PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, MAY 22. 1832 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEIF OTTO EPP Associate Editors Robert Whitmore Fifth Level MANAGING EDITOR MARTHA LAWRENCE Make Up Editor Lillian Baldwin Editorial Designer Emily Shapiro Sunday Editors Bradley Bashack, Stephen Wheeler Special Sport Editor Alfre Hulbert Telegraph Editor Donald J. Kerry Illustrator Michael D. Walker Alumni Editors Ian Jackson Journalist Joanne McDonald ADVERTISING Manager CHAS E. SNYDER Advertising Advertising Manager Messier Kelly Kroen Director Manager Messier Kelly Kroen Director Manager Mellion Milton Director Assistant Messier Kelly Kroen Director Assistant Quién Quen Director Assistant Orrie Orrie Pier Keller Robin Whiteman Robert Whitman Lafe Hickory Lake Hickory Silver River Silver River Morgan River Manatee River Transportation Business Office . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . KU, 64 News Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . KU, 27 Night Connection. Business Office . . . . . . . . 1820K Night Connection. News Room . . . . . . . . 270K Published in the africanism, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the University of Kansas, and in other areas. Subscriptions may be obtained free, but are warranted in advance. waukee. Single equation, no cash. Entered as second class matter September 17 1910, at the post office in Lawrence, Kansas. SUNDAY, MAY 22, 1932 WE SALUTE YOU We salute you. Amelia Earhart You are the first woman to make a solo flight across the Atlantic ocean. You followed in the footsteps of the greatest of the American airmen, Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, exactly five years to the day later. While you were not quite successful in reaching your destination, you have proved that woman does have a place in the air and that the possibility of North Atlantic commerce between America and Europe is coming nearer and nearer to reality. Yours is a great triumph, a personal triumph, and a triumph for all womanhood. It is a great accomplishment, a mark in the progress of history which will not be dimmed by the passage of time You have truly established yourself as the peer of all American airwomen. Again we salute you, Amelia Earhart. SORRY, BUT Gradulating Program on Air. Headline. Some seniors will be on air too. "Sorry, but we are not cashing checks any more; at least not until the summer session begins," is the reply which will soon be given in many Lawrence business establishments to students who have been accustomed to cash their checks there. At first this reply is resented by most students as an aspiration on their financial standing, but when the business man's mule is explained to them, they usually see the logical necessity for the refusal to cash their checks at the close of the school year. They see that often it is the only reasonable, businesslike course which local business men can take, because past experiences have taught many that it is risky to extend credit and financial favors to some students as commencement draws near. Practically all members of the University student body mean to preserve their business reputations and integrity. Few properly leave a 'string of unpaid debts when they leave Lawrence at the close of the school year, but in the excitement of departure after a hectic week of examinations, some become careless and forget to pay all of their bills. This inconveniences local business men and undermines their confidence in students. Students should take time before they leave to straighten out all of their financial obligations. Mexico has taken the sting from the tax on "hard" liquors. If that takes the sting from the liquor itself, we're going to Mexico this summer. 3EHIND THE SCENES Nearly a week has passed since the Democrats met in convention in Lawrence. What really happened at the convention? Men made speeches and received applause; the band played; the gallery looked on, indifferent and puzzled, hoping to witness a fight and disappointed when harmony prevailed. It was a quiet, orderly gathering. Why? Because men in Kansas City, Kan., in Topeka, in Newton and Emporia and Ellsworth—every city and town in Kansas with a delegate—had formed their convictions and received their instructions before they sat down in the auditorium on the Hill. The formal procedure of a political convention is a result; it is not a cause. All the problems have been discussed and solved amid cigar smoke in hotel rooms, law offices, and informal gatherings where politicians get together in small groups. The convention was interesting. But wouldn't the events which preceded the convention have been far more interesting? Have you ever noticed that when the other fellow wontlike your friend, he's "prejudiced," when you don't like his you are simply showing you are a good judge of human nature? MISSOURFS NEW COACH Frank Carideo, who starred at Notre Dame University in football for three years, twice was named as an all-American quarterback, and who was regarded by the late Krate Rocke as the greatest quarterback that he ever coached, has signed to coach the University of Missouri' football team next year. The successor to Gwinn Henry graduated from Notre Dame in 1931 and spent last year as assistant coach at Purdue University, in Indiana. He has a hard role ahead of him in equalling the record made by his predecessor. Trained by the master of football coaches. Caridote will give Tiger supporters a different style of play and one that should satisfy them. Gwinn Henry was the victim