,000 monograms and several hundred plaques as well as various art articles. Articles, Haas products have been sold in every state in the Union and have gone as far as the Philippines, France, and England. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and wave — 35c Oil shampoo and wave — 50c 941% Mass. Phone 533 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Drakes for Bakes ARGUS MODEL A2 $1250 Belladouble self-scaling exposure meter. Certified for 4.5 triplet Amigastent lenses 1/23 to 1/200 second shuttle speeds, motion film, movie film in standard corridor. KODAK FINISHING Fine Grain Developing film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies for the industry Hixon's 721 Mass. Phone 41 MERRY CHRISTMAS * MERRY CHRISTMAS Merry Christmas, Everyone! Everyone! Have a really swell time during the holidays. We hope dear of' Saint Nick fills your biggest stocking with the best of gifts—and may he fill it every day of the coming New Year. Thanks for all favors granted us during the past year and may we continue to serve you. Again may we wish you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year Ober's 9404 TO 1000 OUT 7228 MERRY CHRISTMAS * MERRY CHRISTMAS * MERRY WEDNESDAY. DEC. 20. 1939 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREEL LAST CALL BEFORE HOME! YOUR GIFT PROBLEMS are SOLVED with this Christmas SHOPPING GUIDE Christmas SHOPPING G UIDE WIDE INDEX Index to store SPECIALTIES. Remember there are not the only values and services Books—The Book Nook Dresses, hose—Coles Games, books—Keeler's Jewelry—Gustafson Miscellaneous—Weaver's Robes, etc.—Montgomery-Ward Shoes, slippers—Royal Shoe Store Stationery and K.U. novelties—Reward Wrapping, Cards—Lawrence Paint and Wall-Paper Seasons Greetings To You All from COLE'S THE HOME OF STANDARD MERCHANDISE COLE'S A Merry Christmas and of course A Happy New Year La Deen Davis Warren Anderson Richard Wright Clom Fairchild Jack Hoover Bunny Block Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. SHE will cherish a gift of jewelry from YOU for many Christmases to come. Select your gifts now—and if you wish— arrange to give after Christmas "The College Jeweler" GUSTAFSON "The College Jeweler" --- BETTER THAN EVER Most complete line of gift wrapping in town. Ribbons, Scals Christmas Cards Enclosure Cards also Roseville Pottery and Novelties LAWRENCE PAINT AND WALLPAPER CO. 919 Mass. --- BIRD Websters Collegiates Dictionary $3.50 to $7.00 Keeler's Book Store 939 Mass. --- STUDENTS THE STAFF OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WISHES YOU THE VERY BEST OF CHRISTMAS VACATIONS I Merry Christmas Hear Ye! HEAR YE! Last Minute SHOPPERS attention! X Perfect for Gifts or for You! Perfect for Gifts or for You! Soft Chenille! Rayon Satin! Lovely Gift Housecoats Thrilling Values at 298 She'll think you paid double! Cud- dly cotton chenille in luxious pas- tels or white. Gleaming rayon satin in jewel tones. Whirling full skirts and tiny waists. Both wrap-arounds and sipper styles included. Tubiast, Sizes 12 to 44. 298 MONTGOMERY WARD