PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY JANUARY 28.1923 Comment Mama. They're Here Again If you read today's editorials, you will notice that they are the same ones that ran yesterday ... if you read them yesterday. The purposes and causes of this unusual newspaper practice are many ... we could say that we consider them such good editorials that we want to give you another shot of them ... so we will ... we could say we know you don't have much time to read and hence would appreciate a repetition ... so we will ... we could say we're having our troubles too ... so we will ... we could say we want to save composition expense ... so we will. Anyway, here they are. You can choose your reasons for repetition and you can read them the first time, read them again, or not read them, as you choose. You can rest assured that when exterior conditions are returned to normal . . . so will the editorial page. The Italian Empire swung onward and outward last week. This time, as before, the gains were made at the expense of Great Britain's "life-line" to India, gains which threaten the all-important Suez canal and thus the British Empire itself. Facism Gains Again in Africa Farouk, for half a year king of British-dominated Egypt, last week dispatched his premier, Nahas Pasha, in an effort to strengthen the royal prerogative. Nahas Pasha with his private political army, the blue-shirted Wafd, has been occupying a position of increasing importance in Egyptian political affairs, rivaling that of the king himself. In his place Farouk has named Nahas' rival, Mohammed Mahmoud Pasha, leader of the Greenshirts. Mahmoud Pasha's first acts were (1) to appoint three pro-Iranian members to the new cabinet, (2) to increase the Egyptian army from 11,000 to 50,000, and (3) to hurl catchwords of fanatical, anti-foreign nationalism. These acts indicate Britain's weakening power in Egypt, for they mean, respectively, (1) that Egypt is thinking of changing her lord protector, (2) that Egypt is counting none too much on British military support in case of war in the Mediterranean, and (3) that Egypt's present leaders are preparing her to become the African step-child of the Fascist family of nations. Across the Suez canal from Egypt, Britain realizes her grasp is being shaken loose and has taken only feeble steps to reassert herself. Last summer, Fascist propaganda from the Bari delle Puglie short-wave radio station in southeastern Italy incited Arab riots in Palestine, a British protectorate of the League of Nations since 1919. The intensity of these riots drove Britain to urge upon the League's council a partition of Palestine between Arab and Jew. Since the Ethiopian conquest and England's hampering sanctions, Italy has been handing out radio sets locked to the Bari station to Arabs in both Arabia and Palestine and has increased the pro-Fascist, anti-British broadcasts in the Arabic tongue from that station. Britain has vainly protested, and today she is handing to the same Arabs radio sets locked to the British Broadcasting company's Daventry station near London. Last week she began what Time calls "a fine sputter of pro-British Arabic" from the Daventry station. The British Empire is disintegrating and Italian Fascism is not long in forging new allegiances to another empire. Question, Question---- Whither Next? President Roosevelt must clarify the policy of his administration in regard to industry. Before he can accomplish anything basic, he must choose between two ultimately conflicting desires arising out of confusion in the mind of the chief executive. Is Roosevelt going to advance the natural concentration of business into fewer and fewer hands or will he attempt to check this centralization of economic power by enforcing, through legislation, the present state of organization and perhaps even tending the United States back toward a country of small shops and stores? In other words, will Roosevelt continue to push wage-hour legislation which plays into the hands of large scale industry and tends to penalize the less efficient stores in small towns? Will he cling to the principles of his invalidated NRA which fostered price-pegging and tended to eliminate the small operator? Will he urge labor leaders and prominent industrialists to confer with him on governmental policies—conferences which, because of their size, leave the independent producer outside? Will his administration urge further railroad combines, as it did recently in the middle Atlantic states? Will he centralize banking through increased powers for the federal reserve system? Or, on the other hand, will he prosecute monopolies? Will he flail the holding companies which make concentration possible? Will he continue to oppose concentration of industry by refusals to revise the excess profits tax? The divergent purposes of Roosevelt's administration regarding the concentration of business make his whole program ineffective. He cannot ask congress for a wage-hour bill and more stringent anti-trust laws in the same breath. He must choose one or the other. Either Roosevelt must recognize that increasing concentration of industry is natural and that the thing to do now is to make this economic power more responsible to the public welfare; or he must recognize that America can yet return to a land of small shops and stores if she is willing to pay the price in economic losses. 