PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-In-Chief ... PAUL V. MINER Murreau Inc. Marquis Riese Managers Editor SUNNY KICKS Annual Advisor Night Editor Marques Grouve Editor Chuck Edison Skew Editors Colleman Coleman Marquis Riese Exchange Editor Made Brown July Sunday Drew Jones Decoondoo ADVERTISING MGR. MARGARET ICE Lennon Johnson District MGR. Joshua Johnson Associate Editors Amelia Batte Robert Whitman ... Mavillier Israel Benjamin Browne ... Mavillier Israel Dibru Krom ... Dijttime Marcel Brittany Butler ... Washburn Ira McCray ... Washburn Annelid Kevermann ... Washburn Jonathan Fournier ... Joseph fourth Business Office K.U. 6 News Room K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Office 270K Night Connection, News Room 270K SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1933 Today is Abraham Lincoln's birthday. The nation will interrupt its daily routine to pay homage to the memory of the Great Emancipator, a memory which the passing of years enhances in the minds of the American people. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, 16 each. Entrusted as second-class matter September 17, 1918, at the office at lawrence, Kansas. America asked much of Lincoln. Faced with a crisis that threatened to prove her undoing, she turned to him for the inspirational leadership that held her only hope of survival. Gladly he responded, dedicating his every effort toward the preservation of the Union, and at last losing his life in the fight in which he alone could have shown the way to victory. Only the courage, the indomitable will, the kindly and understanding spirit of a Lincoln could have brought this nation intact through the Civil War. Lincoln did it, and the nation has lived. Published in the atterraux twice a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Today America faces another crisis, not potentially so dangerous to her existence, perhaps as was the other, but surely one that casts shadows of doubt on the future. Is it not possible that in the personality and character of Abraham Lineohn, we of today may find a light to guide our footsteps safely through the present crisis? YOUR PLEDGE Maybe college students are pampered and soft and useless, but they didn't raise half the chomox over the snow and winter weather that the heftier older generation did. A dance floor, a man's lounge billiards, card games, a radio, a fountain, and a swell place just to sit and rest—the University commits. That's the Memorial Union But a building with such accommodations needs resources. The Memorial Union, as a part of the University, therefore turns to the University for upkeep. Since the building is not used for class work and only for student entertainment, however, a small fee is asked of each student. Why shouldn't University students today also pledge their little hit? The Memorial Union has been made possible through pledges which were raised following the War because it was felt by students and friends of the school that a memorial building should be erected in honor of University soldiers who died in France. A NEW INDUSTRY WITH POSSIBILITIES Imagine going through the severest winter without the fear of catching cold; imagine sleeping untrebled by heat on the warmest mid-summer nights; imagine a home with furniture that need never be dusted; with rugs that need never be cleaned; imagine having the air in your home stay at an even temperature the year round; imagine that air always at the same degree of humidity, exactly the right degree. Imagine all these things and you have some idea of the potentialities of the newest of America's giant industries, air conditioning. For many years scientists have been working with this problem, and now a solution is ready, a solution in the form of an electrically-operated device that will heat air that is too cold, cool air that is too hot, dry air that is too moist, and moisten air that is too dry. In other words, air conditioning makes the atmosphere of a room just the right quality and temperature for comfortable and healthful living. It cleans the air and washes it, freeing it from dust and germs. Nor can the commercial possibilities of the new industry be overlooked. It has been, estimated that in America alone there is a potential market of more than $55,000,000,000 for equipment that will do this work. Theaters, department stores, and banks, as well as private homes, all furnish possible prospects, along with counties other types of institutions. Significant also is the fact that development of the new industry will mean increased opportunities for the employment of both capital and labor. Industrial and scientific advancement have defeated former depressions. May not history repeat itself again? LINCOLNIANA —Henry Watterson. Bern as lowly as the Son of God, reared in penury and squalor, with no gleam of light nor fair surroundings, it was reserved for this strange being, late in life, without mame or fone, or seeming preparation to be matched by his own power. He commanded at a supreme moment, and intruded with the destiny of a nation. Where did Shakespeare get his genius? Where did Mozart get his music? Whose hand amused the lyre of the Scotish plowman? God, alone and then alone, inspired the god of God was Abraham Lincoln, and a thousand years hence no story, no tragedy, no epic poem will be filled with greater wonder than that which tells of his life and death. If Lincoln were not inspired of God, then there is no place where he can provide or the interposition of divine power in the affairs of men. English Opinion of Mr. Lincoln—The London Critic, in the course of a review of the speeches of Hon Abraham Lincoln, the Republican can claim the Presidency of the American Union, than refer to his menal powers. "It is from the speeches which Mr. Lincoln has from time to time delivered in opposition to Mr. Douglas that we gather some idea of his mental strength," he writes. "The speeches of Mr. Lincoln, that he has a mind rather of the straight-forward than of the subtle order; that he makes upon print and prominent facts and argues them to plan conclusions, Charnwood's Lincoln, P. 421 (Near the end of the war) Physically his splendid health does not seem to have been impaired beyond recovery. But it was manifestly near to breaking; and the "deep-cut lines" were also broken, and the long legs were always cold. Campus Opinion Since there has been some complaint lately about lack of good sportmanship on the part of University students at basketball games, I would like to refer those complainers to an article which appeared in the Feb. 9 edition of the Lawrence Journal-World which described the sportmanship exhibited recently by another school in the Big Six. I refer to the conduct of Nebraska fans at the 如需修改本页面内容,如有疑问,请联系客服。 ate Kansas-Nebraska game in Lincoln. According to the article, their fans booed every Kansas play and playoff, and showed a disgusting lack of any semblance of sportsmanship. I never heard KU. U. students even begin to act in such a manner, and I hope I never do. **unknit that K. U. students are congratulated on their good sportmanship toward visiting teams in contrast to the lack of sportmanship shown by Nebulaus and certain other Big Six players. They are not given their disapproval of certain decisions which they think are wrong. That is only human. But they never get abusive and rude to opposing players. So I think that the Ransass City Star would do well to print something about Nebraska and her disregardless sportmanship. The students for exhibiting only human traits under the strain of excitement. There is a great deal of difference between razing an official (which of course is not the best of sportsmanship) and abusing and booing opposing players for no good reason at all. Nebraska students have always shown a lack of honor in their sports, so grossly demonstrated as it was the other night. In the Missouri-Nebraska football game last fall, Nebraska fans showed anything but a sportman-like attitude toward the visiting Missouri players. So Nebraska's demonstrations of hostility are not confined only to K.U. It seems as if our fans have still not been given a quarter to their fees. They seem to think that these contests are free-for-all instead of the supposedly keen competition between two friendly institutions of learning. I hope that Nebraska will realize that such condiment, if continued, will bring only ill-will and a bad name upon their school. I think the schools could improve a lot if they would try to use the K.U. student body as an example in good sportsmanship toward rival players. —T.M.B Our Contemnoraries UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Sunday, Feb. 12, 1953 Np. 109 - due at Chancellor's Office at 11 n. m. on regular afternoon publication day and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday classes. MARRIAGE, DIVORCE-AND THE UNIVERSITY Although one out of every six marriages in the United States is ending in divorce, a recent study of marriages of couples who met while attending coeducational institutions indicates that they live in seventy-five results in failure. --has been an ever-increasing emphasis placed upon the social sciences and their related fields. The statement is quoted from a report recently issued by Dr. Paul Popemire, director of the Los Angeles Institute of Family Relations. It is interesting from several points of view, but it appears for a moment, is not at all surprising. On the university