PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1922 University Daily Kansan Official Student Peeper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHIER ... ROBERT WHITEMAN Associate Editors Vicki Lester Editor PAUL V. MINNER AUTUNG EDITOR Makenze Maker Cameron Editor Ice Tracny Night Editor Arnaud Ketemann Harold Schoenborn Sports Editor Gerald Pennington Jennifer McKinnon Margaret Grange Exchange Editor Alfred Brooks Rundy Editor Paul V. MINNER AUTUNG EDITOR Makenze Maker Cameron Editor Ice Tracny Night Editor Arnaud Ketemann Harold Schoenborn Sports Editor Gerald Pennington Jennifer McKinnon Margaret Grange Exchange Editor Alfred Brooks ADVERTISING MANAGER, SUNNY KROSS Assistant Advertising Mgr., ... Margaret Jenkins District Manager ... Billie Millington District Assistant ... Olive J. Townsend Robert Whitman Robert蔡 V. Paul M. Viller Lilianna Stail Billy Hitterson Bill Lawrence William McCarthy William Prairie Telephones Business Office K.U. 64 News Room K.U. 22 Night Connection, Business Offer 2781KH Night Connection, News Room 2782KH Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Chicago, on the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single prices, 12 each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1010, at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. OLD SNOW HALL PASSES MONDAY, OCTOBER 3. 1932 Finally old Snow Hall is to be demolished. It was condemned several years ago as unsafe for further class room work. The vine-covered building, which has been standing the past several years in silent memory of a bygone prestige, while waiting for the necessary money to be appropriated. C. M. Harger, chairman of the Board of Regents, announced yesterday that the work of raiding the hall would be done during the slack months this winter. The furnishings were removed two years ago and now the time-worn building itself is to go. The ground on which the old hall stands will be landscaped, forming a small park in front of Watson Library, which will add more to the beauty of Mount Oread. Yet those ivy-covered walls of old Snow hall are beauty in themselves. They have a touch of reserve and dignity, that has grown with the passing of the years. Aged and dignified, Snow hall has outlived its usefulness. It has given way to its successor, which has been in use for the past three years. The workmen soon will raze the hall within whose walls many generations of Jayhawkers have studied. Old grads returning to the Alma Mater will miss the venerable building, and undergrads likewise will watch, regrettably as each vine-covered block is removed. In the marche of time, the old must give way to the new, but it would be appropriate to preserve some of the stones to mark the site of the historic building. H. S. Pritchett in the October Atlantic suggests that horse racing be substituted for football in American colleges. This change, he claims, would not only do away with the evils of football, but would also provide a better money-maker for college and a greater opportunity for betting, as well as being an amusement readily understood by all spectators. Few persons sincerely believe that the insect world will eventually overcome mankind; but, if the numerous grasshoppers in the short grass between Ad and the stadium should ever get' a little closer to college education, they might become a serious menace. Newspapers recently carried dispatches that "Jarring Jim" Bauch had been posing for pictures which bear indication that the would go after Johnny Weismuller's position as portrayer of jungle strong men. Could it be that Jim might go to the jungle to practice a while and give Kansas paragraphers something else to talk about?—Kansas State Collegian. And now California comes forth with another claim; this time it is the ancient north pole site. We hope that we live until the day that it claims. Dr Brinkley, Bill Murray, Huey Long and Ma Furgeson. THE YANKS AGAIN The New York Yankees, with the great Lou Gehrig, leading the way, again demonstrated their power by crushing the Chicago Cubs in four consecutive wins, to gain the highest pedestal of baseball glory—the world's championship. It was just a case of batting power. Again the Yankees are champs, and in doing so they ran their record to twelve consecutive victories in world's series play. It was a great series while it lasted, but the plucky and courageous Chicago Cubs were battling against odds. The Cubs fought valiantly, always batting for victory, but the vaunted Yankee power was too great, and the 1932 world's series is history. King baseball is now deposed. The great collegiate sport of football is on the throne. In a few months, basketball will succeed the pikskin sport, and then again in the spring will come baseball back to resume its crown. In April the teams will battle once more for the league