PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY APRIL 6, 1932 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR IN CHAPEL EDITOR IN PHILE Announce Editor FRED FLEMING MAKER LAWRENCE MANAGING EDITOR___ STACY PICKLELL Make Up Editor V. Jill Mair Night Editor Margery Ibis Night Editor Margery Ibis Sport Editor Albert Hube Sport Editor Albert Hube Source Editor Alberto Rodriguez Source Editor Alberto Rodriguez Uchrony Editor Brian Grace Uchrony Editor Brian Grace Literature Editor Lennie Rocha ADVERTISING MANAGER CHAS E. SYNYER Porter Park District Manager Peterson Garden Coffee District Associate Oliver District Assistant Bill Hamilton District Assistant Mary Tennant NATIONAL GROUP CAREERS Kyle Rueck John Martin Michael W. Larson Garden Mariners Luke Bustard Stacey Foley Lucie Brubaker Fred Plantinger Jay Rockefeller Telephones Business Office K.U. 60 News Room K.U. 60 Night Connection, Business Office 270 IK Night Connection, News Room 270 IK Published in the information book lines a week, and published monthly. Subscription fee: $40.00. Subscription price: $40.00 one year. payable in 12 units of second term matter. Subscription fee: $75.00 one year. payable in 12 units of second term matter. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6.1932 THOSE COLLEGE PLAYBOYS On the evening of the first showing of Scholastic Scundals a group of five University men rushed in to the performance at the close of the first act. Their conduct was anything but orderly; it would hardly have been flattering to an excited group of junior high school youngsters. They seated themselves noisily on the front row, center section and waited impatiently for the production to continue. Perhaps that is the way to enjoy a musical comedy. Theirs may have been the only physical state in which to appreciate the choruses. They enjoyed the comedy, apparently; they applauded loudly from time to time. Not only were these students disturbing to the crowd by their actions, but also they interrupted the pleasure of the public by dishing in and out of the auditorium, one at a time. It is optional, of course, if these students desire to appear at a public entertainment in this way; but it does seem as if something in the way of restricted admission might be done to prevent them from spoiling the enjoyment of others. "Don't aim above your readers," advised E. B. Chapman while speaking of editorial writing to journalism classes. SENIOR CLASS PHILANTHROPY Have you been able to digest the contents of this page? If not please phone the Kansan office. What can the senior class donate to the University that will be a work of philanthropy this year? Annually the outgoing class is bothered with the problem of deciding whether it is advisable to leave an archway, plant trees, put in elevators, start a sinking fund, establish scholarships or give a lamp post as a gift by which the class is to be remembered. Recently a moratorium on expenses for the University was held. The Chancellor requested that we try to save even more than we have done in the past year. Furthermore, the University is going to carry on economy by omitting paper towels and soap in the wash rooms. Also ice is to be deleted from the drinking fountains. Would it not be fitting to appeal to the senior class to be kind enough to start a penny ice fund, so that students, especially those attending the summer session, will not have to go about with parched tongue? If cold water is not provided, and the students are too poor to substitute a coke, the institution will surely be turned into a mad house. We can stand to go without highly perfumed green soap, but to have warm water in the drinking fountain is a different matter. It is justifiable to go on a thirsting quest for knowledge, but an accompanying physical thirst is too much. We appeal to the senior class to give aid for the necessities of life rather than leave a monument for sentiment's sake. IS THIS JUSTICE? Sunday, four University students decided that spring had come, and in response to the irresistible urge to go swimming, they damned bathing suits under their clothes and trudged happily toward the brick yards. Weird noises came from the direction of their goal. A chug-chug of a huge motor and shout of people informed the students that something was invading the quiet of the bath realm. Upon nearing the desired location, these students stopped abruptly to gaze at a high wire fence enclosing the entire region. The inconsiderate city of Lawrence has permitted someone to commercialize the old haunt of students. Cabins are in the process of construction, a tractor is doing further damage, and the high fence prohibits the free swim. With the passing of this freedom to the brick yard swimming pool, the last "free" thing in Lawrence goes out of existence. "Three Months in Alaska's Cold, 'A Great Experience." —Headline. Yes, if you’re near a graft. GOADING THE SUFFERING Twelve million sacks of coffee are to be burned at the rate of twenty thousand a day in Brazil. On March 19 over three and one half million sacks had already been burned. Such proceedings breed communism when many millions throughout the world are unable to see where the next meal is coming from. In the case of coffee, the practice is far less immeasurable than when other products with more food value are destroyed. Twelve million sacks of coffee, however, would keep many hungry, unemployed men in a better condition to seek work. It is criminal to destroy any food product merely because the market is over-supplied. It could be given to charity and used in the broadlines. It could be given to the poor who haven't money enough anyway to help reduce the supply on the market. It could be made exceedingly useful in helping to tie the world over a period which seems to be growing steadily worse in suffering and period when seems to be growing steadily worse in suffering and misery. Finally, the use of this coffee among the unfortunate might be helpful to sunker spirits and bitter minds. It might even ward off a worldwide uprising of the suffering which would be destructive of more than the coffee capitalists' surplus. A ROW AT COLUMBIA Even at Columbia, the largest university on the continent, students appear to have their troubles. Yesterday at least 1,000 students there planned to go on strike against the expulsion of the editor of the Spectator, the student newspaper. This action was decided upon at meetings held in the past few days to protest against the dismissal of the student editor. It has been planned also to circulate petitions d e m a n d i g the re-statement of the dismissed student. Student leaders attribute the expulsion of the editor to the policy of the Spectator, which, through his leadership, has launched a severe editorial attack on commercialized football. Another reason generally advanced for his expulsion was the alleged editorial sponsorship of the recent student attempt to investigate the coal mining situation in Kentucky. Even though the group supporting the editor,1,000 out of 35,000 is a small minority, it is heartening to hear that editors are backed sometimes by student bodies in their fight for reforms and that their actions and utterances often do reflect the opinion of a part of the student body. Dr. Irving Langmuir last year won $10,000 as an award for the most outstanding scientific achievements of the year. Dr. Langmuir says that the work WORK vs. PLAY There will be a meeting of the club at 8 o'clock Thursday evening in the W. S. G. A. rest room. CLINTON YOUNG. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXIX Wednesday, April 6, 1982 No. 118 QUIT CTRL. Vol. 143, No. 248 December, April, May, 1962 Noellee at Chaucer's office, after a conference on information publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Friday lunch. SIGMA TAU: There will be a meeting of Sigma Tau in room 115 Marvin hall on Wednesday, day April, 6 at 8 p.m. In new membership will be elected the present president. Send the Daily Kansan home. WEDNESDAY NIGHT VARSITY: There will be a Scotch vansity tonight. Stags will be fined a dollar. NEW JEFFERSON WOMEN'S PAN-HELLENIC: There will be a meeting of the Women's Pan-Hellenic Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in the rest room of Central Administration building Two gen glittering with truth may gleamed from Professor Linn's close relationship with the team that we are selling the greater number of our undergraduates gold briques in response to a question from Producers. In a speech she be the face for dinner, the dean who perceives the rule of the situation actually, "Ducks live on it, Bob." W. F. C. which won for him this prize was all done for fun. Nearly all great achievements are accomplished by someone so vastly interested in his subject that it is more like play than work. No business man ever succeeded who locked up his business every night and did not think of it again until the next morning. Campus Opinion Modern education does not provide a place for the person interested in one subject only. He is told that he must spend an equal amount of time on each subject, and if he does not do so he is likely to flunk out of school. As a result he is likely to lose interest in the thing which he likes to do and try to adjust himself to the educational system so that he can get a liberal education. He is not happy at his work; it has become work instead of play to him. Editor Daily Kansan: (Editor Daily Kansan: ESTHER CORNELIUS, President I must admit that I am disappointed in the society of Pachacamac. Their news sheet which appeared on the campus yesterday was a degradation of Pachacamac he has always professed to be a scientist and wished tertiary. But was it the welfare of the University or the welfare of Pachacamac which prompted the public airing of the news which they published? That Pachacamac has fallen, it seems, is not due to the fact that it is to be booked by proprogae. As a barb, I say that we will vote as we see fit. We are not suckers; we can distinguish between fact and fiction. A number of our professors take saints to refer to our popular magusian personality. There appears in a recent issue of the Saturday Evening Post an article by one of their brother professors, Dr. John M. Wise, University of Chicago, whose wife used by our instructors should give the latter some excellent ideas. The professor takes care to curry young people into college and then try to make them think about things in which they are not interested, so they can learn them. In fact, he speaks his surprise at the fact that even some ten percent manage to get really interested. He says that his fine culture, is doubtful if we find it. As Professor Lann points out, "Scholarship is like an interest in making friends, but if unaccepted by other interests." It would seem to me that we have an excellent group of scholars for professors, and of an excellent body of teachers. That is why less and by our requirements for teachers we have brought the existing situations about. Assuming that our professors teach them in groups at teaching as they do at research, preparation of papers for meetings, golf, handball and other activities? Research on outside of class make the fifty minute periods much more to the advantage of the students. Everyone in the international system, they don't believe in grades or this or that and that do sensible students, but we go on hands-on, with them. If our professor admitted hard enough, we wouldn't need finals, but we don't want to work that hard." If nothing should improve with time, that is why we should realize that as our professors control the eighty per cent. (Lam's estimate) who fail to show the teacher what they are doing the condemner as well as with the诫amed. Our students are not abnormal and there is no reason why an instructor and by our requirements interesting to such a small percentage. Our Contemporaries From The Silver and the Gold Boulder, Colo. "HOUR" BY "HOUR" "And I've got to have every hour of 'em to get too." This comment has been heard so often on all sides recently that we have become disguised "Stuff your hours"? we feel like hustling forth; "we have But instead we hold our tongue and reflect on the self-centeredness of our fellow students—and on the stupidity of them. We are also absorbing their higher education. The same thought came to many every registration day, while the perseverance of students courses to take, what to push up. It is an instance where freedom blinds and liberty shinders. We all have so many education shinders of study that our education suffers. For many years the great colleges of the East have seen the deterrimental effect of allowing students to make out of school and to pursue a particular course of study are automatically registered into this and that class; all students in one field take the same courses, with the exception of limited number of electives on the side. And the result is that students get those courses which are essential to a knowledge of their field, and get that natural background for which every student needs necessary duplication of subject-matter, the lack of preparation of the instructors in many cases, and the endless amount of red tape in manipulatives which are now concomitant of a University of Colorado education. FISHERMEN Wherever you fish you'll find the right tackle, rods and reels here. Green Brothers Hardware The Whole Town Is Going Girl Crazy! HELD OVER! 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