PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, MAY 17 1939. Kansan Comment For More 'Name' Bands The success of the Senior Cakewalk demonstrates that the students are willing to support "name" bands. It has been (1) the lack of dancing and spectator space in the Union ballroom, and (2) the large number of passes that would have to be honored at any class party that has deterred the managers from signing "name" bands. No class or dance manager is going to spend $1500 for a band if he realizes that 100 passes must be taken care of before the affair starts taking in money. The Kansan hopes that the M.S.C., the W.S. G.A. and the student body understand this fact. And, knowing it, pave the way for more "name" hands. Sales tax tokens will definitely go out on July 1, according to Governor Ratner, and so after that date that rattling sound in your pockets may be money after all. The German-Italian Pact Will Be Lasting-Yes? In an important Italian city one week ago, foreign ministers of Germany and Italy went into a two-man huddle. Purpose was to devise a formula for putting the squitch on the democratic nations—those nations who muddle up the best-laid plans of Messrs. Hitler and Mussolini. Not that England and France ever accomplish anything permanent by their protests, but at least they have slowed up expansion now and then. So the two diplomats conjured up an agreement about mutual support in war, and it is now known in international parlance as "the Milan Pact." It means that if Germany gets into trouble over Danzig, Italy will gird on her sword and leap gladly into the fray. Or if Italy is caught in a Mediterranean war, Germany will forget her own desires and, whatever the cost, protect Italy with all her might. Both of the countries have distinctive records. Witness what Germany did to the English naval agreement and the Polish non-aggression pact. Witness what Italy did to her friendly agreements with Albania when they became a hindrance to "Italian progress." So France"and England have good cause for a new attack of nervousness. Mussolini will back up Hitler, and Diefuerheir will stand behind II Duce . . . The safety margin lies in the fact that the dictators' actions will be limited solely to action for personal gain. Oumansky was named the Russian ambassador to the United States recently. Better remember that—you might get caught on a quiz program sometime. High School Students Glad to Go Up in Air The recent T.W.A. flying course at Albuquerque, New Mexico, shows that mass aeronautics for high schools has become a reality instead of a dream. A few years ago the suggestion of classes in high school by the use of air planes would have brought stern refusals from parents. Today, with aviation far in advance of what it was then, T.W.A. officials are making a strong attempt to overcome the fears of both parents and children by arranging for classes in the air. The parents of 1,980 Albuquerque high school students were thoroughly convinced when all were brought through a week's course of ground and flight instruction with no mishaps. The arrangement offered the student a chance to listen to lectures on aviation, to examine the big motors and instrument panels placed on display, and to fly in a modern twenty-passenger plane. Ninety-nine flights of twenty minutes each were required to take up the entire class comprised of senior students. The short course promoted airminded individuals and made aviation a by-word of every student. By this method of instruction, T.W.A. also promoted air-mindedness among parents, who were proud that their children were in the class. The action of the T.W.A. in bringing mass aviation to high schools is highly commendable. Similar schools are to be set up in Wichita, Kansas City, and other large cities on T.W.A. routes. With such a program in sight, the United States should become the most air-minded in the world within a few years. The King and Queen of England are two days late on their American tour because their ship was delayed by fog and drifting ice. We presume that it will be considered better taste NOT to ask their majesties about the weather. Arabs and Jews Have England Stumped Not only is England embarrassed by the Western European political embellio, but she also has to worry over the Palestine situation. In an effort to please both Jews and Arabs, she has pleased neither, and recent German propaganda among the hostile Arabs has not helped England's position. Trouble for Great Britain began shortly after the World War. While the war was in progress she promised a great measure of independence to the Islamic peoples if they would rebel against Turkish rule. In 1917 she promised "a National Home in Palestine" to the Jews, partly because of a long-standing regard for the Jewish people and partly because of a desire to gain the support of American Jews. Since the carrying out of both plans would result in contradictions, it is impossible for her to fulfill both of these promises satisfactorily. In March England submitted a plan to the representative committee which limited Jewish immigration to 15,000 each year. She proposed a government to be run by a British high commissioner without any representative legislative bodies until the Arabs and Jews prove that they could live together peaceably. This plan was summarily rejected—by the Jews because the immigration law seemed a matter to be decided only by the League of Nations, and by the Arabs because there was no assurance of independence within a definite period. It now appears that Britain will doggedly enact a plan over the protests of the two races. If she does, her leaders in Palestine may witness an explosion, which by itself should be enough to keep England busy for the next few months. If she does not, a new plan will have to be drawn up, and result for the English is a diplomatic trouncing which will weaken her position in the eyes of the world. Britain seems involved in a Palestine problem the solution of which can satisfy no one. It should perhaps be noted that while American cattlemen are complaining about the government's buying of beef from Argentina, none of the American cattle are protesting. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS OFFICIAL BULLETIN Vol. 38 Wednesday, May 17, 1979 No. 153 Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on date of publication. --reach a decision. However, Ye Shinster claims that if Lois Hays is not the lucky girl, Tom Yoe didn't listen to Kyser's advice. A. S.M.E.: A meeting of the chapter will be held Thursday evening, May 18, at 8 o'clock. Officers will be elected for the next semester. All members are urged to attend - Hal Whitale, Secretary. CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: On Thursday, May 18; at 9:30 a.m. filming of the original motion picture "A Thousand Years," which should meet in front of the library or join the group on the campus later in the morning if they have classes at the library. You will need a hand for the climax of the picture, which will be shot Marissa, the class teacher. Everyone is invited—Marissa, Chrissy Kunz, Keacha DRAMATIC CLUB. There will be a meeting of the team club at 730 Thursday evening in Green Hall The club is at 7:30PM. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economice Club banquet will be held at 6 o'clock this evening at the Colonial teenroom. There is no charge if your dues are paid—Mary Cavensis, President. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM: Professor Ken will speak on the subject "The Applications of Physics to Biology" Friday at 4:30 p.m. in room 203 Blake Hall. Everyone interested is cordially invited.-Seville Chapman. QUACK CLUB. There will not be a regular meeting on the Quack Club this evening because of the W.A.A. break. SCABBARD AND BLADE: Scabbard and Blade will meet at 8 o'clock this evening in the west ballroom of the Union Building. It is compulsory that active members and pledges be present — Rex F. Sure, 1st Sig. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Publisher ... Harold Addington Managing Editor Harry Hill News Editor Walt Meinerling Cooper News Editor Reggie Buckton Night Editor Reggie Buckton Night Editor Wayne Huff Picture Editor Stewart Gleason Picture Editor Ellen Tornice Millerd Rose and Ann Larson Society Editor Mary Lou Randall Society Editor Lisa Bittner Business Manager Business Brown Editor in Chief Robert L. Burdon Marianne McBride Jonathan Moseley Jason Moseley Feature Editors Ammos Mauser News Staff Business Manager Edwin Browne Advertising Manager Orman Wanmaker Editorial Staff REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MCALE AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CALL (212) 835-6700 Back in the gloomy days of depression at Texas A. and M. College 12 high school graduates formed a "colege or bust" club. Low on funds but high on ambition, these young plowers in co-operative living Students 'Go Co-op To Go to College Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $17.50 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except holidays and Saturday. Entered as second class faculty on Monday, and Tuesday. Office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Thought for the day: We are now the wiser. Having heard Kay Kyser. The club renovated a "haunted house," with the aid of a professor in rural sociology, and began building the organization which now has a membership of 1,000 student who save $100,000 a year. They pay for their room, board, tuition, and books for eighty-two cents a day. notes'n discords by John Randolph Tye Although this co-operative was once opposed by local business in- Mary Lour Rundell, society editor, is salking at her typewriter because the Kauan bean refuses to send him wishing to see the King and Queen. Yesterday the sports editor wrote that the Washburn team hoffered with glass when Miller was hurt during the game lost fall. Does Bell mean that they were tinkled to death? In a southern Kansas town a few days ago, a woman wrote to the editor*rising the work of the local fire department in putting out a fire at her house. "I don't know what happened there," she said. ... We do. The house would have burned down. In their last issue, Scribners magazine coined a new verb when it announced that it did not intend to groverwalen the British rulers when they arrived in America. ... If in the distant future we ever own a newspaper, we have only one hard and fast rule which we intend to keep. The paper will not be called the Daily Headlight. No use giving the readers such an opportunity to pum. That preferable belongs by right only to the editor. On the Shin -reach a decision. However, Ye Shinster claims that if Lois Hays is not the lucky girl, Tom Yoe didn't listen to Kyser's advice. Not long ago this department tasted the first sweet delights of fame when a rural Kansas weekly quoted us in the same column with "The Warrior," by Aurelus, Mary Baker Eddy, and an unamung named Brown. (Continued from page one) When Kay Kyser sold a few autographed copies of the Sour Owl for Editor Dik LaBan, Dance Manager Don Wood thought it amusing. When Kyser sold 25, Wood thought he was being a good sport. But by the time Kyser sold a hundred copies, Wood raged all over the place shouting "What does LaBan think this is, a magazine stand?" A few of the boys and girls who couldn't buy Owl's were irked because they thought it detracted somewhat from the maestro's entertainment. Howcome, he played 15 minutes overtime to make up for terests, it now finds manufacturer eager for its trade. Since the founding of the "college or bust" club, co-operatives have sprung up throughout the lush field of Midwestern colleges. At the University, these colleges have their three meals a day for $2 a