PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY,OCTOBER 22,1950 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEP___FRANK McCLELLAND MANAGING EDITOR - WILLIAM NICHOLS Carmen Editor Sunday Editor Sunday Editor Shorting Editor Shorting Editor Nancy Editor Nancy Editor Albany Editor Albany Editor Glover Trousworth ADVERTISING MUR. ROBERT PIPERSON District Assistant * Iris Flomacheon District Assistant * Marion Beauty Circulation Manager * Jack Murry Kannan Board Members Kannan Munneland Frank Kernbach Robert Kent Mary Hartmann Marie Hartmann Gwen Paul William Moore Published in the afternoon, five hours, week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Pennsylvania, at the Press of the Journal ment of Journalism. Telephone: Business Office K, 11, 68 News Room K, 11, 25 Night Connection 700k NORRIS OF NEBRASK insurance prices, $1.00 per year, payable in advance. Ninety percent, or each cash payment, is due by March 31st. Please contact her at 416-752-8900, at the post office in Kansas, under the net of March 1, 1993. Senator George W. Norris "N-ebraska, has had hard opps. He defeated his opponent in trust, gov primaries despite the power trust and the supporters of President Hoover Another man by the same name was induced to run against him but was disqualified because his petition was too weak to persuade the government to enforce the votes and give the election to another candidate. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22. 1930 He has been one of the stumbling blocks of the power faction that has been trying to secure Muscle Shoals for private production of electricity, giving the excuse that it wanted to produce cheap fertilizer for the farmer. Norris met this by proposing that the government should supervise the production of the electricity and sell it to the power interests at cost. The trust balked at this arrangement. Senator Norris is one of the insurgent Republicans and has been one of the leaders in the Senate during his past term. He is chairman of the Judiciary committee. Whether he will be able to win in the November election in spite of the fact that he will not have the full support of the Republican party in his state is a matter of great interest and the election of so prominent a man as he has been will be watched by the whole country. Senator Norris has followed the dictates of his conscience and has failed to observe absolute party regularity. He would "rather be right than regular." She says It's Not Him—headline in the Topeka Daily Capital. Ohi! Ohi! What will he think of she? "RIGHT OR WRONG, MY COUNTRY!" It is a common attitude which is generally assumed to be true patriotism that we have in the famous slogan of Stephen Decatur: "My country—my she ever be right. But right or wrong, my country." We have certain great traditions in the United States of which we may be just proud. The citizens of this country believe in God and his blessings; and we own these considerations. That is our true patriotism, but we are not justified in any way in saying "Right or wrong, my country." The consequences of such an attitude have been and are much too disuse" to the welfare of humanity as a move nations. We need a broader outlook **oxice**, for instance, is only a few hours away; England and Japan a few days. All our various interests are the same: every nation desires peace, prosperity, knowledge, intelligence; we are all so intimately clasped together that national boundaries become increasingly less significant. We cannot be prejudiced and hostile or selfish toward other nations without endangering ourselves tremendously. Our national honor is the world; our security rests in our pacifism; our individual patriotism is pride in our country's achievements and social contributions and a willingness to support the right as we see it without regard for national biases and hatreds. If you want to be aure your telephone is working, just try taking a bath when you are alone in the house. A MORE SOCIAL VIEWPOINT The economic organization of our society has been traditionally productive and therefore predominantly individualistic. Our attitude has always been to uphold the business man, the entrepreneur. Initiative in business has been our American ideal of success. The result of such a policy has been unfortunate in many ways. If it has caused our classes to be relatively open and flexible to individuals, it has also produced certain unfortunate results. Business has increasingly dominated the country, to the disadvantage of art, culture, pure science, labor for use, agriculture, and other socially organic functions; Jeremiah was jazed up to create new we, not originally salient;售屡立; has entered the mass-productive uses; nervousness and mental calls; to the bitterness of comps; and the ignominy of failure, have increased alarmingly! labor has been considered a commodity solely; our natural resources have been squandered; production has been for profit, not for use; there has been no security for effort in case of disaster; and in general we have neglected human beings and the gender human virtues to glorify American enterprise. The nearest we can get, perhaps, is a truly social viewpoint is to shift on attitude from the producer's to the consumer's. Economists of the new order, such as Stuart Chase, are more and more emphasizing the necessity of doing this. We have glorified one chase out of all proportion; we need now to see the functional character of society as an organism and to consider human rights in our aspirations toward "the wood life." Our Correspondents Editors: Dolly Kosey Your editorial regarding Mr. Williams speech in your city commands attention. His valuing view of the student body, he need have no voice. He needs to be held accountable. Indonesian still loves and renews in each generation the upward struggle to human settlement. Salina, 10-21 Edwin A. Mune Campus Opinion Editor Dally: Kaman: --dents, thus reprimands the G. O. P orator: To the Men's Student Council In the recent argument in the Kansas City Sports Commission, which has been one phase of the question which has been overlooked. This is the wearing of two twelve-inch caps on the players' caps at the time of football games. Editor Danny Kawanai: To the Men's Student Council It seems to use that you are unintentionally ridiculously reducing the colors of the University by putting them on the cup in the room. You understand, is understudied, to inillust in a greater love for these colors. Your purpose is to understand what the colors