PAGE TWO SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1931 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Papers of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF CLARENCE RUPI MERCHANT MCKINNEY DATA: TELEPHONES PRESIDENT EDITOR WILLIAM NICHOLS Saturday Edition Katherine O'Reilly Sunday Edition Katherine O'Reilly Monday Edition Katherine O'Reilly Tuesday Edition Katherine O'Reilly Wednesday Edition Kenneth Rush Thursday Edition Kenneth Rush Friday Edition Kenneth Rush Saturday Edition Hermanica Albright Sunday Edition Hermanica Albright Monday Edition Robbie Johnson Almond Edition MARY M. KENNEDY Kanan Board Hammas ADVERTISING MGR. ROBERT PIRLSON District Assistant. Inr Personnelman District Assistant. Resource Manager District Assistant. William B. Stuart District Assistant. James H. Krause District Assistant. --house or a rooming house make one feel like an explorer discovering an ancient, dead, and forgotten city. If you walk too heavily in the halls or should talk for an instant to a fellow student, some harassed looking individual will yell in a very disgraceable voice. "Quiet hours are on!" Frank McGiffield William Nichols Robert Perion Virginia Williamson Mary Burkman Ivan Pachmanns Call Cooper Jack Murray Joe Walters Clarence Ripp Telephones Business Office K, U. 64 News Room K, U. 25 Night Connection 2101K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Georgia, in response to the Press of the Journalism department of Journalism. Subscriptions prices, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple enclosure, ie. needs Intriven in second-class mail math matters. Lawrence Kauinsen, under the art of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1931 BE MODERN, GIRLS! The women of the Hill say they are modern. They wear fashionable clothes, they smoke, they swear, and a few drink, but they still believe that it is better to have friends than that they should have to take no part in the expenses of a date. They evidently believe that the man is receiving a big favor when they give him the asked for date, and consequently he should have to pay high for it. Just an ordinary date to the movie will make some sort of a hole in a man's pocket, when it includes transportation, the price of admission, and drinks afterwards. When a girl has only an occasional date with a fellow, perhaps she should be excused from the "Dutch tren", but when she is with him practically all of the time and shared none of the pleasure of nothing more than a little "didier discor". Don't be afraid to offer your services girls, be modern! The men won't mind! PAVLOWA. THE PERSONALITY Pavlown, the twinkle-toed little Rusan danceeer, danced her way into the hearts of her American audiences. From the bold foilights of the world's prominent theaters, the vivaciousness of this little glitter of personality spum a web about the soul of her medicines, holding them spell-bound with the antics of her well trained Though her admirers may not have deemed her beautiful, she had a heart of gold. Her buoyant grace and charm cheered the weary hearts of the American soldiers as from their breastwheels they faced the dogged onlaught made by the Germans. She irradiated that name gleam of happiness to those about her, who could scarcity she ever had a care. To all postery her indomitable personality, as revealed in the shadows he was a beacon of hope and courage. Still she dances lightheartedly on. And ever will she be remembered as a bright star in the hearts of her American admirers. Although as a fundamental principle we do not believe in crowning professors with laurels, we nevertheless feel that some commendation is due the instructor in English literature who served cokes to his students while they were writing a three-hour examination last Friday. QUIET HOURS ARE ON! Only a few days ago the streets of the campus were buzzing at practically all hours with chattering, smiling students. The college eating houses were full of people, gossiping over their "cokes." In sorority and fraternity houses "bull fests" were going on at practically any hour of the day. The moving picture houses were enjoying a good business. Now what do you find? Students walking along the campus at 8:30 in the morning with worried, preoccupied looks on their faces, hastily scanning a handful of notes. An air of deathless stillness is present on the campus in the middle of the morning and in the afternoon. To walk into a fraternity Yes, the Hill has certainly changed A man who goes to church occasionally, a friend of the editor, spent half an hour searching in the New Testament for the story of the landing of the Pilgrims, when the editor could have told him all the time it was in the Old Testament, says Austin Butcher in the Altoona Tribune. And here we thought the story was told in John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. WHY THE FLUNKOUT? The proposition that a certain percentage of our freshmen will flunk out if school at the end of this semester is pitted. It has always been so in the minds of many students, the murders didn't happen this year. And murder isn't happen any more. There have been multitudinous theories advanced as to cause of the flumka Probably most