PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS --- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1928 Comment Hello, Kansas! Of Thee We Sing-gray row of a ship, appears beacaley. You think of the play, "Outward Bound; with passengers slowly realizing they were dead. The erie, sicky green blobs of quick photo shops, open all night, accentuate the ghostiness. A Syrian drink-stan man, a dot in the racial amalgam, turns his lights and whistles up a side street. Of Feb. 24, we are informed, four Nazi short-wave stations will broadcast a cheerful "Hello" to Kansas. To make the program more compliment to us, certain state songs will be sung. We have no quarrel with Germany because she wishes to send across several thousand miles of land and water a special greeting to Kansas, but we would like to point out for you some features of Germany's radio propaganda system, for definitely, we consider the Kansas greeting propaganda. In the current edition of Life magazine are to be found three pages of picturey illustrated comment upon the radio propaganda of Europe. One statement strikes the t reader as rather startling: "The European ether is shot through with propaganda just as the American radio is shot through with advertising." A reporter in the service of a Chicago paper reports that the German stations are flooding the world with their propaganda. They are replacing wire service in continental Europe by virtue of the fact that news go broadcast, costs little or nothing. We have read from time to time in our own newspapers of foreign radio propagandizing. The English and the Italians have been distributing to the natives of northern Africa, radios which are tuned so that they may only receive from one station—English or Italian as the case may be—and are thus the helpless recipients of national propaganda. The German-American scholar exchange system is thought by many, and probably correctly, to be a propaganda measure. So when Germany says "Hello Kanas!" we may believe she does it out of friendship? Well, possibly—probably. Shall we think of it as propaganda? Certainly. Insurance companies have been waging for years, campaigns against such chronic diseases as cancer and heart disease. They have recently added to the list another great enemy of society—syphilis. Trained Youth-- Unemployment--? Unemployed college youth is an important factor in bringing about revolution according to a world-wide survey of unemployment in the learned professions made by Dr. Walter M. Kotschnig. "Where the overcrowding of the professions leads to a prolonged unemployment of successive generations of graduates, it may become a formidable threat to the very existence of an ordered society." observes Dr. Kotsching. Dr. Kotzsching found many promising young men and women, equipped with degrees and certificates, who were unable to find positions. After trying by calls, interviews, and letters time after time to get a position without success, they became dejected and hopeless. Since the present society could not provide positions for them, there was a reaction: The old order must be changed or destroyed to make place for a new one which could give positions and happiness to educated youth. Unemployed professional men and women have played important parts in revolutions in Germany and other nations. The situation in the United States is less dangerous, but Dr. Hotchkiss urges a nationwide search for new needs for professional services. If the nearly one billion dollars that President Roosevelt urged for the navy were used for improvements in the United States, it would go a long way towards providing work for our youth. By giving our youth chance to work for happiness, we will do much towards avoiding internal disturbance and perhaps a revolution. What!-- Not a Buggy Ride? What is the coming world going to do for horses? An absurd question, you may think, yet a press dispatch from Washington this week, reports the last census of mules and horses, taken in 1935, revealed that the birth rate of these animals is only half sufficient to replace those that are dying each year. Your presupposed reply is: use "iron horses" and the "horseless carriage." But that is where you err, for the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers predicted this week, that within 35 years at the present rate of consumption, the Lake Superior iron region, which produces 85 per cent of our annual output in this country, will be exhausted. Syphilis has always been an unmentionable word until the recent campaigns against it have made it assume a position almost in the nature of a fad. Campus Opinion Editor, Daily Kansan: Yours Till April I should like to ask one question of the bundle o words who signifies himself "Prepared for the Worst." We may assume that he was one since he highly admires the neighborhood bully; but didn't he find out what happens to the neighborhood hot-shot when he ventures across the trails without his bodyguard? Stretching this, as he does, to apply to nations; we see that the United States has had little trouble in bullying around a declining Spain, primitive Mexico, and several of our small neighbors to the south. Our enemies have been trying to win them over. War also shows clearly what happens to the neighborhood bully when he mixes in quarrels out of his bribery. Of course, there is another way to deal with such situations, related to tell all our nations what