'Toujours Gaie —Toujours Gaie' Author of a new thing in typographical form, which is slowly tending to come into usage at least in part, Donald Robert Perry Marquis will write no more stories of the adventures of Mehitabel the amorous cat. Marquis died a short time ago from cerebral hemorrhage. Best known and most unusual of Marquis's works were those written by proxy through Archie the cockroach's ability to jump from key to key of Marquis's typewriter. Archie used no sentence forms nor any of the customary devices of punctuation. He merely jumped from key to key composing words expressing his philosophy on Mehitabel and her amours, for Mehitabel was "toijours gale, toujours gae." A world of homely philosophy is apparent in the works. The author unveils his innermost self unsparingly but with many a humorous quirk. It is unfortunate that such a man is lost to the reading public of the country. Campus Opinion Articles in this column do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the University Daily Kanne. Articles over 200 words in length are subject to cutting by the editor. Contributions on any subject are invited. Bad Knights Editor, Daily Kansan Chivalry is not dead but it is surely being worn slack these days. Perhaps notice of the door to the library is caused by the increased traffic through it. Chivalry will embarrassment to those who would be gentlemen. The energy necessary to open and hold open the door of the library almost prohibits courtesy. It would seem that a door stop such as is used on other doors might be available. The one in question opens most easily from the back. The door closer, who doesn't leap from its arc is apt to be caught in the jam, and it's just too jam bad. A. A. University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER J. HOWARD RUSCO Editorial Staff Editorial Star EDITOR-IN-Chief MOMSHA THOMPSON AMOLED EDITORS: JONET AND DAVID AGINEVIC News Staff "From office boy to President," it is a sentence contained in many a man's business when a paper carrier, a proof reader and an editor are wrapped up into one and the same person who carries 15 hours in the College on the side, there you have something of somebody. That somebody in Tom Ellis, new editor-in-chief of the Kannan. MANAGING EDITOR CHARLES ALEXANDER CAMPUS EDITORS MARVIN GOBBL and JANE FLOOD NEWS EDITOR WILLIAM B. TYLER SOCIETY EDITOR JOSEPH NATHANIEL SPORT EDITOR FLOW TORRENCE TELEGRAPH EDITOR HAUGOLD ARBINGTON MAKEUP EDITOR JASON BANKS and ARBRAIT CAUBLE REWRITE EDITOR FLIPPER COLUMBS LAST EDITOR FLOYD FORREST SUNDAY EDITOR ELTON E. CARTER Tom Ellis came to the University with $50 and a decade of hard knocks for recommendations. Today he says, he is in debt. He owes $17, but figures he can have it paid off by the time school is out in the spring. Before Tom came to the University in the fall of 34, he had been spending his time teaching school, working on pipelines, railroads, cement mills, filling stations, beer joints, chop houses, and doing a little farming now and then. Between these jobs Tom spent his time bumming around the country seeing things underneath. Ten's average day begins when he barely makes his 9:30, class every morning and ends after he has finished delivering his papers along about 3 o'clock in the morning. When he gets home he fixes his furnace and goes to bed to catch a few winks before the alarm awakes him for the new day. He admits that he is pretty tired when the day is done. When asked for an interview, he sat for a long time trying to figure out just why he should be getting the “breaks” now. Then he admitted that he was flattered that he did like it, and that he’d tell anything I wanted to know. This is what I found out: Last spring Tom was one of the recipients of the Schott Award, given to seniors in the department of journalism. Journalism is Tom's first love, although he says he would like to be a college professor when he gets out of school. He knows the Kanman from the top down and is active in all the processes of putting it out. ALICE HADSMAN-JUICUS J. HOWARD RONO DAVID E. PARTINGE KRENNETH MORBIN GRACE VALENTINE JO COURCHAIN QUENTIN E. BROWN WILLIAM FITZGERald DREW MCACULIJN EDWARD BARNETT MARTIN BENTTON MARVIN GOEBEL JANE FLOOD MORBIN THOMPSON CLAUDE DOREY ELTON CRAYER ALAN KLEIN CHARLES ALEXANDER Kansan Board Members Paper Carrier; Proof Reader Is Also New Kansan Editor 1937 Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press Rv Virgil Mitchell, c'39 The new editor is a little older Distributor of Collegiale Digest BUINESS MANAGER ... P. QUENTIN BROWN REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Services, Inc. 242 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO EDITION SAN FRANCISCO Entered as second-class master, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. be English. His friends know him it be a person who will not be argued out of anything. His professors know him