of them have an element of truth in them. Most of them are old and have been repeated again and again. But here's a new one that apparently hasn't been given much consideration so far: high school students pick up too much superficial sophistication before they enter college; they come here with too much knowledge of wrythings and their implications, their expressness to learn, their amazement at new things, particularly in the realm of knowledge and wisdom has been crushed out. To grow up in a high speed age, to know as much about what used to be called "orbidbird" things as their parents did at thirty or forty, plays a certain amount of havev with the individual's desire for book learning. He's been interested in too many other things during his high school days to become as interested as he should in getting a higher education. Books and lectures are dull compared with the lure of the things he has seen and done. Naturally, they don't get the attention the old-fashioned scholar who delighted in study for study's sake gave them. Nothing can be done about the life of a student before he comes to college The only thing that can be done is to make study and courses more attractive to him than they are at the present. But that is a problem that will take educators a long time to figure out. A STEP FORWARD The action of the Kansas legislators on the bill to license automobile drivers cannot be commended too high. In a day when the motor car has supervised all other means of transportation in importance, Kansas has lagged behind her sister states in providing for the safety of the highways. But the problem remains of effecting the purposes which the legislators had in mind, by strictly enforcing the provisions of the law as it will finally be ratified. The law-makers have done their part by furnishing a statutory basis for making the roads safe for the people of Kansas; the satisfactory operation of the new rulings depends on the enforcement officials. Hit-and-run drivers, drunk drivers, incapable drivers, and children drivers in their first decade of life cannot be legislated off the roads. It is to be hoped that Kannas can effect the enforcement of this law without "Wickerabaming" as W. A. White would have It is reettable that a provision for an annual renewal of the driver's licence could not have been inserted into the bill. But a step forward has taken which may inaugurate a new era of safety in transportation. Oskay — (UP) = Mizur Hajar. A liaison found employment here after walking 200 miles from Tokyo expressway and met a newspaper published his picture and a brother he had not seen for eight years. The brother's employer gave Haim a job. Carries Child 200 Miles Bail Used as Fine Duluth, Minn. — (UF) — A local communist was put out today. He had been sentenced to 60 days in the workhouse. When he arrived at the jail next week, he was found with $100 "100 ball" he had posted had been taken up as a fine. He protested futely. Journal of a Christmas Trip to the South By Bruno Radtke Though the port did not seem very busy, we had good opportunity for them to买货 and unload cotton soap, oilseeds or merchandise. On the French market you can see a quite unusual merchant, Unfortunately, New Orleans is one of the cities which are only rivaled by the faces and dresses of buyers and vendors. Unfortunately, New Orleans is an economic depression; imports and exports are lumbered so badly by tariffs that the city became paralyzed. We were told that unemployment was widely spread throughout the city, but it was not as severe as in other cities streets you could find people standing in long lines to get a free meal and the well-known apple seller with their own bicycle helped with help the unemployed" were there in large numbers. Of course, many things have been tried to cope with this situation, trivially-walks, or as Mr. J. M. Keyman says "restriction of output" or "reduced requirements" in themselves to restore equilibrium. On the other end of the famous Canaan that crosses New Orleans and is supported to contain large numbers of fillies, probably, because it was too cold) there lies Lake Pontchartrain with the charming home of the Southern Yacht Club on its shores and on luxurious vessels. The first coat drive at West End Park, close to the club, seems to be very similar with the second, a standard automobile necking parties. The whim of a wealthy Oleander is reflected by the unique Metairie coat, a fine dress with a famous race course, but was transformed into its present destination by this man, because the club that evoked affection refused to admit him as a member. NEW ORLEANS by Columbus the XII This is the fourth of a series of grievies written by Dr. Bruno Nadice, exchange professor in German, in which he relates the account and impression which he and his fellow countryman, Johann Wiedemann, exchanges scholae in a groom's air car trip taken during the Christmas holiday o the South. New Orleans displays an exuberant vegetation, especially in the parks. Though you will find numerous plant-trees lining the streets, the final highlight is the beautiful Park, where graceful swans adorn perils and extensive well-flowering leaves attract the enthusiastic golfer. I