PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1955 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN OFFICIAL STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER HERBERT A. MEYER, JR. Brian Robinson JACK PESTON MANAGING EDITOR SIMILEY JOE RHODESMAN MANAGER E. DURANSON JOEN EDITOR-IN CHIEF MELVIN HANLIN ASSOCIATE LAWYERS BUSINESS MANAGER ... F. QUENTIN BROWN Campbell Editor Markup Editor Sports Editor Assistant News Editor Senior Editor Senior Editor Fred Heiss Bell Rogers Riley Knowlson Horace Mason Donald Hicks James Porkinson Jerome Wiles John Mawhinney KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS MARGARET POINT... F. RUTHERFORD HAYN HERREY MINTER ... F. QUINION BROWN RUTH MINTER ... SUSAN TUBBLE RUTH SWORLD ... SHRIESTON JEFFERSON AJILYN MERMAN ... HOUSE HUNTER MARCELLE MERRICK ... MOUNT DAVID TELEPHONES Business Office K.U. 66 News Room K.U. 28 Night Connection, Business Office 2701 K.2 Night Connection, News Room 2702 K.3 Sole and exclusive national advertising representatives NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, Inc. 406 Audubon Avenue, New York, NY 10024 Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle Published Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday mornings except during school holidays by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Kashan from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, per year, $13.00 cash in advance, $12.50 payments. Single enrollment fee. Entered in new civil matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawnridge, Kansai. TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 3. 1935 MAKING SANCTIONS EFFECTIVE If the committee of the League of Nations in its meeting decides to place an embargo on oil against Italy it will be one of the strongest and most potent weapons in an effort to make that country cease its invasion of Africa. The two methods previously employed have not been very effective in that they were anticipated by Muscolini and therefore preparations had been made. Financial experts figure that the type of financial embargo that is in force at present could not seriously hurt Italy for several years. This does not change because the remaining countries not included in League actions furnish sufficient products. An oil embargo on the other hand would strike quickly and effectively. Italy depends upon League nations for nearly 70 per cent of the oil she uses. Without this her industries would be hampered; feet movement would become impossible; and her African campaign would be disastrously ended. Thus the threatened oil embargo is of vital concern to II Duce and if adopted will bring a crisis in the Italo-Ethiopian conflict. A member of one of the dramatic clubs at Topeka high school was assigned to the task of drawing up a constitution for the club. The member, a pretty girl, wrote in her manuscript, "One-half the membership of the organization shall constitute an aquarium."—Topeka Tinklings. POLITICIANS MIGHT NOTE Greece, which once led the vanguard of civilization, has supplied only one outstanding figure to recent history, and he is not a Greek, nor is he able to live in Greece. But Eleutherios Venizelos, a native of Crete and now exiled from that Greece which he tried to make great again, has set an example that should call for study by all politicians, statesmen and not a few kings. Banished since last March, Venizelos has sent his blessing to the restored monarchy and tacitly has pledged his still strong following against hampering the revivalist regime. The returned king generally is considered a weak ruler of a weak line. He is not the first of Greece's recent kings to endure the ignominy of having his reign cut in two, but he has come back in response to a demand which the venerable Venetios sees as a preference for monarchy over a republican form of government. The statesman is over 70 now, and much of his active career has been given to the struggle to set up a modern republic in a country never quite able to accept it. This is not his first exile, but many predict it will be his last. Not very many Americans, especially those who have tasted power, even adopt a viewpoint. Some few of our leaders exhaust themselves in office and spend their decline years in retirement, but most of them hang on until senility shakes their grasp upon the electorate, or hardened arteries prevent their keeping up with the parade. Venezuelas, with the country, face an important progress are more important to his country than is either the form of government or the man who is at his head. Judged by his recent utterance alone, he has a certain claim to treason. Upon observing the notice, "Dates Assigned for English