PAGE TWO 7. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY OCTOBER 23, 1923 University Daily Kansai Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEF PHIL KEELER Otto Tipo **MANAGING EDITOR** Matthew Feldman **JOKE NACK** Michael Lawrenson **Laurea Editors** Steve McKay **Night Edition** Ronald Meyer **Robert Whiteman** Robert Whiteman **Telephonic Editor** Bernice Herrmann **Albemarle Editors** Conrad Dungan **Albemarle Designer** Joshua Levine ADVERTISING MANAGER District Assistant ROBERT REED Caster E. Sayer Phil Kierler Joe Kierlin Robert Reed Flee Flinging Robert Whitman Midland Curd Mary Whitman Midland Curd Ley Hutchison Blime Lainted Telephone... K.U. 6 Business Office... K.U. 2 Night Connection... Business Office... 2701K Night Connection... News Rooms... Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, by mail. $4.00 by carrier in Lawrence for (1913, 1, 52). Single copies, $9. Enforced as second-class matter between July 17, 1913 and June 19, 1914. Lawrence, Rapee, and art of March 3, 1979. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1931 THE JOHNSONS Martin and Osa Johnson, famous African explorers noted for their pictures of animal life, will appear in person tonight at the University Auditorium as the first number of the University Lecture Course. They will present their latest picture, "Wonders of the Congo," a pictorial record of the region and provide details on the making of which their lives were often endangered. The two will speak alternately while the picture is being shown. Pictures of countries and animals not familiar to the layman are always interesting. Shoots of Africa with its big game and its jungle life are especially fascinating. Usually when a picture of this sort is shown, its value is lessened because the facts presented cannot be relied upon. The authenticity of the Martin Johnson's picture, however, is certain. These native Kansans, hailing from Independence, have spent many years on the dark continent studying the life habits of wild animals. Two years were spent on the picture to be presented tonight. Students should appreciate the opportunity of seeing this picture and to listening to the explorers in person. It is an interesting climax to a hectic week spent trying to "catch up" before mid-semenet. Mile. Josee Laval has come to the United States to see American dresses. A master stroke of diplomacy. A GOOD MOVE Varsity舞姿 are one of the most popular forms of recreation offered to University students. Yet despite this fact, dance managers have complained that these functions are poorly attended. It is a reasonable assumption that such a difficulty has been encountered because the admission has been more than the average student could afford. The action taken by the Men's Student Council providing for an investigation of the prices of variety dances is commendable. Recreation and entertainment have a necessary and legitimate place in the student's life but when the price of that entertainment remains all out of proportion to the cost of recreation, readjustment must be made. Because of decreased budgets, students cannot and will not pay pre-deprecession prices for their entertainment. If the Council succeeds, as it should, in effecting a reduction in the price of varieties, it will have rendered a real service to the student body. The man who said that life is one perplexing problem after another can't realize how perplexing life really is until he tries to figure out the difference between the fellow who owes you money and the fellows to whom you owe money. THE DUCK SEASON The duck season opened Oct. 20, when the weather was warm—not enough to wear bathing suits instead of leather jacket, wool socks, and boots. One might hunt prairie chickens and deer, wearing bathing suits but certainly not ducks. One has to suffer and endure countless hardships in order to hunt ducks in the orthodox way. The prairie chicken season is over and the deer season in Missouri will lose tomorrow; therefore nature should give uwe duck hunting weather. It is almost imperative that we have nasty weather in order to make the duck season a complete success, and nature is only slowly complying with this request. Who would appreciate bagging his share of ducks, if he did not have to shiver until he could hardly hold his gun, and long hours laptched on the skin, and endure countless other hardships that make duck hunting the rest sport that it is. The weather is one important phase of duck hunting that legislators can't do much about. They can change the length of the season, the big limit — even route the flight of the ducks to a certain extent by the construction and draining of lakes, but for the right kind of weather hunters will just have to pray and hope. Dear Lord, give us "beauty" weather. OUR HOBO Robert S. Wilson, instructor in sociology, sometimes known as "Bob, the Hobo," has just returned from New York where for fourteen weeks he has been compiling a report on "Community Planning for Homeless Men" for President Hoover's unemployment relief program. The material for the report, which is designed to aid communities in planning relief for vagrant men during the winter, was gathered by direct visits to fourteen of the nation's cities whose problems are acute. A better man could not have been selected to study the conditions of the hobo than Mr. Wilson. He has slept with wanderers, eaten with them, and suffered with them for weeks at a time. Once or twice in the course of his investigation he has been arrested for vagrancy and has had a difficult time proving that he is a University instructor making a sociological study. Mr. Wilson is one man who is helping to prove to the world that the science of sociology may not be such a useless thing after all. His experiments should be watched with interest. