PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1932 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR IN CHIEF FRED FLEMING Associate Editors MANAGING EDITOR STEVAC PICKETT Make Up Editor Oceane Owl Copy Editor Paul Meehan Night Editor Drew Bissett Design Editor Margaret Dickson Telegraph Editor Margaret Dickson Security Editor Prudence Or Editorial Editor Prudence Or Fashion Editor Titus Poore ADVERTISING MANAGER - CHINA E. I SYNDER Director Manager Director Assistant Director Assistant Director Assistant Director Assistant Director Assistant Mgrs from Tallahassee, Fla. Mgrs from Tallahassee, Fla. Mgrs from Tallahassee, Fla. Mgrs from Tallahassee, Fla. Mgrs from Tallahassee, Fla. Pirkler Schiller Joe Kushner Joe Kushner Robert Willettman Mildred Carson Gordon Martin Marina Lauro Lila Heykwitz Lucie Rubin Francis Frick Telephone **Telephonses** Business Office K: UU. 68 News Room K: UU. 25 Night Connection, Business Office 2701K Night Connection, News Room 2702K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Education, for the purpose of representing Forms of the Department of education. Only a small percentage are paid, per article. Simple copies, for each fee. Subscription price, $40 per year, payable in ad vance. Single copies, 3% cash. Enforced as second-class matter September 17, 1910; at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1932 EQUALITY AT LAST! Today was the day of days! Women's self government is assured after the glorious, whole-hearted turn-out (two hyphens in one sentence is—are?—bad, but equal representation is—something or other) by the feminine portion of the student body to vote in a real, honest to goodness non-partisan (we didn't know that another of these was going to appear; have a few for good measure)—election. RELATIVE VALUES No combines will control the doings of our women next year. Wait until tomorrow for proof of this assertion, when results of the election come out. At last the unorganized woman is coming into her own! The kidnaping of the Lindbergh baby has even driven the Chinese-Japanese war from the front pages of our newspapers. Our world has become insensitive to the sufferings of its people at home and abroad in the face of this catastrophe which faces the son of the famous aviator. It has taken Will Rogers to revive and recall to our minds that in spite of the Lindbergh misfortune the world must go on. It has taken Will Rogers to remind us that other children have disappeared and that other families have suffered despair. THE ANNUAL FLING We are sorry for the child. We are more than sorry for his parents. But we can't overlook the other families in our country who recently have suffered the same hardships and who have had only the barest sympathy. Their problems are as great to them as those of the Lindberghs are to them. We have rather lost sight of human understanding through worship of our heroes. According to all accepted political methods, University women have a unique method of electing officers for the W.S.G.A. council. No other group would tolerate such plans. After a meeting of all organized house presidents who receive instructions and who pledge the support of their houses to co-operate with the present council, a mass call of all University women is called. At this meeting, every woman has an opportunity to nominate others for offices on the Women's Self Governing Association council. Each nominee pays one dollar into the general fund. Theoretically there are no combines, no election campaigns, and no discussion of candidates between times of nomination and election. Today and tomorrow the candidates are paraded before the women voters at teas, Thursday elections will be held to decide which candidates represent the choice of University women. If national elections were conducted in this way, Alfaula Bill Murray would win by a beard. CAPITAL AND "THE MASSES" The "masses," chiefly represented by a few hundred gullible workman and hungry unemployed under the direction to a Communist leader who was, in the trite phrase, "conspicuously absent" at the actual riot, marched on the Ford plant yesterday evening. Repulsed, first with fire hoses and threats, they came on with sticks and pieces of brick and four were killed and fifty or more injured. Every economic depression is featured strikingly by active dissention between the helpless laborers at the behest of professional agitators and trouble makers, and the hired forces of capital. Usually the capitalistic power prevails. If the side of the workmen is successful, employed labor is rarely benefited to an appreciable extent, and the unemployed, as in the present instance, get nothing but violence and death as a result of the hopeless conflict. It seems as if labor could outsi well do without Communisti agitation. Surely it would be no worse off without it. RELIGIOUS UNITY Catholic, Jew and Protestant leaders have been conferring in Washington and have begun a plan whereby the religious prejudices of the three groups may be reduced. They wish to establish national religious unity among the faiths. The idea is not to effect some new kind of ecclesiastical merger, but rather to combine the counsel and good will of the three for the benefit of all the seets. The purpose is praiseworthy. All three hope to gain the same final goal, but each has tried to attain it by some means different from the others. For this reason, there has been little co-operation among the groups, and considerable wrangling. The conference is a welcome step toward the attainment of inter-religious amity. SPONGERS With mid-semester near, K. U has the rise of the annual number of spongers. To some extent they are always present, but they are especially active about the middle of each term. Library readings are assigned to all members of a class at the same time, but the sponges are not interested. They let the others get the reading done, and just prior to the time the material is due the less ambitious class members get the work from someone else who has taken the time to do it. This in itself is bad enough, but it is more than disregarding to have one of these parasites ask to see a paper you have prepared for class and then, a day or so later, band in one which is a lot better than yours and on which he will receive a better grade than you, regardless of the fact that his is a day or so late. The more hardbound students maintain that it is easy enough to discourage this sort of practice, but try to deny having a paper and then turn one in and see how your stock rises with the other members of the class! Our Contemporaries ABOLISH STUDENT LUXURIES? Editorials in newspapers all over