campus of today the sexes are engaged in a social and intellectual competition which provides opportunities for each to observe character traits and intellectual capacities in the other. Marriages founded upon mutual appreciation are indeed likely to prove most permanent. But in addition, the university-trained man and woman is possessed of a greater knowledge of psychology and of the factors that determine human personality traits than is the untrained man or woman is knowledge that makes for tolerances in interpersonal relations husband and wife. Further, the college student of today secures from his studies in the social and the biological sciences a greater social stability, a greater amount of technical knowledge and a wider conception of ergonomic principles by the average man or woman who has not pursued university study. In spite of these things, however, it would seem that the modern university might more specifically attack this problem of intelligent and rational murmuring in students, because increased knowledge occasionally secured by the student on such matters, which has been mentioned above, in merely a by-product of studies pursued for other purposes, we know of only a few examples. The first designed course bearing on this topic. College curricula have progressed far from the original three FA's and today include courses dealing with every field from practical vocational matter to academic work, from classical and cultural branches of earning. During this evolution there There will be a meeting of the Mathematics club Monday at 4:30 in room B1 Administration building, Miss Lilly Somers will on "Nine Point Circus." Dean E. B. Stouffer, of the Graduate School, will speak at the meeting of the Graduate club to be held in the private dining room of the cafeteria at 6:15 Tuesday evening. He will speak on his impressions of Fascism and Hitlerism and as he has spent some months in both Italy and Germany since the activities of Mussolini and Hitler began, his talk will be an interesting, first-hand discussion. ELLIOTT PENNER, Chairman. GRADUATE CLUB: MATHEMATICS CLUB: Freshman commission and social group will hold a joint meeting Monda- t at 4:30 p.m. The subject for discussion will be "Dress and Grooming." Y. W. C. A.; ALICE GALLUP, MARY SCHRUM, LUCILE WEISS, Chairmen. At the same time there has been founded a number of special institutes and foundations concerned with family relations and the problems introduced into society by the newer conceptions of science, and the increased knowledge of eugenics. It is reasonable to expect from the universities of the country a reflection of this increased knowledge and enlightened point of view in their curricula if these universities are to fulfill their function of adequately training for participation in the modern society which he shortly becomes a part. If university students are to be carefully schooled in the arts of writing, religion, language, literature and philosophy, in the sciences of medicine chemistry, physics and mathematics, in the vocations of agriculture, business and health, or in the sciences of human relations which will probably make or wear their whole future to a greater degree than any other? It is an aspect of human affairs still left largely to chance or instint. The divorce mills of every civilized country give ample proof of the lack of success which the instinct has achieved as the bases of mate selection - Chicago Daily Maroon. STUDENT EMPLOYEE AND STUDENT EMPLOYER That such habits and lack of seams of responsibility upon the part of staff depts should have effects such as these. The more students of our more earnest students. On cannot criticize employers, and on cannot find fault with the University placement office which is, for this reason, a major burden in positioning position for its many applicants. Because of continued experience such as these, one concern that has formerly staffed an entire department with 90 University students worker at the university, has dismissed the entire group and substatted for it 18 women employed on an eight-hour schedule. The change resulted in increased efficiency and economy for the employer, and an ex-female student for student was completely exhausted. As the depression continues and each month makes more scarce the available jobs for all classes of individuals the problems and difficulties confronting the Board of Vocational Guidance are increasing in number. We have fully realized that in order to self-supporting University men and women may secure jobs, the directors and counselors of this placement office have to be exponent on ever-increasing amount of work to discover the few positions available. Recently John C. Kernan, one of the vocational counselors