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan: --committing petitions for freshman class officers must be in the hands of the secretary of the Men's Student Council by 12 cdeck noon Thursday, Oct 29, accompanied by the usual filing fee of $1. Petitions will be for president, treasurer, two shop managers, intramural manager. Thursday evening heralded an even a momentous incident in the life of the University. First, a man of power an intense culture and achievement of a great people, made his contribution to an almost unremarkable influence, and his influence was manifested in a phenomenon of still raver occurrences—a moving discussion at a Why Club. It will never be known what we will never know the keen enjoyment realized by the few who participated in that meeting. It will never understand why those who matched their wits with a truly great mind in a sincere search for knowledge would not have exonerating inquiry and puerile argument from the more incompetent members of the audience can become. This is an aptly pertinent importance to a smirkingly competent student body? Why waste our time on petty pleasure seeking group to the imminent catacrophe attendon to such an un-reasoning mode of existence as to leave the foolish abandon of the perma nicely gratifying opportunities is no situation calling for calm reflection. Let the university students consider, lest they unwittingly assist in a possible monumental demonstration of the fact that apathia spells atrophy, and Carl Peters. Our Contemporaries Leisurely Rushing Now that the rushing season is over and approximately three hundred freshmen have been lured into the various universities, the potential for a central tendency to discuss post mortem and to criticize the rushing system at the University. There seems to be a need for better training on the limitation on the extent of rushing season next year, advocating a new approach to the question voiced by those who are discontent with the present system and are willing to adopt any plan by which the university will be well-tailored freshmen may be lessened. These malcontents do not seem to realize that they would be defeating me and the fraternity by measuring. It is not the length of the season that in so unpleasant; it is the time when the fraternity loses out of regret we hear tales of rushing seasons as they were a few years ago, when the periods lasted for three months; but when they get the fresh but just let them come around to the house and look the fellows up with their false fronts, no trying to be unnaturally pleasant—it all sounds like a repugnance. In the inter-fraternity council put OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXII Frost, Nov. 23, 1931 No. 37 The Baptist Young People's union will not have the hike which was planned for Saturday, Oct. 24. CECIL ENGLE, Social Chairman. B. Y.P.U.; FRESHMAN NOMINATIONS: MAC DOWELL CLUB TRYOUTS: MAURICE McMANUS, Secretary. Gathering out for music and dramas are asked to meet in the central Administration building at 7:20, Tuesday evening, Oct 27. MATHEMATICS CLUB: RUDOLPH WENDELIN, President. The Mathematics club will meet Monday, Oct. 36 at 4:30 p.m./room 21 east administration building, Professor Mitchell will speak. Send Your Mother Flowers on YOUR BIRTHDAY Nominating petition for freshman president, vice president, and secretary-treasurer; sophomore president, vice president, and secretary-treasurer in the School of Medicine must be filed with Fell Chair, chairman of election committee, by 12 eckon clock on Saturday, Oct. 24, signed by 15 qualified voters. HOWARD ABERNETHY, Vice President PSI CHI: MEDICAL SCHOOL NOMINATIONS; modern and we have what we have today: hot-boxing, throat-cutting, begging freshmen for dates, and acting as unnatural as possible. Furthermore, every year there are a number of midsit taken into fraternity and also the freshman. A longer period of time is needed to be avoided for the good of the fraternities and also the freshman. A longer period of time is needed to be judged and be judged more accurately than is the case at present. At any rate, a shortening of the present period would mean that it all the more unpleasant and unattainable without any offer being given. The latter, of course, requires actual time itself, which merit would be far outweighed