PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY. APRIL 20. 1034 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAMBERTON, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief ... MARGARET GREGG Associate Editors Managing Editor MERLE HERYFORD Campus Editor Leona Watt Senior Editor William Decker Senior Editor Careny Harper Senior Editor Almani Harper Ross Holmes Junior Editor Married: Greene Dorothy, Smith Arnold, Smith Armand, Smith Brown Group Poul Woodmanse Virgil Parker Woodmanse Chelles Coles Miles Coleman Jimmy Patterson Merle Heyford Vigil Parker Woodmanse Advertising Manager Clarence E. Mundie Circulation Manager Willur Leatherman Teleparks Business Office KID-65 North Connection Business Office 7091K Night Connection 7091K Published in the afternoon of Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday and on Sunday, Monday, and Saturday by posts in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kauai, from the Press of the University of Kauai. E authorized as the second class matter. September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas Subscription price, per year. $3.00 cash in advance, $2.25 on payments. Single copies, $1.50. FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1934 A SCAPEGOAT? Uncle Jimmy Green has had to take it again, right in the face this time. The old feud between the laws and the engineers—and by the way, does anyone remember just why it started?—has sprung up again in the form of numerous splotches of whitewash on the front of the law building, the sidewalk, and Uncle Jimmy Green. OLYMPICS IN BERLIN? Uncle Jimmy Green may be remembered as one who always stood between the law students and their indiscretions, taking the brunt of their misdemeanors and foolish escapades. It was evident this morning that he is still doing it. Chancellor Adolf Hitler already has started plans for the 1936 Olympics which are to be held in Berlin. He has proclaimed that the nation will select the best competitors from all parts of Germany and train them for the coming competitions. Governing bodies of athletic organizations in America and other countries have voiced a protest, charging discrimination against Jewish athletes in Germany. Hitler's domination over Germany has become complete, even in the selection of the country's best athletes. And the protest against this domination is growing louder every day. The American Jewish Congress, which met early in March, discussed the persecution of the Jewish race under Hitlerism, its threats to civil liberties and democracy, to science, to the arts, to the liberal professions, to the church, and to the status of women. This protest arose from the race which has been oppressed by the Hitler regime. No government, however, should have the official and avowed policy of denying to a whole class of its people their equal rights as citizens because of their descent. ALTERED RUSHING RULES The Olympic games have always been open to the outstanding athletes of the world. Requests have been presented by a group of athletic directors that the next Olympic games be transferred to another country. Many believe that to hold the competitions in such a country, where racial prejudice does not allow true representation, would tend to do away with the true purpose of the Olympics: to choose the world's amateur athletes. In setting the day for fall rush week one day earlier, the Women's Panhellenic Council has done much to lighten the burden of first week activities for the freshman students. Since the institution of freshman convocation in the few past years there has been a serious conflict between the pledging service for nearly two hundred freshman women, and the required attendance at the freshman convocation. With this new ruling in effect, the women will be able to attend both the pledging service and the first meeting of the beginning students, and they will get the full benefit of attending the entire session. Both of these activities, although greatly different in their functions, are important phases of college life, and the doing away with the conflict between the two will aid materially in helping the students to become acclimated during the first days of college life. BLEEDING HEARTS The woes of the world! How the cruelties of the world are uncovered in every humanities course on the Hill in all of their sordid, uncutth bold facedness! Students see, as if on a panorama of the world as a whole, all