revealed another set of circumstances which makes the work of this University service department still more difficult, and of whose existence we had not guessed. Thus concern the attitudes of employers to toward student labor, adverse attitude towards students, and student workers themselves for what we can see little excuse. These employers who have made custom of hiring students for part o full time work over a period of several years frequently report dissatisfaction with the ability and regularity of these men an women. Too frequently, there are re requests for a "night off" because of to mourn's examination or the quarter"s irregularity. It is irregularity of attendance and application because of one distraction another which enters into the life o the student part time worker an which is not allowed by the older, full time student to interfere with his bids of duty. With current business conditions de creatng the number of jobs open to all individuals, with the rate of compensation dropping seriously, with the more significant appeal of the marriage between women, it is a small wonder that the University has difficulty in finding work for the most efficient and dependable students. With this additional factor added to the situation, and created by the indifference and personal whimsie of the management at the reports from this office in Cobl 215 that several thousand positions are nevertheless found each year. The working student today is en joying a privilege that many thousand of adult men would welcome. That induction will be an important aspect of the attitude of employers toward student labor. All the promotion and all the personal effort of the many college and university vocational offices will go for naught if the students themseek to pursue their part-time, university help. On the other hand, efficiency and application earnestness and initiative, upon the par of these same students, can tenderness to answer the number of position that will open among college worker--Chicago Daily Maroon. The German club will meet Monday at 4:30 in Fraser hall. Herbert Schupe will speak on "An American Student' Experience in Germany." German Club to Meet The May Day Mystery Octavus Roy Cohen Copyright by Octavus Roy Cohen. SYNOPSIS CHAPTER 1 — Automotive Peyton, a New Yorker, returns Peyton Thayer's attention to Ivy Welch, seventeen-year-old who has been unable to endure with bitter recriminations, the teenage boy another student, long Thayer's friend, another student, Thyer and Vernon, a wife with him. Thyer and Vernon CHAPTER 10: HI-Jarry Welch, Iwel W, b completed his first freight on the front section to aid the war and applied for the freight protection to end the war. Tony Welch also is in tow with the train to Paris. He is married to Tymor Welch who CHAPTER 15. The intern is determined to see Thayer and end his association with the hospital. Thayer has been until she has appealed to her husband, who lives in a room at a fraternity house. Max Veritas services and goes to his room. Tony ends services and goes to his room. Tony ends services and goes to his room. Tony leaves the house almost immediately afterwards, violently in a state of rage that apparently clobbing to his feet, instantly apparently clobbing to his feet. A small car jerked to a hull in front of the fraternity house and two men alighted. One of them was tall and broad and wore the uniform of the Marinard police force. The other, wearing civilian clothes, was short and CHAPTER 1V - Wells's appeal to the Senate, the fraternity he determines to see Tearay. Despite Ivans' presentations, he does annotate and after his leave, Caricature, and a final reckoning, he is enabled in the threat Raven, Nararoo, the chief, taxes charge of the case. Students strolling on the Row or lounging on the verandas of fraternity houses, stared with sudden interest at Pal Tau Theta. There was a general movement in the direction of the house. A young man from Laudonia moved to the university and the policeman who stood on the lawn of Pal Tau Theta. "What's wrong, officer?" The cop answered tersely. "Murder?" "Good G--d. . . . You don't mean." "I don't mean nobit, young feller, Somebody's been murdered in yonder and nobody's to go in or git out, That's all." The stunted young man told his companion. The news sped from tip to lip. Who was it? 13, No, not Huey Peech. He was the first person perch. Then somebody mentioned Pat Thayer. Many persons mentioned Pat Thayer. No one knew where the rumors started, but Thayer's name was on a bulletin board. He allowed nobody to approach within hearing distance of the group on the veranda: the militant, positive figure of John Rogan, chief of the Marlins battling the pitcher,Petitized with fear and