Exams," a University of California student remarked, "There are hardly any functions here where a fellow can stag it any more." Rocky Mountain Collegian Walt Disney will judge the K. U. beauty queens. In so doing, the creator of Mickey Mouse is letting himself in for a lot of catty remarks. Kansas City Kaplan —Kansas City Kansan. Say, don't you think that sun feels great! Did you have a good time Thanksgiving? No. I'd rather not think about that football game. Didn't the University get some wonderful publicity—13 drunks. OLD SQL Old Sol, however, is the most important and popular individual around here. He was welcomed with a lusty cheer by all those who attended the football game. Since that time he has hung around like a rich uncle with a beaming smile. During the past few nights, the mercury has fallen down to between 35 and 40 degrees and that is mighty close to freezing. However, the days have been bright and the sun has shone with all the beauty of an August day. Yes, we like these little visits of Sol and we wish he'd stay all winter. Movie circles report that a Shakepearican drama filmed as an experiment is paying its way. A lot of people soon may have a better idea of what the English professors have been trying to tell their students—Lawrence Journal-World. Our Contemporaries A BAD UNIVERSITY Why shouldn't a university be a hotel? What's an university for if not for the free demonstration of ideas appealing to community welfare? If the faculty and staff are interested in providing education, and the government of it to create a bedded for the nurturing of elephants heaven be praised? So long as this continues there is no in the institution. The university is a place where people — Overseas State Barwomen SUGGESTED AUTO SHOW EXHIBIT— ALL-STEEL "BODIES" Why not a concession for Death at this year's auto show? In the space provided, instead of admiring onlookers, there would be munged corpses, appropriately veered with blood. Sleek and glittering strands of chromium and color would be replaced with twisted heaps of bone, the numbers of course — but instance rather than umbilicate. Possibly it would hourly car manufacturers who incidentally have shown little attempt to co-operate with general safety programs, but it is unlikely that it would elicit a direct effect upon the ever increasing rate of fatal accidents. Since little relief can be expected from the mechanical side, the solution lies with the pedestrian. Caution, added to preparation, must become the watchword of everyone who depends upon his feet for locomotion. Stop and go stops, regardless of position, should be supplemented with careful inspection of trafffic from all directions. Watchful attention should be religionly observed. That carelessness is deadly has become the rule rather than the exception. Unfortunately, crippled and inexact humans cannot be traded in for new models. Dented skins, elbows and heads do not respond well to the hammer of a repair man, and insurance is no little actual comfort under circumstances. Finally, if enough people survive, some future expiration date display, safety glass and all-star bedframes for the bed may be built. A THOROUGHBRED "At Saratoga, New York, during the running of a steperace, a thrombosed failed to clear a water jump, fell heavily, strangled to his feet and careened from the stretch an eighth of a mile on his three good legs. He finished. The injured leg was hanging twitching and cutless. His handlers made a quick examination. The poised animal was locked quackly, out of his mercy with a shot below the ear." narrow levers can tell a throughbread as far as they can see them. Sharply cut about the throatlatch, Tapering muscle. Eyes that burn. The carriage of royalty. Clean cut loftefacks, dainty smooth legs with steel pastures for treadmil. Burndy muscles around the rump, stripe muscles around the hock, and arm. To slim the armile of a body forward at tremendous speed. Breeding has made a throughbread like Twenty Grand out of generations of selections. A throughbread will do his best. He will finish if he has enough good legs to hold him up. He will shagger up with the pain of hell running through his body and pound on, one foot at a time, until he is done. For a work man is a throughbread." —Oklahoma Publisher OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN --- Notice that at Christmas, Office 3.15 p.m., preceding regular office hours, will be open until 7:45 p.m. Vol. 23. December 20, 2018 No. 99 EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING! An advised meeting of the School of Education faculty will be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, April 28. R. A. Schwegler, Dean. --- ENGLISH