PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINEb Alfreda Brookeback Howard Turtnard Managing Editor SINDNEY KROSS Campaign Editor MARGARET GREET Competition Editor NATALIE MARGELTOWN Marketing Manager NATALIE MARGELTOWN Telephigh Editor ARIEL KECKUMAN Art Director KECKUMAN Chief Columnist CHRONI CLEMAN Society Editor CHRONI CLEMAN Kochere Editor MAUREEN BROWN Mature Brown Editor DORSELL Smith Sunny Editor DOREN Smith ADVERTISING MGR. MARIAGEH INCE Robert Whitman...Margaret Jeen Cole...Michael Lefkowitz Bishop Kron...Mary Millington Bill McIntyre...Alfresco Brooch Ira McIntyre...Arnold Brecksen Arnold Brecksen...Davis Smith Joshua Smith...David Smith Published in the afternoon, five times a week, on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin, in the Press of the Department of Journalism. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933 Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single empire, be each. Enter as second-class matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrences, Kansas. MORE SPEED! MORE THRILLS Results of a questionnaire which was issued to fans at the Kansas-Iowa State basketball game last week showed that followers of the sport think the game is still too slow. They would like to see more dribbling, more speed, more thrills, more action, in the game which already is one of the fastest sports in the world. Although more rules to speed up the game might furnish some additional thrills to spectators, the question should also be considered from the standpoint of the players. So many rules for making the sport faster have already been adopted that basketball is now even more strenuous than football. It has become a game which so tries the players that they are shaken and exhausted at the end. Even those who train conscientiously are unable to play an entire game at full speed if they do not happen to have exceptionally rugged constitutions Already the sport has progressed to the stage where many believe that it takes too much time for a student. If it were made even more strenuous we should have a condition in which the tail actually did wag the dog. Furthermore, it would probably be necessary for each school to have two or three teams of substitutes, for the regulars could not lost out an entire game. The usual political argument is one in which two people quarrel about something of which neither knows anything and which ends in each thinking the other knows nothing. SOMETHING WORTH HEARING The University debate team has a schedule reaching as far as Florida. Among the squads to be met this spring are South Dakota, Florida, Texas, Missouri, and St Louis Universities. The Kansas teams have gained a nation-wide reputation by their debating ability. This was brought out recently when Fred Anderson, a former member of the Kansas team, was selected as one of the members of the Missouri Valley debate team to go to Georgia. Isn't this reputation a good reason why students should support the University teams by attending their debate held on the Hill? Quite evidently the Japanese are confusing the League's "Cease!" for "Size!" IT'S UP TO US NOW Like a tired mother, who, weaning of the constant whining of her children demanding that they be allowed to go out and play, gives in, so congress has finally answered the pleas of the people to be given the privilege of deciding for themselves whether beer shall become a legalized part of their daily diet. Since the beginning of the controversy which caused congress to place the decision in the hands of the voting public, there has been a constant agitation for the movement that has just been taken. Members of Congress are not passing the buck this time. The people have made it so apparent that they felt the decision should be left up to them that they have rightfully been given that chance. But the wets' battle is only starting. The drys are for the first time meeting their real test. All that has gone before has been the important but wearisome details always necessary in preparing for question of such moment as the liquor problem. The people have seven years to decide. They must have their answer before then if they are to prove their competence to undertake legislative duties of this kind. MORE THAN ENTERTAINMENT One of the most progressive industries in the United States, that of motion picture production, has only recently been regarded as something of more value than a means to provide entertainment. Only in the past few years have educators begun to use the motion picture. The Oread Training School, under the supervision of the School of Education, is the first school in the middle west to adopt a plan whereby high school English students through careful study may gain the same educational value from the movie as has been derived from a study of the stage drama. The plan permits the student to view each picture from a technical standpoint, including the study of theme, characterization, dialogue, and work of the director. It also gives the students the responsibility of judging the social value of the picture. With these purposes the study of the movie should result in good. The force of the motion picture is felt in all walks of life. Therefore any plan which will give young people an intelligent and profitable approach toward the appreciation and study of the motion picture will certainly be constructive and improved taste and appreciation on the part of audiences should result in a better cinema product. Our Contemporaries A LITTLE FOLLY NOW AND THEN Numerous college papers are reminding their readers that the time of the archaic practice