should be expected to respect the colors which ourselves are instrumental in tailoring? Have you, in your high-school class, been given one school bind their opponents' colors about their play in a game? I cannot imagine the experience of freshman cap and then subjecting the weaver of the cap — all sorts of haircuts, grooming styles, and dress spectacles to the Crown or Blue. The Alumni of the University also disappointed in this use of the colors which they loved, which you love, and which we are beginning to I am not a member of the mysterious crowd, and I am not objecting to the cap that I wear. When I wear a colorful colored button on top of what they stand for. When I wear R, O, T, C uniform I am proud of the crimson and blue pompon I wear, as in some manner, in a band uniform I like to wear I am not complaining about being the object of this ridiculous自我. I realize that you men have to pay the school. However, if you want to make fun of us, why not require a long green shirt and a dress on what the day before a game? My objection is to the color of the coats of which you represent men. W A Dear Karen dramatic erie, why shouldn't we laugh when we hear the people whom we respect as autonomy try to control us. Obviously the stunned lines of an rame play? Editor Daily Karaan; The author of "The Marked House" apparently was "writing for that great sport," he wrote. He responded to average third, a fact that the Kansas Players overlooked in choosing such parallelism driven for their own reasons. The play isn't even technically good. Half the first act is unnecessary, and half is not even technically good. Half the first act is unnecessary, and half is not even technically good. If all this house-pice and had been presented frankly as horseplay, it would have been a wow. As it was, some of our guests were here. We had to laugh in huffs at the pets. Bring on some good plays, and we'll try to laugh where the dramatic department wants us to. Our Contemporaries Scorner. Old-Fashioned Politics at K. U. Al F. Williams, former federal district attorney, went to Laverne, Calif., to seek old-doctrines of the grand old party to the young men and women of the state university. Mr. Williams, whose administration of the department of justice in Los Angeles holds some old-fashioned views on politics, and he expounded them to the youthful minds of the university students apparently without blushing But he appears not to have made any great difference. The stirring issue at the university, just now no far from an state affairs go, is the question of taxing the fraternity to cover its legal societies, which have from time monumental escaped taxation on the policy of exemption for educational purposes. The county commissioners of education have said a central lend of mind rather than an exalted vision of education, in the肌赴 upon placing all such property on the tax rolls along with saw mills, four mills and paper mill buildings, must materially materials of Lawrence. Preamblely, Mr. Williams went down to Lawrence to capture the vote of the discontented and unrealistic minds and spirits of the student body, and he held his students good old way known to that school of politics of which he is an alumnus. "The fraternities," counded Mr. Williams, "must make themselves felt as the traditional favorals will be granted them." The University Daily Kangaroo, which published a story about them, said. What's Your Selection in the Learbury All-Sectional Football Contest? 21 Learbury Suits FREE The University Danny Kansht, when generally reflects the view of the students, thus reprimands the G. O. P orator: One will be given to each of the three persons whose selection is nearest to that of College Football for the following All-Sectional Football Teams 1... The All-Western Eleven. 2... The All-Southwestern Eleven. 3... The All-Missouri Valley and 4... The All-New England Eleven. 5... The All-Eastern Eleven. 6... The All-New England Eleven. Women will be announced on the February 1928 issue of College Horn-on the second January 1 Get Your Official Entry Blanks FREE Here OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIII Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1994 No. 34 Wednesday at 10 a.m. and Thursday at 11 a.m. The regular Wednesday night dances will be held in the Union building Gam 7 to 8 o'clock FEIN SNERV AND DAVE NEWCUMER WEDNESDAY NIGHT DANCE; JOHL CLUB: There will be an important business meeting of the Quill club this evening at 7:30 in the rest room of central Administration building. All activities and pledges are required to be present. KATHRYN HAYES, President. QUILL CLUB: PI DLTA PHI There will be a meeting of Pi DLta Phi Thursday at 4:30 in room 260 RUTH IRENDIENTAL, Secretary. FEDERICIA RALLY: There will be a FEDERICIA rally Thursday evening at the Little Theater in Greensboro and a clock. FEIDERICA S. ANDERSON KU KU MEHNING: John Kucinski, an important meeting of Ku Kin. Thursday evening at 7:15 in room 200, Fraser. DAVE HANKIN, BUSINESS Kappa PMA will hold a special pledge service for Methodist women on Thursday of March in Myers Hall. THELIM CAUTY, Polishity. JAY JANES: Be at the stadium 45 minutes before the football game Saturday to sell programs. The picture will be taken then. SHIRLEY CASEBIER, President. Mr. Williams should have said, "My party will try to determine as scientifically as possible whether the schools community and respect individual rights, or not. On that basis we shall decide the case, for we know no party can convince its constituents that our school is a Votes are secondary," but he didn't and there lies democracy's weakness. All of which goes to show the difference between the old school of pledgement in the modern school of disloyalty in the shipment of Kansan. Mr. Williams, no doubt, would have Mr. Williams, no doubt, would have said what the Kansan he should have said, if he had only known that the university students were making only justice and fairness, based upon community interest. But it never occurred to me that the reason for their failure was a graduate of the school of politics—the school that says: "The way to get what you want is to deliver the vote to the right party." The question for factions is not the weakness of democracy. It is its strength and bulwark. K. C. Times, 10-21-30 MASOUERADE COSTUMES For Rent 118 E. 11th St. Phone 2471 ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. Fletcher Price Representing Miller Fur Company Detroit, Mich. 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