MAJORS: Prof. C. S. Skilton, who was a fellow township of G. W. Calbey, will speak of him to English masters and others interested, on Thursday, Dec. 5, at 4:30 a.m. in room 206 French hall. JAY JANES: There will be a meeting at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 119 Fruzzy. Betty Tholen, President. LANDON-FOR-PRESIDENT CLUB. There will be a meeting of the Landon-for-President Club this evening at 7:30 in room 102 Journalism building. Everyone is invited. W. S. Johnson, Chairman Department of English. HIADAMANTIH, Ibadamantih will meet at 4:30 Wednesday afternoons in the Green Room of Prassal hall. SOCIAL RELATIONS STUDY GROUP. The Social Relations Study Group will meet this afternoon at 4:30 in room 110 Fraser hall. Prof. R. H. Wheeler will speak. Prof. Gerrillian, Chairman W. V.C.A. The Annual Original Christmas hazzar will hold December 4, 5, 6, 7 at Harley House. Fred Gemmill, Chairman. Virginia Hardesty. TRADITIONS IN HEIDELBERG ARE SMASHED BY THE NAZE By Clarence P. Oakes, $ ^{22} $ autores Note The writer of this article, Katie L. Burrows, is the graduate of Independence, Kansas, her first book was "The End of Independence," written "to touch of Africa." This feature was originally for the Kenya and the Sudan journals, but later moved to *Autores Notes*. World Famous Romantic Color and Background of University Is in Danger of Extinction Heidelberg (By Mail) — The dueling, marching, singing, and drinking Student Corps of Heidelberg are no more. The brilliant ribes can carry their best advertisement abroad must give way, under the latest ruling from Berlin, to the uniform Nazi brown shirt and swakatak. As the war is ongoing, the impositioned of the Corps is holding its "last commerce" that will end in the dissolution ceremony. Scores of alumni here called "Alte Herzen," are in town to wear the beloved colors for the last reunion. The "suggestion for their voluntary dissolution" has been pushed for two years by the Studentenschaft, Nazi student government body. These Nazi students are in character (although none of the parties concerned will probably relish the comparison) very similar to the German case in which an instructor in the League for Industrial Democracy at K.U., with an admixture of extremely entrainable R.O.T.C. adherents. They have contended that the Corps, which include in their membership less than 10% of the student body encourage skibnishness, create artistic distinctions not based on merit, and project these distinctions into later life. The Corps have also been guilty of having in the distant past taken a few outstanding Jewish students. The Nazi spirit or this point is similar to that of Jews in Germany and that they are at Kristen who will not pass a Jew or Jewes for upledge. Ancient Antics 20 Years Ago By D.L.H. There will be one interclass football game played this year if the turnover of students keeps up as it has in the last few weeks—Japanese student sellaires in Myers hall reads a Kanana headline—(Now Japanese sell their wares from coast to coast—and it all started in the religion department). Blanche Mullen, student, declined the invitation of Henry Ford to accompany him on his trip to Europe to get the boys out of the trenches by Christmas—(People with mechanically minded brains are still trying to run their cars until they can be helped by refusing to send his trucks and cars into the embattled districts—Well they fought the World War in spite of his trucks and European excursion). The annual football smoker will be made a two-bit affair this year by cutting out the food — Two items in this column suggest that students twenty-five and older are more tradition than maybe fit for our agege. Student directories promised by the state printing department for September have not arrived yet. Adv—Dance all you like--you'll get heated of course but Duofold under-wear stops preparation. A new animal house is being built near the heating plant to take care of the animals and insects of the departments of entomology, physiology, baccalaureum, zoology (Insects) and entomology of above departments, still roll the Rill in 1935). The Law Scrim, first formal dance of the year, will be held this week. Tickets are $4.00. This annual dance is scheduled for a total of 800 couples are expected. A feature of the party is that no corsages or cats are allowed the daters. (This year's event was all everyone was broke after spending four bucks per cardboard. What glal today couldn't walk four blocks to had been in a four-buck party?) Four Harvard athletes make Phi Bau Eka Kappa reads a 1251 headline— (1853) headline Four Harvard athletes (1964) headline Wins the "White line" the greater honor!) Students at the University of Californi are birating the fact that social nobility is the rule at that university. Have we become so thoroughly democratic that that charge might not be made of us.) Engineering students of the University heard a talk on explosives the other day. (A few years later they got involved with knowledge by hearing the explosives.) Personal Adv.