of Tiger alumni and supporters because he happened to have two good teams. *K* Now that Carideo is signed, Missouri supporters are pleased. He will give his best, as all good concedes do, but if he should run into a little bad luck, will he follow Henry? The football fan is a bard person to please, especially he alumnus. The Kansan welcomes Frank Carideo into the circle of Big Six coaches and wishes him many years of success at Missouri, but may he lose all games with Kansas. ATHLETIC ECONOMY Judging from Huey Long's work in congress his name should be changed to Long Huey. At the Big Six faculty meeting ni Lincoln, Friday, the possibilities of eliminating cross country running, the reduction of the number of basketball games each season, with all games being played on weekend nights, and the abolition of spring football practice and scouting were considered. Lack of finances was given as the reason. Competitive athletics is a fin- thing for any young man of col- lege age, but over-emphasis largely nullifies the good effects of the competitive sports. The fac- tulty members of the Big Six committee should be congratulated for their efforts to curtail some of the over-emphasis, even though they did it under the expedient and accu- tuality of economy. Such a move would be beneficial not only from a financial viewpoint but also from the viewpoint of competitive athletics. Intercollegiate athletics have become overemphasized ni$m$ schools during the past decade. Formed upon an intramural basis, athletics spread between neighboring schools until now schools hundreds and even thousands of miles apart are contestants every year. Loss of school work in making these trips is not looked upon as an evil and the money needed to make the trips and buy equipment is not thought to be wasted. Probably it is not wasted. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Notices due at Chancellor's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issue. Vol. XXIX Sunday, May 22, 1922 No. **19** The Kansan Board will meet at 3:30 Monday afternoon. OTTO EPP, Chairman. KANSAN BOARD: Depression or not, I'd be willing to bet a dime that the author of the editorial "Your Clothing and Your Health," which appeared in Friday's Kaussan, was a woman, or at least a person who paid much attention to masculine legs. KAYHAWK CLUB: The Kayhawk club will meet Monday, May 23, in room 10, Kansas Union, CONYERS HERING, Vice President. Coney Island is the best place in the world to study legs, but even the YM C.A. swimming pool on Saturday afternoon will suffice. Make a special visit there some time. The department of painting is showing an exhibit of paintings and white colors by Professor Karl Mattern in the south gallery of the Thayer museum during the month of May, which will be open to the public until Commencement. Also, a collection by Professor Bloch is being exhibited in the galleries of the department of drawing and painting, rooms 325 and 327 Administration building, which will be on view until the end of this month. Editor Daily Kansan; PAINTING EXHIBIT: Rhodianthia will meet Sunday at 5 o'clock in Prison Hall for the annual picnic. Members planning to attend should pay 25 cents to Moine Luther Original poems will be read at the meeting all who have won first places during the year should bring typed copies of their winning poems. ALBERT BLOCH, Head of Department of Drawing and Painting RHADAMANTHI: VAGUE KNOWLEDGE W. S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE The W.S.G.A. Book Exchange will start paying cash for used books Day, May 7, at 9 o'clock. Bring your books to the BOOK EXCHANGE. HOTEL EDITION Member There are approximately one thousand students graduating this year from the University who have no realization of what the Alumni association means. All they know is that the association cannot ask them for money in the first year out of college, for the senior fee covers membership for the present time. Campus Opinion A ONE-POUNDER THRIVES To many, the Alumni association is just room two in the basement of the Administration building. In that office are friendly secretaries, and thousands of filed cards with each graduate and former student listed on them. As the seniors pass by, they rejoice or mourn the fact that their activity from now on will not be seen, but will be noted on a card. Weighing only one pound at birth, seven weeks ago, he may be able to discard his special crib of a shoe box and hot water bottles within another seven weeks. This youngster is running a handicap race. He has buckled down to his business of gaining weight with nary a whimper. Still, the seniors do feel a comfort in knowing that the Alumni association will know their whereabouts when one-time boson friends will have been forgotten. FREDERICK E. WIRTH. College students and business men should forget about their worries over final exams and the depression and give him a round of cheer. He is fighting a greater fight than any of us and without as much crying. After all, life is just what one makes it. When the other fellow is set in his ways, he shows obstinacy; when we are, it is firmness. A number of the students in the University R. O. T. c unit are wishing that the military department would adopt zippers to be used on army uniforms instead of buttons. Dr. Camutson says students who worry are the best scholars, very likely we shall all get A's en this semester. Kansas City's famous one-pound baby is now a robust and sturdy young man of three pounds and thirteen ounces. He scaled that weight Friday when he crawled