PAGE TWO --- --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 3. 1935 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR IN CHIEF FRED FLEMING Associate Editors Lake Elk MANAGING EDITOR STACEY PIECKLE Make Up Editor Make Up Store Carriage Editor Carriage Store Historical Editor Historical Store Trophylight Editor Margaret Donnethy Donnelly Album Edition Bill Cox Exchange Edition James Price Barnes Barrie ADVERTISING MANAGER _ CHM E. SYNDER District Manager District Manager Margaret Irace District American Firm Gibson Phil Kulzer | Joe Krask Karl Ruder | Fred Planting Whitman Whitenan Gordon Martin | Martha Lawrence Lethal Leith | Lucille Brunet Irwin Pickall | Francie McCullough Business Office K.U. 6 News Room K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Room 2701K Night Connection, News Room 2701K Pulished in the afternoon, five times a week, and held at the University of Kansas, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., by the Association of Journalists of the University of Kansas, from September 19 to October 3, by subscriber prizes by mail ($4.90), he carries an APA 6th ed. edition. He is trained as a second-grade teacher, September 17. For details, go to www.apa.org. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1932 "MOSES" BRINKLEY RETURNS The groundhog, perennial prophet of fair and foul weather, poked his blunt nose out of the ground yesterday and promptly drew himself back into his subterranean chateau. According to those people who are firm believers in the unerring accuracy of his predictions, the hasty withdrawal back into the ground signified another month or so of wintry weather. But it seems more than probable that this little animal's action was occasioned by the announcement emenating from Del Rio, Texas, that Dr. John R. Brinkley, intended to return to his native haunts and conduct a campaign for the governorship of Kansas. "My business calls me to Kansas where my home and heart are" the doctor declared. "I must return, I'll do what the people of Kansas ask." The them are touching words, mister, and right noble ones too when one considers that Brinkley is severing connections with his highly profitable radio broadcasting station to offer himself as a sacrifice to the whims and deserves of his Kansas public. And it's such a fickle and finicky public that the honorable John is listening to! Only two years ago this same public that is noted for its G.O.P. solidity turned the tables and elected a Democrat for governor. That just shows how undependable they are. But if the Doctor has heard the call and is willing to sacrifice his own personal plans and profits for the people of this great state, it is only fair that he should be given an opportunity to lead the oppressed natives out of the Egypt of Democratic rule and into the promised land of a Brinkley democracy. Potatoes are cheaper, tomatoes are cheaper, the farmers are calling for relief, and the Republicans are a bit hazy about their coming campaign. So come back home, Dr. John, the welcome mat is on the porch. THE FRANKENSTEIN The enrollment machine began grinding out its semi-annual grist of student fodder yesterday and today in its usual annoying fashion. It creaked and balked, and numerous undergraduates found its mysteries much too intricate to be solved after only one day of observation. Perhaps the students who are having such a hard time enrolling this semester don't know it, but that same old machine, with various overhaulings and an occasional repair, has been serving the University for over fifty years. Taking everything into consideration it's a pretty wheezy and decrepit old machine. It operates with the same facility that may be expected of a 1919 Model "I," a dyspeptic Missouri mule, or a lowesick high school youth—and it's just about as dependable. It suffers from bunions and gall stones, its valves need grinding, the crankshaft is fractured, and the connecting rods have a chronic case of fallen arches. With such Jobim afflictions is it any wonder if many patient and long suffering students marvel that it functions at all? For years the old hulk and machinery have remained practically unchanged, snorting and puffing erratically at the beginning of each semester that the students who are thrust into its gaping maw may become properly enrolled. But the old machine as it now exists has outlived its usefulness. Because of its antiquity, inefficiency, and general undependability it has become the Frankenstein of university administration. It has served long and faithfully, it is true, but why not retire it and give the student body a shiny new 19? model with body by Fisher and free wheeling? TO SPEAK OR NOT TO SPEAK Yes, that is the question, apparently, for at Wellesley college, according to a recent article in a woman's magazine, the women are experimenting by not speaking to each other as they go from class to class, saying that it is borsheme to keep continually flashing a smile, nodding the head, and saying "hello" to everybody. According to the article, "The feeling that comes to all of us when we have to speak endlessly again and again to the same round of faces had swept over the college, and so, being possessed of more courage than the rest of us, they attacked the problem." At least, the girls have selected the most innocuous and harmless albi for their