PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1894 VOLUME XXXII Pajama-Clad Will Be Fe At Annua Free Movies Wit South Park M for Those P ery Clac An exert of motorcye the University band will cession of nightshift-chair in their winding march forial Union building to S Merritt College. nigt hall midget nip廊, All men students are to the memorial Union bu o'clock, and at 7:15 the clerk goes through a lane of torches. The parade swirls down Indiana street to and then cast to Massarah in an unmarked faire in a snake dance to $3. All Men Can Talk "It is thought by man, rade is for Freshmen on like it understood that all chairman of the traditie sided today. The "flying s k-men and Ku-Ku w route out all slackers. At South Park a bung with boxes, saving boxes and packi past week, will be ready fi ews. Edwin (Hans) Pci cheerleader, and his assis in some rousing yells to I of athletes, Coach A and Jack Rice, c.36. Merchants to Prove Through the courtesy Chamber of Comm rence will be treated either for students in nighthats or to the Dickinson, Varis theater's free of charge, theater, because of the st ing there, will not be riders. At the Dickins be a chair in the theater organist will a students in singing the "It is very essential preserved throughout 9 order that the program r time for the 9 oclock Lindenbaum. No raiding stores will be permitted who are parade, will be on hand marchers. Student Recital Piano and Voice Are For Arts Progra The weekly Fine Art held this afternoon in 3D auditorium at 3:30p was as follows: Piano Theme and Variation Gorge Troy Bist due bei mir * The Sandman, (from and greet) * Keith Dave Piano: Sonata, Op. 31, No. 2 First Movement Willis Quan Voice: Phyllis Has Such Cha Graces arr. by Mildred Hole Fiano: Concerto in G minor First Movement Carolyn B (Orchestral parts on by Howard C.5 Address Bacterial Professors N. P. Sher Professors were the great Baker Bath school in hall yesterday. Both a talk about their experi- mer on a trip to the neerology in Indiana. Speak about the soci- ernality while Professor while Industrial side. Educational Gro Phi Delta Kappa, na fraternity, elected offe at a special meeting T Those elected are: proxim; vice president; I retary-treasurer, Garland J. W. Twente, professor dressed the meeting to schools District in Ka University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEF ... WILLIAM BLIZZARD Associate Editor Wesley McCalla Loreen Miller ACTING EDITORS THIS ISSUE: WALLEY McCAYLA MANAGING_EDITOR ... LENA_WYATT Sta信 Business Manager...P. Quentin Brown Aest. Business Manager...Ellen Carter Compass Editor Max Mayo Editor Ruthie Bettner Stewart Ellen Allan Smith Editor Alain Morrison Sunday Editor Gordon Harper Monday Editor Maireen Morris Night Editor George Larsson Early Edition Leon Wattz William Miller William Miller Wesley McCalla Wesley Millard William Hillier P. Quinn Brown Telegram Business Office ... KJ.16 News Room ... KJ.25 Night Connection, Business Office ... 2701K2 Night connection, news room ... 2701K3 210783 Published in the afternoon of Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday during school holidays by the Department in the department building by the Department of Journalism and the Department of Journalism. The price $2.00 for advances, $2.50 on payments, single copies, enclosed as second class matter. September 19, at the post office at Lawrence, KS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1934 DID YOU VOTE? Yesterday, the question of whether hazing should be continued on our campus was put to a vote. The results were 412 for hazing, and 347 against hazing. When the results are added up for both sides the total is 759 students who voted on the measure. As a conservative estimate there are some two thousand men enrolled in the University. A number such as this makes 759 voters look like a pretty small group. Do you wonder where the others were? Out of 2,000 men students,759 voted! The University Daily Kansen devoted its editorial page almost entirely to the opinions of both sides on the question of hazing. Opinion ran riot, humorous comments were made on both sides, interesting comments were made on both sides, intelligent comments were made on both sides, and last but not least, absolutely inane comments were made on both sides. There was a great deal of controversy and to all appearances the question promised a good election which would be supported by at least a large majority of the men students if not by all of them. "Europe