PAGE TWO P221A TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1930 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEEP CLINTON FEENEY CLINTON FEENEY Associate Editors Jack R. Morris Tria PitaNimmons MANAGING EDITOR LESTER SUILLA, Margaret Editor Debbie Wade Marketing Editor Diane Bach Business Editor Carol P. Gaucoz Business Editor Carl E. Gaucoz Technical Editor Elizabeth Mossel Supports Editor Ellen Mossel Supports Editor Edith Mery Way Ahmed Almohadi Almohadi Editor Shawn Tayler ADV. MANAGER BARIDA GLANYLVE Advert. Micr. Adm. Mgr. Assistant Adm. Mer. Mgr. Assistant Adm. Mer. District Admin. Mgr. District Admin. Mgr. District Admin. Mgr. Robert Favron KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS Lester Smith Lester Smith Mary Woolf Wilber Moore Mary Woolf Marion Harrington Barbara J. Glurille Lois Lekdahl Telephone Business Office K. U. 6 News Room K. U. 2 Night Connection 270K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Akron, from the Tree of the Deaf Subscription price, $10.00 per year, parallels in Advance. Simple copies, $6.95 each, from Advance and Kanser, 17, 1896, to the good offer at Lawnerville, Kansas, under the art of M. H. 1879. The Jayhawker track team will go to the Big Six meet at Lincoln Saturday doped to finish at least second in the race for 1930 conference honors. The wise ones who have followed the varying fortunes of the schools to be represented there give Kansas almost an even break of being out in front when the finale on the Big Six track season is sounded. POWER TO EM TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1930 Fans have a right to feel proud of their Jayhawk favorites. They have performed in great style this season. The Nebraska Cornhoppers have been the only one to turn the trick of setting the Kanns back in a hallway. The Jayhawkers have entered they have turned in excellent performances. Bratun Hamilton, in his first year as track coach here, has established a reputation as a good fellow and mentor par excellence. He has had the material and he has made something out of it. Kansas should look forward to a long string of track successes under his guidance. Kansas will enter the Big Six meet with a good chance for first place Power to 'cm. After reading of weddings held in theaters, in airplanes, before radios, and while gently floating to earth in parachutes, we wonder why some original soul doesn't put one on at home. THINGS HAPPEN Today's news will be ancient history tomorrow, but it might be well to pause and reflect on the paradoxical happenings of this thing called fate. In the past few hours the episcopacy committee has exonerated Bishop Canon because he said he was sorry for having let himself fall into the hands of those New York "sharpers". During the same period of time a Kansas City youth tapped from the throne of nationwide fame because his memory had been so good that he unconsciously became a plapianist and probably today wishes that he could be free from the not cost of Zanzibar. Apparently bishops can be exonerated if they are the victims of circumstances, but a high school boy with a good memory doesn't have a chance. Now that our statements have returned from the naval conference and have handed the results of their labors to the president, he will tonight view a mimic battle between battleships and seaplanes on one side and cruisers and destroyers on another. The problem is it is to be handled over the entire nation, and if the people enjoy it sufficiently they will probably urge their representatives in congress to oppose the report of the naval conference. Columbus gained worldwide fame by starving to death in prison. Think of the thousands of college students that go unheralded and unsugr FIREWATER THAT BURNS The scourge of disease and pestilence has inflicted itself upon man since the beginning of time with various causal reasons given. The Black Death, the Typhus plague, the Cholera were interpreted as the workings an insidious devil that had a deep hatred for human beings. Now comes America's great catastrophe that threatens to take a far taller than that of the Civil war-jake paralysis. This is an odd and protente plague that kills the body but leaves the mind intact to suffer over the wrong doing that brought about their present incepted condition. In a way this is best—think of a drowning man! He has but a moment to make a resume of his life. Scientists have had their say, of course, as to the cause of "jake," and have visited the blame on everything from the aromatic spirits of alcohol that balmy stimulant that gives an energy brim—brown drums to the sweet-secreting plant that spice that lends entiment to fruit cakes. We of the intelligence learn in rap attention to all these harangues of twisted organic rings and what-not, but deep in our hearts we know better. The cause of "jake" is not a secret—the devil of prohibition is at the root of the whole business. Bacchus has been outraged and a sacrifice must be laid at his feet in the humble spirit of penitence. John Ringling says that tigers cost 1000 each. This is too much money e a pet, with goldfish retailing for i cents per. THE NEW PIONEER Prof. Goldwin Goldsmith, chairman of the department of architecture at the University of Texas, visited Lawrence over the week-end and