PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1938 eg This Fall, the University Plans To Build. Also This fall through PWA and state appropriations the University of North Carolina continues a $5,000,000 building program which includes the erection of man's and women's dormitories, a dining hall, and a power plant. This fall through PWA and state grants the San Jose State College in California embarks upon a $1,000,000 building project, embracing a new music building and a new library. This fall through PWA and state appropriations Indiana University lays the first foundations of a building construction program which will furnish nine new buildings—a new union lounge, four dormitories, a physical science building, a new school of business administration building, an auditorium-music hall, and an extension building. This fall through PWA and state appropriations the University of Minnesota will begin a new $2,000,000 building program which will see the erection of six new buildings on the campus—a new dormitory for women, an apartment building for graduate students and married instructors, an agricultural campus health service building, a natural history museum, an observatory, and a new union building. This fall through PWA and state grants. Oklahoma A. A. and M. College begins a $1,090,000 building project which includes new men's and women's dormitories. This fall the University of Kansas embarks upon a building program, too. Two new stone benches are being erected on the campus in front of the library and the business school administrative offices are being removed to the unsightly, makeshift room partitioned off in the basement of Frank Strong Hall. Charlie McCarthy has talked Edgar Bergen into something he can't get out of for a year at least. It's the fiftieth edition of "Who's Who in America." 'Working on the Railroad All the Live-Long Day' No, Oscar those stakes with the red stripes you see around the campus are not horse shoe pegs. They're not for croquet either. What are they for? Well it's like this Oscar the engineering students are figuring a way to build a railroad and those pegs are their survey marks. They're not actually going to build a railroad, but they're going to put in some mighty hard work thinking about it. You see they'll map out an imaginary route and put up imaginary bridges and right of way and then find out how much it costs. I'll run into millions but nobody has to pay. What's that Oscar? You say you'll buy stock in the troud if they'll guarantee service to 8:30 classes? Who wouldn't, Oscar, who wouldn't! The railroad, if actually built, would start at the astronomy building and would amble down to Potters lake, where it would cross on a tressle. From there it would wander back up the hill to the rear of the Administration building. Next it would cross the Grove, go past the Union building and stop again at Dyche Museum. Incidentally, plenty of the trees would be cut down in the Grove and a lot of dirt thrown up for the right of way there if they did build the road. You wouldn't like that Oscar? Where were we? Oh yes—road leaves Dyche, goes past the Walkins Memorial hospital, then on to the Intramural fields. After that it follows the highway a while and then goes on back to the Astronomy building where it started. Bluff and More Bluff Adds Land and More Land Hiler is Germany. Whatever occurs within Germany or whatever Germany does is the result of his whim. And this week's crisis makes him responsible for the future of Europe. In the light of this final fact, his rise to power teaches a historical lesson. On September 14, 1920, Hitler's party returned deputies to the Reichstag with a vote amounting to about twenty percent of this body. By 1933, the Nazis polled only one-third of the votes in the Reichstag. But President von Hindenburg was forced to appoint as Chancellor the noisy and influential Adolf Hitler on January 30 of that same year. Der Fuchner's rise was psychological, not reasonable. Based on wild oratory, hot hatred, shrewd propaganda, it progressed through opportunism and luck. through April. Impatient to reorganize Germany, the new Chancellor dissolved the representative body February 1, 1933 