trembling violence; Rube Farnum, tail and flapped and frightened; Phil Glasser, reduced from his customary alertness to his miniature of his usual negative self. Rionan was questioning Parmara. Rionan was struggling to be fair and honest to remember things and yet to remember them. He absolutely and absurdly miserable. Then there emerged from the Main building a tall and dignified man before whom a path opened in the throes of studenza. Whitman Dean, dean of students at North Carolina University fraternity house and was promptly stoned by the policeman on duty. "No further for you," snapped the officer. Dean Boyd spoke quietly. "No. That'll be John Bongan yonder." And he gestured toward the veranda. The policeman called out to Reagan, "This guy is the big boss, Chief. Oh he come up?" "Will you ask him if I may spend to him? I'm dean of the college and I'd like to find out what has happened." "Are you in charge, Officer?" Roagan's keen eyes surveyed the dean. He jerked his head affirmatively. The dean mounted the veranda steps his arrival sending a glow of thanksgiving through the branches of his office. He kissed him. His spoke directly to Rangan. "My name is Whitman Boyd," he said quietly. "I understand that someone has been killed." "Let him through." "Good G—d! Then it's true—I heard the students gossiping." "Murdered. Young feller named Thayer." You've heard nothing else. "No. That's why I came. To find out." "Well—he's dead all right enough. Stabbed in the throat. "Tain! pleasant up in that room." "The what do you wish done, Mr. Rea gan?" "Just exactly nothing," mild the deactive crisply. "Night now I gonna 'phone handquarters for a couple more harness bells to police the grounda. Nobody's come in here and no one's going to move them, so it isn't move from them they are." "You mean," gasped Gleason, "that we're under arrest?" John Reagan grinned broadly. "Not yet you aln't, youngeller. But don't get impatient." CHAPTER V The town of Marland spread风采 from the foot of the hill on which stand the buildings of the university, the University, in the chief shopping center of Marland. Archer street caries at the corner, and University is the chief shopping center at the four corners which mark the intersection of Oak and Archer there are two gas filling stations and two open on Oak street, and next to one of them, one door from the corner, facing Archer street and west of Oak, is the home of the Marland National bank. The Marineland National bears an enviable reputation. It is small but burrow, and on its roster of directors owns two restaurants and a weight even in the city of a quarry million which exists twenty miles away. It is spoken of boastfully by natives of Marineland, and Randolph Holmes, is a real power in the community. This morning—the morning of May third—Randall Flake sit at his desk in the office which was marked "President-Private." He was a twn. web designer, whose hair matched the gray of his bank building. He had a fine, broad forehead and iron-gray brows from beneath which a pair of keen eyes pecked in a manner which gave an impression of unimpeachable edginess. He was mugged at attentively at a tiny bit of p板board. There was printing on its surface--printing, not embossing. He said simply: lankera' Protective Ass'n James H. Hanvey "Our best operative arrives Marla morning May Third." Mr. Fletcher's eye coved to a yellow telegram from New York. It was from headquarters of the Banks' protective association and was very Mr. Fiske heaved a sigh of relief as he prepared to shift a very great burrow into the sand and one professionally equipped to hear such burrows. He looked up at Miss be: picked up the slightly soiled card which lay on his desk. "Show Mr. Hanvey in, please." Miss Seward put out a bony hand which trembled in protest. Fiske frowned. "Surely, Mr. Fiske—not that man! The—the terrible person who gave me that card." "I don't understand, Miss Seward. This man is a great detective." "There's a mistake, Mr. Fisk. This person couldn't detect anything. I'm very sure of that. Just wait until you see him." She vanished in triumph, and Randolph Fisk stared after her. "What in the world, . . ." Then he be smiled. At least she had prepared him for a somewhat uncounted person. Probably he was wearing a costume, squared-toed shoes, a checked vest and a dime's worth of chewing tobacco. Queen how these detective chaps always dressed so that there was no mistaking their preoccupation. Randolph Fisk saw the door swing open. Then Mr. Fisk was recalled infurriculate. Jim Hainey was everything in the world which one is quite sure a deodorant would do. It dried and sixty pounds of败酱油 was distributed with healthy inositic effect; it wubbed he moved . . . and seemed to move with