of initiating freshmen into fraternities by putting them in their dorm rooms, and the manances is drawing nigh. College editors in general have consistently freerned on the institution of Hell week since 1965. The college students should have outgrown. College fraternities are to be congratulated on having passed beyond the stage where the upperclassman with the most ruthless ideas and the toughest hearts has conducted the activities of Hell row. Where remnants of these dangerous practice exist they should be quelled by the most vigorous means. Where there is even a slight probability that injury of any sort may result from such an act, it will be inevitable that fraternity men will allow the carrying out of such stunts. But though the mature student may scoff with uplifted nose at the other harmless practices which fraternities carry on during their pre-initiation ceremonies, the worst that can be said is to make a freshman will testify that he thoroughly enjoy his probationary activities and nearby any unceremony will agree that despite the nonsense of the performance, he enjoyed witnessing and participating in the childish anties of his brethren. In the absence of any indications of cruel treatment of nephocytes it seems unnecessary to demand that fraternities forego all the enjoyments of a reason-ful life and that they enjoy that sort of thing. It hardly seems to assert that abuses are bound to creep in if a system of probationary activities is tolerated at all. If we are wrong, then we are dislississued about the common sense of college students and undergraduates who are vigorous repression of all activities savoring of Hell week—Daily Nebraska. The most unintelligent bit of censoring of the year has been done by Prof. W. R. Slaughter, publications adviser of Northwestern University, who has banned the word "beer" from all student publications. "Beer," says the Professor, "has nothing to do with students, no matter what is done about it in Washington." An earthquake in China, the death of King George, the election of a president, do not directly affect students. Yet students would be interested in them, and the articles should appear in college masters. While we will not grant the statement made by Professor Shaugher, nevertheless, if it were assumed, you can see no justification for his censorship. We extend our heartfelt sympathy to the editors of the Northernwestern publications and as far as Professor Slaughan, who is from Alabama, beer, beer, beer, Michigan Daily. According to reports, a course in lovemaking has been added to the curricula of college courses in bury. WT This sounds like a wake of time. We were of the old school that believes that, in subjects of this nature, impulse is the promulgator and ex- QUIPS from other QUILLS The course, no doubt, has its points, however, especially if there is a lab period in connection—D.C. in Oklahoma Daily. Messrs. Brown and Jones thought they were having a hard time to make ends meet in the hotel business, but the two worked as well while a-CWL. J.C.WIN in Windfield Courts. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Friday, Feb. 24, 1933 No. 199 1234567890 Pretty little coeds Notices due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. MATHEMATICS CLUB: Two heads are better than one—when they are both on the same shoulders—McPhrison Republican. Away from maw and paw And a hay nouny noony And a hot chaw chaw. -EJ. in Oklahoma Daily It is hard to understand the makeup of the headline writer who insists that "Burns Are Painful." We have yet experience burns that are not painful Even Burns and Allen are getting painful. C.W.J. in Winfield Courier. Now President-elect Roosevelt announces the addition of a Preffen Frankfurter of Harvard to the staff of the University. Hot dog? - Wilson County Citizen. The shoe clerk is one man who does not agree that women are trying to fill men's shoes—McPherson Republican. The only place where promptness is no virtue is at the meeting hour of any large committee—J.P.H. in Ottawa Herald. Another benefit of the alleged depression is that it has eliminated those salemale who for the first ten minutes of conversation defied all efforts at discovery of what they had to sell—J.P.H. in Chanute Tribune. "I," threatens Paul Jones, Kansas' leading awed in the Lyons News, "if a certain dry Republican editor in this state does not send us the beautiful story of his life, he will home for several years we are going to name him on the day that national prohibition is repealed." We have not the least idea at whom Paul is aiming, nor can he him at least seven shackers by the week of the war in Chantule Tribune. Time is an infinitesimal fragment of eternity magnified into significance by man.-AJL. in Washington Student Life. The well-known stork has a faulty distributing system—McPherson Republican. Vol. XXX Friday, Feb. 24, 1933 No. 109 Noticees due at Chancellor's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication due There will be a meeting of the Mathematics club Monday, Feb 27, at 4:30 in room 211 east Administration building. Miss Dorothy Doerr will speak on Tuesday at 5:30 in room 211 west Administration building. SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1—Antonietta Peryon **J** Marland, resumes Patton Thayer's attention to Ivy Wheeler, seventy-year-old with bitter recriminations, the nonchief, another student... long Thayer's nonchief, another student... long Thayer and Vernon each other. Thayer and Vernon each other. CHAPTER VII—At the scene of the attack, the two men who wielded the sword the latter will call. Toundra Thayer