—We want a high class lady who is helping her way through school to solicit in the country part of each day. It is a high class proposition. Prefer a girl who has been raised in the country. Conveyance furnished. You will be delighted with the work—An answer I. W. L.—Kansas. Won't the students who have football uniforms and other athletic equipment checked out and not returned please? W. O. Herman, manager of athletics. Only recently, however, have they found an excuse for attacking the exemplary behavior of the Corpus, loyal patriots all, and among the best workers for the new undertakings. During a raid on the University of Pennsylvania Corps (the one the Student Prince joined) to give proper attention, and one of them wine-cracked as his aspirant was served, "Does the Faucher eat his aspirant with his paw or with a fork?" Other patterns of the inn reported the incident and the immediate suspension of this Corpus was followed later by the general order that is being executed. Reactions to this new order are varied. The Corps member feel about the same as the average fraternity man at Kansas would feel if the government suddenly ordered, through the Student Council, the closing of all fraternities. But they fear it will cause a "stuff-till-lists." Many of the students outside of the Corps are climated to see something destroyed that was for them unattainable. Some university authorities are wondering what effect this loss of color will have on the celebration next year of the 550th anniversary of the founding of the University. Heidelberg townpeople are concerned who are disempowered by those who are close to the students in a business way. There is some apprehension, although not in official quarters, as to the effect upon the attendance at the Heidelberg University, which this year the largest in all Europe. From the United States there were 121 students, more than double any previous year, and most of them were probably born in America, as was by the excellence of the institution. But the Nazi levying process grinds on inexorably, seeking to eliminate social distinctions. To most foreigners Heidelberg without the Student Corps is Heidelberg without the Castle, and without its romantic setting at the foot of the first floor. Heidelberg has suggested that Nazi party spokesman has suggested that Heidelberg旷掉 its tradition of romantism and become a factory city in the new Reich. Another has suggested that Faculty Women's Club EXHIBITION AND CHRISTMAS SALE December 7 Beautiful imported articles and handicraft of many kinds 1300 Louisiana Street the professors abandon their caps and gown at ceremonials for the brown shirt and swathina. Neither of these suggestions is followed to any great extent. By this hour the last Corpus has finished the final "Landeswater" ceremony by candle light in the darkened chapter room, each Corpus brother has in turn removed his gay cap and impaled it upon a passing sword. As the last strains of the "Landeswater Lied" are out, the crowd rejoices as the adjournment drapes down at the head of the table—and the world's most colorful student tradition is dead! ROCK - - - CHALKLETS Conducted by J. M. The German exchange student says of exams an given on the Hill, "They're so kindergartenish." Where he comes from they take one exam after they have completed all of the work for a degree. The pleasures of Homecoming is giving up your bed to an old grud. But we remember that nothing is too good for them. Eat Breakfast HERE Add similies: As uncertain as this Kansas weather. at the CAFETERIA You will enjoy the variety of foods offered DOLL UP! Give your friends a treat. Priced $7.98 and up Shop for holiday frocks at TERRY'S where the smartest, newest and most individual frocks are arriving daily. Save your carfare and give us a break. How we'll appreciate it 841 Mass. TERRY'S Phone 348 STUDENTS! FACULTY MEMBERS Tasty lunches and dinners are being served at our No. 2 store in a cheerful holiday atmosphere. Dine here with your friends where student waiters will give you prompt and courteous service. "You will meet your friends at Coe's" COE'S DRUG STORES No. 1 1345 Mass. St. Phone 521 No.2 411 W. 14th Phone 516 Read the Daily Kansan Want Ads. SENSATIONAL YOU-MUST-BE-PLEASED OFFER WINS CAMPUS PIPE SMOKERS READ THESE DETAILS-ACT NOW! 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