as an expert in the logical extreme of an individualist. than the rest of us. He is of medium height, his head is half bald, and he is a typical Irishman, but claims to He is a pacifist, an idealist, and enthusiastic about everything. But he cannot see anything strange about Daily Kansan Classified Ads PHONE K.U. 66 --being the editor of n paper and carrier boy too. ROOM FOR ROYDS: Well furnished, comfort room in quiet apartment home. Sleeping parch with twin beds. Phone 3051, 1126 Ohio. -83 GIRLS: Room and board, $23.00 per month. Also, room with kitchenette, 129 Tennessee. -84 BOYS: Well furnished, comfortable rooms One single. One double with twin beds. Also room mate wanted. Meals if desired. Phone 21800, 910 Ohio. -46 SKATES and SLEDS GUNS and AMMUNITION Basketballs BOYS: Rooms at 1135 Ohio. Nice location. See them. -84 FOR RENT: In quiet home, two double rooms. Board if desired. 1423 Kentucky. RUTTER'S SHOP FOR RENT: Steam-heated apartments, well furnished. Good location. Two sizes. Also furnished 3-room house, very desirable. Call 1989R for appointment. -43 BOYS: Room at 1320 Ohio. A double room with a large closet and twin beds. Phon. 1119. -84 BOYS: Single and double rooms for next semester. Easily accessible to the campus. 1222 Mississippi. Phone 2662. -83 Students who are on the CSEP payroll are requested to notify the CSEP office immediately of any change of address. Your Locksmith 1914 Mass. St. Phone 319 WAVE, new styles, any style 25e dried SHAMPOO and WAVE, 35c dried Economy prices on other beauty CSEP REQUEST END CURLS, $1 up, inquire 7 Experienced Operators New Equipment Added IVAS BEAUTY SHOP 941!½ Mass. St. Phone 533 Next door Keeler Book Store --- GRISI: Rooms at Oread House, 1225 Oread. One-half block from campus. Board if desired. -87 BOYS: Rooms and board, $18.00 per month. Room, $7.00, 1031 Mississippi, -53 APARTMENT. Nice, light. large 2-room apartment with extra close room. Bills paid. $16,900 per month. 1591 Rhode岛 phone. 2741. -84 BOYS: 1-room modern farmed apartment. Ideal for four boys. One single or double room. Very reasonable. Good location. Call 2292J. +84 BOYS. Clean, attractive and well furnished rooms. Private Room. One single. One double with two beds. Clear to K.U. Two bedrooms. Guest living room. Flat 243-147 Kentucky MNJ: Room for rent; double or single Modern home. Located between University and business district. Clean and quiet. Phone 2414. -84 ROOM for one or two students in private home; first floor, private entrance, no other rooms in house. Nice location. Approved. Fone : 249-2483. I125 Terni FOR RENT: Approved two-room apartment for girls; modern conveniences, or one or two rooms wanted. 1319 Vermont, Phone 1131]. WAVO BEAUTY SHOP --- Shampoos 25c up Finger Waves 25c (dried) Oil Permeants 2.50 up Phone 95----921 Miss. St. PHONE K.U.66 Phone 95 — 921 Miss. St. TAXI HUNSINGER'S 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 ROOM FOR BOY: Single, near campus, 58, 304 West 14th St. Phone 2091W. - 43 BOYS. Two "apparent" rooms, very nicely furnished, private family, quart surroundings. No other rooms. Only short rooms. 1400 New Hampshire. Phone 22132 WANTED: Two or three students to share six-room apartment or wood-fired fireplace- electric refrigerator of kitchen appliances electric oven of kitchen appliances 709 W. 12th, Tel. 1544 W. A. 183 12th, Tel. 1544 W. A. 183 WANTED: Stenograph with college education for part-time work. Those interested please we Professor F. J. Brennan of department in his office on Saturday morning. BOYS: $1.00 per month, Roan and two meals per day, $17 per month, Martin's Club, 1026 Ohio, Phone: 7720. -8 FOR RENT: **Zoey** apartment, south side, front, rear entrance, private porch, garage if desired, Adults only. Vacant January 29th, 11616 Transway. RADIATE WOMAN. Approved single woman, ideal location, strictly modern, private home. Graduate or employed woman 124 Missing Hawaii. 846 -856 JOYS: Large, comfortable, double room, well lighted, middle. Close to K.U. and business district. Approved, $60.00 per boy. Phone 3088, 1105 Vermont. -82 SHAMPOO and 25e WAVE, dried Oil - Drene - Fitch Shampoo and Wave, dried 25e End Curls $1.00 up, Complete PERMANENTS, Any Style $1.00, $1.50 up, complete MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP MICKEY BEAUTY SHOP 7321/2 Mass. Phone 2533 IVA'S Shampoo and Wave 35c Complete Permeans $1.50 up Phone 533 9411% Mass, St. PROTECTING YOUR NEWS SUPPLY Your MEAT Supply Your WATER Supply Your MILK Supply These three basic commodities bear the stamp of Federal, State and Municipal officials as a guarantee of purity. Protection of your NEWS supply is as important as protection of your MEAT, WATER and MILK. "Official" subsidized news agencies abroad are convenient instruments for national propaganda. They are publicity media through which favorable news may be disseminated unfavorable news colored, moulded, or suppressed. UNITED PRESS news is obtained by UNITED PRESS men intent upon giving a neutral, unbiased, truthful account of a news event. "By UNITED PRESS", or (UP) is a stamp which guarantees purity and protection for your news supply in The University Daily Kansan