PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5. 1920. Kansan Comment K.U.'s Black Eye School spirit and school loyalty are essential qualities. But such attributes fail to excuse such a mob demonstration as occurred after the game Friday. We put the chip on our shoulder and asked the Aggies to knock it off, choosing the goal-posts as the battleground. The half-hearted response to the efforts of the cheerleaders, the lack of cooperation in performing the card displays, were eliminated by the post-game performance of frenzied mob spirit. Granted that that the feed between the schools is hoary with tradition, granted that the game was not inspiring, granted that a good free-for-all worked off some surplus energy, but is such action conducive to promoting good-will toward either school in the eyes of the visitors in the grand-stands? The fifth-quarter was a juvenile and purposeless fight. It was an excellent example of what school spirit should not be. Nothing worthwhile comes of the battered heads and tern garments except a fulet and foolish feeling when the smoke of battle clears. Spite-fights and riots have ended football competition between Iowa State College and the University of Iowa. Repetition of recent history could end in the severing of football relations between Manhattan and the University. Zoning An Ocean Land-locked Kmsans may yawn when confronted with the impossibility or practicality of the "safety zone" for American ships set up by the Declaration of Panama, but a future of increasing "incidents" in the breakfast-headlines must startle more than the coast citizens. The Declaration of Panama, which was conceived by the Pan-Americans after the outbreak of the European rash, provides for the setting up of a safety zone 400 to 1200 miles wide around the Americas, excepting Canada; within this radius all belligerents are to call time-out and refrain from war activities. It provides specifically that the American nations should: 1. Forbid the use of their respective territories, land or sea or air for belligerent activities. 2. Forbid belligerent warships to use neutral ports or waters in numbers of more than three at a time or longer than 24 hours. 3. Regard flight of belligerent aircraft over American territory as an infraction of neutrality. 4. Exclude belligerent submarine from ports or admit them only on the condition that they enter afloat and flying their flag. Such a clear-cut avowal is admirable in these times of hidden motives and diplomatic horse-play, but can these ultimatums be enforced? Under such rules, a United States patrol boat would be in an embarrassing position if it chanced across a bellergent vessel in the restricted area and the bellergent refused to leave. To fire on the ship would be an "act of war" in the eyes of the bellergent, and to allow the ship to continue its activity would reduce the safety zone to a force of international law. Fighting for one's neutrality is not a new idea. The purpose of the Declaration is to keep the America's out of war, but enforcement of the plan may defeat its own aims. It is impossible effectively to patrol the 13,800 miles of coast line and nearly five million square miles of open water in the safety zone. There is no provision for enforcement other than a mere "request." The success of the dream lies with the respect which the belligerents feel toward the United States navy. Another serious complication is the undeniable existence of English possessions within the restricted area. Upon receiving notice of the Declaration of Panama, British naval authorities indicated that England would do everything "in her power" to aid the America Republic's "idea", but would not limit or relinquish belligerent rights or access to the West Indies or other colonies. --for supremacy. Charm bracelets made up of identification tags, and gas-mask containers equipped with everything from first-aid kit and brandy to a good book and a pack of cards, show the trend toward brightening a hopeless situation. Mars and Fashion War-aware college campuses pursue the headlines and listen to radio commentators, and the men wonder about the air-tightness of our neutrality and the women wonder about the fashions the war is producing. American coords are up on style as well as current events. Black-outs in Europe are evolving white as a safety method; so designers will produce white clothes and white accessories and eventually the shops in the United States will be advocating white costumes even in the dead of winter. In Europe grim necessity and vanity struggle Wars have always had a drastic effect on what women wear. Over the last 150 years the story is repetitious—the major wars have necessated clothes that women could move