Aflame—What Next?" asks Mary Hillyer. Answer: ashes. WILDCATS ARE HOSTS The Wildcats are pruning their whiskers in anticipation of the arrival of the Jayhawkers on the Aggie Campus. Festivities will begin with the arrival of the Kansas pep organizations in Manhattan this evening. After the game, one school will celebrate victory over the other, but even when the Jayhawk feathers are ruffled on the playing field, when fur rises on the backs of the Wildcats, the friendly spirit which has nearly always prevailed between the neighboring institutions will remain unchanged. Students taking advantage of Aggie hospitality this weekend may do much toward the preservation of this spirit. It is an opportunity to show Kansas State the value which the University sets on her friendship. BARBAROUS DANCES Yesterday a freshman questioned the dignity and standards of our University dances. How do upperclassmen feel about it? They have been going to varsities for two or three years now. Doesn't the conquest begin to pall on you a bit? Every one knows, of course, that that's what the vapors are —conquests. No savage tribe ever used the dance to show off its women, more obviously or effectively than does the modern college. We have an institution supposedly devoted to the farthest advance of human civilization, a museum, an example of the most primitive of customs. As a form of aesthetic enjoyment available to everyone and universally enjoyed, the dance cannot be surpassed. But the college varsity, with its cutting system and stag line, a popularity contest, a chance for the most successful woman to display her prowess before her less fortunate sisters. It displays all the directness, the cruelty that civilized people have, for centuries past, been overcoming. How much longer will the universities continue to sponsor and encourage this modern form of barbarism? Double Girls Quartet Organized—headline in high school weekly. Just a nice way of calling girls two-faced, we presume. A vast housing project has recently been completed in the heart of Manhattan's slum area through the aid of an $8,000,000 R.F.C. loan. Four blocks of the worst city slums have been cleared away at a total cost to the city and the federal government of $9,000,000, and two twelve-story apartment building substituted which are to be known as Knickerbocker Village. A STEP BACK FOR THE SCHOOL In place of the sordid tenements which housed 650 families on the area known as "Lung Block" because of its high tuberculosis mortality rate, the apartments in the new buildings have electrical refrigeration, tiled bathrooms, outside windows, and self-operating elevators. The one flaw in the scheme is the rent which ranges from $22.50 for 2½ rooms, to $87.50 for a 5½-room penthouse, averaging approximately $12.50 per room, as compared with $5, the average rental in the surrounding area. The buildings have automatically become white collar residences. In speaking of government control, are our educators to be pledged to unquestioning support of a system which, like all human systems, is surely failable in many respects? We have had jibes at European schools for subservience to dictatorship. We have declared that freedom to inquire and question is inherent in the very concept of learning. Are we going to go back on our principle? It seems that we have not fully recovered from the old extravagant days and established ourselves on the solid foundation of practicability. The slum dwellers are no better off than they were before. The class of people who will occupy the Knickerbocker will most likely be better housed than they have previously been at the same price, but they are not those in the most desperate straits—those who needed the assistance most badly. MODERNIZING THE SLUMS THE "ALTAR OF HONOR" AGAIN At least one state in this demo- As an interesting little sidelight on the progress of civilization in the last century or so, we have the recent return in France to the duel as a means of settling disputes. The issue seems to be purely a matter of terminology—whether "rioter" or "manifestant" is the proper designation for one party in last winter's bloody combat, whether "assasin" or "state-man" fits the other. A duel, of course, was just the thing to bring the whole matter to a reasonable and satisfactory conclusion. Guy La Chambre, Minister of the Mercantile Marine, thought that the honor of French politics and the Daladier cabinet depended on his acceptance of the challenge of a "roiter" (as