PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1934 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEIF ___ CHILES COLEMAN Sarah Wilson William Blizzard MANAGING EDITOR MARGARET GREGG Campus Editor Mary Horsley Special Editor Marcie Herrford Special Editor Dan Dino Exchange Editor Margaret Mollot Sunday Editor Gretchen Orning Sunday Editor Margaret Grego Hip Hop Producer Alfred Kersmann Jimmy Fatterson Grothen Orupel Larry Sterling Paul Woodmanlee Virgil Parker Susan Smith Advertising Manager Clavenee E. Minelli Circulation Manager Marion Joetta Telecoms Business Office ... K1, 60 Hospital Office ... K1, 72 Night Connection Business Office ... 5701K Network Services... 3801K Published in the afternoon of Tuesday, Wednesday mornings except during school holidays by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the University of Kansas. Entered as second class master, September 19, 150; at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1934 Subscription price per year, $3.00 cash if advance, $2.25 on payments. Single copies, 16 WISDOM IN ACTION As the machinery to provide 350 University students with work from CWA appropriations is set in motion, the benefits of such an arrangement become increasingly evident. Not only are students already enrolled enabled to continue their work, but those who have been forced in past years to leave school because of financial difficulties are encouraged to return. Nor do the students alone benefit from the plan. The work they will do to earn the money provided to aid them will, in many cases, bring relief to department staffs cramped by retrenchment and hindered in their research activities by lack of clerical and other assistance. The renewal of these activities and the expanding of programs made possible by CWA funds will have a telling and extremely beneficial effect upon the efficiency and service of the University. With similar conditions and reactions throughout the country, it is obvious that the CWA educational activities will be well worth their cost. To an administration far-seeing enough to recognize this, and to the group of educators and government officials, including the University's chancellor, Dr. Lindley, men whose wisdom in advocating and fighting for the plan was largely responsible for its adoption, goes the credit for having done a real service to education. RUSHED ENROLLMENT The high tension caused by the Soph Hop and enrollment will soon be over and students may settle down to leading normal lives if they have been able to obtain satisfactory courses in the confusion of enrollment. With this good fortune they may work contentedly throughout the semester. If they were hurried too much or influenced by a disinterested adviser to choose a subject of no benefit to them, then they will be poor students and perhaps will just drift through the year. If there could be a more satisfactory means of enrolling, similar to the pre-enrollment system used by the senior class this year, students would have more time to consider what classes would be of more benefit to them and they would choose the more profitable ones. In the present pandemonium where they stand in line for hours waiting to be enrolled and at the last minute find that they have not the proper prerequisites for the desired course, rather than spend the time thinking out the next best course and braving a new line, they select any subject with credit hours enough to fill out the program and proceed with the enrollment. This system for the entire group of students would probably make more work for the heads of the departments and advisers, but considering the harm done to the students under the present system, the advisers could well be martyrs to such a good cause. Enroll in haste and repent at leisure. THIS JOB BUSINESS Thousands of college graduates in a few short months will be looking for jobs. A mere handful of those who receive degrees will start in business for themselves. A generation or so ago, it was almost every young man's ambition to go into business for himself. He dreamed of a little store, a weekly newspaper or an office, of his own. Now, the goal is a position with sufficient salary to support an apartment and a car. Of course, going into business for yourself entails a certain amount of capital, a sad fact which immediately disqualifies many undergraduates. There are, however, a large number of students who could raise the necessary money if they were content to begin modestly. The principle difficulty is that most young men want to rent the Empire State building to start in the clothing business. Another disadvantage to the beyour own-boss idea arises from the fact that the young man must frequently make his start in a small town. Two thousand dollars will outfit a very nice concern in Hillevie, but that sum will scarcely buy the fixtures for a big city store. After the heyeyh of college, a job in the city holds an irresistible lure for the graduate. The old home town offers too few diversions for the average young man; all that is bright and glamorous glows in the city. So they believe but in reality small town life can be just as exciting. It is unfortunate that more students soon to end their school days are not looking forward to a business of their own. With the employment situation as acute as it is, a few taken from the ranks of the job seekers would help just that much. