PAGE TWO MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief Martha Lawrence Alice Gill ... Hetty Millingt Mangaging Editor Ira McCarr Markup Editor Chloe Colmes Night Editor Matt Jones Night Editor Aliza Froyleau Telegraph Editor Harold Stevens Telegram Editor Steven Browne Roostey Editor Margaret Green Exchange Editor Grize Dodge Exchange Editor Glenn Dodge Sensational Editor Sam Smith ADVERTISING MANAGER SHINY KROSS Assistant Advertising Marär Marriet Lee District Manager Billery Millington District Assistant Olive J. Townsend **Board Members** Robert Whitcomb II Paul V. Miller Marcet Reeves II Lillibail Stuhk III Beryl Mulligan II Alexander Hoods III Mr. Lawrence III Ira McCarty Washington Franley **Telephones** Business Office KU, 61 Broadway KU, 61 Room No. Business Office Night Connection, New Room 2962 KU Published in the afternoon, face to face a week, and published weekly in the evening. Department of Journalism at the University of Alabama, Journalism office. Journalism price, $40 per year, payable in advance. Single issue, or for each issue on September 17, 1630, at the post office at Lawrence, Louisiana. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1932 THE ANNUAL ROLL CALL The American Red Cross started its annual membership drive Friday in an attempt to obtain funds in order to continue to give its valuable service. Although the middle west has been fortunate in requiring but little of the assistance of the Red Cross, it has watched with pride the great work this humanitarian organization has, accomplished. Distress, resulting from depression and unemployment, has made more people realize the necessity of organized relief, the work of the Red Cross. But this work can not be done without finances. Every individual who is in a position to do so owes it to humanity to provide himself with a membership in order that the Red Cross can cope with the added burdens resulting from the present conditions, as well as the taking care of the other crises which are ever present. WHAT PRICE COLLEGE Is college worth the price? Does the good receive balance the disillusionment and moral and intellectual laxity sometimes developed? Many writers have said that college males the man but they have failed to mention that it sometimes breaks him. They have spoken of the enlightenment he receives socially and intellectually but they have passed over his mental and physical breakdowns. The modern youth colleges of college age, buys a racon coat and sets out to pledge a fraternity. He has not been prepared for the heartbreaks or the disillusionments in store for him. So he goes blissfully to college, perhaps he pledges, perhaps he doesn't, but whether or not he is a fraternity man he finally bumps up against social problems which are, by his old standards, unconventional. He may in time reach that state where he is unable to distinguish the right from the wrong. Or, again, he may, if overworked during his university career, go into life physically and mentally broken. Of course, the majority are not so affected but the minority's outlook is warped and their health broken. Does college pay for them? A NEW CLASSIFICATION It has been suggested that there are two types of individuals in regard to knowledge: those who know and those who don't know. Basically this is true, but a little examination of this principle will disclose that in reality there are four classes: (1) those who know and are aware of it, (2) those who know and are not aware of it, (3) those who do not know and are aware of it, and (4) those who do not know and are not aware of it. This division may or may not be valuable but if every person could discover which class he admires most, then by introspection find in which class he belongs it might solve a number of class problems. Perhaps Plato was right, after all, when he said, "The proper study of mankind is man." OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at Chamberlain's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issue. Vol. XXX Monday, Nov. 14, 1522 No. 59 The Advanced Standing commission of the Y. W. C. A. will meet Wednesda day afternoon at Henley house at 4:30 RUTH ROWLAND. ADVANCED STANDING COMMISSION OF Y.W.C.A.: CAMPUS PROBLEMS SPEAKING CONTEST: CAMPUS PROBLEM LAME SPEAKING CONTEXT A group of students speaking content will be hold in Fraser theater Tuesday evening at 8 vclock. MARGARET L. ANDERSON COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 15, at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of the Administration building. E. H. LINDLEY, President. ENGLISH LECTURE: Miss Helen Eboda Hoopes will give a lecture on "Women Poets of America," on Thursday, Nov. 17, at 4:30 p.m. in room 200 Fraser hall. DOVE: There will be an important meeting of the Dave staff taught in the north tower room of Primer half. It is necessary that all members be present at this meeting. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: There will be an important meeting of the Home Economies club at the home management house Tuesday at 3:00 a.c. Miss Elizabeth Grange will speak on "Home Economics When I Have Known." The meeting will be followed by a tea. LORENTE KALIBERNNER, President. GRADUATE CLUB: **GRADUATE CLUB:** The Graduate club will meet in the private dining room of the cafeteria at 6:15 o'clock Tuesday evening. Professor J. M. Kellogg will give an illustrated talk. All graduate students are invited. ELLIOTT PENNER, Chairman. INTRA-MURAL MANAGERS OF WOMEN'S TEAMS; INTRA-MURAL MANAGERS OF WOMEN'S TEAMS. Please turn in to Sergeant Eain Fowler shops a list of all women who will comprise the rifle teams to represent each house and each independent team. This must be by Tuesday noon, Nov. 15. ROWENA LONGSHORE, Manager of Women's Rifle Team. JAY JANES: There will be an important meeting Wednesday at 4:30 in room 216 Administration building. All members must be present. MATHEMATICS CLUB PICTURE: The Mathematics club picture for the Joyhawker will be taken Tuesday. Nov. 15. Meet at the Mathematics office promptly at 12:20. OTHER BOUNDARIES: Vice President PI_LAMBDA_THETA: PI Lambda Theta will hold initiation services on Tuesday, Nov. 15, at 5 o'clock in room 161 Fraser. It will be followed by the annual Founders' Day banquet at the Colonial Tea room. Price $5c. MARGARET E. ROBERTS, Secretary. THETA EPSILON: Republic meeting will be held at 1214 Mississippi street Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. All