M. La Chambre's victory doomed him to be termed). No mean fencer, the French statesman made short work of vindicating his country's honor. At least, as the duelist's mind sees it, "honor" was unheld. The rest of the world wonders. Is a nation's honor a matter of who happens to be the best swordsman? Is the honor of France so insecure, so fleeting, that blood must be shed in noisy tribute, lest it fail to win the recognition of the world? eratic nation seems to have taken this backward step, "Time," in a recent issue, heads its education column with a paragraph which should bring a protest from every thinking reader. Every teacher, from kindergarten to university, from college president to assistant, must "solemnly swear" to "support the Constitution of the United States of America and the Constitution of the State of New York." But everything depends upon the interpretation of the term "support." It's a fairly inclusive matter, this promising to support the constitution. Any sort of questioning of the existing order of things might be considered as breaking the oath. Now our schools are not exactly strongholds of free thought at the present time. Yet in some small measure the student is encouraged to bring to trial everything he is taught. That slight tendency should be helped along in every way, not crushed out by the hand of the government in the schools. We'll admit that it's rather in the nature of locking the stable door after the horse is stolen. But they ought to be told what they missed—all the students who did not hear the recital given Monday evening by the new professor of piano, Jan Chiapusso. MUSIC APPRECIATION DISCOURAGED Campus Opinion Ad Auditorium was packed, even to folding chairs in the aisles—a turnout which that room does not very often see. Despite the discomfort, the audience displayed an enthusiasm entirely merited by a program so excellently chosen and presented. The fact that such an attraction was scheduled for the small auditorium in the Ad building is a comment of one aspect of education in the University. The failure of the general student body to take advantage of its cultural opportunities has been subject matter for editorials long before this. But now this negligent attitude seems to be finding general acceptance — encouragement, even, if the arrangements for Monday night's recital show how much anyone is concerned with helping the student to grow into greater appreciation of what college can offer him. Editor Daily Kansan: Whether Hitler is "a silly barbarism," an "occitant" or what not I do not know. I wish I did. But what I wish most is that I could believe it because "it says so in a book"; for after all the nature of evidence not the nature of Hitler, is my greatest concern. An intelligent young man asks for proof of a specific statement and the eminent Mr. Lewis Browne GREETING CARDS Birthday---- Cheer---- Sympathy---- Friendship---- Engagement---- Thank You---for ALL OCCASIONS "LEARN TO DANCE" Special 5c 6 for 25c Gentleman instructors for ladies. Lady instructors for gentlemen. Private Lessons Day and Night Marion Rice Dance Studio 9341/2 Mass. N.Y. Cleaner's Bidg. hands him the names of three books. "It must be so," he says in effect, "because it is in those books. Little did I think that superstition in this age and place!" Let me illustrate: At present I happen to be much inconvenienced because I don't know what manner of man Daniel Dofehl (1651-1733) was anyway. I want to know: I need to know it is the special answer from the books, oh, he is the answer from the books. No less an authority than the great Dean Swift supplies characteristically unequivocal testimony, "Defoe was so dogmatical a rogue that there is no enduring him." And now the chorus of critics improvising on the same theme. "In the art of grave and impertubularly lying he has no rival." (Edgar) "A venal and lying journalist (Telegraph) his lying and double-dealing" (Williams); and again "A lurian, a traitor, a shifty politician." (Tidl.) It seems to be going off smoothly quite a corseus of opprobrium. . . . Until I pick up a fifth book, just one book too many for a facet judgment. "Defoe" says John Maschilew, "being a very unpopular man," and is unable to be cheated by those with neither honour nor charisma. In another connection he further comments Defoe's honesty and remarks that "he was known by both King and Queen as an upright defender of their cause", but "the veronom of many men..." and "the upright defender of a man of