with whiskey for fortune and Vernon Thayer with profit for fortune and division the profits. After the ex-merchant searched Vernon's room, finds there, sourced Vernon's money, evidence the weapon with which he evidently evidenced the weapon with which he had arrived. CHAPTER IX. — To Honeng the brute warriors of the enemy, to discover that Thayer had been related discovery CHAPTER X CHAFTER VIH—Hawkeye mourns the day of the murder. Wichinca in value was in the eye of Thayer. Wichinca was alive when he left him. Thayer was alive when he left him. He is lying, seemingly endowing to him his firm conviction being that he was the victim of incidents more the resulting害人 incident. CHAPTER 11—Larry Welch, Ivy's brother, professor at the university, is a member of the college's mother's friendship with Thayer. Welch and Tony Payton are in love with each other. He can do in the matter. Tony then goes to his wife in Thayt. They but is his wife only in name. CHAPTER IV—Welch's appeal to the Board of Trustees for the pristine heir. He determines to see thieves try to find the home jointly, finds that a landlord's moive chief, takes charge of the property. CHAFTER III—larry demands his妻子 to withhold love with it. Tony persuades him to wait until she has appended to her husband's room at a fraternity house. Max Verveine lives and goes to his room. Tony ends a chaperone and depends, nonetheless, afterwards, vividly in a state of excitement, never leans, apparently clothing to be severely bruised. CHAPTER V—The Marland bank is with the money after being shot and apparently badly wounded, Jimmie G. Lewis was obese, and good natured, comes to investigate the robbery, Randolph Finkle, leaves Vanessa Vernon was driving the car, and Vernon's friends CHAPTER VI: Thayer, Fluke tells Harvey, has been systematically told to drop games, and Vernon, apparently, has been taken. Harvey to take charge of the murder, both the murder and robbery. Tony is under arrest as Thayer must be They spoke briefly to the dean and left the huddling together. Below them was the howl; long concrete stand on the deck with its windows open in diamond; men in truck suits built easily around the oval or practicing field sports; the regular indigent in playing baseball; the college baseball team. Under the trees were a half hundred cars; some empty, others full of stuff. The stands held perhaps a hundred students and through the woods one could glimpse couples—usually of children sitting slowly and talking earnestly. "I dunno. . . it ain't the education. John. But when I look at this stuff, what's written in books that those kids take away with 'em. Maybe I'm wrong, but it seems I'd sort of like to do it on four years of this kind of stuff." "No—I reckon maybe it wouldn't—for you. I'm just a softy." "What the h—1 would you do with a college education, Jim?" Octavus Rou Cohen a scene was a quiet, peaceful scene; a scence which made a profound impression on the Broddingnagian Hanvey. He was fascinated by the informality of women and how they look so different; earnest, spectated young men and women studying aggressively; a general air of stiffness and studiosure. But this . . . , why, they were upon the young folk with real envy and there was a feeling that he had missed something in life—something which he would like to go back and have. He expressed all this haltingly which he would take on, Rinkeogan looked at him in amazement. "But, I ain't paying they nintt" "But, by golly, a few years from now" "but, I'm going to go back" h—I there! he get going mongain again! Fine big itt am I to my friends for an day! They slowly descended the wall toward the Pal Tan Theta fraternity house where Rengar's car was parked. Students edged them curiously and "Yeh! and all they're thinking about is finishing up." "You said it!" muttered Reagan. "Me, I never have thought college amounted to much." W. N.U. SERVICE. buzzed with conjecture. Hanvey was relaxed. He was thinking—and Reagan was literally disappointed because the congressional disclosure regarding the ownership of the knife which had been used to kill Mr. Bush's children, and tried his truffle hurt, though he would say so. He attempted to elicit a comment from Hanvey—and went at his task circling. "You and the kid seemed to get along fine, Jim." "Ivy, Welch? Say, she's a regular, John." "Darn little cat if you ask me. Did everything but scratch my eyes out." "find out what you eventually must scratch my eyes out" "you don't say, I remind she must have a week spot for a poor old fat fat like me." "Ten to one she didn't tell you anything." "Gimme the ten, John. She told me plenty." pron. "What 5" Doubtfully. "We-ee-l, She said that she and Pat Tather were engaged. Thayer and Max Vernon quarreled just before Thayer was killed. Thayer and Miss Vernon agreed to shine in up to Ivy Welch. Then Ivy and her brother had a row, and he left her with the intention of seeing Thayrs and ordering him to lay off." "She knew we had all that dope at ready." "Maybe she did. John—and then, again, maybe she did. Anyway, it might be a body who isn't accustomed to this killing. Allowing for the fact that she'd maybe try to shield her brother. I don't think she would accept it. The cop to help us catch the person who really killed Tillen." His eyes closed slowly. "She sure was in love with him." Harvey turned slowly and regarded Deagan for a minute. "Kid stuff!" "I think that's the same mistake everybody made when they thought of her in connection with Thuyen. All they said was: Kid stuff." "What you driving at, Jim?" "Nathilin" special. Just rimbili in my speech, as