championship and the right to enter the classic of baseball in late September. Right now the Yankees are champions; King baseball is dethroned, and everyone is waiting for the new ruler, to begin his reign. Prof. F. H. Guild remarked to one of his classes the other day that there have been more people killed in automobile accidents the four years, than in the World War. Here is another thing that can be blamed upon the Hoover administration. Dean Robert R. Wicks of the Chapel of Princeton university believes that chapel attendance should be compulsory at least half the Sundays of a term. Otherwise, he says, students feel that they are showing too much religious interest if they attend. Though they scoff at the Sophisticated Sophomore as he avidly digests Tarzan, the dignified seniors' 'bifftily jet' around 'to the perusal of the same strip before the day is over. Patient in Louisiana killed his physician for offering to take him for a ride, and they say he's insane. But maybe he's from Chicago and merely misunderstood.—Daily Trojan. "Trio Holds Up Kansan"—headline in the Lawrence JournalWorld. That's nothing; some journalism students nearly hold up the Kansan every day. What possibilities does politics offer as a career for the college-trained man? What are his chances in the game as it is played now? This question, particularly pertinent in the present year, is posted by the editor of the Vermilion, St D., Republican and left without an answer. Our Contemporaries POLITICS AND THE COLLEGE MAN We met a young man a short time ago who is preparing himself for a political career . . . He is a college grad- He puts it this way: The Advanced Standing Commission of the Y. W. C. A. will hold its first meeting of the year on Tuesday, Oct. 4, at 4:00 a.m. at Herley House. All meetings are free. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Val. XX. 103 Monday, Oct. 3, 1922 N. 14 Chancellor's office, Berlin, for national publication ADVANCED STANDING COMMISSION OF Y. W. C. A: Natlats due ail. Chancellery's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. GRADUATE STUDENTS, SCHOOL OF BUSINESS; The first of a series of three meetings for graduate students in the School of Business and department of economics to be held in room 210 Administration building this evening at 9 o'clock. The general topic of discussion will be "Introduction to Speech," the speakers will be Dean Stockwell, Professor Ike, and Professor Holtzclaw. D. J. TEVIOTDALE, Adviser to Graduate School. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB: The Home Economics club invites all students interested in Home Economics to a tea at the Home Management house on Wednesday at 3:39 o'clock. KAPPA PHI: The first regular meeting for Kappa Fppa will be held Tuesday, October 4, at 6:30 mch in wychs hall, Mell. LeLourd and Mrs. Thompson will speak The Kayhawk club will hold a smoker in the men's bunge of the Memorial Union building at 7:30 Tuesday evening. All non-freementry men are invited to attend. CONVERS HERMING, Vice President. EVELYN WORDEN, Publicity Chairman. KAYHAWK CLUB: KU KU'S: All members turn in their athletic books at the Athletic office immediately. Turn them in to be reserved in the Kui Ku section. DONALD ELKIN, President. Kappa Phi Delta Kappa will meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening in Oread Training School. GARLAND DOWNUM, Secretary. PHI DELTA KAPPA: THETA EPSILON: Regular meeting of Theta Epsilon will be hold Tuesday evening at 6:45 *clock* at 1128 Mississippi street. THELMA KRATCHOVIL, President. ute and has already had a year's postgraduate work at Columbia University. The coming year he will study in the University of Chicago. The following year he plans to study international law in Scotland. He is a young man of starling character with high ideals. . . But we wonder how much chance that young man will have with the voters when he goes up against an opponent who can chew tobacco and tell funny stories, the kind of candida-like gossip he enjoys and forgets them the day after election, and whose sole occupation while in the navy roll? And well may this wondering South Dakota editor wonder. A good many aspects of the political game, under the present rules, tend to discourage persons of ability from entering public life. This year the good doctor is conducting a truly up-to-date campaign with a garnished painted truck called Ammunition Train No. 1, advertisements for a cowboy radio crooner. He is promising the poor people of Kansas paving on hundreds of miles of roads in every county in the state, free text from the Kansas and in every county created by state money, and many other expensive improvements. On top of all this he promises to reduce taxes. The Kansas farmers are so anxious for any kind of change that they are falling right in line. Turning to another state, there