members are expected to be present. President Did you know that the University Daily Kansas is the only college daily in the state of Kansas? In a recently published rating of the thirty collegiate dailies published in the United States it was accorded one of the highest rating. The Kansas differa from a majority of other collegiate publications in the fact that it plays a dual role as a city daily and the official school publication. Through the wire facilities of the United Press it is able to give you the latest news from all over the world. Through its student reporters and editorial writers it attempts to summarize for you the Hill news and opinions of the day. In this latter capacity it opens its columns to you through the medium of Campus Opinion. "It is me" and "Who are you looking for?" were included in the Council's list of permissible grammatical constructions. Authors, linguists, editors, business men, and teachers were among the 220 judges chosen by the Council to make a study of English usage. The Council itself is composed of 6,000 elementary, high school, and college teachers. The University Daily Kansan has been serving the college public since the first edition in 1912. It has attained this present record among the student-published dailies through the efforts of faculty and students of the department aided by readers who have given time and service to it in many ways. We believe it is an enviable record and one which can be maintained only through diligent work and continued co-operation from Kansan readers. We shall appreciate your suggestions and contributions. Apparently giving up all hopes of improving the speech of the "better middle class," the National Council of Teachers of English has approved as good colloquial usage 230 commonplace errors. "SMALL ERRORS" The surveys and discussions of the Council during its 21 years of existence have had much influence in textbook making and in teaching. Hence it may not be long until college professors will skip over "small errors" in a freshman English theme such as the following: "If it wasn't for football, school life would be dull." The reason a student feels awfully bad at other times is because of the work they have to do. Most schools have a healthy climate, but you have to walk slow to enjoy it. I was feeling badly the other day when a professor invited my friend and myself to his office. He told us we should try and get our lessons better. But we were not the students who he was looking for. I felt pretty good after that." CAMPUS PESTS Our Contemporaries "Maurice the Moocher" is known by everyone and liked by no one. When he accepts you, you may be sure he is addressing your package of cigarettes. A hearty hailer of your person, he is a hardier inhaler of your 'smokes', no matter what the brand may be. A common campus watchword among the older men is, "Here comes Maurice." It's a signal for temporary fasting. No careless exposing of anything, some of which Maurice might want to mooch. Freshmen are the moochers' prey. These unsuspecting ones supply him with everything but an excuse for his existence. "Don't mind if I ride, do you?" has carried him out of their way many a time; and "Let me have a dime; pay you back next week" has bought him many a coca cola out of their allowance. Miss Jekyll and Mrs. Hyde Ah Maurice! with the taking ways, haven't you ever heard of the one that begins, "It is more blessed. . . ." "Women are angels," cried a world, stepped in its idealistic context of a creature, "pure, sincerely and fragile, impractical but to be considered with utmost respect." Gold Nugget Found Sibille, Mont. (UP)—Discovery of a gold nugget worth $47 was reported recently near Gold Butte, Mont., where a small gold nugget was under way the last few months. The nugget is said to be the first picked up since there is 1860. Gold Butte once enjoyed a gold mining boom, but later prospectors turned to richer district. Then came Kiplig with his "rag, a bone, a bank of hair," Schopenhauer's short, narrow-shouldered, broad-bipped, short-legged monatosis; Nietzsche's warrior; and Chesterfield's view of women as children. Men early realized the inaccuracy of both the old and the new concepts, and changing conditions brought the same realization to the women themselves. Nietzsche used the monetary but rather useless organisms, insulated from careers of business, they were able to maintain the angelic aura. But the briskness and intimacy of their contact with the world today has revealed that women have dimensions, feelings and capacities like other human beings. As a result, many women try to live up to both concepts at once. They employ a dull personality, shifting disconcertingly from the soft-voiced Victorian to the hard-liped, calculating modern. A Minnesota professor tells the story of a girl who asked her classmate selection, "Oh!" she cried, "they gave up everything for love!" The professor tested her: "Would you go to the Common Peepal's ball with a boy you liked very much, or to the Junior prince with a more acquaintance?" The tears stopped, the eyes drooped in different! Of course I'd go to the prom. The world of men might face with equanimity a return to the old and simple idealistic concept of women. But perhaps the woman's new hardness is deeper than a veneer — Minneapolis Daily. Aberdene, Wash. (U.P.) - Hend pea shelling was too slow. L. S. Sorensen used a cloth wringer and got fast action. --by Eating at We Beat Missouri You can beat Depression The Cafeteria One Stop Clothes Service Station We do everything to your clothes but call the old clothes mar. Schulz the Tailor 917 Mass. St. Nothing is good enough but the best. --- STATIONERY SALE CONTINUES Entire Stock Including MONTAG'S - WHITING'S AND HURD'S FINEST PAPERS Also ALL CRESTED AND SEAL STATIONERY AT 25% to 75% REDUCTIONS Rowlands TWO BOOK STORES Some Advertising May Need But there is one form of publicity that stands on its own feet. WOMEN'S PICTURES Want Ads Use No Display; They Are All Meat! Want ads sell books and instru ments, find lost valuables, sell typing ability, rent rooms and apartments, bring workers and employers together, locate tu tors, or what do you want? at 25 words or less: one insertion, 25c; three insertions, 50c; six insertions, 75c. Over 25 words: one insertion, 1c each word; three insertions, 2c each word; six insertions, 3c each word.Call at the Kansan Business office.