naunt. Only remember falls in love, it isn't knit stuff to her, not matter what it seems like to other women. I have done better to realize that we have done better to realize that我 Weych was a woman grown. Get me? Weych was a woman grown. Get me? Hanvey shrugged. "Durned if I know," he confessed. Then: "So Max Vernon admitted that was his knife, eh, John?" "Did he see the blood on it before he made that admission?" "I—I, no, Chief, I don't that dumb, I had the blade covered when I showed him the knife. He saw it before it seen and he said, sure, it was his. I said: "You couldn't be mis- terrorized so could you?" and he heard he certainly had put him in right, he enunciated that the knife that killed him had put his foot in right, he encouraged that I showed him the bloody blade." "And what did he say?" Reagan shook his head. "He said he didn't give a d—n if he had killed Bill McCollum and didn't do with it. He's a darn fresh kid. Jim—and he hasn't told the truth about anything since I first stock him in the housekeeping. He goes over and does that." "Not yet, John. Let's go to the undertaker who's not Thayer's body. I want to take a look at it." "Come ahead." Reagan stepped into his car and Jim crawled in on the other side. "Any of Thayer's family down here?" asked Hanvey. "A sister. Seems to be a pretty nice sort, but she won't talk much. I got a little angry with him. Jim. And, of course, a father can't press that kind of an investigation too strong with a man's sister when he's lying dead in the next room." "Gosh, no." They turned into Marland road and sped along under the spreading shade trees which lined the paving on both sides. "John" asked Hanvey suddenly, "when you searched Tinsley's room did you find any jew- "Nothing but a watch and chain." "No diamond rings?" "Sure not. What gave you the idea?" Just because I overlooked Max Veronica's hard you haven't got my right to sniff that sort of stuff everywhere." "Aw, now, John—don't you go get it! needed at me. I just nailed you a question friend-like and—" "I ain't peevel, Jim. But dog gone! "I you seem to have more ideas and less words than anybody I ever saw." Jim chuckled. "Don't mind me, Kit. I'm lamb, and the less I say the smaller chance there is or anyone finding it out." "Kid yourself, Jim—if you want to,' he said. "But don't try to kid me." At their destination, the understainer conducted them into the cubicle where the police officer was sitting in the police orders. Hauvey was frankly frightened by the sight of death, and didnt even look at the body as Reagan gave a clinical discussion on the request. John Reagan laughed. ".. . , right in the neck, " he was saying and the voice came to Hanvey as though from a distance. "The due is why there was so much blood, is why there was so much blood, I asked him would it need to have been struck by a person with any strength enough to kill me, to take an east side of a keen knife would do the work. I asked him if a woman could have done it, and be said, sure, a chair could have. Then I asked the "Tell me that later," suggested flanvey hastily. "I want to get out of this piece quick." "To find that diamond ring. You see, John—at the time Pat Thayer went to his college in a ring which Iyv Welch had given him. I want to see if he's still wearing it." Reagan bent over the body. When he straightened his expression was unsteady. "Good Lord, Jim. If you didn't want to look things over, what did you come here for?" "You sure you got your dope straight, Jim?" "Yeh." "There then's something darn funny — because Thayer isn't got anything on his fingers except a signet ring." He said. "It's hard to believe. Hassov renamed贤效 eye on the "It's gone all right. John." "I'll say it has," Reagan's forehead was creased with intensive thought. Suddenly he smashed his right fist into the palm of his other hand. "And you know what it means Jim—his diamond ring being gone?" "Just this: Thayer was alive when Larry Welch went to see him. Larry saw the ring and knew it meant he wanted it, but he didn't him. Then he took his sister's ring off Thayer's finger, because he know if he left it there it could be traced back to him." 65 "burned if I know, John. But whether you are or not, you sure sound reasonable." The Number (To be continued Sunday) - The Price - 25c The Name Jayhawk Taxi Ike Guffin, Prop. Beat the Aggies George O'Brien Tonight - Tomorrow Zane Grey's "Smoke Lightning" with George O'Brien Tonight - tomorrow MORAN and MACK The Two Black Crowds in "HYPNOTIZED" Arrives Sunday for 3 Days THE LONGEST LAUGH ON THE SCREEN! Shows---- 3-7-9 Extra! Hollywood Runaround Ricksha Rhythm Late News Prices—Mat., Eve., 15c When Down Town---announces a Free Lecture on Christian Science by DR. HENDRIK J. DE LANGE, C.S., of The Hague, Holland Wiedemann's LUNCHEON The place to stop for a refreshing fountain drink or appetizing sandwich is our beautiful new Wahkut Room. Served Daily Established 1868 835 Mass. Phone 182 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Also 5:10 till 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Christian Science Organization, University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas IN Member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. Friday, February 24, 1933, 8:00 p.m. UNITARIAN CHURCH 12th 8 Vermont The Public Is Cordially Invited to Attend Your Picture (from any negative in our files) FOR Last Chance to Get Your Picture at This Low Price Is Saturday and Monday This price includes pictures from negatives for the 1933 Jayhawker. More than one print at the same price if desired. Frerking Studio 1021 Massachusetts