actively in, and the intervening peace years have swaddled them up again. The Civil War changed crinoline to practical limey-woolsey. The French Revolution eliminated tight stays. The World War discarded the corset and evolved the current comfortable mode. The present fight will make minor changes and put women into uniforms, but nothing revolutionary is probable when clothing is reduced to a practical minimum. Fashion-conscious collegiate are not going to disareth their foot-easy moeaskins for military boots, but fads will show an obvious world-at-war influence and the R.O.T.C. will not have a monopoly on the military fashion. --successfully turned the tide of the ice flow that was advancing on the ruins that the Daily Kansan called home. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 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 review and correction, although the name will be withdrawn if the writer desires. To The Editor: I would not be critical if the windows in the library could not wait for repair until nightfall. If they were in danger of imminement collapse, or if there were only momentary valuable damage, it would be different. But, personally I don't bend over when you can then cover the library when the occupant is away. Is it because the workman can't come at any other time? And if it is, why can't they? If someone can answer these questions, it would satisfy a lot of willing-to-attack them. To The Editor: B. W --successfully turned the tide of the ice flow that was advancing on the ruins that the Daily Kansan called home. What's the matter with our sentiment? The recent decision to do away with Hobo Day leaves me angry After all, this is one of our dressiest traditions, and we have been getting rid of too many of them. Of course we accept such things as a mere matter of course, we seniors, having known it and taken part in this study, should be grateful to us. We begin to wonder. We have always been of the opinion that college was a little something beaten down. But think of the poor freshmen. They don't know what Hobo Day is, what it can mean. They've never gone through it, don't know the fun of it. We seniors will always remember it, but we shall never forget. But the freshmen—tak, they will leave college with no memories of Hobo Day or much of anything else, as long as we go on sacrilegious duty. It was very nice of the school to declare a holiday for the Cornhusk context the other day. But do we need it now? It is too late. One more day of school, either way, will not hurt anyone. It would have been much easier to put last Friday's classes on a shortened schedule such as in our room. We might even work together, and then abolish Hobo Day to make up for it. A GRIPER --successfully turned the tide of the ice flow that was advancing on the ruins that the Daily Kansan called home. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 37 Sunday, Nov. 5, 1939 No. 37 Notice does at Chancellor's office at 3 p.m. on day before publication during the week, and at 10 a.m. on Friday. --successfully turned the tide of the ice flow that was advancing on the ruins that the Daily Kansan called home. ALPHA FHI OMEGA: There will be an important meeting of the National Service fraternity at 430 Mion Plaza. First time room of the Union building. Bring your chess and money for the hayride: Kenneth Cedaray, president. 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 Dalley, secretary. PHI CHI DELTA: Phi Chi Delta will have its regular supper meeting Tuesday evening, Nov. 7, at 5:38 at Westminster hall. Marguerite Harris will hold a discussion with students about the new Eater Timeline, Emily Jane Yount, program chairmen. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Publisher **Carolina Stoff** Editor in Chief Editor Udara Sherry, Martin McBride Feature editor Feature editor Managing editor... Stew Jones Clinician writer... Climber Lee News editor... Roderick Burke Campus editor... Dale Heckendorn Baby Guides... Berry Guiles Mokup editor... Lehn Young Measures editor... Rebeita Krench Rewrite editor... Elizabeth Kirsch Measurements editor... Walt Meinerling Sunday editor... --------- Horry Hill Editorial Staff Edwin Browne MEMBER 1 KONSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION Business Staff Business Manager Subscriptions rate, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Loveland, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class office at Loveland, and served as office at Loveland, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. Shore and Posty Save 'Shack' with Ice Picks With scarcely any investigation unreliable sources (Schiller Shore and Ken Postlefwaite) reveals several startling unhistorical revelations in connection