by the added duration of time was left. The Daily Tor Heel. Psi Chi, honorary psychological society, will hold a regular meeting. Monday, Oct. 26, at 4 p.m. in room 21 East Administration building. MASQUERADE COSTUMES Beg Pardon For Rent 118 E. 11th St. Phone 247JL LeOra Anderson (To white people only) Topeka - Hobo day at Washburn college will be held Oct. 30, on the daft set for the game with the Kaman Siatu Teacher's college of Emporia. --- The study is one of a series made under the auspices of the industrial research department of the University's Wharton School of Finance and Commerce to the bureau of census by industries over a period of 21 years. Through an error in the reporting of the Men's Student Council meeting in December 2013, the committee of 32 was accredited as being elected to the council as代表代表 from the college. Philadelphia, Oct. 23—(UPC)—Of the total of $6,080,669 wage carriers in 128 manufacturing industries in the United States, only 40% are similarly Shawn and of employment seasonal variations in productive activities, according to a survey by Dr. J. Parker Burk, assistant professor of business at the University of Pennsylvania. Trombold, however, was defeated by Everett Figgs, ed'32, who will represent that school. According to the department of industrial research, it is the first comprehensible research discipline in variations in industrial employment and is particularly important because its employees are exposed to employment, seasonal variations, due to their complex character, offer a long-term career. In making the study, Doctor Burkell has employed not only the groupings of industries arbitrarily derived from the broad classifications used by the authors, but also varied other groupings in order to add clarity to the summary picture. Many Jobs Are Seasona Fluctuations Annually Throw 800,600 Employees Out of Work Plain Tales The following story is going the rounds at the University on the Secretary of State. It was last Saturday that the secretary was visiting Lawrence to attend the K U-Aggie game. He was down town and some way or other one of the feederers on his Caddis sedan came into contact with that of a yellow, model T Ford driven by a University student. The secretary climbed from his car, approached the student and said: "I'm the secretary of State." "Well, I'm glad to know you Me. Secretary," said the student, "I'm farmer Perkins." An assistant instructor was calling roll the other day without pronouncing this title at the first of the name. Finally she came to the name Ham. The person bearing the name was absent but that did not keep the instructor from calling it three times. On the third call someone in the back row spoke up with: And with that he drove off and left the distinguished secretary standing. "No, no Ham this morning." LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. DR. H. X. DOLEN Dentist Dickinson Theatre Building DR. FLOREANCE BARROWS Osteopathic Physician Foot Correction 909% Mass Phone 2317 Now Playing— Bebe Daniels "HONOR OF THE FAMILY" On the Stage "DALTON'S DANCING CO-EDS" STARTS MONDAY For 3 Days TOPCOAT VALUES ZANE GREY'S RIDERS of the PURPLE SAGE ZANE GREY'S GEORGE O'BRIEN Margarite Churchill Noah Beary POLO COATS and TWEEDS VENGEANCE SPURRED HIM ON-UNTIL LOVE HIM AND HIM HI. He hit triggered him with a romance of the Southwest. $25 HOUK AND GREEN 843 Mass. Ave. PIPES Popular Shapes and Sizes $2.50 - $7.50 Values All go for $1.50 "Handy for Students" Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass Phone 678 UNION PACIFIC FOOTBALLSPECIAL To Lincoln, Neb. — October 24 Leave Lawrence 7 a.m., Arrive Lincoln, 12 noon — RETURNING — Leave Lincoln 7:00 p. m., Arrive Lawrence 12 Midnight Round Trip Fare going and return ing on Special Train $4.00 Also Round Trip Fare $6.70 Good starting Friday and returning on regular train Sunday. For further information call Union Pacific station Phone 76 A Store Both You And We Can Be Justly Proud of HERE is genuine gratification for us to know that every Diamond, every Watch and every piece of Jewelry we offer is of proven quality and value. And it is your gratification to know that you have at your command a Jewelry Store so thoroughly reliable in its offerings and its transactions with you. No better service, superior quality or value is available elsewhere, making this a store justly to be proud of. The College Jeweler Lest You Forget Our serving hours are Breakfast Luncheon Dinner 7:30-8:45 11:30-1:30 5:15-6:45 Plan to Eat Where: The Cafeteria The food is excellent Service is good Prices are right Nothing is good enough but the best. WILLARD Battery for small cars Lower Prices on threaded rubber insulated batteries. $6.95 Firestone TIRES TEXACO Gas and Oil CARTER SERVICE There Is One Gift That Only You Can Give— Your Photograph For a short time we will make for you under our prism glass skylight ( no blinding lights ) An 8x10 Studio Portrait For ONLY $1^{00} Buy only one or as many as you wish at this special price. No Appointment REQUIRED LAWRENCE STUDIO Ground Floor 727 Mass. St.