PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7.1934 VOLUME XXXII Pajama-Clac Will Be F At Annu Free Movies V South Park for Those erly Ch. An escort of motor the university band wi cession of nightshift in their winding marne of the campus. Night morrow night in the nightual nightshift parade. All men students and the memorial Union o'clock, and at 7:15 thru 8:00 a.m. neue through a lane torches. The parade down Indiana street t and then east to Mane where they pose in a舞 dance to fake an audience. All Men Can T "It is thought by me ma ride is for Freshmen c is for participate." S chairman of the tradi said today. The "飞ing K-men and Ku-Ku" route out all skilers. At South Park a b save boxes and pace past week, will be read edw. Edwin (Hans) cheerleader, and his as in some roundy yells t is for athletes of the跑协 at Jack rie, C36. Merchants to Pre- Through the courte- rence Chamber of Contests will be treate- der and judge, in nigh- things to the Dickinson, Var theaters free of chary theater, because of the ing there, not will be raders. At the Dickie a cheerleader on all students in singing the "It is very essential" preserved throughout order that the program time for the 9 o'clock Lindenbaum. No raids will be permite parade, will be on in marches. Student Recita Piano and Voice Are 1 Arts Pro The weekly Fine held this afternoon in auditorium at 32 as was follows: Plano: Theme and Variatio George Tau Voice: Bint due bim mir The Sandman, (from and Grete) Keith D Plano: Sonata, Op. 31, No. 2 First Movement Willis Q. Voice: Phyllis Has Such Cl Graces or Bilderd He Plano: Concerto in G minor First Movement Groovy E (Orchestral work) by Howard C Address Bacteri Professor N. P. Sh Downes were the guys Bacteriology Club uh ball yesterday. Both them spoke about their oratory in Indiana. spoke about the socia oratory while Professe a talk about its instud Educational Ga Phi Delta Kappa, fraternity, elected off at a special meeting Those elected are: pre- stive; vice president; retary-treasurer; Garl Brown; advisor of the advisor of the club. dressed the meeting School Districts in K University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF WILLIAM RLIZZARD Associate Editors Wesley McCalla Associate Editors Wesley McCalla Loreen Miller MANAGING EDITOR ___ LENA WYATT Campus Editor ... Staff Max Mover Rutherford R. Hays Succed Editor Sunrise Editor Sunday Editor Mercerian Harms Michael Night Editor George Lerpine Business Manager ... P. Quentin Brown Aust, Business Manager ... Elton Carter Lena Wyatt Barker Mullen Lorell Mullen Lorell Mullen Rotherd Harter Mecilla C-Maila Carolyn Harper Carolyn Harper Friedland Harter George Lerrig Jake Markham F. J. Markham Telephone Business Office K.U. 66 News Room K.U. 35 Night Connection, Business Office 2701K2 Night connection, news room 2701K2 Pulished in the afternoon of Tuesday, Wed day, Thursday, and Friday and on Sunday morning except during school holidays by stu- dies. In 2016-17, the University of Kansas, from the press of the University of Kansas, from the press of the teach. Entered as second class matter, September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kan. Subscription price, per year. $3.00 cash in income, $2.25 on payments, single coins, $6.00 SUNDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1934 LET'S GO TO COLUMBIA In the very near future an event is scheduled to which for many years every student in the University has looked forward with interest and excitement. We refer to the annual grid battle for supremacy between Kansas and Missouri. In years gone by, when the game was played at Columbia, special trains have been chartered by the students to go to the Tiger's lair and help our football team bring back the scalp. Those trains were filled not only with students who wished to help their team win, but also with the K. U. band, the Jay James, and the Ku Ku's. Last year the Missouri team was defeated on our home field, but the odds will be greater when play Missouri at Columbia this week. How about the student who enters a course with anticipation of work, only to find the teacher fooling along in a hazy sort of reflected glory from his or her three thousand years of teaching? CO-EDUCATION AND ELDERLY SPINSTERS A principal objection to co-education in college is that women should not be given the same courses as men—"woman's place is in the home," and her training should be centered around this fact. That the home is her place is recognized by no one more readily than the young woman herself, but home has changed considerably from a decade ago. Mechanical devices have greatly shortened the working hours of the housewife, and being mentally and physically active, she must turn her interest into other channels. This is no longer a man's world. Nor does man want it to be, for he has recognized the place of the educated and intelligent woman in many phases of society hitherto closed to her. Colleges for women offer as wide and complete a range of courses as is to be found in most universities, but do they