earned imagery of the Lady Liberty from the United States as beautiful as Audubon park on St. Charles avenue opposite the Charlotte Loyola University of Alabama at a Zoo and a fine bathing pool, 1000 year-old oaks with green foliage, roses in full blossom and these charming trees which have become so popular in Europe. There are always seems to have existed much sentimentality about the French quarter and the glorious old Creole days. And you realize that this is justified as soon as you enter the house, because you enjoy a happy mixture of French and Spanish style, is still preserved. As you are passing along streets that could as well be found in Marseille or some port in France, you can see a classicist architecture of the houses, some of them with picturesque iron-lace balconies, which make wonderful flower gardens. You also notice them on the streets. Fine art廊和 French windows lead to lovely yards, called "patis," decorated with flowers and fountains. Royal street with its grand entrance seems to have been imported directly from the quarter near the Porte. Much Vegetation in Parks Canal street, the main street of New Orleans, successfully rivals Broadway in New York and La Salle in Chicago; its width is surprising with four street walls and streets and imposing buildings with fine shops facing it. Here is the city's business center, where a large number of fine shops and streets and imposing buildings with fine shops facing it. Here is the city's business center, where a large number of fine shops and streets and imposing buildings with fine shops facing it. Here is the city's business center, where a large number of fine shops and streets and imposing buildings with fine shops facing it. Here is the city's business center, where a large number of Sentimental Atmosphere St. Denis in Paris. Unfortunately, "the Old Abraham House" has nowadays five entrances, and the built to say whether prohibition is enforced very severely in New Orleans; at encounters with drivers paacing the street car tracks, drinking nice quantities from large hip-jacket cups. Jackson Square is the most attractive spot in the French quarter; here stands on imposing monument "of the defender" of Paris, which is prominently called, in the center of the square. The north side is lined with the first group of old-time architecture built for the academy of the classical of the late 18th century, as represented by the autumn lines of St. Louis cathedral, flanked by the old Spanish courtyards, the Cabildo, and the Cathedral of St. Louis in architecture; the latter buildings showing both more graceful lines with their arches and arch windows and a series of pillars. The Cable Bridge contains an excellent collection of objects referring to the old days of French and Spanish rule. Here you can see documentaries falling in love with the paintings of Nicolas Cage. The house is also full of relics of Napoleon, the great man who, after abolishing the much hated Spanish ruler, ordered the city to be realised that he could not keep it any longer. Therefore, it is no wonder that the grateful citizens build a refuge for him intending to rescue him from "Napoleon House" Is Seen "The Napoleon House" with its small tower and windows of five proportions, reminds you of the residence of some rich merchant in a French provincial town. Of course, it is interesting that Napoleon collects inside, than the "Napoleon Grocery" that occupies the ground there too much sense of intimacy, like the fascination of Napoleon's personality has lost its power more than a century after his death and how exquisite it happened of Napoleon had fed to America, one of the "IPS" of American history on this subscript it calls in his essay. 'Nanoleon House' Is Seen As our map indicated a Vieux Carre Jackoon Square, I asked an elderly southemian our way, pronouncing the French name of the ancient ascendant. At first he didn't seem to understand me (by the way, this does not reflect on my account, I have heard that he was quite familiar with the only French lady on board our liner told me she thought it was perfect; probably because I was the only human passenger on the boat. Perhaps she afterwards a bit sorry for it, when I stubbornly insisted on practicing my wonderful ascension on her liner, which would have prepared and prepared her for visit to this country by reading Dahamel's "Scenes de la Ve Future"). After a few hours, I gave up, feeling a face pressed fierce and he replied in a bound Southern ascent, "Ye-r-eighnt-ing Mist!" Disappointed, I looked at the famous French that is supposed to be spoken round here, when somebody told his friend behind me back in a chair, "What is that French that is supposed to be spoken round here, when somebody told his friend behind me back in a chair, ' Many Races in America This is a very instructive lesson for the foreign concerning the language and race problem which this country has to face. America does not show the racial uniformity so frequently among the European nations. Here we find a conglomerate of the races all合连着 in Arkansas, we even discovered a large percentage of Chinese among the population of that town). One of the few native Americans in the form whole is a uniform language. We