the country make it common practice consistently for spending thousands of dollars for luxuries while the parents of these students are struggling to make ends meet. The college administration officials have brought pressure upon student organizations which led to the cancellation of numerous and other elaborate social functions. Pennsylvania State Collegian The latest word comes from Lehigh where propaganda against expensive ad- vertising practices is published, the Brown and White. "One in- eight weekend dances" the editorial describes as "a mess of people." There's Style in Glasses Make them a smart accessory instead of a tiresome necessity New frames have the distinction of fine jewelry F. H. Roberts Fitted, of course, for helpfulness, they are chic enough to be worn for vanity's sake alone Optometrist 833 Mass. St. students don't pay the $15,000. Maybe the fathers and alumni付它. But it costs that much anyway. Beach parties and dances and sleepiness nights may be enjoyable to collegiate at weekend parties, but no one can deny it is a luxe We refrain from saying "so what with difficulty." It is possible that the students have been out of record with student pocketbooks. It would be a much more satisfactory situation if each of them knew five functions altogether, students would hold the dances on the lesbian scale and so decrease the burden from undergraduation to undergraduate conditions would not be alleviated if college students were to忌瞕 an elimination of all the luxuries of their undergraduate ca It seems that here is a case where we may point to the action of Penn State students in one of the larger dances here, students have been successful in running Stuart Mill with no more definite ball. And Mittany Ball but only a few dollars. Even if a fraternity has been able to struggle along within its budget this year, wouldn't it be a wise procedure to send a team of students and salt it away for next year's possible hardships? This is not unwarranted pessimism, but common sense says that it would look ahead, adjust themselves to new circumstances, and plan for the future, who will thrive on the depression and stand its difficulties with color flying. Without attempting then to cut a great deal into the Penn State student's admitted right to enjoy himself during undergraduate days, it seems that there should be carried out by fraternities should be carried out by fraternies here. For instance, few of the Greek houses have not felt a serious lesson of incuneum because of outstanding social behavior and social anxiety within the required budget. Yet, how many of these houses have contemplated the elimination of June houseparty with the stipulation that money which was buighed to this event be given to some department other than social? Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan; To deny the existence of so-called "facts" referred to in previous Campus Opinions is unnecessary. A record of the Council's achievements is available in the campus bulletin. Club it welcomes all non-fraternity men at its meetings and desires criticisms and in quiries from its all. Its manner of obtaining non-fraternity representations should be made clear to everyone. These articles should be an invitation to study the merit of the Council's record and the efforts of the Kayhawah Club in the case of any evidence linked by proof which has been and will continue to be available. D.C.C All the food served here is Good Food. But all food is not good food. Food Is Good So why eat where you are dissatisfied when you can buy such good food cheap The Cafeteria Nothing is good enough but the best. VoX. XXIH Thursday, March 10, 1982 No. 129 Notice due at Charleswood's office after after non publication dates and at Charleswood's office a.m. on Saturday for Sunday hours. There will be a meeting of the Dramatic Club this evening at 8 celeb a Green hall. JACK EFFEST, President. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN DRAMATIC CLUB; All students who wish to do practice teaching in Oread Training School next fall should make application for such practice teaching before March 19 in room 163 Friester. R. A. SCHWEGLER, Dean. PRACTICE TEACHING: SENIOR CLASS: see There will be a meeting of the senior class in the Little theater of Green hall at 7:30 tonight. FRED FLEMING, President. WHY CLUB: The regular. Why club meeting for tonight will not meet as such, but all Why club enthusiasts are invited to hear Doctor Dector Engler speak on "Austria; Poland; Czechoslovakia" in the central Administration auditorium at 8 p. m. under the auspices of the University convocations committee. SAM R. CARTER, Secretary, Y.M.C.A. 100 Sheets and 50 Envelopes of Hammermill Bond. 24-lb. paper. Ripple finish. $1.00 Names and addresses printed free of additional cost. Dale Print Shop 1027 Mass. EXPRESSION IN AMERICA *pg* LUDWIG LEWISOHN $4.00 THE BOOK NOOK Rental Library Birthday Cards What Is Easter Without New Clothes? But try and imagine what Easter would be without new lingerie. LA MODE SHOPPE 917 Mass. "Hello, old topper." "Hello. old boy." 'Say, old bean, are you giving your date a Corsage for the junior prom?' "Of course." "Where are you getting it?" "At Ward's Flower Shop. Just call 621 and they will deliver it for you at any time." "Thanks, old topper." You Too. Will Want to Make a Hit. Ward's Flower Shop 931 Mass. Flowers of Distinction Phone 621 Look at your shoes. evryone else does Get a shine. Get your heels straightened. Sure we half sole. too Electric Shoe Shop 1017 Mass. Shine Parlor 11 W. 9th Are You Lucky? 12 MEN are going to be lucky and get high grade SUITS for only $14 See Our "Lucky Size" Window! Slippovers With or Without Sleeves $1.95 Solid colors or with contrasting trim in new fancy weaves, or with without sleeves. Colors are black, white, royal beige, and light green. Spring Hats $3.45 (Formerly $3.85) Others. $1.39 to $2.95 Here's a good news for thrifty buyers who demand style and good looks along with economy. New blenders and new stoves have never been so 'ow for such quality. Others. $2.85 to $4.75 and Tomorrow TONITE! And Tomorrow Shows 3 - 7 - 9 PAY NITE! We Pay You To See This Show A Life Time of Emotion - - in But Two Turns of the Clock! 24 HOURS CLIVE BROOK KAY FRANCIS MIIRIAM HOPKINS REGIS TOO EME From the Fascinating Best Seller by Louis Bromfield Aloe-Benny Rubin Candy - Cartoon - Orgasmine - News Diblin Yellow Payline Tickets Go for 108 Credit on This Show ****** Another Big Special Another Big Special MIDNITE PREVIEW 11:15 Saturday Nite Edna May Oliver - Roscoe Ates "LADIES OF THE JURY" ON THE STAGE VARSITY RHYTHM BOYS in Harmony and Specialties Combing MONDAY TANGEE THE GREAT