and new elections March 5 Comment brought the National Socialists forty-three and seven-tenths percent of the deputies. This, plus the lukewarm Nationalists, gave Hitler a support of fifty-two and five-tenths percent. His next step excluded the Communists. Eighteen days later, the cabinet was authorized to govern by decree for the next four years. In April the state governments were abolished. By July 11 all parties but one were dissolved. Then followed the comic salawing of an "all-National Socialist" Reichstag (dictatorship granted in seven minutes and thirty-two seconds) and the equally ridiculous ninty-nine percent "mandates" from the people. Hilter grabbed Austria with little trouble and now plans to incorporate a portion of Czechoslovakia—the Sudeten area—into the Third Reich. His bluff worked in absorbing Austria, and already Czechoslovakian supporters, meeting with Hitler today, say peace must be preserved "at any price." Allow the Other Fellow to Say It "Drive slower, so people can see me." Douglas Corsigan likes glory from his admirers but now he exhibits display and his real attitude with the above words, spoken during the parade at his home city, Los Angeles. Changed from the smiling hero of a few months ago, or the hero the newspapers depicted, Corrigan took his praise before he reached these shores with an "Aw, anybody could have done the same thing." But the parade in Los Angeles after his tour of forty-four American cities was not long enough. And the medal awarded him by the mayor "was good, but some of the others were better." It's convenient to possess such spunk, or foolhardiness, when necessary, but when the right thing has been accomplished no need will exist to say "drive slower." The other fellow will say that. Official University Bulletin Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 3 p.m., preceeding regular publication. Sunday at 1 a.m. and Monday at 3 a.m. Vol. 36 Friday, September 30, 1998 No. 13 Vol. 36 Friday, September 30, 1938 No. 13 CREATIVE LEISURE COMMISSION: The Creative Leisure Commission will hold its first meeting at the Creative Leisure Commission Building. Major pictures will be shown, and plans for the year will be discussed—Marjarie Wiley, Charles Yeomans, Cochairman DIRECTORY: Students who have not filed addresses and telephone numbers at the Registrar's office should do so at once so that the information may be updated or new now being prepared. - George O. Foster, Registrar ESTES REUNION: There will be a reunion picnic of all persons interested in, or who have attended, the Estes conference of the Rocky Mountain Student Christian Movement. You can attend KU 35 or City 1413 for reservations. Twenty cents per person will be charged—LeRoy Fugitt, Estes Chairman, Y.M.C.A. FENCING CLUB: All members of the Fencing Club and all those fencers who are interested in joining the Fencing Club are urgently requested to meet in the fencing room in Robinson gymnasium at 4 o'clock this afternoon. All these unable to be present should communicate before this afternoon with either the Robinson gymnasium or with the Kalmari Oravezt. Important plans will be laid for the coming year—Kalman A. Ora vezt. REINTERPRETATION OF RELIGION COMMISSION: The joint Reinterpretation of Religion Commission is the first time this afternoon at 4:30 in the Pine room of the Union building - Enyl Bruker. SCOLIALIST CLUB OF K.U.: All members are area residents of the College. You can day or night sight to see the Broadway stage ball, "Hits and Needles." For transportation or tickets you may see the secretary of our club, phone 2627W - Mary Pier STUDENT ACTIVITY BOOKS: Student activity books are ready. Please bring your receipt and call for your books at the table in Central Frank Strong library, between noon to 12 and 1.30 to 4—Over Bingham, Photographer. University Daily Kansan EDITOR IN CHIEF ACCESS EDITORS JOHN R. TYE, KENNETH TELLEMUR, UAARON SARMA EDITORIAL EDITORS MARVIN GOEBEL Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS MANAGING EDITOR LOUISE R. FOCRELL CAMPUS EDITORS DICK MARTY and JEAN THOMAS NEWS EDITOR LAURA BLEAR SCOUTY EDITOR HELEN GAIL SPORTS EDITOR LEWER KAPLMANN MAKEUP EDITOR HARDY HILL SWEEPSTOP EDITOR