vast reductions. But it was the head which rose above triple chins that filmed Randolph Randolph, who was a schoolmate and round and utterly expressionless. Randolph Fisks was quite sure that never before in his life had he seen someone so intelligent of intelligence. It was—yes, by George—it was the eye. Round it was colorless as the orbs of a fish. "Uit-uhh, In person. Largely. I might say." The mass of flesh stood in the doorway. Flake knew he was breathing; Flake knew he had been rather remarkable contraction which appeared in the neighborhood of Jim's house, and rhythmically. Handloch Flake kept his eyes fascially on that particular apparatus. It hung from a ceiling in front of a mirror, far to nothing which the banker has ever before set eyes upon. It was lonely and silm and seemed to be made of wood. Then, without warning, the silence was punctured by a sleepy, drawly voice. "It's a toothpick. Mr. Fiske." "You are James H. Hanver?" "Huh!" The banker jerked himself together. "Wh-what's a tooth-nick?" "This!" Hanvey touched the trinket affectionately and detached it from his chain. "Swanless piece of jooly five gourmet gave me a piece of its solid gold—equestrian karat. Great invention; feller don't always have to be running around hunting toothpicks when he got one of those, but touching it touches a percussion a wooked little brain at Randolph Flake. That tellman gave a perceptible pump. "It-it's very—very remarkable," he murmured. "I am kind of funny-looking, ain't" I. Mr. Fiske? Mr. Randolph Flake was completely stripped of the poise upon which he added himself. He did not answer. Hanvey rattached the toothpick to the chain. The banker was staring and said, "Is that a dog eye?" opaque eyes of Jim Hanvey were raised slowly until they met the gaze of a small dog. "You are James H. Hanvey?" "You're the man the B. P. A. sent down here to investigate the robbery?" "Yes." Mr. Fiske was getting himself under control. He sought refuge in frankness. "I imagine my actions have been exceedingly discourant, Mr. Harvey. I apologize and only wish to explain that you somewhat stirred me. You see, you are not—well, not amuse the detective about which I read." --never could figure out how they do their tricks." "I wish I was," breathed Harvey estatically. "Goose! I love mystery stories. They fells sure are slick." "I Am Kind of Funny-Looking, Ain't I, Mr. Fiske?" "And you don't work like the detec- tions in books!" Another shock for the banker. He blinked. "Golly, no. I don't ain't stick, Mr. Fiske. I don't hardly know any dickers who are. Lemme tell you something." The desk and his sleepy eyes held the attention of the bunker. "My kind of work isn't hard. And why? Suppose I go on a case. I smart off wrong, but I don't know where I'm out on the wrong track—I start again. Something always. A detective can make all the mistakes he needs to do one thing right—he lands the man he's after; see?" "The B. P. A. wired me" he said slowly, "that you are their best operative." "But the crook, gosh! the poor feller haws," he said. "In the sun, he's caught. He has to do everything right. The detective only has to do one thing right. And there Flake had been studying his visitor, he was amazed now to find himself warming to the unninety person. There was an almost childish simplicity about Hanwyn which gave Flake concern. Hanwyn himself insisted that the man was a caricature. The banker gasped. "Crooks are your friends? I—1 never heard of such a thing." You say they don't do your. "Well, the high class crooks don't. Only the burns." "I guess not. But can't you see how much easier it makes things?" "Good Lord!" Fiske leaned back in his chair and regarded Havney with wideeyed wonder. "You are quite the most remarkable man I've ever met." For the first time, Fiske smiled. "And the fattest." Haney's eyes twinkled for a mo- crowlet pocket of his coat and pro- tected thin and vicious-looking projects. He extended these toward his com- panion. "Have a cigar?" Fluke thanked him and accepted one. He held the card from the other, held it up to his eyes, and vault relish. He blow a cloud of smoke across the room, and Fluke turned to face him. "They are kind of strong," said the detective genius, "Some folks like 'em." Fisho struggled heroically against he asphaltiging effect of the violent umes. Then they got the better of dim. "May I open another window?" he inquired weakly. "Sure. That'll be fine." Hanvey the second e cigar which lay unlighted on the desk. "Ain't you going to smoke yours?" "I'll try one of my own, if you don't mind." (To be continued Tuesday) IF YOU MISSED THE FIRST CHAPTERS of "The May Day Mystery" you may secure back copies of the Kansan at the Kansan Business Office. Kansan Business Office.