PAGE TWO SUMMER SESSION KANSAN FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1939 201 Summer Session Kansan Address All Communications To Summer Session Kansan William Fitzgerald Edito Walt Minkinger Assistant Edito Staff Members Jane Coleman Fredia Cowies Mauren Mong Raymond Derr Richard Linton Business Manager Business Telephone K.U. 58 Night Connection 2702 K3 Editorial Telephone KU25 Night Connection 2702K3 Should All Schools Be Equalized? The Board of Regents has announced that the President of Kansas State College will receive a salary equal to that of the Chancellor of Kansas University. This announcement comes as the result of considerable agitation on the part of Kansas State folks to place their school on an equal plane with that of the University. It wasn't the idea that President Farrell was worth more, nor that it was time for him to have a raise that caused all the uproar. The whole drive was based on the old child-hood argument: "If Billy gets some so should L." We're not saying that Doctor Farrell isn't worth the money. He probably is. But it is natural that there should be a difference in the salaries of men heading two different types, sizes and kinds of institutions. The responsibilities and the requirements are entirely at variance. The owner of a weekly paper doesn't draw down the income that William Randolph Hearst did as the owner of a string of newspapers. The weekly proprietor could hardly expect it. But here we have the head of a smaller school asking and receiving the same salary as the Chancellor of a State University. We believe K. U. folks should sponsor a campaign to raise Chancellor Deane W. Malotts salary to $15,000 a year. As head of one of the finest Universities in the land; as Chancellor of a school that maintains one of the greatest medical schools in the world; as president of a college that has no equal in this part of the country, he deserves it.-K. E. P. We'll Take Fried Chicken Quite likely, many Summer Session students have underestimated their opportunities. We're not talking about the grades you might have earned, or the social contacts you might have made. We refer to those fortunate students who can drive back to "Mom end or so. There, my friends, is a privilege equalled by few other opportunities, for this is a glorious time of year to be on Kansas $^f$ Think of the golden brown fried chicken, the tempting mounds of potatoes, mashed and creamed to a turn, with the addition of rich milk from a Kansas contented cow, followed up by the home made "ice cream" that invariably follows the chicken dinner. Then there's the big platter of succulent green corn on the cob, hot and steaming, ready for butter and salt. There's food fit for the gods. Really, there's nothing like the Kansas dinner. It's one of the things that makes us glad we live in Kansas. A Frenchman may enjoy his snails and know how to judge wine, an Englishman may like his tea and sirloin of beef, the German his kraut and sausages, the Russian his vodka and red cabbage and the dozens of other nations with their so-called national foods. But for us--well we'll stay with a Kansas farm dinner, with none of the formalities that require a fork with which to eat the chicken, or those little silver gadgets to be plugged into either end of an ear of corn. We'll take ours plain-- with the fingers--and all we'll ask will be plenty of time, and no interruptions. Kansan's Who's Who - Geo. O. Foster, registra gets your transcript. - Karl Klooz, bursar, gets your money. Below: • Allen Crafton, playwright director, man about Campus • Jessica Crafton, actress, directs her husband's directing. Mrs. E. E. Bayles and Party on Caribbean Cruises Mrs. E. E. Bayles left this morning by automobile with her aunt, Mrs. L. N. Lewis, and Judge and Mrs. Hugh Means for Mobile, Ala. From there the party will sail July 31 on a five-week Caribbean cruise. They will stop at Jamaica, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Trinidad, and at Paramaribo, Dutch Guinea. They plan to return home about September 9. women at athletic coach at Lecompte high school is working toward his master's degree in physical education this summer. Announce Birth of Daughter Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hayes of Lecompton have announced the birth of a daughter at Christ's Hospital, Topeka, on July 22. Hayes. We Hog (Continued from page one) Ski Sunday School crosses on a ticket chopper not long ago. Nice looking girl, too. Speaking of pins, have you noticed how all of the sorority pins that have obviously been in moth-balls for years blossom out when their owners come back to the State U. to brush up on their book work and stuff. ☆ ☆ ★ took a small trip north to see Denny Lemoine, who's been looking after his pin for some time, last week. On the way back the horsemess carriage he was pushing broke down and he 'lad to hitch-hike home. And more pin stuff. Dick Amerine The alumni of the University have been taking advantage of their college associations. When the school sends them a request for money for the new men's dormitory they enclose a stemped envelope in which the alumni can return their $1,000 donations. The alumni have been using the envelopes all right. They enclose advertising and business letters trying to get the University to use their products in building and furnishing the new dorm. --- KEEP COOL!! — Eat in Comfort in Our AIR-CONDITIONED Dining Room De Luxe Cafe Try Our Special Week-day Lunchoon 711 Mass. Phone 551 35c Special Sunday Dinners Served 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. Classified Ads Phone K.U.66 LEARN TO DANCE For All Occasions Ballroom - Tango - Jitterbug Marion Rice Dance Studio 927 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. PALACE BARBER SHOP Haircuts — 25c Haircuts and Shampoo — 50c IN OUR BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and Finger Wave — 50c Permanents — $2.50 up Machineless Permanents — $5 730 Mass. Phone 282 Make THE STADIUM Your Headquarters for Barber and Beauty Service STADIUM BARBER AND BEAUTY SHOP Joe Lesch Frank Vaughan 1033 Mass. Phone 310 UNION CAB CO. Phone 2800 Baggage Handled-24 Hour Service When Others Fail Try Us TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Castle Shampoo and Wave 35c Oil Shampoo and Wave 50c Neck Trim — Free 941 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 533 One Flower is Worth More than ten thousand words. 910 Mass. Phone 820 Lowest Prices in Town THE REXALL STORE Prescriptions - Drugs - Toiletries Prescriptions - Drugs - Toiletries Fountain and Lunch Phone 516 Free Delivery H. W. Stowits 9th Mass. WHY TAKE CHANCES? When You Can Be Sure of Clothes Satisfaction. "Suiting you—that's my business" Repair and Alteration Dept. DeLuxe SCHULZ the TAILOR 924 Mass. Phone 914