action, that of boredom with the established custom. They might have said that it was vulgar to smile and say "hello" to a friend. Women have ideas like that sometimes. Or they might have declared that it took too much time and kept students from being on time to classes, thus deceiving the real reason for college There's an idea, girls, it's free. And they might have said that emilie spoils the well-bred, aristocratic lines in women's faces, making commoners out of the cream of America's women. There is a reason that would have started something. Or last, but not least, they might have said that a woman of Wellesley is of sufficient distinction not to have to speak to anyone, not even her own classmates, having been bred by her association with those半 hallowed halls to a state of mental and social self-sufficiency that excludes ordinary friendship and fellowship. But what do they do? They base their reason for not speaking on the theory that it is biosome to do so. They have no regard for the daily commentator of affairs outside who have to have copy every day. Why couldn't they have given a reason that would have caused a stir and have got themselves into the limelight? It would serve them right if no one give a hang whitener. It would serve them right if no one give a hang whether they were on speaking terms with each other or not. At the Play You moderns who monchantly place the well manicured hands over the gaping mouths to cover the bored ho-hun when your mothers and dads begin thinking of you, an opportunity to see what the fond parents found excited and if you will be just partly open-minded you'll have good old days weren't as bad after all. Bry C. H. Brennan, Sr. under the same arrangements as we viewed the performance on its first appearance. Take time out for whatever you may believe is important and by yourselves to Fraser theater for the rarest little play. "I have never been a university has ever protested. "The Music Hall of 1900" is one of those things that you cannot afford to miss. The combined forces of the Kansas University have ever protested. "The Sigma have compounded a delelectable morsel for your approval. And, by the way, we'll wager 10 to I that you'll improve as did the audience last night in a display of enthusiasm, and had it not been for the Sigma would have guaranteed a year's run. Perhaps, we are letting our fanaticism run away with us and if we are, what of it? We are glued our love to Fraser theater and there wasn't a dull moment for us last night and we would go back tonight Overture Strikes Chord Enough of this. The play's the thunderous one, but it's also the slightest idea where to begin. Perhaps, the beginning will serve the time. That means the overture. The orchestra under the direction of Belen Stockwell and Eloe La Mar furnished the mood and struck the instrument performance. The first number consisted of the Five Delanos in ten starring minutes of classic and interpretive posing. Then one of the greatest comic teams of the Patchwork Funkin' dots and the four lent in the aisles in a playmaker pool game and other jollties. Then the great dramatic actress Miss Olga Nethersole played one of her current success in her distinctive way as a child, teaching her babies who talk of free love and think that "Mourning Becomes Electra" is a play for children, go and learn what love mean in the first days of the century and come away better man. As a baiting fisher the tryin's drama of Miss Nethersole, came Peter Dailley singing his new hit, "Plaving with the Girls by the Sea." And the chorus ! ! The bathing beauties ! The Miss America of 1900 ! ! Go and see the movie of her life. The marvel of the age the wonderful kinetopile -next faced its marvell on a screen before your eyes in a thrilling bit of western life. "The Great Train Robbery" See this and Clark Gale and Joan Cawford. Bathing Beauties Score "Santiago," the finale of the first realistically portrayed the vicissitudes of our wonderful Red Cross nurses and our gallant troops amongst the viperes. "what was that war about?" oh-yah tuger and Toyo Rosewell. The curtain fell on the grand ensemble of the company as it rendered--don't you love that? that starring one. Good Boy Eyes, a girl with eyes overtime on the heart throb notes. Then A Touch of Paths The second act opened with an illustrated song by some unblessed soprano who sang with tears in her eyes. And who wouldn't after viewing the touching slides used to describe love of love outstretched the circle or straightening out the eternal triangle. Then true to the times, the unexpected happened. Maybe, it was the exegete's inquisition rate, an order he skipped, and added much to the merriment and made the audience feel that it was playing a parlor game. It will follow the printer order. however An Act for the Men “At the Depot,” an act entirely in the park, is one of the cleverest rides around. They’ve been around a bit, too. The audience by now had entered into the sparti of the piece and roundly hissed the word “you” – you had to–chief was a wiper for true. Frankie Batley billed as the "Queen of Burleye" had the men in the house pop-eyed as she grated around like an angel or moth at the lame or something. Do angels fit around flames? No, they don't. You did! you quick "sickness the Flit." The old stand-by heart tear from the light