PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1930 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEP CLINTON FEENEY Jack R. Morris Iris Pitfallenmons MANAGING EDITOR ... LESTER SUHLER Director of Marketing Marco Editor Nikki Editor Renée Pearson Editor Jane Cooken Reporting Editor John Cooken Source Darren O'Neill Management Editor Amy Shimbun Animal Editor Shannon Shimbun ADV. MANAGER - BARBARA GLANVILLE Foreign Eng. Adm. Mgr. Mar- shifat, Adm. Mer. Mar- shifat, Montclair Counc- solidarist Adm. Mer., BOARD HANDOUT Lester Schuh Mary Wewer William Hewer Gregory Weaver Barbara J. Glavelle Dilton Lennon Carl E. Cooper Mary Barmen Haley Harper Ledith Kohlbeck Telephone Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 270KX Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin, in the Fees of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $1.00 per year, payah in advance. Single coins, leach each. Entered as second payment at the door at Lawrence Kanau, under the act of March 3, 1879. WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1930 AN INNOVATION Last night marked the initial concert of a combined musical group with a personnel of 85 pieces. It was an innovation to the music lovers of the University to hear and see the combined playing of the huge K. U. Symphony and the Little Symphony orchestra, but it was a new idea that should become an annual occurrence. It would indeed be a worth-while feature of the final school weeks if each year one could look forward to the concert two orchestras would present. The evening would be a climax of all the thely musical festivities of the University. Professor Kueisteren is to be congratulated upon this new musical introduction. The height of personality is embodied in a donkey, we were to judge by the psychologist's remarks that character is indicated by the ears. IT IS EVER THUS— The women of Leland Stanford University have launched a campaign for a ten million bond endowment fund to permit more women to attend Stanford. At present the enrollment of women is restricted to 500. In initiating this effort, the women of Stanford show an appreciation for the relative value of the real factors essential to the success of a university. Big, brawny men have told us that successful athletic teams determine the success of a university and that it cannot hope to become great without them. A few scholars still persist in contending that no institution of learning can properly be called a university unless a certain respect for books is maintained, and a majority of the students who aspirations toward Phi Betu Kappa. But the women of Stanford have penetrated to a factor in university success as old as nature itself. They realize that only by allowing more women on their campus can Stanford boys be kept away from the University of California at Berkeley. Aimee Simple McPherson is missing again—she was last heard of "somewhere east of the Suce." We wonder what sort of comeback she will stage this time. POOR BABES Two soft bundles of humanity have been left to the hands of fate this spring for Kansas City. The most recently-found bundle was discovered in an old tank, nearly dead from exposure. It may be that the child, not having seen any of life yet, would have been happier if she had died while so small. Life is only full of responsibilities anyway, and besides there will always be a stigma attached to the little one because she was mistreated by adults, even though her mother was found later. Heaven known, the baby is innocent, but someone will see that when she is grown, she will learn of the fate she suffered. Humans are like that. The Greeks once placed all defective babies in a public market place for the taking. Then at least others knew they were there and could save them from death. Buf Americans are much more civilized. Not caring to bother with a child, they can hide it in a rusty tank or leave it on a doortop in the middle of the night. THE END OF THE ROPE The old homily that every farm boy learns before the age of 15 of "give the tall efflent rope and he'll hang himself" seems to be working out in central Kansas. For a period of years the liquor traffic has flourished in and about Wichita and Hutchinson with almost no restraint. These cities have been the rendezvous of Saturday night idlers in most of the town within a radius of 40 miles. Together with it, vice has flourished in wild abandon. Fails were made by prohibition officials, but only unhapazily and occasionally. Always the real forces behind the liquor interests slipped away. But the lawless forces craved expansion and they ran up against a stone wall. They have finally advanced to a point where the state is in a position to make a general clean-up. If the state fails to do so, it will be one of the most serious failures of popular government in the state of Kansas for the liquor interests have finally stuck their neck in the noose. One of life's darkest moments, observes the Thoughtful Freshman, is to discover at the top of the Hill, after missing breakfast and scattering books in a hurried flight, that this wasn't the day you had an 8.30. THE HOOVER TRIP President