STEPHEN JOSEF SUNDAY EDITOR ELON TORRENCE News Staff Editorial Staff REFERENCE FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative AUTHORIZED REFERENCE CHICAGO - LOS ANGELES - BAN Francisco BUSINESS MANAGER ... FOWN BROWN APPARENTING MANAGER ... ORMAN WANAKARI Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, $3.00 daily, during the school year except Monday and Saturday. Entered as second class matter office at Lawrence, $2.50 daily, student office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the Act of March 1, 1899. Spur, Chain C,Half Circle Hat Ranch Brands Promote Oklahoma U. School Spirit With the pass era of the "Cati- King" in Oklahoma, sweeping catliffs ranges and Texas Longhorns have given place to oil derricks and the muggy smell of oil, and a sweetty driller bawls out orders on the spot where the dusty-shirted, blue-jeaned cowboy rolled his cigarette In a letter of congratulations to the I. S. A. here, the Independent Men's Association described their set-up, and pointed out to the embryonic organization here the advantages of incorporating the spirit of the group into their work so that the group "fits into" the school as if it had always been there. But the influence of the old cow country remains. At the University of Oklahoma at Norman much of it has been assimilated into the traditions of the school, along with the pioneer spirit. "We divided our campus into six divisions, according to the number of students living there and not considering geographical size or location. In name they, we wanted away from the Barb-Greek antiquity. "By organizing our unaffiliated men, we further hoped to promote intra-murals and change the mush- notes and discords by John Randolph Tye the Fulter brush situation in the journalism shack is rapidly assuming the proportions of a national menace. . . . To vie for Phil Russell's title as the champion blusher on the Hill comes Phil Lord, a senior with something of a past at Emporia State. The Lyon county flash should give the Hutchinson boy a real run for the money. The Young Democratic Club is opening its fall campaign tonight with a free dance. Unless they wish to be regarded as cheap skates the Young Republicans can hardly escape offering the voters a dance. All of which should add real zest to the fall campaign which was rapidly showing signs of deteriorating into speeches and more speeches. A battle of bands will do more to solve the problems which the country is facing than two dozen political orators. Incidentally, the most crying need in the country today is a good, new Dorothy Parker joke. --room character of the teams they'd been turning out." Some people still work on the theory that sugar catches more flies than molasses. A prominent minister in Toperka has accepted a church in the east and The Topeka Capital headlines the news, "Reaches Difficult Decision." It's always news when a person hesitates to leave Topeka. Being consistent is very difficult. An Oklahoma college paper waxed quite indignant the other day over Hitler's treatment of the Jews. In a well-written editorial they exploded the German ideological claims, the Aryan myth, and ended by preaching an effective sermon on the necessity for tolerance of racial minorities. However, in the next issue of the paper, it was explained that the reason six Negroes were deprived of their civil rights was "that is an unwritten law here that has become almost a tradition in the past thirty years that Negroes should not be allowed in the town as they compete with student domestic employment." Until one has written a column he never really appreciates why Odd McIntyre uses to label some of his notable items "Purely Personal Piffe." --room character of the teams they'd been turning out." Dr. Florence Sherbon, professor in the department of home economics, with Dr. John Aull and Dr. Harry M. Gilley of Kansas City, conducted a round table on the program of the nutrition institute sponsored by the Kansas City children's bureau, Sept. 20. Professors Conduct Round Table Attends Management Congress Elizabeth C. Sprague, head of the department of home economics, attended the seventh international congress in Washington, Sept. 19, 2013. The