to do and what not to do; there is also the possibility that some of the other nations, believing in slightly different gods, may question the source of Yours till April, the customary month for our entering the arena of honor and glory to protect our prestige, our investments, Democracy, or whatever seems to need protecting. L.E.O. Editor, Daily Kansan: A Library Gripe As the hearts of the instructors harden And assignments increase their pace And poor students are made to suffer- Oh, what a helluva place! Students waiting in line and just hoping -Hoping that they will be next Hoping that they will be next to Hoping that they will be next to that blamed book they are wanting. The crowd is too large and important. The candidates are from Troutville, Libertarian soon become Troutville. Do you suppose there could be a system— Librarians soon become frantic Striving to please without irk. Do you suppose the books would just work it out. To obtain needed books more quickly, you could go to a library. 10. Would you please turn back without having to take turn about? Let us pray that in the near future Some wise guy will give us his best. And work out some sort of a system to solve our problem. Norman E. Fisher. Official University Bulletin Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 p.m., premed- regular publication days and 11:30 a.m. at the Chancellor's Office. Vol. 35 Friday, February 18, 1938 No. 97 --gray row of a ship, appears beacaley. You think of the play, "Outward Bound; with passengers slowly realizing they were dead. The erie, sicky green blobs of quick photo shops, open all night, accentuate the ghostiness. A Syrian drink-stan man, a dot in the racial amalgam, turns his lights and whistles up a side street. EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: The faculty meeting will be held on Monday, February 22, in 115 Fraser. E.-H. Littleton, Chancellor FALL SEMESTER GRADES: Students who have not yet obtained their grades for the fall semester may secure them at the Registrar's office today or tomorrow—George O. Foster, Registrar. HOUSE PRESIDENTS' ASSOCIATION: Presidents of all organized houses which we have wounded at the second floor of Robinson gymnasium at 4 clock Monday. This is very important; Barbara Humphrey, president of the city's basketball league. REINTERPRETATION OF RELIGION COMMISSION: The Reinterpretation of Religion Commission will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in the Pine Room. The King will speak.-Evelyn Beakter Donald DeFord SETSE POOC: There will be a meeting of all interested in the Estes conference at Henley house on Wednesday, where we will have an informal talk on "Mountains." Make reservations at Henley house by Eden May Parks. VACANCIES IN MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: Notice is hereby given of the following vacancies on the Men's Student Council; law representative and president of the sophomore class. Pettitions for the position are due on Friday, February 18. The Secretary of the Men's Student Council on or before Monday noon, Feb. 28, 1933—Moe Ettsonen, Secretary. University Daily Kansan Official Student Payer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE. KANSAS FOTOR IN CHIEFT AUTOGRAPH EDITORS: MARTIN BENTON AND DAVID W. ARGENIZI TOM A. FELLE Editorial Staff MANAGING EDITOR MARVIN GOFELB CAMPUS EDITOR BILL TYLER AND GEORGE CRASEN NEWS EDITOR BILL FITZGARDLA SOCIETY EDITOR DOROTHY NETHERNUT SPORTS EDITOR ELION TOWRENCH MARKUP EDITOR JEAN THOMAS AND JAY MARTIN REWRITER EDITOR DICK MARTIN TELLEGRAPH EDITOR HARRY HALL SUNDAY EDITOR JANE FLOOD PUBLISHER DAVID E. PARTRIDGE News Staff ALICE HALDEMAN-JULIAN J. HOWARD RUSKO DAVID E. PASTRINGE KINNISH MORGAN KINNISH JARED MOIRIE THOMPON JOI COCBRINE F. QUINTENNIA WILLIAM FITZGERald WILLIAM LMACKHUN DRYE MELCHILD EDWARD BANNETT MARTIN BENTION MARVIN GOEBEL KIMMY KOHN JERRY BEE MOIRIE THOMPON CLAUDE DOREY ELTON E. CARTER ALAN ASHE CHARLES ALEXANDER Kansas Board Members 1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press Distributor of Collegiate Digest Columnist Thanks Artists For Designs Squib Inspired Entered as second-class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. BUSINESS MANAGER F. QUENTIN BROWN REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publications Representative 420 MADISON AVIL. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO, IL. FORT WASHINGTON LOS ANGELES PORTLAND BEATRIA By Dorothy Caldwell, c. 39 Miss Rosey Kernick, professor of design, received a letter from O. McIntyre shortly before his death, thanking her for three photographs which she had sent to him. These photographs have an interesting history. "No place is more starkly forlorn than Broadway at 4 a.m. All life seems suddenly to have run out. And there hovers the stagnant arm of spent焊, the miama of decay The Times building, like the grea Two years ago Mika Ketchn read the following paragraph in McInnery's column in "New York Day by Day". material for designs, Miss Ketcham presented the article to her class. Three students undertook the making of textile designs based upon it. The students were Avrid Jacobson, 36, now an assistant instructor at the University Janice Jang, 37, now a professor at Stanford University; and Virgil Lee, 37. "A few chronic coffee drinkers in Lindy's sip in glum retience. Scrub women in the hotel lobbies glance up through dull, rhyme eyes. News-paper bundles, imprisoning