X PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1931 University Daily Kansai Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEEP PHIL KEELEP **Dire Tip** **Associate Editors** Firehead Masoning EDITOR Jeon KNACK Make Up Editor Lancaster White Masoning EDITOR Lilith Stoddard Night Editor Masoning EDITOR Télégraph Editor Burie Homenegg Alumni Editor Centric Designer Alumni Editor ADVERTISING MANAGER ROBERT REED Assistant Ace, Mgr. ROBERT E. SAYER District Assistant SALENE KRON District Assistant FERN GLOSS John Martin Phil Keeler Joe Kuek Robert Red Feed Flipping Robert Whireman Midway Carr Merrill Whiteman Married Luke Hickhill Lucie Bluestud Telecharge Departments business Office K.U. 6 News Room K.U. 2 Night Connection, Business Office 2701K Night Connection, News Room 2701K Published in the afternoon, but times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Dixon or the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, by mail, $4.00 (by carrier in Lawrence for 1931.15.18), single copies. 31. Enclosed as second-class matter; September 17, 2016; to be delivered by March 18, 2016. Lawrence, Austin under of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1831 UNINFORMED VOTER Twenty freshman women have been placed on the roll of the W, S.G.A. Council as nominees for the offices of vice-president and secretary of the freshman class. The victors will occupy seats on W.S.G.A., and will have votes on all council matters. Although they are only freshmen, and new to the ways of the campus, they are the potential leaders of their class, and it is imperative that the most worthy of the twenty be selected. Much depends on the quality of their leadership. A bill passed a year or two ago by the women of the Hill reads to the effect that there shall be no electioning on the campus in regard to W. S. G. A. elections. There was a reason, and a good one, for the passage of such a bill, wise move. It remains a fact, however, that there is no way in which and the women have deceived it a the voters can determine who would be the most satisfactory person to fill a freshman office. Information for the entire Hill could not reasonably be considered as electioneering or propaganda. An uninformed voter is worse than no voter at all. Nothing is known by the majority of women about the activities participated in by the nominees before they come to Mt. Oread. The election tea, given the day before the election, helps in introducing the women to the public, but still there is no effort to let their qualifications be known. It is reported that thieves entered a Montana police station and stole all the officers' chairs. If it was like some police stations we know of, we wonder how the cops got out of the chairs long enough for them to be stolen. A SLAP IN THE FACE Arman Johnson has urged the voters to down President Hoover at the 1932 election for slipping the United States through the back door into the League of Nations, against the will of the senate and the electorate. He refers to the President and Secretary Stimson in authorizing Prentis Gilbert, consul general, to sit in with the League Council while it deliberated upon the Sino-Japanese controversy. Mr. Johnson considers this an act which warrants the defeat of Mr. Hoover in the coming national elections. Mr. Johnson says it was not necessary for the country to join the League in order to invoke the Kellogg-Briand anti-war pact. Of course it was not. We could have brought the Pact of Paris into play single-handed, but such an act would have stirred the ire of Japan against the United States, toward whom she already does not have an amiable attitude. Had Japan rebuilt our move, we would have been "he who got slapped" with no veritable comeback. The situation would have been comparable to the SinoRus- sian railway dispute in 1929. At that time, Secretary Stimson sent notes to the two countries reminding them of their pledges under the Pact of Paris to settle all controversies pacificly. There was no war between the two countries, but as a result of our independent action, we felt the slap in the face of Russia, and we could do nothing about it. We should praise our administrative officers for the foresight which was shown in meeting the League on that issue as a matter of world co-operation, and not as a case of trying to "slip one over" on the people. Secretary Stimson, recalling that incident and seeking to avoid its recurrence, acted wisely in joining with the League to invoke the Peace Pact. Japan will now have to stave off the adverse sentiment of the world in order to win in this fight with China. How are people going to get a big kick out of reading the expressions in the new Bible when most of them don't know how the old one said it? ANOTHER CHANCE A twelve-year-old boy, in Seattle, Wash., has been sentenced to life imprisonment, for murder. Father E. J. Flanagam, founder of a boys' home in Omaha, has asked the Seattle authorities to send the lad to his institution, where by personal supervision he may be led into clean, straightforward unhood. We hope that the Washington court will deem it wise to parole the boy to Father Flanagan. The youngster was a victim of environmental circumstances. He had been brought up without the guidance and care of parents interested in his welfare; he was forced to carn his bread and butter, and he tried to do it by burglaring. It certainly is not the "nuit of the boy that he has not leveled normally. The led deserves a chance to prove his merit in surroundings which are wholesome and free from the degrading atmosphere of terrible poverty. Governor Murray's troops are back to a bridge taking the toll of a tail company. President Hoover says that the failure of small banks virtually stopped last week. Yes, observes the Thoughtful Freshman, at the rate they'd been closing the weeks