week. More than 50 women at the Texas State College for Women obtain both board and room for $10 a month. Even in the largest apartment house in Berkeley, Calif., students live on a Henry Werner, adviser of men and associate professor of chemistry, tells this one on himself. Several years ago he and two other professors went on a fishing trip together. The trio sat on a bank and dabbed hooked fishes in the river. Mr. Werner became disgusted and moved downstream a few rods to a place where two mechanics were fishing. Neither Mr. Werner nor his new companions had any luck, but the other two professors began pulling out fish profusely. One of the mechanists stood it as long as he could. He continued to the Advisor and said, "What do your friends for a living?" Guided by the fundamental Rochdale principle, 50,000 American college students are "living co-op." The first consumers' co-operative in England was founded in 1844 in England. From this store grew up the principle of "co-operative marketing where no credit is given and all profits are distributed among customers." These resourcelife college students do an annual business of 3 million dollars in their various co-ops. They share equally the work, expense, management, and fellowship of their organizations. The students themselves are the owners, and they elect their own managers, work on committees of management, and make decisions about the disposal of profits. "I know it," declared the mechanic, "it's brains that do everything. It's brains that run things in Washington, it's brains that run the world, and its brains that catch fish. By now, what do you do for a living?" "They're college professors," replied Mr. Werner. Three Million Dollars Annually "Oh," said Mr. Werner, "Tm a professor, too." Even in the hard-shelled East these The mechanic looked at him for a Even in the hard-shelled East these moment with surprised skepticism before he remarked, "The hell you are!" Because several members of Miss Twente's sociology class have threatened to tell Tye that Ye Shinere got locked up in a woman's dormitory at Lansing yesterday, he hereby confesses. And while Ye Shinere is in a mood to confess, he has been bullied and denia he wore at the Cakewalk last night was formerly part of Agnes Mummert's corsage. Many Congressmen, Few Wives To Meet Royalty Washington, May 17—(UP)—King George VI and possibly Queen Elizabeth will meet all the members of congress but only a chosen few congressional wives, it appeared today. The representatives and senators will get a special close-up of the visiting royalty on June 9, the second day of their visit to Washington. Lady Lindsay, wife of the British ambassador, revealed that plans to meet members of King George to meet members of the rotunda of the capitol. Whether he will be accompanied there by the queen is not yet certain. organizations flourish. At Princeton almost all the students deal at the University Store which is run by a board of trustees composed of students and faculty members. Profits are used either for expansion or disbursed in the form of patronage. Lack of funds needn't keep the UNION CAB CO. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 UNION CAL CO. Phone 2-800 When Others Pail, Try Us Baggage Handled - 24 Hrs. Service energetic American youth out of college. If he so affeled, he may pick a college with a co-op and get his education from books as well as experience. The brass tacks of statistics reveal that bookstores are saving students 10 per cent and interns and dormitories 40 per cent. Try Our Tasterite and Tenderloin Sandwiches CR Y S T A L Sandwich Shop Fountain' and Curb Service Tibbets Standard Service BRIDGE STATION Open All Night RANKIN'S We Deliver 1101 Mass. Phone 678 Complete Fountain Service All new equipment FRITZEL ICE CREAM Try a Spring Lubrication At Hartman Standard Service 13th and Moss. ONCE -- ALWAYS DRAKES for BAKES HAL'S for Hamburgers and Chili 9th, and Vermont Jayhawk Taxi Phone 65 We handle packages and baggage KEYS FOR TRUNKS Tennis Rackets Restrugt Base and Soft Balls RUTTER'S SHOP 104 Mass. St. Phone 319 "Lucky Night" starring Myra Lynk and Robert Taylor is now playing at the Granada Theater. Bob Eidson, this is your free pass. Present it with your identification card at the box-office. GOING ON A PICNIC? 907 Mass. Phone 61 GOING ON A PICNIC See Drake's for Potato Salad Baked Beans Potato Chips Cookies, Donuts, and Buns DRAKE'S BAKERY Dellicottesen TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Castle Shampoo and Set ... 35c Revita Oil Shampoo and wave 50c Revlon Manicure ... 3 for $1.00 Seymour Beauty Shop 817½ Mass. Phone 100 PALACE BARBER SHOP IN OUR BEAUTY SHOP Shampoo and Finger Wave — 50c Haircuts -- 25c Haircuts and Shampoo -- 50c Shampoo and Eagle Wrap — 506 Permanents — $2.50 up Machineless Permanents — $5 730 Mass. Phone 282 "Lucky Night!" starring Myrna Loy and Robert Taylor is now playing at the Granada Theater. Cary Jones, this is your free pass. Present it with your identification card at the box-office. IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP Phone 533 941 1/2 Mass. St. UNIVERSITY CITY More than 4,500 young men and women at the prime of life, receptive to the new and different, associate and interact in hundreds of activities from dance to classroom—in a city within a city—on the hill. They hold hundreds of thousands of dollars at their command to spend in Lawrence . BUT WISELY! A recent survey $ ^{a}$ shows that 93 per cent of men's clothing bought during 1938 was purchased in stores which advertise regularly in the Daily Kansas. The official publication of the University of Kansas is the only medium which reaches ALL students, every day, with a medium of time and expense to the advertiser. Mr. Merchant, are you receiving your share of business from University City? *Conducted by the division of Market Analysis of the School of Business.