PAGE TWO 1. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1931 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEF Elizabeth Rathbun Associate Editor Manny Manning EDITOR Sunday October 1 Sunday, Sep 8 Marine Strait Jacqueline Jackson Daniel Smith Darren Walsh Malcolm Court Harry Haugh Charles Sills David Walker Sarah Watson Lilah Shields Adrian Snell Jennifer Krause Jon Krawk Mike McKenna Daniel Frogan Faridian Darden ADVERTISING MANAGER...MARION BEATTY Astr. Advertising Mgr...Iris FireSimmon Kansas Board Members Telephone Business Office K. U. 64. News Room K. U. 2. Night Connection 274137 Frank McCollard William Vaughnman William Nichols Michael Berry Mary Burton Joe Fischmann Jake Owen Paul Goad William Moore 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 Square Subscriptions price, $0.45 per month, payable in advance. Single payment required. Mail receipt to mail server, bar 17, in the at post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1931 DELIBERATION A letter from O. G. Halliburton, Fort Worth oil man, censored Sen. T. H Caraway and his colleague, Sen. J. P Robinson, on the grounds that in past years of severe drought neither government nor Red Cross aid has been extended suffering people in Texas. Caraway's reply in part said, "It is strange that a Negro always finds something to complain about, although his immediate wants are cared for. I should be very glad indeed if you would confine your correspondence to people of your own race." Halliburton, a white man, furthered the argument by replying that Caraway should not be "influenced by race or previous condition of servitude" and that Caraway's stand on the matter of drought was "contentible". The affair has temporarily dropped there, but it is almost a surely that the correspondence and Caraway's mistake as to Halliburton's color will not prodd members of the Senate to re执 faster on matters of legislation. Deliberation received an added emphasis through Caraway's and Halliburton's published correspondence. The A.S.M.E. makes plans, KFKB is ousted, N.S.F.A. elects, Y.W.C.A. offers courses, K.C. changes coaches, and the A.T.O.s make points. One way of learning the alphabet, anyway. TAU SIGMA The dance has gone through its cycles innumerable times, but save for epochs that were barbaric it has clung pretty well to stately motion and soft, beautiful music. A notable instance of retrogression was the furious energy that was displayed as dancing following the World's War; the nation wobbled to jazz, and motions that were dubbed as the "Charleston," or the "Varsity Dug" or the "Black Bottom" invaded ballrooms. But amazing steps and astounding convolutions were not enough—humanity still had intimate respect, and it was obvious to almost any man that post-war dancing was idiotic Tuesday and Wednesday, Betty Dunkeel Tau's Sigma recital will be at Fraser theater in its seventh annual recital, and therein modern tendencies in dancing, at least dancing with thought, will be shown. Miss Dunkel, who ten years ago founded the Tau Sigma while a junior here in the college, has carried through with her standards, now as an instructor she offers her troupe in various phases of interpretive, tap and tape dancing. For several years her shows have been successes, not only because they had originality and beauty, but because Miss Dunkel's enthusiasm has imparted itself to her students. Treading on a shaky structure when she builds a show on interpretation of some aspect of life through the dance, she has never faltered, and like her, the performances have been unusual successes. This year's recital more elaborate than ever before; where once only girls took part, the show is now intertwined with young men. Headline—"Stocks Leap, Then Slip." Looks like an advance story on the Tau Sigma recital. A HOPELESS CASE A. new malady has struck the personnel of the American college population. A person afflicted with this peculiar malady is commonly called a booster. It matters little what he boasts—anything from a hog-call context to a society for the prevention of cruelty to fleas will claim his attention. Symptoms usually appear in the sophomore year and develop steadily until in the senior year the person afflicted is commonly called a B.M.O.H, or a B.W. O.H*. (Consult footnote for further enlightenment) This condition has become a serious menace to our educational system. It must either be met squately and incorporated into our curriculum as many other equally worthy subjects are, or it must be completely eradicated. We suggest that these students be segregated. They could all be enrolled in the School of Boosting which would contain such courses as "Putting Over the Idea," "Advanced Principles of Boosting," "The Causes and Cure of Boosteritis." This school might be housed in the post house of the new hospital or perhaps it would be possible to build an amnesia to the animal house south of the campus. The latter seems the more feasible plan because then laboratory courses could be offered and all major courses could practice on the animals. So, hurrah for the boosters! We want bigger and better boosters, but