THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1925 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS PUBLISHER CAROLYN HARPER CHARLIE W. BROWN EDITOR-IN-CHEF CHARLES D. BROWN Associate Editors Robert Robinson Genevieve Horn MANAGING EDITOR HARRY VALENTINE STAR Lance Editor Makeup Editors Sports Editor Society Editor Society Editor Freeman Worthish Kinder Business Manager ... F. Quentin Brown Kansan Board Members Lena Wynn Ijoh Owen Lievice Wynn Rotherham Kimberley Wynn Jola Markman Carleton Harper Jojo Brown Christine Harper Chloe Brown Heather Weaver Max Mousey Wendy Weaver Wendy Mousey Business Office K.U. 66 News Room K.U. 66 Night Connections, Business Office 201K JK Night Connections, News Room 270K JK Pollished Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, of the Department of Education for the school district by students in the department at the University of Pennsylvania. The Press of the Department of Education, the University of Pennsylvania. In advance, $25 on payment. Single enclosure, for online payment. Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. mas. THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1935 GRACIOUS—OH, MY! Tutt . . . and still another tutt Would you bother about the sill; thing? Would you pay any attention to it? If your newsreels were run out of Williamstown, Massachusetts, when their false imminendo was made a public heir by the graduates of William College? If you also, besides the news reels, owned a castle in California covering four hundred square miles, and by the way had a shack in Mexico sitting on a "plot" 133 miles across—would you be excited about editors from Princeton? "The worst part of the whole situation, however," comments The Daily Princetonian," is that the victims of this poisonous doctrinal immolation are, for the most part, unaware of what is being done to them. "The madness is slipped into their coffee, as it was, for the newsreel is a medium of information which depends entirely on the interpretation placed upon its scenes by the interlocutor." If you, as a leading patriot in your country, had filled your papers with "claptrap, triviality, sobstuff and tripe," would you be bothered if an obscure yahoo in Massachusetts criticized your newsreels? If college papers over the country began to talk about you as if they didn't appreciate your splendor and ambitions for America would you feel sighted? Hurt? Bruised? "Protestations are very likely to produce definite results," said The Princetonian. What if college papers over the nation said, "We object to the Metronote News on these grounds! First, It reports as the truth, incidents and scenes which are twisted into half-truths of skillful propaganda. Second, it is one of the most powerful methods of controlling public opinion by misrepresentation of facts. Third, Commentators in the Metronote News interpret all scenes in a manner to support the policies of their owner. Consult Hearst. One professor at Kansas confesses that when she grades her final examination papers she finds out how little she really knows. ALACK-AHAH They walk slowly, lingeringly. They stroll, whether there is a verb to cover the idea or not. But you know what it is. They walk arm in arm, and with the upswing of the foot indicating lightness, eneity. Why not? Things have changed. The timid tulip struggled through the ground some weeks ago, but when he got his head out there came a hall of dirty and windy and choking days. New he's at the tallest stretch of his beauty. In his various colors and that incomparable bright yellow he seems to nod and blink with the pride of a royal ancestry. They walk without plan, that is, so far as we are aware. So often they "happen" to find themselves in the shade of an oak, or listlessly attentive to the whish of the wind rushing through the cottonwoods. Well, and, for that matter, as it were, what on earth are we going to do about all this goin's on? You decide. A barber shop politician was heard to say that the New Deal is like Christopher Columbus. Chris didn't know where he was going when he started out, didn't know where he was when he got there, and didn't know where he'd been when he got back, and the trip was made on borrowed money. SAVING CASH The extent of cooperative enterprises in college and university operations was conservatively guessed at but unknown until a recent report gathered by the N.S. F.A. Twenty-one colleges indicated successful cooperative book stores. Some had faculty buying clubs, and others had pooled their economic interest to reduce expenses on coal, groceries, gasoline. Of course the growth of this cooperative idea is probably traceable to a continued economic crisis that calls for sharp buying. The W.S.G.A. owns, operates, and derives profit from the Student Book Exchange here, and makes available to our students quite handy savings. An exchange built on a broader basis, with a larger supply of books, and perhaps managed by the Union Building for no profit, would be able to serve our students with even greater savings. The four - billion - dollar appropriation of congress comes just at the right time, since several thousand and college graduates, the unlucky ones, will be needing relief in another month or so. AN ANSWER TO IGNORANCE (Stanford Daily) A sensible, scholarly reply came re- flectively. A sensible, scholarly reply came re ntly to the proclamation of a Midwest S. M. E. The invited branch will meet at 7:36 this evening in room 210 Marvius Hall. There will be arundule discussion on the topic of national defense. Election of offices, for the next term will be held in the business meeting. Every member is urged to attend. H. E. MILLER, Secretary. Vol. XXXH Thursday, May 9, 1925 No. 150 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at Chancellor's office at 3 a.m., proceeding regular publication days 10 a.m., 11 a.m., 12 p.m. on Sunny issues. Thursday, May 9, 1925 A. S. M. E. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION There will be a meeting of the Christian Science organization at 7:30 this week in the University building at Mauine JESSEE, on March 5, in C.Myers hall. DRAMATIC CLUB: All dramatic Club members must pay the assessment and make their reservations with Bob Cunningham or Farrow Strawn before Monday if they wish to attend the camp to be held May 16. BOB CUNNINGHAM, President. DRAMATIC CLUB: GRADUATE SCHOOL FACULTY: TABLE OF FACULTY There will be a meeting of the faculty of the Graduate School at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 14, in the auditorium of the Administration building, for the consideration of new graduate degrees in clinical medicine and in music education. E. H. LINDLEY, President. K. A. C. E; There will be a meeting of K.A.C.E. in room 101. Chemistry building this evening at 7:38. The speaker will be the Parker. Everyone is welcome. K CLUB MEETING. All you are to K Club meeting this evening at 7:30 in the gymnasium All K please be present. ERNEST VANKE, President. NO CLUB: There will be an important meeting of the Ku Ku Club tonight at 10:30 in room 209, Fraser. There will be an election of new members. You must be present at this meeting to obtain a shingle EDDIE RICE, Secretary. KU KU CLUB: GIVE The Life Saving Class will meet tonight at 7:30 for its final session. Examiners be please present. HERBERT G. ALLPHIN. JFE SAVING CLASS: MATHEMATICS CLUB: MATHEMATICS CLUB. The annual picture will be taken today at 12:30. Meet on the north steps of the Administration building. MARLOW SHOLANDER, President. NEWMAN CLUB: There will be a regular meeting of the Newman Club tonight at 8 o'clock in the basement of St. John's church. JANE FITZPATrick, Secretary. M.C.A. CARINEL: Important meeting today at 4:30 in room 10 Memorial Union building. RALPH MKICBIBN Vice President. V. M.C.A. CABINET; ern chain store druggist that his niece, "mindlessly exposed to Communistic influence," was being withdrawn from the University of Chicago, whose fault was in the way she received any reply came from the president of that institution, age, young Robert Maynard Hutchins, who in a few years has made a nun for himself as an intelligent preacher. "Freedom of inquiry, freedom of discussion, and freedom of teaching—without these a university cannot exist. Without these it becomes a political vacuum." 247 The University exists only to find me communicate the truth," . . . With these works Dr. Hutchins laid out a policy which should be the keynote of modern American education—that the important thing in learning is to solve problems and possible solutions peacefully and progressively. The intec uncle objected to readings which gave a Communist viewpoint. He disbelieves in that education, therefore, which gives every side an opportunity to speak, and believes that the only right lies in tradition. Freedom of inquiry is the prime essential of education, and if that inquiry is objective, fair, and if corrective theories postulated are investigated, intelligently, then no sensible observer can have cause for complaint. Z Z Z Z OUR SPECIALS Jellied Consommé Tortilla Batter Tomato Rouillon Tempting Cold Plate Lunches BRICK'S Phone 59 We Deliver STUDENTS NOTICE! (Don't Forget Next Sunday, May 12th) We Are Headquarters for MOTHER'S DAY CANDY Exclusively Designed Boxes 25c --- $2.00 No charge for packing and mailing. Rickerd-Stowits Drug Co. 9th & Mass. "The Rexall Store" Phone 238 Let us show you how well we can clean it and how quickly we can get it back if necessary. We clean silks and flannels without shrinkage. ? In a Hurry for that DRY CLEANING? LAWRENCE STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 383 We clean everything you wear but your shoes. The present time is ideal for the traditionally apathetic American student to take the lead in the matter of fair thought on all subjects. With the great universities of Europe under the thumb of dictatorship, they have by Dr Hutchins' definition ceased to educate and instruct them, and a delicate default opportunity to prove their belief in the ideal which they call "Americanism." ROCK CHALKLETS Conducted by R.J.B. The man who perfecls a typewriter that will balk and stop functioning when the writer tries to slip a "dead" paragraph through it, will be a G-dend-send Omar Klayman's 1855 Version A loaf of bread, (sliced) A jujug, wine (3.2) And thou— Beneath a tree set out by the CCC Poocher in PIDDLE Time. -Vic Boelner in ElDorado Times. It has come to the point in Kansas were Fear Miss Spring has to travel with a complete wardrobe including her fur coat. Join the Gang for a COKE Between Classes UNION FOUNTAIN In honor of Memorial Union For MOTHER Beautiful flowers to express your love delivered here or anywhere. Mother's Day, May 12 Ward's Flowers Phone 621 931 Mass. Into Summer... at HARZFELD'S A special augmented showing of new-season fashions, including types for street, sports, afternoon, dinner, evening and travel wear. Thursday, May 9 Friday, May 10 HARZFELD'S Hill-Top Shop --- at the Source of the News TABLE TALK—Charlie Chaplin, famous comedian of the screen, gave out an important interview regarding his next motion picture. The movie H. Becle, United Press Staff co., directed by Tommy Wheeler, played it over with the King of Comedy at the breakfast table. You will find a United Press correspondent where there is NEWS. Quick, accurate reports of NEWS events all over the world come to you in this newspaper through the globe encircling wire service of the UNITED PRESS. Weaver's Arden Special Boudoir Beauty Box ALL THIS WEEK $ 12.00 $18.00 value This beauty box is full of the necessities and beloved vanities made by Elizabeth Arden! There are cleansing cream, skin tonic, muscle oil, velva cream, pore cream and special astringent for the night and morning treatment of the skin . . . amoertee cream and little lotion, those protective preparations which are so useful when you travel . . . also powder, rose color, lip paste, and cleansing tissues . . . in a metal case with lock and key . . . a real $18.00 value at this special for the week.