opera, "The Prince of Pillen," was the next offering and it was a wow even to the starched futility of the roar-adrenal who sang the "Men" in the opera, as a diart with son lovely cherisher. "Ten Minutes of Elecution" — a quinn old custom of the times — was obsolete. But the movie Ridgeway who retested *Lasso* on the Iride Grande with gestures and noise, from 1962 to 1978. Not so long ago we read that all of the members—lady members—of the original Floridan Secteotte satirized the fashion, the originals looked as charming as the lovely revivalists of the Music Hall of 1900, we doubt if a mere millionaire would have had a change. A nummer of ten times worth the cost of admission. The next feature was that always received an Gus HUH! High Bowl Trophy, which meant how those gals could dance. The Taugs really struts its stuff in this countdown. Kernio Kroh, Helen Lawson, Camilla Luther, Janet Lovet, Kathy Paterne, Wanda Porter, Lillian Peterson, Ruth Pole, Alice Smith, Muriel Smith, Winifred Deusen, Sarah Cunningham, Deusen, Rosemary Jo Wentworth, LaVern Wright, Winifred Wright. The closing number was the ever popular song and tablou wherein the aging couple see themselves in the middle of a "Silver Threads Among the Gold." We haven't mentioned any names We appell the entire cast. They all starred. The costumes were authentic the research was carefully done, and the whole show rang as true as a glo- ce on the gold standard. Frank Anneherg, Myrtle Bail, William Brake, Brooke, Calderwood, Acecine Callahan, Margaret Calabash, Elizabeth Crafton, Elizabeth Duck, Jack Fait BamHersons, Jim Hammers, James Harker, Eugene Hibbs, Stanley Hurst Boyd, Robert Fletcher, Nicholas Kell, Lena Kennedy, Robert Milton, Morrison Moore, Rolla Nukles, Frank Nimocks, Glenn Ostran, Holtman Neilson, Robert McGregor, Charles Stultz, Lucie Wagner, Virginia Wherritt, Frances Wilson, John Warga, Winfried Wright, Clinton Performers in "The Music Hall of 1900": Our Contemporaries Sahobin Missourian Dancers: Clara Beckett, Martha Bishop, Bаяrn Byrna, Cornell University, Virginia Egina, Shirley Forsythe, Doryn Foster, Davothy Friedrich, Elke Frischtie, Germine Greene, Barbara Jane Harrison, Dorothy Johnson, Viv A DIFFERENT "COLLEGE SPIRIT" College and university students in America probably show less active interest in political matters than any student in Europe. Students in many nations, particularly in European countries, take very seriously the conception of themselves as leaders of the future, and are forever leaping into action. This is not to fight for this or that ideal. Not in frequently serious outbreaks occur. Because of the political indifference of our own students, it is rather difficult to identify the specific conditions described in a recent dispute from Berlin. Politics, according to many sources, can be characterized and studious atmosphere of Germany's halls of learning into the turbulence of the ringside and arena. Adolf Hitler, Germany's master explorer of despair, fear and hatred, has captured the imagination, loyalty and courage of its students as it moves across campuses leaves a trail of riots, police raids, attacks on professors and disrupted classes. The student movement for freedom, which means dissolution of the Voraus treaty, and studies have little place in their activities, of the student body is nationalistic. Economic factors enter in, however, which make the situation of unrest easier to understand. Perhaps the main cause is the lack of supply of university-trained citizens. From every age youth is warned that the professions are overcrowded. Recently four of the nation's greatest industrial engineers, Germany's forte, were not needed. So young Facetist doctors, lawyers, teachers, engineers and theologians form associations with a view that such an event day of Hitler's "third红" dawns. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXIX Wednesday, 5.1. 1932 No. 100 BAND: The K. U. Band will not meet tonight, Regular rehearsal will begin next week. J. C. CANELAN, Director. INTERNATIONAL GROUP OF Y.W.C.A.: The International Group of the W.Y.C.A. will meet at Hensley House at 7:30 on Thursday evening, Feb. 4 MARIAN NELSON, MORTAR AND BALL: All plights see bulletin board in Fowler Stoops before Thursday night. Feb. 4. Initiation services to be held at 5:30 Feb. 4th at Wiedemann's. Y. M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. CABINET DINNER; F. ANNEBERG, Secretary. K. U. RADIO CLUB: Y.M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. CABINET DINNER: There will be a joint Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. cabinet dinner at the Colonial Tea Room this evening at 6 o'clock. All members are requested to be present. WANDA EDMONDS, Secretary of Y.W.C.A. A meeting of the K. U. Radio club will be held Thursday at 7:30 in room 110, Marvin hall. This is art important meeting. Anyone interested in radio is invited to attend. RALPH C. AYRES. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Is Part of Your Education Six times each week it will bring you news of sports, convocations, social events, meetings, announcements, features --- everything connected with the University of Kansas. Keep Your Finger on Mount Oread's Pulse by means of THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN $4.00 a year or only $2.25 for the rest of this year By mail or carrier