principle." who dared to udge a popular here." I ask you: Would you trust Daniel Defoe with your last dollar? Esther Wilson. Want Ads Twenty-five words or less; 12 invoice, 52 line, 3 charge; and proforma. WANT ADS, WANT ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. FOOTBALL FANS get their hair cut—to a good football game. Special—Friday-Saturday, hair cut 28c. K. U. Barber Shop 14, 149. Tennis 2:2. LOST: Saturday, watch fob with Sigma Xi key. Name Cameroon Day on key Frider please call C. J. Dodds 315 or 306. LOST—Small blue ring with white flowers. Not valuable except as keepsake. Phone Betty Gibson 25. Reward. -28 JOURNAL-POST delivered to you FOR THAT HALLOWE'EN PARTY or MASQUERADE BALL Phone 288 Adolph F. Ochse PARTY SHOP 944 Mass. The Place to Meet and Eat THE BLACK CAT "Student Owned and Operated" 1008 Mass. Next to Carter's Service Station CAFE Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication and 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday lectures. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXAH Friday, Oct. 14, 2023 (No. 2) PHI CHI DELTA; PHI DELTA KAPPA: There will be a Phi Chi Delta cabinet meeting at 5:15 Tuesday, Oct. 23 at Westminster hall. FLOREAN DILL SCABBARD AND BLADE: or RHADAMANTHI: DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN: There will be an important meeting of Phil Della Kappa Tuesday evening, Oct. 23 at 7:30 in 115. Fraser hall for the election of officers and a discussion by Professor Russell on "Restricting School District in Kansas." All members are urged to be present. FRED W. JEANS, President. There will be a meeting of Rhambonnii on Sunday, Oct. 23, in the Green room of Frasert hall, at 4 o'clock. NOMAN JACCUSHAGEN, President. MOVED to 1014 Massachusetts street, your locksmith and key shop, Keys made for any lock. Door closers over-fraught. Knives, shears, and lawn mowers NOTICE CO-EDS: Soft end cures $1.9 complete; guaranteed oil permanent $1.20 to $5.50, any style. Shampoo an oil-free conditioner. Shop 72, Hewlett-Packard. Call 23533. A More Magnetic WITH Your Favorite Magazine Daily Newspaper BUICK 72 MASTER SEDAN, model 47 for sale. In good condition, 5 good tires. Mrs. Frank Strong, University Drive. Osteopathic Physician Spend the Evening at Home Scabbard and Blade will hold a regular meeting Monday, Oct. 21, at 8:30 p.m. in room 5 of the Memorial Union building. Election of a delegate to the national convention, nomination of new members, and plan for activity will be the chief business. The meeting will be informal. DR. FLORENCE BARROWS A More Magnetic Fredric March each evening and Sunday 15c week. Sports, news, comics, up to date pictures. Phone your order to 608. WILL MAHONEY in Treatment of colon and rectal diseases $909\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. Phone 2337 Der Deutsche Verein versammt sich am Montage, den 22. Oktober, im vier über im zimmer 313. HAZEL FILM, Chairman, No.27 WILL MAHONEY in "SHE'S MY LILY" Universal Colortone Fox News SPECIAL Ken at the organ Mats and until 7 After 7 10c - 25c 10c - 35c LOUIS FORMAN, First Sergeant. Tonight—Saturday than you have ever been privileged to see "Handy for Students" A More Alluring Constance Bennett Strong men shook and women quivered! Husbands drew swords, . . . and bolted door, when Callell prowled! while women trembled with fear, that he'd pass them by! in "The Affairs of Cellini" SUNDAY—CLEOPATRA Our stock of mazages and newspapers is always up-to-date. Phone 678 Rankin's Drug Store 1101 Mass. WANTED: A 1853-34 Jayhawker cover, Call Paul Wilbert, K.U. 32. correctly sharpened at Rutters Repair Shop. Phone 310. -31 Shows 3-7-9 New Low Prices 25c til 7 than 35c NOW! Ends SATURDAY AGAIN! WE THANK YOU, K. U. For your splendid response to one of America's finest stage shows. CARLTON COON ON THE SCREEN Constance Bennett Herbert Marshall In Michael Arion's and his orchestra and his Atlantic City Revue 20 people on the stage. "Outcast Lady" BIG OWL SHOW 11:15 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY - 3 DAYS MIDWEST PREMIERE HISTORY'S GUILTHEST SECRET EXPOSED! BOLT OVER Del Rito And 28 Other Featured Players in Warner Bros. Sumitous Special MADAME Du BARRY ON THE STAGE OWL SHOW ONLY CARELTON COON and his Atlantic City Revue ENDS TONITE "42nd STREET" ALL SEATS 15c PATEE OHN WAYNE IN "STAR PACKER" SATURDAY 10c TO ALL BIG DOUBLE SHOW 2 FEATURES FRANK BUCK'S "Bring 'Em Back Alive" and "Burn 'em Up Alive" Sunday—Monday IRENE DUNNE RALPH BELLYAM "THIS MAN IS MINE"