I. M. A. at The University of Oklahoma was first attempted in the early days of the depression when slim pocketbooks didn't allow much outlay for social activities. To those who were "on a shoe-string" something which aimed at the adventuresome hardiness of those who populated Oklahoma was something to evase at. Thus, their districts, the Seven Up, Chain C, Spur, Half Circle Hat, Flying U, and the Bar Lo were named after some of the best known ranches of the Southwest. The IMA's house organ—a small paper published once each two weeks—is known as the Roundup. The organized independents at Norman differ from the I.S.A. here in that men and women are organized separately, and their scope of activities includes the social, intramural, and the scholastic. The I.S.A. here emphasizes purely social activities. However, the one organization was instrumental in discharging the course of the other in its formative period, and Oklahoma University will be one of the schools to send representatives to the National Convention here this spring. On the Shin-correspondent instead? You and our column are enough like Hitler that you ought to get along. You know, "Der Feuer, der better." And with that I guess I had better Czech out. Continued from page 1 The host of Gov. Stubbs. Unquote Author's note: Henceforth will Clem Fairchild and others please address such letters to the "Campus Opinions" department Their waste paper basket is more spacious than mine. This is no Vox Pop anyway. ☆ ☆ ☆ Independents will celebrate Independence Day on October 20 this year. They have some newsreely good shots of life on the Campus which will be displayed in Fraser theater that day along with a style review. The independents have built up a fine organization. So fine, in fact, that they have bad a hard time keeping the fraternity boys out. ☆ ☆ ☆ When Delt pledges walked out last night they walked out with all the silverware and light fuses. Disconsolate acts dined most primatively in the manner of King Henry VIII. Jane Blaney is (or was) engaged to Bill Harris and Maurice Canady is (or was) engaged to Catherine Dunkel. However, so smoohed a n d stooches report that Blaney and Canden entered the Blue Mill through the front door and the black door when the wrong people crowded the front end the other evening. Or maybe we heard it wrong the fifth time. A PSGL boy thought maybe a more or less Pacchacamac controlled parking committee might not be lenient with parking tags to boys on the wrong side of the political fence. ☆ ☆ ☆ Surprised was he when he applied for and received a tag for a can that doesn't exist. Y.W. Social Service Commission To Meet The first meeting of the Y.W.C.A. social service commission will be held Monday at 4:30 p.m. in Henley house. Mary Jane, c'41, chairman of the commission, has outlined the program for the year. There will be two commission meetings each month. At the first meeting of each month the members will discuss some particular phase of a community program. The second meeting will be in the form of a field trip to places of interest in Lawrence including factories, mills, and nursery schools. A field trip to Kansas City has been planned for sometime this fall. At that time the women will visit industrial centers in Kansas City. LOST: Tan leather billfold contain valuable papers to owner only. Bearing name Eldred Balzar. 121 Missiphone. Phone 11773. Please return or call. Liberal reward. -15 Beware of fountain at intersection of 12th street and Oread. Owner call Koenig, phone 3113. -15 Phone K.U. 66 Classified Ads Present this free pass at the box office of the Dickinson theatre and see Jane Witers in "Always in Trouble," now showing. KATHIERN MERRY SPECIAL!!! Super Shell gasoline ___ 15.9c Silver Shell ___ 14c Shell Ethyl ___ 18c Slater Service Station 23rd and Louisiana St. Jayhawk Taxi Phone 65 We handle packages and baggage Lescher's Shoe Shop We Call for and Deliver 812% Mass. Phone 256 Cleaning and Dyeing Polishes and Laces WANTED Student Laundry We specialize in silk garments Mending done Free We deliver Phone 1313 Keys for Any Lock Guns and door closers repaired Fishing tackle and Ammunition RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. St. Phone 