Hoover is going to make a swing around the country this summer. The trip is in reality a second campaign. He is bringing his program directly to the people and asking them to ratify it by their vote in the election this fall. He will probably ask for a Republican House and Senate to facilitate the carrying out of the Republicum program. This action is much the same as that of Coolidge and Wilson, when they asked for congresses of their own political faith lost their measures be altered or curtailed. It is the patricity of responsibility on the people. We look to our president for leadership. If he does not carry through an effective program he alone is blamed. The congress that hold up legislation is not blamed. It is this fact more than any other that leads our presidents to make campaigns every two years. As the last week of the semester approaches and the semi-annual resume of faculty stories begins, we suggest that someone invent a checking system for instructors so that they can check them off. When it comes to reviews, enough is enough. Proposed motto for Congress: "Do it now." There is, after all, a difference between pledges of fraternities and their activities. cigitates The Thoughtful Freshman. Pledges leaving school just can't get used not to waiting on someone, while actives can't become accustomed to waiting on themselves. At The Concert The Moztar "Symphony in G Minor" was an excellent a piece of work as a work has ever presented. The clarity of theme and the zart intended were well brought out, whether it was grandeur with full volume, or delicacy with soli instruments It was only a few years ago when getting a complete orchestration for the KU. Symphony orchestra was a problem itself, a Little Symphony was out of the number of obtaining accuracy limited to the possibilities of fine playing for effect. So it is indeed a tribute to Prof. Karl Kuehnster, as well as a tangible evidence of the increasing implemence of schools which send students to the University. 90 musicians of the University could come together and present an ambition a program as they did last night. The orchestra play with certainty, but they have pressed the moods which the numbers demanded. The woodwinds and brasses, which usually are the problems of music, have been performed "throughout in credible facilities." By John Shively The "March from Carmen" was presented vigorously as the closing number of the program. The first part of the program was presented by the K.U. Symphony. The tone poem, "Finlandin," was nearly a All sensors are urged to attend the class conversation to be held in Presser Theater Friday morning, May 25, at 9:30am. Instructions for commencement will be posted on the presser's website as soon as possible. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII Wednesday, May 21, 1983 No. 186 SENIOR CLASS CONVOCATION: ARTHUR CROMB, President. Meeting of all actives at 823 Missouri street, Thursday, May 22, at 7:30 p. m. COLENE SERGENT, President PHI CHI THETA: There will be a meeting of Pi Signa Alpha in room 106 west Administration building Thursday afternoon, at 4:30. PI SIGMA ALPHA: STANLEY E. TOLAND, Secretary. SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: Snow Zooclubgy will hold their spring hike Thursday, May 22, at 5:30 Meet in front of snow hall. Members and guests are invited. There will be a Wednesday dance from 7 to 8 tonight in the Memoria Union building. WEDNESDAY DANCE IRMA CASEY, President. different number than that presented at the music week programs, owing to the special grant for greater grandeur, and the presence of important instruments in the studio. The Rimsky-Korakoff selection from "Scheherazade" gave opportunities to the woodwinds to show their worth. Dorothy Kueisterer played her solo recital in *Desert Dearness* The Saint-Saens in *Dance Macabre* was vivid in its presentation. London, May 21—(UIP) Two-fteens of giant airplanes, equipped almost as completely at ocean lines, are under construction for use over Great Britain's pacific coast in retoe. The fleet (which is the largest) will carry forty passengers each Britain Builds Giant Air Fleets UNION OPERATING COMMITTEE. Cool Meals Cold Adas That refresh during the Hot Day will be found THOMPSON STUDIO 829 Mass. Phone 614 Wide Awake and Up-to-Date You will be pleased with the photographs we make. We have told you before. BELL'S MUSIC STORE Garland Franklin ★★★★☆ Earns Great Sporting Champions • Goal-Core Orchestra • Every Year Saving Time • Great to Save Money ★★★★☆ 23355 - MINNIE THE MERMAID AND YOU WILL COME BACK TO ME - Boris Communist and New York Rival 23370—IT HAPPENED IN MONTEREY AND SONG OF THE DAWN—George Oliver and Orchestra, 22351—GONE—Shilker and Vice President, AND COTTAGE FOR SALE-RELEASE Communion and Orch. LIFE'S a muppy, salty dessert. But the muppy dessert is all very affer- mentate.鱼.鲜.Bernie Clem- man's mini cocktail on your Victor interview The stream of the world's artists and orchestra... from jazzy to symphony, record exclusively for Victor and all other musicians. . . . yahoo!, yahoo!, yahoo!, ...on Virober Records. 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