last night's capriches, tudd from non-stop wagons. Broadway, smelly, punch drunk and with fishily glazed eyes, awaits the revivifying whiff of a clean new dawn." France Reports Hitler Promise After these designs were sent to several national exhibits, photographs were made of them. These photographs were sent to Mr. McIntyre and in appreciation of him he sent a letter to Miss Ketcham. Fome, Feb. 18 (Friday)—(UP)—High Faseist quarters asserted tonight in a retort to British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden that Austria is not seeking advice from Paris and London because her independence is fully guaranteed by Germany and Italy, acting in full concert. Realizing that this was inherent Vienna, Friday (Feb. 18) —(UP) The Austrian parliament will meet **24** to hear Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg make a declaration concerning Austro-German relations, it was announced officially today. Faris, Feb. 18 (Friday)—(UP)—French official quarters reported tonight that Fusher Adolf Hitler of Germany has promised, in response to Anglo-French inquiries, to make a strong pledge of respect for Austrian independence in his Reichstag speech Sunday. The accompanying picture is a reproduction of the design by Virgil Lee. The assurance of Italo-German protection over Austrian sovereignty followed a semi-official government announcement that the new German inroads in Austria are "welcome with open favor by the Italian government as the beginning of a new era of peace between two peoples who are deeply related in race, language and common culture." Vienna, Feb. 17. –(UP) – Austrania tonight was on the verge of headling surrender to Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's demands for complete Nazi "pacification" of the government, after Great Britain and France refused aid against German encroachments. Chancellor Kurt Schuchzigg and the Fatherland Front, fighting to escape being brought under the Nazi yoke, struggled to present the main argument and propaganda from being added to the five cabinet pots which Schuchzigg turned over to Nazis or Nazi sympathizers when he capitulated to Hitler's demands 48 hours ago. The Kansas Highway Patrol made 23,480 light corrections during the last six months of 1937. This means that patrolmen obtained compliance with the law in thousands of cases where cars and trucks were operating on the highways without proper lights. THE Rexall DRUG STORE ... for lowest prices in town H. W. STOWITS Free Delivery Phone 238 9th & Mass. Sunbeam Electric Shaver $15.00 Sosieni Medico Yellowbole PIPES Many Uses for Famous Antiseptic Mi 31 Solution Kills Germs in 10 to 25 Seconds Don't let colds and irritated throats get you down. If you gargle Mi 31 Solution regularly morning and night, you may avoid many colds. Mi 31 Solution kills germs in 10 seconds. You'll be amazed at the good it does you! Mi 31 Solution can also be used for first-aid treatment. Every cut or sratch that draws blood is dangerous unless you guard against infection at once. Mi 31 Solution put on a dressing as much as a compression will kill germs. Another popular use for Mi 31 Solution is as a gargle to avoid unpleasant breath which, as everyone knows, has often kept a person from securing friends and happiness. Do not use this Solution regularly and you will never have to worry about offensive breath. Did you know that you can get rid of body odor quickly by sponging yourself with a bit of Mi 31 Solution? It refreshes the skin and takes away perspiring body odors. Mi 31 Solution is effective because it is tested and approved in Rexall's great Research and Technology Department where a staff of doctors, chemists and helpers work. MI 31 Solution is sold at the Rex- all Drug Store at a price that'll make you happy—only 48c—with a money-back guarantee. Naval Expansion Reaches Billion Mark Your Rexall Drug Store is H. W. Stowits, 9th. and Massachusetts. --adv. Washington, Feb. 17. —(UP)—President Roosevelt's naval expansion program will cost more than $1,000,000,000. a about 200 million above original estimates, and present naval yard facilities are inadequate to accomodate it, Rear Admiral William Dubose said today. He said the program, exclusive of the 1000 airplanes envisaged, would cost more than $1,000,000,000. The 47 combat ships, he said, would cost $731,955,000, and the 22 auxiliaries, $246,451,000. A NEW SHIRT WITH A NEW COLLAR AT A NEW PRICE GENTLEMEN! We have the newest shirt in these United States—the ARROW DART! In addition, Arrow Dart is Mitoga tailored for better fit and Sanforized Shrink — guaranteed not to shrink. The Arrow Dart has a specially woven collar, the Arosewa — a new, non-wilt starless collar that will out-wear any other collar of its type! At its new price — $2.25 — Arrow Dart is within your means. ARROW DART $2.25 $100 The WELLESLEY ... half shirt ... half sweater The perfect sweater-shirt in soft cotton lime with high neck and short sleeves. They come in white and just about every imaginable postal shade. Grand for suits, skirts and shacks. Dozens of other new sweaters and skirts in lovely pastels. WEAVER'S Cosmetics Phone 636 N N N N N N N N CORSAGES Are Necessary to Make Formal Attire Complete. PARTY DECORATIONS Are just as important as your orchestra for your spring party. Let our experienced designer help you. Fine Flowers . . . Always in abundance . . . Orchids, Gardens, and Roses. As near as 363 Phone