with the Journalism building. At the time of the great ice age, two youngsters with abundant curly hair, wearing three-cornered apparel, resided in a cave near the "shuck." They were the unsung heroes of the department of journalism at that time because, like today, no one in the department could sing. As the ice sheat pushed onward the little tots, Shore and Postwashte worked day and night with their ice picks before they hat ON THE OFF B-E-A-T By Roderick Burton That fellow with the black eyed doesn't seem to have any idea how he got it. At least when we asked him about it, all he did was mutter something about "running into a goal post." Coinidence Rides Again: Last week was national apple week, and this week teachers are giving mid-semester. Nothing is more dull than to listen to a football game over the radio, especially if your team is not playing and the score is something like 32-0 and you don't care who wins anyway. And whenever something exciting does happen, the chowd chews so loud that you can't hear the announcer, and when you do get the radio tuned in so that you can hear the announcer he is saying "Ob, boy, what a play!" or words to that effect. It gives one a spurt of impel delight to hear the announcer say that the play was called back for a penalty. But perhaps we are a little too hard on the boys. Nothing, we are sure, can match their pre-game, opening and half descriptions of the weather and the crowd and the band—intermixed with the announcer trying to switch us over to that microphone to hear the latest cheer. It has always been our sneaking ambition to talk some freshman into transcribing some of these reflensing bits of literature and handing them in to his rhetoric teacher as a composition. The comments on the returned paper would doubtless be noteworthy. We are sorry that Norway returned the City of Flint to the American crow. Now the Americans can't get sand at Germany for seizing American shipping, and consequently they will have no excuse for fighting Hitler. The only thing Norwegian leaders can do at Norway for not giving them a chance really is lick the Nazis for seizing American ships. Let no one get the idea that this department is, not interested in sports. Why, it was only the other afternoon that we were asking ourselves when the basketball season opens. That fellow who originated the proverb "No news is good news" was not a newspaper editor. Our professional laundering helps a let with that well-dressed appearance. Call LAWRENCE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS PHONE 383. For--- STETSON HATS Now It's Goddin: Black Norcistus. $2.50 Rame: Wine of Good Hope. $2.50 Steinbock: Grapes of Wrath. $2.75 Ethol Vance: Escape. $2.50 Your Fall Reading $2.50 Cloate: Watch for the Dawn. $3.00 Burns Mantle; Best Plays. $3.00 Van Paassen; Days of Our Clota: Watch for the Dawn. $2.50 You are cordially invited to come in and see them. They are for rent also—1sC for 5 days. We recommend Good Books The Book Nook Exuapry: Wind, Sand ond Stars. $2.75 Wain: Reaching for the Stars. $3.00 Burns Montle: Best Plays. $3.00 Tel. 666 1021 Mass. There came to pass, a great rain There was a torrential downpour. And it came to pass after seven dew days of the flood who upon the earth. And the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights. (Genesis 7:10, 12) Time Toddles on! Schiller and Posty were sore afraid. Being sympathetic souls they were much worried about the Aggie fan who was duly thrown into Potter's lake after the traditional game, but their greatest concern was for the Journalism building. Their fears soon vanished as the fountains of the deep, and the windows of heavens of heaven shattered. The father of the "shack" helped Noah land the ark on the crumbling pile of stones housing the University The old gent with the sexy, Shore, and Postlethwaite paddle on. There was a man, Colonel Zebulon Pike, who was out in search of a peak to have named after him. He climbed the crumbling "shack" thinking that at last he had succeeded in fulfilling his desire for publicity. Our hero and friend "Zeb" to Manitou. Therefore, Pike's Peak is in Colorado instead of Kansas. Father Time purchases a new What would you think if your best friend walked across the newsroom, fall through the rotten floor in the second page of the Kansan? Kansas State college won the football game, but Kansas had two winners: the Daily Kansan "acceped" local and Kansas City newspapers on the football game and the National Cornhusking Contest, and a K-State celebrant who was thrown into Potter's lake, following a successful defense of the K. U. goal posts after the name. Despite a Halted Press Kansan Scores a Scoop Father Time purchases a new Ford! Harry Hill, publisher of the Daily Kanan, stayed at the office during he game and handled all details f. the extra edition of the Kanan. He visited the house where he coercing story and partially listing the play-by-play account KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K. U. 66 Don't scoff. Worse stuff has come out in the Kansan. Dentist 745 Mass. (Over Safeway Grocery) Phone: Office-570 Res.