of the blots on the pages of history. There are the deceptions and follies of our elders; their mis management of everything from municipal elections and village pay checks to federal Tea Pots and graft; there are our slums, our unfortunate peoples, our racial minorities; there is the gluttenous greed of a capitalistic dinosaur; there is the existing human suffering and semi-machine-slavery. For all of these, the student's heart bleeds while he is in school; for these just cause he is Granted that the student's lament may be in good feeling, and granted that the causes, too, may be just; then wherein comes the callousness of post-college days? Are these causes no longer of value? Or are they dimmed in the complexities of winning the weekly pay check? The story has been the same for many a year: the student's heart bleeds for the downtrodden principles of the world. But that is only while he is yet a student. A CENTURY OF PROGRESS HERE Today's student is tomorrow's scientist! The mechanisms to be on display at the twenty-first Engineer's Exposition this weekend will in all possibility prove to be of inestimable importance in the years to come. "This exposition has a two-fold purpose, first of acquainting the general public with the character of the engineering laboratories, and the type of work done in these laboratories; second, it serves as a basis of conserving the loyalty and enthusiasm of engineering students in their University, as well as a direct aid in engineering education," said Dean George C. Shaad. The general plan, a super-Century of Progress, will give impetus to keen competition for the award to the best departmental exposition. The make-up of all displays has been done with but little faculty supervision. The values gained through experience in this work will more than pay for the regular routine work in getting the exhibit in shape. Freshman Commission will meet at Henley house on Monday afternoon at 4:30. Dean Hendus will speak informally to the group, after which supper will be served. All freshmen women are invited but are asked to make reservations for the supper by Saturday evening. MARY LOUISE ANDRESON. FRESHMAN COMMISSION: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXXI Friday, April 20, 1934 No. 133 There will be an official meeting of the Kayhawk club in the basement of the Memorial Union building Monday evening, April 23, at 7:30 o'clock. All non-fraternity men are urged to attend. JAY WANAMAKER, President. LIFE SAYING SCHOOL Men please sign with Mr. Allphin, 105 Robinson gymnastics, for life saving school starting Monday, April 23. HERBERT G. ALLPHIN. Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days. Sunday issues The Mathematics club will meet Monday April 23 in room 211 Administration building. Professor M. E. Rice will speak on "Notation". Visitors are welcome. ELIZABETH HINSHAW, Vice President. Regular meeting of Steel Key will be held at 9 o'clock on Tuesday, April 24 in room 130 Marvin hall. Important business meeting. KAYHAWK CLUB: This exposition, basing the facts on others of the past, will merit the attendance of every one interested in engineering progress. Current Screen Our Contemporaries POTS OR NOT? STEEL KEY: --and Of course the best part of the picture is Hal Leroy's dancing, and the only criticism we can make is that there is too little of it. "Harold Teen" (Patee) is a good-natured comedy of adolescence which, in spite of a foolish plot—if one could call it a plot—brings forth enough laughs to make the picture entertaining and likeable. LIFE SAVING SCHOOL: A very noticeable and commendable feature of the picture is the excellent characterizations. One could find little fault with Hal Leroy as the well-known comic-strip Harold Tearen, Rochelle Hudson as Lillums, Guy Kibbee as Pa Lovewell, and Hobart Cavanaugh as Pops. Not only do they act as the cartoon people, but there is a striking resemblance to them also. The story concerns Harold, who has been out of high school one year and is now a newspaper reporter. Complications arise when rich Mr. Snatcher comes to town and falls in love with Lillums. Mr. Snatcher's daughter proceeds to embrace herself with the moony-faced Harold. But Lillum's affection is bestowed again on Harold when she sees him save the show by his dance. MATHEMATICS CLUB: --and The interfaerntain council has ignored the Daily's comment that "We have an interfaerntain council which has little cause for existence if