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan: Arising out of the gloom and intensity of Finals Week has appeared a brilliant suggestion of two-fold appeal. One notices that houses are divided among themselves in these nerve-rucking times because some inmates are hectically trying to stuff knowledge into their wrains or to perform the last-minute act THE KANSAS PLAYERS Present "DISTANT DRUMS" A play of the Oregon Trail By DAN TOTHEROH Feb. 12-14-15-16 Four nights beginning Monday Fraser Theatre 8:15 p.m. Single Admission 50c Student Activity Tickets admit. Reservations: Basement, Green Hall begin- ning Thursday morning. Phone K.U. 174 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. The band will play at the basketball games tomorrow and Friday nights. Be at the auditorium at 7:15. J. C. McCANLES, Director. BAND: Credit is now offered to persons for band work. All former members of the band are eligible for this credit. These who have not been members of the band should enroll now so as to be eligible for credit next year. Anyone desireing to join the band of the band semester series must enroll in an enrollment period. J. C. McCANLES, Director. BAND MUSICIANS: BASKETBALL STILEMEN AND USHERS; Please report at the auditorium for the Oklahoma basketball games tom row and Friday nights as follows: Stilleman, 6:20; Ushers, 6:40. ALL PERSONS MINISTER The first rehearsal this semester will be held Friday at 4:30 in room 32 Admiration building. JOE BUEHLER, President. STEEL KEY; There will be an important meeting of Steel Key in room 102 Marvin hall at 9 o'clock Tuesday evening, Feb. 13. ROBERT M. ARMSTRONG. on papers and notebooks; while others, Fine Arts students and those whose finals are over early or are scheduled toward the end of the week, wander aimlessly about, disturbing the studious ones in their unquenched search for diversion. The genius of the proposed plan is that both of these classes, as well as the University as a whole, will be benefited. most unpopular professor. The count taken, the students' choice will be publicly tarred, feathered, and strung up. Thus will the idle students be afforded an exciting diversion, the overworked students have an opportunity to rid themselves of their inhuman professors, and the entire school will, after a few months, be medicated professional processors by the processes of evolution and natural selection. It is proposed that a general election he held in which students vote for the M. L. H. A PICTURE LIKE NEVER BEFORE NEVER AGAIN The Biggest Picture Ever Made WIFE-TRADERS Youmayhaveseen THIS Ha-cha Boop- Boop-a Doop, etc. And you may have revelled IN THIS Or you may have may have thrilled to Ro- mence: "How beautiful you are tonight!" Perfectly good entertainment! You've seen it before and you'll see it again. BUT... now for a NEW THRILL! PRIMITIVE PASSION In the Battle for Life in This Weird Arctic Wilderness You will be shocked by this mighty drama of Love, Desire, and Bitter Hate revealing - - - the strangest moral code on the face of the earth. Direct to You From Its $2.00 Record Breaking Broadway Run --with any 20c purchase (Except cigarets) Magnificently directed by W. S. Van Dyke who spent 2 solid years in the Arctic wastes to bring you a masterpiece that surpasses his "Trader Horn." AN EPIC FROM THE EDGE OF ETERNITY NOW THRU SATURDAY Shows: 3-7-9 25c 'til 7, then 35c Kiddies 10c Come Early for Choice Seats FREE! A bottle of the new peppy drink that will pick you up 7up" the New Littled Sod 66 Thursday and Friday Only Stop in now and get yours. GLENN CARL SIMMONDS CLIFTON BRICK'S On the Hill On the Hill We Deliver Phone 50 WHETHER YOU'RE An architect, An artist, A college student or one of the many others--about the middle of the ten hundred block You can find All of your School Supplies, reasonably priced, down town at-about the middle of the ten hundred block 1025 Mass. St. Phone 1051 Many are Many are Enjoying the Excellent Food at the low prices Why are you not eating at the CAFETERIA The House of Pleasing Pictures DICKINSON Tonight and Tomorrow Songs - Drama - Thrills LEILA HYAMS and PAUL LUKAS in "SING SINNER SING" Friday and Saturday BUCK JONES "The Thrill Hunter" 100 - 150 Mat and Eyes. Cartoon and Late News 10c - 15c 'til 7, then 25c Shows 3 - 7 - 9 Want Ads -87 Twenty-five words or less! 11 Insertion, 32; 5 insertion and add prompt. WANT ADS ARE ACCOMPANIED BY C A S H. 8 INSTRUCTION in typing and shorthand by experienced commercial teacher. Typewriters available for practice. Call Helen Kohler, K.U. 98. BOYS: Room with sleeping porch for rent to men students. Phone 2267, 1328 Ohio. -90 BOYS-pleasant first floor room for rent, southern exposure, very desirable. $1\frac{1}{2}$ blocks off campus, oil heat. Could be used for apartment. 1247 Ohio. Phone 1127W. —89 GIRLS: Large south room with board $25 per month, also lovely room and board $2.50 per month. Home conveniences; use of living room, radio, grand piano. 148 Tennessee. Phone 1763-90. BOYS: Well furnished, comfortable, single or double rooms. One-half block north of Union Building, on bus line, opposite athletic field. 1218 Mississippi. Phone 1338. — 90. ENROLL in the University if possible but remember the International Correspondence Schools teach Academic, Commercial, and Engineering Courses. See Mr. Humphrey, 1511 Rhode Island, Phone 1690M. — 90. FURNISHED APARTMENT: 3 rooms, large closets. Married students only. Modern. Private entrance. Reasonable rates. Phone 1825W. —87 FOR RENT: Single room, private bath. One block south from campus. Rent reasonable. Call 2131M. Preferably before 10:30 a.m. -85 Economy of Time There is a certain period in the evening when it is desirable to do your newspaper reading. A paper should be available THEN, not after someone else or when you should be studying. Your time is limited and valuable now, more valuable than ever before. Have a Daily Kansan of your own. DANCING! Coming — Friday, Feb. 9 OLD MILL—TOPEKA Wednesday - Friday Saturday - Sunday Jack Crawford The Clown Prince of Music Apartment Two-Room Clean, Comfortable. Furnished FOR RENT South Exposure All Bills Paid Over Rowlands Annex Journure, Mouh. Houtt TODAY! for 4 Days King of Theatres You'll fall in love with- "LETS FALL IN LOVE" EDMUND LOWE ANN SOTHERN GREGORY RATOFF Starring- Plus—Stoopnagel and Budd the two inventing idiots in "THE INVENTORS" Sunday Is Your Big Day and Ours, Too! JANET GAYNOR LIONEL BARRYMORE "CAROLINA"