-1950 C. F. O'Bryon Please Drive In—Drive Out Pleased HARTMAN STANDARD SERVICE For Gns—Oil—Tire Repairs—La brication 13th. & Mass. Phone 9 press. The Bible refers to the landing place of the ark as the mountains of Ararat. Hostetter Radio Sales and Service The "shack" has a new wrinkle that will make the Tower of Pisa envious. If that pile of wavering Italian masonry should try to duck the wall, the builders would build it would超能 topple. The Kraman team-to has acquired several. 17 years experience on all make of radios. Expert aerial installation. Dem. & Night Spacing or radios. Expert aerial installation. Lady & Night Service Phone 300 1403 Mass CUSTOMERS-Old and New Come in and see us in our new location Come in and see us in our new location. Oyler's Shoe Shop 14th and Tenn. 842 Massachusetts Phone 387 For Good Times and Good Things To Eat VENUS BEAUTY SALON Latest in Hair Trims and Styles VENUS BEAUTY SALON CHIEF LUNCH Highway 10 at Haskell OPEN ALL NIGHT Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. Sales, rentals, cleaning and cleaning Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 Barbers Best Scalp Balm Even at that, the Kansan was on the street before fans, who had remained in the stands for a few minutes after the game to watch the battle of the goal-posts, were more than started down the Hill. Bob Stewart's Barber Shop 828 Mow St. Barbers Best Scalp Shampoo at Only one slight hitch occurred in the Kansas's "sooop." Hill had written and set the heads for the football story, with the exception of the actual score. At the final gun, the edition was ready to roll. A printer hastily set the 27-6, but the six numeral went in upside down, and the press had to be stopped for the correction. 16 Years Experience NELLIE WARREN Beauty Shop (formerly Cinderella) 1211 Kentucky Courtesy 1000 Missouri Dw. Service of the football game to a linotype operator. KEYS KETS Locker Padlocks Guns — Ammunition BUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 DICK'S CHICKEN SERVICE order at any time, whole fried chicken dinner with mashed, French fried, or potato salad, gravy, bread, pickles and olives. $1.00. Also home made pies. 24 hour service. 718 Kentucky, phone 1124. Optometrist 911 Mass. LEARN TO DANCE For All Occasions MONEY LOANED ON VALUABLES. Unredeemed guns, Cloth- Marion Rice Dance Studio 92714 Mage WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Special Sunday Dinners...35c Week Day Dinners...25c Bill's Lunch 717 Mass. St. Omaha Hat and Shoe Works We buy old hats and old shoes you have to sell. Shoes repaired, hats cleaned and blocked. Called for and delivered. Phone 255 717½ Mass. headquarters. Make the Stadium Barber Shop and Beauty Shop your Personnel: Joe Lesch, Jimmie Pierce New York Frank Vaughan Phone 310 1033 Mass. St. TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Drakes for Bakes For your next hair cut see us. Ty Mailin Herb Charles Dorsey Warren Ray Haslett OREAD BARBER SHOP Continuous from 2:30 Collabored focusing mount, Bolt-in self-collaborating exposure certificate f/d.5.T裂 Anastomosis thickness speed. Uses inexpensive 3mm speeds 721 Mass. Your LAWRENCE Theaters Hixon's Fine Grain Developing Film—Paper—Chemicals and supplies attractive curves that eminent buste builders of the country are seeking copy. Father Time is dickering for an airplane. The "shack" totters on! DICKINSON TODAY 5 Days Phone 41 KODAK FINISHING and Continuous from 2:30 Adults 35c—Children 10c HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! A THIRTY-RING CIRCUS OF FUN TRILLS! Hit the laugh jackpot with Crachpots! Grouche! Chico! Harpo! B—(i—g—o—t HARPO KENNY FLORENCE BAKER · RICE EVE ARDEN · MARGARET DUMONT NAT PENLENTLE Comedy—Oddity—News NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY Continuous today from 2:30 10-35c—Matinee G Night RICHARD GREENE RICHARD DIX BRENDA JOYCE ROLAND YOUNG GLADY'S GEORGE NOW! ENDS TUESDAY 2 BIG HITS! "One of the 10 Best" LESLIE HOWARD in Bernard Show's "Pygmalion" with Wendy Hiller —and— Timely! Thrilling! Calling All Marines Don Barry, Helen Mock Warren Hymer, Robert Kent J VARSITY TODAY 4 Big Days The Greatest of All in Realm of Motion Pictures SONJA HENIE TYRONE POWER "Second Fiddle" Second Fiddle 2nd Feature For Thrills, Action and Romance Don't Mist "Flight At Midnight" Joan Parker, Phil Reagan "Prophet Without Honor" and News 1