is Illinois where famed big Bill Thompson is at imposing the downstream farm tax. A few years ago, the Small, former governor, who was in Take the gubernatorial race in Kansas this year. One of the candidates is Dr. John R. Brinkley, the goat clutch quack whose license was revoked by the state medical board. Incursed at this action, Dr. Brinkley two years ago started a campaign for governor apparently on the theory that election to office would vindicate his standing as governor of Appalachia. Following strenuous campaign among the people, Dr. Brinkley polled the amazing total of 180,200 write-in votes, only a few thousand less than Harry Woodring, who was elected. The Best Abashed Bishkarian, however it is the NATIONAL "The Supreme Authority," and THE NATIONAL "The Supreme Authority," and the study that will prove its resounding and Webster's Collegiate Recommended by the English Department of University of Kansas 106,000 words and phrases with defi- nitions, etymologies, pronouns. G. & C.MERRIAM CO. But there is another side to the matter. Such incidents as those in Kansas and Illinois are common enough not to excite any appreciable protest, but they are not the general rule. The fact remains that the number of college graduates in public office is increasing rapidly. at all your college Backpackers or Writes for Information to the Publishers. Free access papers if you wish. Springfield, Mass. This may be accounted for in that the proportion of college graduates in the country is increasing and that it is but natural that more of them should get into office. Granting that, it seems, nevertheless, that the American public is gradually demanding a higher type of public service. Scandals involving ***** dieted, tried and made to disgoy withheld interest on state funds in 1925左廷密 left the Mississippi, Ohio and Illinois rivers in a show boat promoting Candidate Small's小贴 for vindication. Opposing Small is Judge Henry Horner, whose name used to be Levy until his wife was born to hers when he divorced his father. "My friends. I don't have to tell you that Levy's don't eat hogs. If Horner is elected, hog prices are bound to drop. Furthermore, Jewsrim pawmashops, and the first thing Horner will do if he gets to Springfield is own a pawmashop. He was put up by Tony Cermak to get his wife nor children in a Catholicote, trying to be the Catholic vote, by sending his children (Judge Horner has neither wife nor children) to a Catholic parochial school!" blunted Blustering Bill. "The downstate clodhoppers," according to a reliable report, "gawped, snickered and nodded approvingly." If these two incidents are fair examples of the way the game of politics is played in this day and of the way a villain might have worked after votes, the hopes for Vermont's college trained politician are very discouraging, indeed. The text is the title of the 16th book page. 1700 pages of this volume contain illustrations of works by various authors, and illustrates in a dictionary of foreign phrases, and other literary terms. ON A BASIS OF SERVICE LOW PRICE QUALITY We create business or social forms or carry out your ideas with taste and distinction. In times like the present when the necessity of efficient and honest government is forcibly brought to the attention of the people, this tendency should be stimulated. Popular government will long continue to be a rule of emotion and prejudice rather than a rule of reason, but it will still remain one, given the condition, it seems, is now being made. The future, even more than the present, indicates a growing place for the college trained, conscientious official who will regard public office as an opportunity for public service rather than for private gain—Daily Nehrakan. Dale Print Shop 1027 Mass. public corruption which once would have been considered but natural are now front page news. The Cafeteria is conveniently located and our menus are well planned. You will find our new 25c meals delicious. You need not leave the Hill to eat. The Cafeteria Take a Tip From Us--- Nothing is good enough but the best Hoover or Roosevelt? What Actually Happens at Hear WM. HARD, Nov. 3—"Behind the News." Hear FRANK KENT, Oct. 14—"The Coming Election." Washington? Will Russia's Experiment Fail? Heat the authentic story ft WM.H. CHAMBERLIN, Jan. 16. Why Don't the Nations Disarm? KENT Hear the authentic story from WM. H. CHAMBERLIN, Jan. 16. BRAILSFORD Hear H. N. BRAILSFORD, distinguished British journalist. CHAMBERLIN On the HARD Student Activity Ticket also-- LECTURES CONCERTS By DR. R. L. SUTTON "Arctic Big Game Hunting," and RICHARD HALLIBURTON, author and traveler. JASCHA HEIFETZ. great violinist JOSE ITURBI, Spanish pianist HALL JOHNSON Negro Choir GLADY SWARTHOU7, soprano Seven Debates East-West Revue Three Plays Glee Club Concert 22 Events for $ 4 Invest in an Activity Ticket