give a woman the valuable experience of daily and matter-of-fact contact with the men she will meet in the business and social world? In defense of institutions for women, Margaret Edwards Park, president of Bryn Mawr says, "The absence of sexual and social pressure is an intellectual advantage rather than a liability"; and further, "Segregation at the college age doesn't hurt a bit. It teaches an appreciation of each other, sadly lacking in women who have no chance to see their sex in control." That women do learn a greater appreciation of each other in a separate college is probably true. The value of such a knowledge is too often overlooked. But what of men with whom they are to spend the rest of their lives. Understanding and co-operation with them must often be acquired after graduation. There is need in the educational system for both types of institutions, for preparing women for active part in the complex modern society, the coeducational college has the advantage of providing conditions which will be experienced in practical life. Just when we were all through worrying about "Dizzy" and "Daffy", those St. Louis Cardinals had to send in "Dazzy". If a senior were asked offhand to point out what he deemed the "worst evil of student life on the campus," he would probably scratch his head, look puzzled, and end up by saying, "I can't think of anything right now, but surely 'here must be something.'" MOUNTAINOUS MOLEHILLS It is part of every man to have a natural tendency to be a crusader, and especially if he is somewhat above the average of intelligence. Periodically he becomes bowed down with the weight of the world's evils, and if he is energetic, he will more than likely find an issue somewhere within his scope that he finds reason to champion. The crusader urge may so far overcome him that he magnifies the significance of his cause to the point of making it and its champion a little ridiculous in the eyes of his fellow men. So it is with many of the issues that spring up throughout the year on the campus. Political campaigns are apt to fall into trivialities. Budding socialists and pacifists stir up the evils of what they see as an economically cruel world. Champions of the freshman cause wring shudders of horror from unthinking students by depicting the torments of the term preyed on. "May we suggest to the press photographers that hereafter when they take action pictures of the K. U. team they arrange their cameras so they won't show backgrounds of empty stands with not more than a dozen spectators goalard of the forty-yard line."—Chanute Tribune. Can it be possible that that is the same forty-yard line where the Kansas students are wanting to sit, and can't? Short Shots Sheet 1 of 4 Bee, women, and song seem at last to have become a part of the college curriculum—at least at the University of Wisconsin. Students there, so it is reported by the collegiate press, are the sole operators, performers in, and patrons of the club which hold forth in the student Memorial Union on the weekends. But the fun diminishes. The midnight closing hour still holds for the women --the pictures was something about "Hear Singin' Bing as a College Student at Princeton." Cautious men will make hundreds of dollars this year by not betting on the World's Series, says the Chanute Tribune. To the Daily Texan the news from Cody, Texas, that a mechanic out on a country call who crawled under the sailing car and was bitten by a snake, only the comment that the gentleman had no difficulty in locating the rattle. Princeton at last seems to be gaining favor with the Man on the Street. When the Paramount Theatre boys in New York want to be Bing Crocker's horrible "Sweet Loves Me Not," they started to do a little bally-hooting. Over Times Square they put up a wall of windows and painted sixty-foot views of Bing and Miriam坤基winning twenty-foot arms around other other and kissing each other on their yard long lips for the camera. In another banner, burned in brown and white, provided suitable atmosphere. Underneath Bing Crosby Disgusts Princeton Daily Princetonian Our Contemporaries Bing Crosby OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN The faculty of the School of Education will meet at 3:29 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 9, in room 119 Frasher hall. E. H. Lindsey, President. Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issue. Sunday, Oct. 7, 1934 GRADUATE SCHOOL; FACULTY MEETING; EDUCATION FACULTY MEETING: As for specific studies I would choose some line of study and I would study. If I found I was on the wrong track I would not hesitate to change. I'd take courses of appreciation in everything, and not do it to fill in a few hours credit either. I'd go "highbrow." I'd leave the university knowing the difference between a bibliograph and an etching if I had to use one, but a scherzo wasn't a species of bird. I'd not take college as seriously if I had to to do over. This may appear a GINGHAM FROLIC: There will be a meeting of the faculty of the Graduate School at 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 9, in the auditorium of the Administration building. The Gingham Folic for all University women, sponsored by the W.S.G.A. end the Y.W.C.A. is to be held at the Memorial Union building Wednesday October 10, from 4 to 5:30 p.m. MILDRED INGHAM, Chairman E. H. LINDLEY, President. PHI DELTA KAPPA: If I had those four years to live over, there are a few things I would do. I would realize that it was a privilege to spend four years in a university atmosphere instead of approaching it as four years of grinding work—the object of which to凑 up enough credits to receive a degree and call it done when I graduate. And in my hands, doubt very much if I should even work toward a degree. There will be an important meeting of Phil Delta Kappa on Tuesday evening, Oct. 9, at 7:30 in 115 Fraser Hall for the purpose of electing officers for the year. All members are urged to be present. FTED W. JEANS, President. The company will meet Monday, Oct. 8 at 8:29 p.m. in room 5 of the Memorial Union building. LOUIS FORMAN, Sforegnan. SCARBARD AND BLADE: Y. W.C.A. Assembly for all women will be held Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. in Fraser theater. EDNA TURRELL President A small article written by Raymond Nichols appeared in the Daily Kansas editorial column when I was a senior. "How do you know a woman is one me, I wish I had had that advice when I take a Freshman and had had the sense to take it. So I am writing this in the letter." KAYHAWK CLUB: Inside the fake marmalate lobby of the Parramont it was even worse. One bronze badge had suddenly been modest and put on a Princess pennant as a kind of join cloth. Scattered around the walls were various scenes from the show—more Bing, and more and more Marmalate scenes—such epic titles as "Oh, you Nausson Man!" "Mitian and the Dean of Princeset! Hold 'em Dean!" There will be an official meeting of the Kayashwey Club Monday evening October 8, at 7:30 oclock in the Men's Lounge of the Memorial Union building. For once in our life we wished to hel we had gone to Oglethorpe. I would appreciate the fact that I was surrounded by a faculty who, for the most part, would be only too glad to be my friend. I would realize that they had had experience with course, but still a group of people who had acquired a superior knowledge along some line. (Instead, during my Junior year I hold that very sophistication that people who taught school and taught anything else. Each Junior thinks he is the first to discover the fact that it as common as whooping cough—but not so harmless). Who made friends with students? I thought of as sinless ample-publishers. Campus Opinion ditor Daily Kansas: This is not going to be a moral serenity—yet I can't resist writing a "if I had onlys" concerning my college days. After several years away from school, I spent with respect at opportunities at which I mainly strugged my shoulders. I would attend every lecture and forum the university presented. I don't mean that I should go and take notes on everything as though I would miss one of the previous words. I do mean that I could have learned a great deal about my life from there. I wouldn't swallow everything whole, for from the few I did attend I can remember that I was in disagreement with many. Right here I might say that I wish I could look back and remember myself as a "cracked radical" as I called them. If I had shown enough enthusiasm over something to have baked it would at least be eaten by me. I was not sure of my fellow students in my little niche of mediocrity without conviction enough on any subject to even stir. The one activity I would let rest without my assistance would be student politics—it is so much more simply and efficiently taught elsewhere. In my opinion it is the most useless, unproductive employment of time on anything on the campus. contradiction to what I have already said but let me explain. I'd learn to when you I studied and play when I played. I'd learn to work hard and then I'd play hard and have no hang-over from one to the other. I wish I had held some opinions and been called a radical; had studied and been called a priig; had made friends with the faculty and been called an apple pollinator; had tried to appreciate good things and been called a high brow. I wish I were now an educated person instead of just another college graduate. Want Ads Twenty-five words or less; 15 inversion, 25; 3 inversions, 25; privilege, 25; private, 25. WANT ADS ARE ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. WANTED: A 1933-34 Jayhawker cover Call Paul Wilbert, KU. 32. WANTED: Your typewriter to clean and repair; LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 75 Massachusetts. -18 TOPEKA DAILY CAPITAL delivered to you each morning. Know what is happening in Kansas. Keep up with the news. 56a a month. Phone Myron Messeheimer after 4 p.m. Phone 1410R. -24 WANTED. Student girl to work for board and room. Experience preferred. Small family. Call 2815. -20 LOST. Pair of silver rimmed glasses is black case with none Grey Optical Co. Reward for return. Charles Double-day phone 2025. -18 SWITCHES, BRAIDS and CURLS made to order of your own hair, or hair furnished. Ressonable price. Good condition. Worn by a pregnant woman. Tennessee. 