before, there just weren't any small banks left last week. "Wild bucks are decoy wise," complain Wichita sportsmen. These ducks have been unable to attend school long enough to learn that "birds of a feather flock together." Campus Opinion If Mr. Evans, who pleads so eloquently for upperclassmen to assist the K men in endearing the constitutional laws, he asks them to socially-minded upperclassmen of the University, will define more satisfactorily just what the spirit is which he demands from students in this environment, and in what way such definite written "laws" can be classed as "traditions," perhaps his non-athleticfelicitation more prone to obey his injurious actions. Editor Daily Kansan: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY_BULLETIN Vol. XIIX Tuesday, 9 March, 1831 No. 46 We are no more certain that the "guff-gawf" and ridicule at the efforts of enforcement are expressive of anger. We are not sure that the K men perform their actions in front of a football crowd merely to attract attention, their fellow men and attract attention. OTANY CLUB: Regular meeting of the Botany club will be held tonight at 7:20 c'clock at 1124, Louisiana street. All members please attend. There will be a regular meeting of Delta Phi Delta tonight at 7:20 o'clock in room 310 west Administration building. Attendance of all members is required. LORRAINE STARR, President. We have no doubt that if the motives which animate the K men can be instilled by proper definition, explanation, and justification of this "spirit" and "mind," then it is possible to persecute fellows, the problem of enforcement no longer will exist. JAMES C. BATES, President. WASHU DELTA. DELTA PHI DELTA: Ah, wey campus, "another seer speaks," on the refreshing subject of school spirit. Do you realize that you are "totally ignorant of the essentials" of what students think is pressure?" That is, indefinable to all but the seer, with, touching modesty, insists, "who am I to tell the seer about?" The word "humbilous efforts" this benefactor of El comité de programs se reunirá en reúna que jueves, el 15 de noviembre a las cuatro y medía, en la sala 113 cajón Administración building. REQUIRED: FL. ATENEQ: OSCAR GARCIA, Presidente. GRADUATE CLUB: The Graduate club will meet this evening at 6:30 in the cafeteria at the Union building.葛H. Brandan, of Berlin, Germany, will discuss "The Political and Economic Situation in Germany as viewed by the German University." All graduate students are invited to participate in the club. BOY L. ROEETTS. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB; There will be an important business meeting at 3:20 Wednesday in room 101 Prager hall. MARGARET FARR, President. Le Cercle Français se renumira merciod a quatre heures et demi, dans la salle 308 Français. Hall tous奏 qu'il parient saison sont invités. Editor Daily Kansan: NOVEMBER 26TH A MORNING A private dining room of the outfitter will speak at 12:30 Thursday, Nov. 5. In the private dining room of the outfitter on "Churacy and Crime-Cases and Cures" will speak about "The Great War" and "World War II." MARY KREAMER, Secretary. WALTER TROMBOLD, MARGARET STURGESS, Co-Chairman, PHI CHI THETA; There will be a meeting of Phi Chi Theresa on Wednesday evening, Nov. 4, at 8:15 p.m. in room 5. Union building. All actions and pleagues please be present. The names of those accepted in the recent Quail tryouts are pointed on the club baltimore board in Friar Hall. Pledging will be held on Wednesday, Nov. 11. QUILL CLUB TRYOUTS; A Peaceful Soul The November meeting of W.A.A. will be held Wednesday, Nov. 4 at 4:50 in the gymnasium. It is very important for all members to attend. The rejected manuscripts have been returned to the Quill box, where they may be recovered. The envelopes containing the names of the authors have been destroyed. CLINTON YOUNG. TAI1 SIGMA: LAW SCHOOL Signal square dismissing class will meet this evening in the Union building from 7:30 to 8:30 o'clock. ELIZABETH DUNKEL Dr. Albert P. Van Dusen will speak on "Birth Control in an Adolescent Scheme for Social Residency" on Thursday, Nov. 7 at 12 p.m. in the central auditorium of The College of Medicine. WHY CLUB: HILDEN GIBSON, ALFREDO DUSTAMANTE, Co-Chairman. Star of "Holiday" and "East Lynne" In Her Latest and Greatest Role! It Is Even Greater Than We Predicted! Shows 3 - 7 - 9 GREATEST VALUES EVER OFFERED in the Drug World at The Original Rexall 1c Sale Which Starts Wednesday and continges through Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Fritts-Stowits Drug Co. 9th & Mass. The Rexall Store Phone 238 R. E. PROTSCH Merchant Tailor The Rexall Store Our Prices Are Reasonable Nothing is good enough but the best Again this time we invite you to eat one of our meals, we are quite sure that you will be pleased. This is our sincere desire—to serve the best food obtainable. DeLuxe Cafe 711 Massachusetts TAXI 25c 12 TAXI HUNSINGER Friends: Those women cooks serve real home cooked foods. mankind enlightens us concerning our flairant misconceptions. flagger misconceptions. With unprecedented exigencies we await the longed-for definition the re-vision of the school into that zone known as school spirit. We discover that this "essential something" consists of sections 2 and 7 of Bill 10 in the Mons Student Council constitution of the freshman cap" and the "matter of going to football games with dates." The worthy expedition ends as a passionate appeal for co-operation between the students of their sacred duty. It plunges into an asylum disappointment as we discover that our Knights of the Holy Flail "get discouraged" from lack of experience and played at their law enforcement奖. Are we satisfied, wearly camp? No! Do we wish further comment? Not! Can we prevent further ludicrous crimes against the English Department? 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