should not encourage immigrants to stick to their mother tongue, neglecting American. It is no more a matter of culture than it is much different from English in accent and phraseology. That does not involve that they should forget their native language. If you do it as breads the cultural cut-out. But we should not worry when American becomes the everyday language of our former countrymen and women. It is little surprising that one searches in vain for French speaking people of notable Spanish types, for New Orleans may be the city where it is likely to pop. It may be that the famous March Gran, the Caracolin in the Lenton season, reveals some of the temperament of Los Angeles before we left, not to be in love with the beautiful Greco girls; we did not, simply, for the reason that we could not find them. Gentlemen prefer the more beautiful Nero population in New Orleans, living in rather介乎馁 quarters. Their humbleness shades relationships between them and whites who are characteristic of the town. New York is Ready American. Now you can French-dress, enjoy a four-hour throughout the States. Unfortunately, I don't care much about this brown beverage. But my companion coin found out that it was unmistakably delicious. Being an eater, I'm sure he gulped number cups which was not quite fine, as we had poured our money, and honourly bounty you to prey on your friends. There is a nice spot, where you can get a dip "dip as black and mud as and hot as hell". Here are the hunting grounds of the Crooke enthusiasts, and here too, the legends say the cave Errors of Yesterday Realizing that our education had been neglected for a considerable time, one night we went to the movies to see what was very instructive to the German, especially to the former officer. We learn all about the fendish faces of our officers, the stubborn chininess of our soldiers, their queer manner. In most of these films we justly outshine by the brilliant courage of our enemies, who always seem to be the impossible. Thus two men in their planes keep up an admirable conversation while shooting immature enemies. They were so brave that when Richthofen, "The Red Knight" appeared, they were rather irritated. Remember: if these fellows are going to shoot him too, I'll have a question." Why on earth, he might have thought, did it take the military, rather instructed, to deliver a mischievous blow? Our poor former aristocrat gets the worst of it, as one of the Hollywood's outstanding actors specializes in them, showing that they securely deserve the praise that goes to their thing about all this is that the United States recruiting office advises young men to see this film, 12 years after the militia! Never mind that is the fate of the a defended nation, what could have been a series of poisonous ant-internment proceedings? Why not show some of the great German war films? They would prove that objectivity and fairness can be pre-defined by being disingenuous to your country. It is not wrong to make mistakes once, but twice is bad. Think of the better grades you would have received on your reports if they had been TYPEWRITTEN. We have rental TYPEWRITERS as well as new ones for your inspection. Call us today to insure better grades next semester. Phone 548 LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 737 Mass. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIII Sunday, Jan. 25, 1931 No. 95 W. S.G.A. BOOK EXCHANGE: The W.S.G.A. book exchange will be open for buying second hand books at room 5, sub-basement of Union building, according to following schedule: Monday, Jan. 26, 9-12; Tuesday, Jan. 27, 9-12; Thursday, Jan. 29, 9-11 and 12-3. DAVA MANNING. Manager. READINGS FOR HONORS IN ENGLISH: Students interested in the course, Readings for Honors in English, may confer with Miss Burburn in room 201 Fraser hall, on Monday, Jan. 26, between 1:30 and 3:15, or on Tuesday, Jan. 27, between 3:30 and 5. Other appointments may be arranged if desired. JOSEPHINE BURNHAM. Chairman of the Committee A. G. ALRICH 736 Mass. Street Well Dressed Students Printing Engraving Binding, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Stationery go to R. E. Protsch, the Tailor 833 Masse "The University of Sweden" will be the subject of a talk by Prof. Mary E. Larson at 7:30. "My Religious Journey" will be the subject of the 12th and 13th Sunday at 11 at the Unitarian church, 12th and 14th St. streets. Super Service Station for Clothes We make. We repair. We line. We remodel. We clean and press. Suiting and Servicing Is Our Business Schulz, The Tailor Nine Seventeen Mass. Sale of Slip-over Sweaters and Golf Hose This is the time to buy your Spring Topcoats $50 Topcoats, now $33.35 $40 Topcoats, now $26.70 $35 Topcoats, now $23.35 $30 Topcoats, now $20.00 $25 Topcoats, now $16.70 --during exams—get your drink and food HOT ROBY'S ON THE HILL 40c Special Chicken Dinner 40c Chicken Soup Baked Chicken with Dressing Mashed Potatoes with Gravy Cole Slaw Butter Scotch Pie Coffee Milk 25c Sandwich Special 25c Valentine Candy a Specialty Toasted Tongue Salad with Lettuce Tomatoe and Mayonnaise Don't Try to Study When You are Hungry— Special Delivery Service Free Delivery 2 Trunks PHONE 50 Largest Sandwich List in Town 4