21833. -25 VERY COMFORTABLE ROOM, continu- tion hot water, connecting bath, best location. Apply Apt. 1, 1532 Massa- nuchsets. Phone 257. -21 JOURNAL-POST delivered to you each evening and Sunday 15c week. Sports, news, comics, up to date pictures. Phone your order to 608. NOTICE CO-EDS: End soft curls $1.00 computer guaranteed oil permissions $1.50 to $3.50, any style. Shampoo and conditioner $2.00 each. Massachusetts. Call 233.3. -44 MOVED to 1014 Massachusetts street, your locksmith and key shop. keys made for any lock. door closers over-awned. Knives, shears, and lawn mowers correctly sharpened at Rutgers Repair Shop. Phone 310. -31 SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING Special class at 3:15 p.m. for KU students, at Special tuition rates Class starts Oct. 8. Lawrence BUSINESS COLLEGE Phone 894 HOWARD CLEANERS 8 East 9th St. Suits 50c Dresses 50c Trousers 25c Suits pressed while you wait 35c Phone 185 House Built of Tile as Rebuff To Cynical Advice of Father Stands as National Monument By Wesley McCalla c35 But many years ago when Mexico was a Spanish colony, the Count of the Valley of Orizaba rebuked his spendthair heir in more poetic language. On occasions when his patience was tried to break out, the young proverb: "My son, you will never build a house of tides." And though the young man probably gave no sign of repentance or will to reform at the time, the off-repeated prophecy found a corner in his heart and stayed there to mix with the comfort of his easy life. By Wesley McCalla, c'25 Parental predictions as to the future of a young waster of today may take a prosine and even rude form, such as: "That extravagant birt will never amount to a tinker's so-and-so." So, when the old Count had been dead many years, and the son was left with the fortune, the title, the gout, and that slight shame in his heart, he decided to take his father's predictions, and put them on display of sandstone, with tall pillars, arches and sculptured ornaments and a beautiful court and garden, outside he covered it with the blue and white tile that it is the fame of Pibbla. Fifty-thousand years later, walls completely and ran in narrow bands about the rooms inside. The House of Tiles still stands today, one of the most curious and beautiful architectural monuments in the ancient capital. Its history is part of that of Mexico extending through the periods of the colony, the empire and the republic. Noble families who have lived there have left their armorial insignia DR. FLORENCE BARROWS Osteopathic Physician Treatment of colon and rectal diseases 909 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 2337 Drop in Sunday Eve Delicious Sandwich and Malted Milk UNION FOUNTAIN Sub-President, Memorial Union REFRESH YOURSELF at the on its walls. The clan of Surrez de Percio described under their blazon the motto, "If only he guards his honor, no power can touch or seize him; if only he protects and defends Don Andres Diego Surrez during the political disputes of 1528. He was stabbed on the main streetway of his house in the garden, who was executed in the garden." There the traveler, in the same atmosphere that surrounded nobility of another age, may dine on Mexican or American dishes (or hybrids as "Frioles a la Boston"), and observe Euro-Israeli cuisine, probably will be inclined to smile at the formal greeting of the tall gentleman who approach each other with serious faces, embrace and administer the customary two pats to each other's shoulders, even though the procedure was infact as constituted as the American handshake. Today the delicate beauty of the House of Tiles is somewhat out of place amid the squalling traffic of the city. But it is no dead architectural relic: Like most of the fine colonial buildings of Mexico it has remained in use. At present it houses one of the city's best residential buildings, and a few of the better class shops. 1009 Mass. As ceramics, the titles adressing the house are said to be worth more than a quarter of a million dollars today. But fortunately, they are not likely to be sold, for the national government, or for the commercial use of the building, instead that it shall be preserved as it is without disfiguring change. OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY Cigarettes - Cigars Regular Meals - Short Orders Mixers THE BLACK CAT 1008 Mass. JUST NORTH OF GRANADA HANNA for RADIO PHONE 303 904 Mass. St. Hot Chocolate and Wafers — 5c !! Jayhawk SPECIAL !! 25c PLATE LUNCH Choice of Meats 3 Vegetables Bread and Butter 2 Cups of Coffee or Milk Chili — 5c & 10c Hot Dogs — 5c FLOYD'S CAFE 832 Massachusetts St. 2 Doors South of the Patee "We Fix It" Blacksmithing Blacksmithing Acetylene Welding Electric Welding Boiler Work Repair Work Electric Refrigerator Repairing Phone 106 LAWRENCE IRON WORKS 611 New Hampshire