upon the scales for the first time in two and one-half weeks. He has gained fifteen ounces during that period. --noon will suffice. Make a special visit there some time. Fat legs that vibrate in motion like the proverbal stomach on old Saint Nick—skimmy legs that would look good on a modernistic clavetted—legs that bow in like the handle on a spoon and legs that bow out like the handle on an old fashioned pump-legs that wobble when they are still as a slicker in January! Legs, short or long—fat or skinny—wobbly or stiff, all of them funny and fuzzy. And then just as we get to feeling that we are civilized and have acquired a sense of prestige, some aspiring editorial writer bobs up with a muddy smile. He exudes kindness. Imaging them saying, "Why my dear, even his best friends won't tell him!" Legistis' aren’t helpless and athletic feet had enough! Et comment! Lay off, McDuff, let the monkey continue to be the biggest attraction at the zoo. Depression, but weather, sweat or sweler, we're gonna keep our pants he Republicans can steal our costs and the Democrats can snitch our skirts, but when the Sociists try to start a back to nature movement by turning us loose without our pants, we're going to get tough. Shakespeare said ssn eyes, ssn taste, ssn ears, but he didn't any- d Yours for masculine integrity and another pair of pants. Our Contemporaries Lees. INTELLECTUAL INQUIRY One of the most valuable contributions which an educational institution can make to the intellectual development of its members is the stimulation of a healthy skepticism. A college student has reached that part of his education, if he hopes to become a culturalized person. He may be limited to the more acquisition of facts and second hand ideas. The Encyclopaedia Britannica contains far more facts and ideas than a single student ever encounteres in four years of college, and costs far less. The expense in time required by a college education must be justified by the quality not found in encyclopedia—the development of creative thought. The first evidence that a man is learning to think intellectually and independently comes usually in his ex-situ knowledge of ideas and institutions complessively accepted by his follow. He is often wrong, but he will some day be strikingly right; he is traveling under the guardianship of a child, which is open to uo hitchhikers. A. G. ALRICH Printing Warehouse Binding, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies, Stationery 736 Mass Street It is a curious fact, and one of gleamy significance, that a student will spend hours each day in the laboratory, applying to physicist problems the empirical development of which is perhaps the high-water mark in the history of the human mind; but when he checks in his equipment at the end of the period he checks in with it any spirit of intellectlethm which he may have had. He has actually stated that E. Ht-but he tacitly subscribes to the current campus notions, the standard of values of his set, and local fashions in pedagogy. His diploma will be the label on a sealed container, the identification of the sterility of the contents. Departure from the innocuous ideas which have been sanctified by usage and official approval is often looked upon with suspicion. The culturalism which must be stamped out at all cost. On the contrary it is the best health symptom possible, the indication that that institution, as a school or modern man, is approaching its goal. —Purdue Exponent. PERMANENTS Hair Set and Finger Wave $2.50 and $4.00 Snyder's Beauty School Phone 893 817% Mass. Busy Days Don't leave the Hill Eat Nothing is good enough but the best. --stay correct in length forever. Try the Arrow Trump, in white, plain colors, or stripes. It's a grand, white shirt. Only BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. TAXI 25c For Quick Service PHONE 65 Jayhawk Tax Friends and countrymen get the Trump. You're going to get along well with the Trump. For here's a shirt that won't disceye you. If you buy it in your correct size, you need never fear that it's going to shrink down to your small brother's size. For the Trump is Sanforized-Shrunk, which means it's guaranteed to fit you permanently, or your money back. Yes, you'll like the Trump, with its smart, even-setting collars and its sleeves that $795 Would you like to have a degree in three years, a master's degree in four, or a full year's advantage in getting ahead with your life work? Or, would you like the opportunity of doing additional and intensive work in your field? You can have any of these—by attending the summer session. Make the most of these years of your life. Full details will be gladly furnished on request. You're here, of course, to acquire knowledge, scholastic and vocational training, the learning that is to aid you when you step out into the active world. Why are you in college? As a senior, on the verge of graduation, you know the feeling of one who is about to make the first attempt at actual realization of that distant goal—success in the other world. You know what it means to make the most of your college opportunities. As juniors, sophomores, and freshmen—perhaps you have yet to decide on a chosen field of endeavor. But you still have the advantage of time—you have a double opportunity to shape the course of your life. The summer session offers you an opportunity to improve yourself in your field of endeavor, and at the same time, to gain extra steps toward your goal. . Apply for information through THE DIRECTOR Room 107, Fraser University of Kansas SUMMER SESSION 1