it can not settle squabbles" like the freshman cap controversy. Northwestern. --and Welcome Again TO THE KANSAS RELAYS A Lasting Souvenir with a Dual Purpose. . . . . UTILITY and DEEP APRECIATION It is a common defense when being adversely criticized to sit back and re-frain from making statements. This is a fine piece of strategy, for which the council must be complimented—but it's not good enough. If memories of the days, when the interfaithry council was more than a name, are true, that organization was formed with a greater objective in mind than to provide jobs in which the officers could sit back and "have nothing to say." No.133 The council has set the date for the official cap-burning. It will be on Has Such Interest Been Displayed on This Outstanding Athletic Event. . . . METAL RADIATOR JAYHAWKS, ASHTRAYS, AND CAR AND SUITCASE STICKERS. 1237 OREAD FORD DICKIE, President Crimson and Blue Felt Banners, Pennants and Pillows With the Official K.U. Seal; the Chenile or Triple Felt Jayhawk—or Both—are Buys that Never Will be Regretted. FELT GOODS and SOUVENIRS Beautiful . . . All Wool Never Before: Hos Our Selection of KANSAS UNIVERSITY Never Before: (We Close Saturday Afternoon for the Relays) Been as Complete as it is at Present. 1401 OHIO TWO BOOK STORES Also: April 18. This is one of the suggestions that the Daily made. We wanted action from the ruling groups of the North Campus, and it would not as for to set a far-away war. Fine. Our next suggestion, that if they did set a duto; instead of giving up the whole freshman cap ide, it should proceed to enforce its rulings. It has only gone half way with its job. It is probably not very important that one more extra-curricular group fall down on the functions which it set up for itself. But there is an angle to this freshman situation which is important. The class is unsettled within itself. Those who wear cap feels that they are being imposed upon by their fraternity brothers, while others go free, and the ones who refuse to wear caps are strongly tempted to "cap-lifting" on the others. It is hardly the spirit that will make for a unified class in the future. It is within the power of the interfraternity council to do something to remedy this deplorable unrest in the freshman class. It will fully satisfy the Daily Northwestern if it follows either the liberal plan, and for alls about freshman caps, or if it holds to its previous statements of the unsightly "pots." DRUGS COSMETICS STATIONERY Go to RANKIN'S Drug Store Across from Courthouse Phone 678 DICKINSON TONIGHT and TOMORROW If you want good interest-hold- entertainment you'll find it here! Wynne Gibson, Onslow Stevens "THE CROSBY CASE" OWL SHOW SAT. NITE—11:15 p.m. Good Shorts 15c WHARF ANGEL Victor McLaglen, Dorothy Dell VARSITY and KING OF THEATRES TONIGHT TOMORROW Every One Is Getting a Kick Out of This Fast Moving Shirkim Among Bullets and Skirts IDA LUPINO TOBY WING THE K. U. SPECIAL PREMIERE SATURDAY NITE 11 P.M. and SUNDAY for 4 days MELODY WAS IN THEIR HEARTS MELODY INSPRING Songs as fresh a. a Spring Morning EndingWithAkka "The Open Road" The "Open Road" Introducing LANNY ROSS Star of Radio's Maxwell House Showboat - with CHARLIE RUGGLES MARY BOLAND ANN SOTHERN Want Ads Twenty-five words or 13 lines: 6 insertions, 7 longer and preamble. WANT ADS AND ACCOMPANIED BY CAS H. S. Wait, the prompt says "Maintain the original document structure." The text is all in one block. The instructions say "Maintain the original document structure." The text is all in one block. Final check of the text: Twenty-five words or 13 lines: 6 insertions, 7 longer and preamble. WANT ADS AND ACCOMPANIED BY CAS H. S. LOST; White gold ring with Delta Chi crest. In Union building Thursday evening. Call W. W. Pennington, 988, -124 for FLOWERS CALL 72 BUMSEY Flower Shop ALLISON 927 Mass. OWL SHOW Preview 11:15 SATURDAY CLARKE GABLE MYRNA LOY "MEN IN WHITE" Sundoy Shows: 3-7-9 PATEE NOW! ENDS SATURDAY Let's Go Collegiate with the Drug Store Gang. Harold, Lillums. Pop and all the others in a grand jamboree of mirth and melody— "Harold Teen" A Thrill - A Laugh - A Surprise Every Banana Split Second with HAL LEROY ROCHELLE HUDSON GUY KIBEE (World's Greatest Top Dancer) Really Go to Town in His New Dance Sensation "COLLEGIATE WEDDING!" HEAR "Sweet and Simple" and other New Song Smashes - PLUS Todd and Kelly Laff Panic "BACKS TO NATURE" Cartoon - News Events Starts SUNDAY Here WEDNESDAY FRANK BUCK'S "Wild Cargo"