319 HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 TAXI Mickey Beauty Shop Shampoo and Waveset 25c Oil Shampoo, Wave Drydry 50c $1.50, $1.50, $1.50 Permanents St. $1,90 up 7321 Mass. St. Phone 2353 Quality Cleaners Men's Suits and Women's Dresses 65c Free Pickup and Delivery 539 Indiana Phone 185 Iva's Beauty Shop Shampoo and Wave 35c Oil Shampoo and Wave 50c Permanents and End Curtis Our Specialty Phone 533 941½ Mass. St Large's Cafe Pork Tenderloin and Fish Sandwiches Free Shrimp Friday Evenings 18 E. 9th Phone 2078 ANNOUNCING A New Shop for You Girls Shampoo and Waveset 35c Oil Shampoo and Wave 50c Seymour Beauty Shop 817 Mass. Phone 100 JOHN HOLMES Present this free pass at box office of the Granda theatre and see Norma Sherear and Tyrone Power in "Martie Antioinette" now showing. Skilled Personnel hair cut Louis Hirefield Virgil Wiglesworth Mac McCarthy Harry Houk to give the right HOUK'S Barber Shop 924 Mass. St. OUR PRICES Suits 50c **3** Tuxedos for $1.25 Dresses Coat (unisex) (fur trim 25c extra) Free Pick Up and Delivery 14 E.9th St. Phone 616 Shampoo and Wave 35c Permanents $2.00 and up Nu-Vogue Beauty Shop 455 SPECIAL!!! Grand Cleaners Nu-Vogue Beauty Shop 927% Mass. Phone 458 Phone K.U. 66 UNION CAB CO. Phone 2-800 When Others Fail. Try Us Baggage Handled - 24 Hrs. Service AMATEURS HERE IS THE SENSATION A CANDID CAMERA for $ 12.50 WITH f 4.5 LENSE HIXON'S Lobby Hotel Eldridge Javhawk Beauty Shop Speck's Package Delivery Jayhawk Beauty Shop 727 Mass. St. Phone 854 Shampoo - Fingerwave 50 - 75c Permanents $3.50 $5.00 $7.50 Girls! It's Different! It's New! A Modern Beauty Shop Just for You!! WANT ADS 10c From 8 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. 1111 Mass. Phone 305 LOST: Kappa Sigma Pin. Reward. Call Bill Southern at Kappa Sig House. Tel. 1700. BEAUTIFUL furnished 6 room re- didence, K. U. district, also attractive 4 room bungalow. Redecoated apartment and rooms with cooking privileges. 1325 Kentucky. Phone 2863R. BOYS: Nicely furnished large south room, radio. ideal for two or three boys. Must rent, make an offer, Neur Campus. Phone 21223. BOYS: Large clean double room in quiet home for two boys, good b e d innerspring mattress. $50 each for two. 1622 K. 2833V AIRCRAFT SCHOOL Opportunity to learn plane mechanics and engineering under direction graduate engineer of many years experience, in factory completely enough equipped to build complete airplanes. Instruction will include rebuilding construction of an airplane or government standards. Moderate tuition required. Allison Aircraft School, 4th and Perry Sts. (Phone 562-16 ONE double and one single room in private home. Meals if desired. Mrs. M. H. Goff, 1631 Illinois, Phone 2131. ROOMS: One sing and one double room in private home. Board optional. Mrs. M. H. Goff, 1631 Illinois. Phone 2130. BOYS: Reasonably priced and newly furnished rooms. Right at west entrance to campus. Phone 1445, 1325 W. Campus. BOYS: Nicely furnished bedroom in private home. A large and very attractively furnished room. Guest room is nicely priced. Phone 2596. 1017 NTH BOYS: Board and rooms for two. Also meals served to students outside the home. 1299 Oreqd. Phone 1115. FOR RENT: nicely furnished rooms. for girls at 1528 Tennessee St. Prices very reasonable. Phone 2643 or 2420. -14 GIRLS: Two light housekeeping rooms very reasonable. Also one double room for girls. Phone 2949W. 1341 Ohio—15 EXPERIENCED Dressmaking, alteration, restifying, coat relining. Special get acquainted prices. Evening appointments. Phone 1141RJ. 1005 Kentucky, Second Floor Apartment, Mrs. Floyd.-15 FOR SALE: Nearly new $275.00 accordion for $150. See it at 1140 Mississippi—15 LOST: Tuesday morning, Sept. 27. a black baucle pouch containing fountain pen, compact, glasses and other valuable articles. Reward. Return to Fine Arts Office or call 1774. -14. NOTICE: Will the person who, possibly by accident, picked up a German text and a psychology text at the Union Dining Room, Tuesday noon, please return them to M. Ross Moser, 826 Alba, or call 1790* FOR SALE: Nearly new Kimbali baby grand piano. Excellent condition. Plano located at 734 Rhode Island. For information, call 860-251-9133. - **13** 15.