we hope they all "bust" out of school. (*) B.M.O.H. is the abbreviated form for Big Men On Hill. The feminine is Big Women on Hill. SUMMERFIELD ENDOWMENT In another week the names of some two hundred high school students who will be graduated this spring will be selected and recommended for taking the preliminary competitive examination for Summerfield scholarships. Not more than twenty-five or thirty will merge successful. Of these, about ten will be selected as final winners of scholarships by a more stringent examination which will be given later in the spring. Then, and not until then, the endowment association will investigate the students' financial status. Each winner will be guaranteed money sufficient for a college education, no matter how much or how little he may have to begin with. The scholarship fund may be used to pay for none of the education or all of it, depending on the needs of his student. When Mr. Summerfield gave the money to the Kansas University Endowment association, he did not specify as to how it was to be used. He only stated that he wanted to create an interest in scholarship. The association has attempted to do this by making the winning of one of the scholarships purely honorary without any regard to "the financial needs of the student." There are at present nineteen Summerfield students in the University. Some are getting all of the money for their education from the fund, and others are getting none of it. This, it seems, is the best idea by which scholarships can be awarded. The person who wrote "Those Little White Lies" will have a lot of explaining to do in heaven. Plain Tales The inevitable line of Space *Science* Making it life-like is life- re recalling little things that pointed to conditions that eventually occurred. Tyr- ian, who is on a mission to find what has just happened to a boy we know, Everybody used to say he could either be a great man or a rotten man. Things that were hard for most ladies came easily to him, but strangely enough on the other side — the integrity and respect, simple matters for the average youngster, he had a constant fight with himself. Once at school he would walk down the street he saw a bottle of milk setting on a porch, and he took it and drank before the rest of us could disappear. He was a good teacher, built a code from some books he had read that armoured his philosophy of might make right. He read histories of ruthless men, and talked about Nietzsche. The Inevitable Case of "Speed" A meeting will be held in the rent room of central Administration building on Wednesday, Feb. 25, at 8:10 p.m. immediately following the Union dance. Initiation will be held for three new members. A program by the members will follow. There will be refreshments. WILLIAM VANDEL. President. MAC DOWELL CLUB: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVIII Sunday, Feb. 2, 1951 No. 113 The picture for the Jayhawker will be made at Squire's Monday, Feb. 23, at 12:30 All faculty and student members are urged to be there. Please wear dark dresses. BETTY M. CORBY, Secretary. m臀誊po愚)和 how weak men m臀誊po愚)and how strong men really he never knew. He works all he wanted was to build a wall about himself, protecting his actions by some means. PI LAMBDA THETA: 1. 5.4.2011 6:18 RHADAMANTHI: He was a good football player, but he could have been much better. He could nibble body, and an instinct to play, but still stoller plugged along play after play, he'd wheel hard for a few downs, look like, and then load for a white. But he still stoller plugged along play as a player. Sometimes an opposing lineman drove into him hard, and he was worthless to the team for the rest of the game. There are a lot of little tricks in football that a dirty player could back full of, but he is not a humper for him; it occasionally we put penalizes when he was caught by an official, and ene in a tight game when we were on the road to the winning lane. We'd have to tackle and we were set back half the distance to the goal line. The game was a tie, and most of us never forgive him. Rhadhanidhi will meet Sunday, Feb. 22, in the Green room of Fuseer, All members should be present. JOSEPHINE WHEELER He never finished high school. He went down to the town pool halls, and we saw him intermittently. He still wore his shirt all the time once in a while, and talked loudly about "easy money" and "no backtracking." He was bootlegging, but we thought that was the extent of his law breaking and got up to see him up that he'd had a hand in it, but there was no proof. He left town anyway, saying the place was getting too hot. Then, a couple of summer ago he came back. He was foppishly dressed; he wore a white suit and brown; he talked affectedly; he flashed his money. He was a bit concealingly shocked. He said, "I saw him, and one day he said his vacation was up, that he had to get back on the job." Campus Opinion A few days ago a newspaper story broke, "Speed" was implicated in a kid's death. It wasn't the kid, it but as an accomplice he was sure to be sentenced. And not long afterwards we got a letter from a young man who was with the rest of us and "Speed" told him that he was going to speed Speed, I suppose," he wrote. "The natural thing for you to do is to say I told you no." Somehow, I guess, we always remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He'll get from 10 to 25 years. You remember when he came back two years later was lots of evidence pointing to his future. He wi When the Dove came out, there aured in Campus Opinion two attitudes about the Dove's articles and both indulging in a bit of general anewing. Now sneerering is a nasty word, but it is not the same as defending attacks. In the following issue of the Kanan, only one person defended the Dove, and his name is on the Dove Editor Daily Kansan: Is that a fair indication of what Kansas University is like? Attack number one referred to the article in the Dove about student employment. It quoted that "only K men or future K men are given employment and not just K men who are or stadium" and went up in the air about that much only. Apparently Mr. Attackee did not read the rest of the article, but he him up. Let me quote for his benefit. "The main grievance is that the athletic department is not satisfied with their training, and they are another." One wishes that Mr. Attacker had read and considered these facts before he asked what he did; if so, his protest might have been less positive and ungrateful. "Not that any complaint is meant concerning such action, if this has been a policy at the University, let it remain so! (1) B. 2. 4 Attacker number two condensed with a few remarks about the Dove's intelligence. He asked Cleland answered very well this bit, but perhaps a disinterested person's argument might not be superfluous. The Dove seemed prepared, Imperial Germany. There are very few instances in history of a German soldier who would Well, look what happened to Germany in spite of and because of her preparedness. She was thus able to hold out against most of the rest of the world four years, and the longer she stayed there, the more heretofeutral countries sided against her America and Germany totally different cases? And why did she assemble as prepared and see what happenes. The Campus Muse Now you conservatives might say that the dissatisfied have the choice to set up a private society. Well, they obviously wouldn't want to fit into society as it is. No one really wants to set up a private society, so they try to set up their own society, they can't. You conservatives claim possession of all the earth, in cities and cities. These dissatisfied would have not been able to do so if farms or arrested for vagrancy. Surably that precious number which does criticism thins has a right to a say to say it can be run. From the attacks on the Dove, one would gather that they did not. Therefore the question of Karzee student opinion? At Tristan and Isolde The Campus Muse R. M. Wagner is dead now He will never know A gallery voice a police officer a crime Claigned plagiarism. You see, in the first set, Sailor cowl songs, singing faces. In the second set, There came a heavy voice From the gallery, fraught With hostet indignation. With his eyes that gag Fit bet, from Will Rogers." Our Contemporaries --of Friends and Good Food An effort is being made in the legislature to raise the entrance fee to the University for students outside of the K.U. enrollment so that students should happen to become a law it would cut at least 1,099 students off the K.U. enrollment. The same type of law was enacted a few years ago in Wisconsin and drove all of the out-of-state students out of Wisconsin quit their school because they wanted a more representative group. Of course the law was later repaired. Friends of the Kansas state university will continue this Kansas bill and prevent its enactment—Douglas County Republican. An instructor at Western Reserve University has publicly requested students who want to take any of the several snap courses he is offering to sign up early and avoid the rush. He is afraid that many will be denied enrollment even though claims have been added so that his room seats 130. The Place for George's Lunch 1011 Mass. Tillyer Lenses Accurate to the Very Edge PINK GOLD— WHITE GOLD— FRAMES. Devils Drugs and Doctors by H. W. Haggard, M.D. New edition at $3.50 Our The Best Seller Book in Nook Non-Fiction Do You Want More Money? Cut down your daily expense How? The Cafeteria Eat Where Your Money Goes Farther Rowlands Book Store Will Give Nothing is good enough but the best --of To the student writing the best ad for their store, for a full page in the 1931 Jayhawker. Elaborate art work is not necessary. Copy must be in by Saturday the 28th. CALL ROWLANDS FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS New Stock Eastman Kodak Films in all sizes Rankin's Drug Store 11th & Mass "Handy for Students" Phone 678 Tennis Rackets Restrung Promptly Youll find new and lower prices. new style ideas and startling changes in woolen design and color in our SPRING EXHIBIT of Society Brand Clothes $40 and $50 Other Spring Suits from $25 to $38.50 SHIRT HEADQUARTERS IS YOUR COLLAR A HANGMAN'S NOSE? 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