offered numerous personal reflections on the subject of the fine arts. Previous to becoming a member of the faculty of the University of Texas, he served as an adjunct professor at the University at the University of Kansas, where his work in building up the department received high commendation from his associates. In speaking before several university and high school groups, Professor Goldsmith emphasized the necessity for a greater appreciation of the fine arts. He remarked that ward school and high school students are not receiving adequate training in the appreciation of the beautiful things in life. In accordance with his theories the schools should have more intensive instruction, and such training should be given by people who have adequate knowledge of the subject. Particularly did he deplore the fact that many of the classes are conducted by men and women who themselves have never had any training in the fine arts. On the subject of art, the professor let it be known that he has little or no sympathy with the so-called expressionist art or the creators of such art, who are seeking to portray something which they imagine to be the future in art. It is his firm belief that art should be an expression of the life of the people today and not an attempt to reveal the future. Such are the decisions of a man who has spent several years in the practice and teaching of architecture. He has learned that appreciation of the beautiful life is achieved through fullness of life, and is traveling about the country on a lecture tour in an effort to direct the thoughts of people toward it. Naturally the University of Kannas feels a close interest in the success of Professor Goldsmith's endeavors and is particularly hopeful that he will have the power to convince his listeners of the need for a greater appreciation of the beautiful things in life. When Aimee Semple MacPerson got lost east of the Suez this time, she handed a nasty blow to Mexico. Their only salvation for front page fame will be to have another revolution. THE PIT AND THE DENDULUM Shades of the Spanish Inquisition Echoes of Edgar Allen Poe. The finals are upon us. Blindly we group our way about the pit of unfathomable knowledge, and hourly we see the light of inspiration receding farther and farther out of reach. As the darkness deepens, a nameless terror seizes us. What horrible fate awaits us on that dreadful day! We have known all year that there OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII Tuesday, May 26, 1958 No. 185 There will be a short meeting of Quill Club Wednesday evening at 7:30 the rest room of central Administration building. --would be a day of reckoning, and we have we tried to seize such defense as we could along the way. We have sorted out the essentials at best we could, and have moved forward with confidence. There are weak places in history that were not easy to find, same heavy, and some things must be lain aside. And there were other things that were forgotten in the teedious preparation. ELIOT N. FREEMAN, President. PHI CHI THETA: There will be a meeting of all active members of Phi Chi Theta Thursday revenue at 5:20 at 825 Missouri street. COLENE SERGEANT, President PEN AND SCROLL: 20. It has been voted to have another meeting of Pen and Scroll Tuesday, May 10, at 8 in the rest room of central Administration building. ELIZABETH BRANDT, President. PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION: The Pro-Law Association will meet in 165 Green hall, Tuesday, May 20 at 7:20. Committees will be chosen, and overseen by pro-legal work. JOE BALCH, Secretary. BAND REHEARSAL: Hand簿ureal will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 cep. All members are requested to be present. We will be a hand contact on the campus Little Priscilla of the golden curls is a grandmother now. Her grand-daughter is a blonde too. But what a difference! She knows not how to faint; the waist length curls of her grandmother are replaced by her boyish priscilla III never puts her finger in her mouth and giggles; rather she lights a Murad and greets the world with contemplative tolerance. She is the third generation. Only Five Veteran Drivers Enter Annual Indianapolis Speed Classic Indianaapolis—(UP) —The eightteenth annual 500-mile auto speed classic in Indianapolis on May 30 will be marked by a death of veterans, both among drivers and their mounts, and because of this, there appears to be little likelihood of record performance this year. J. C. McCANLES, Director. Of the 45 entries there are only five drivers who qualify as veterans on the two and one-half mile brick oval. Twenty-eight man will make their debit on the course, unless some of the five unnamed drivers are veterans. Of the 17 who have circled the track in previous competition, only two - Peter De Pau and 1968, and Louis Moyer in 1928 - were the event, and eight others have made their debit among them. The drivers and ten drivers are making their second probable the most. Four nates stand foremost in that circle where fondness breeds pride. He was the winner and record holder, and six times an entry, three of them within the money, Phil Shuler, four-time winner, and the veteran of six 500-mile contests, in five of which he placed, and Louis Moyer, the only winner in his career since he rose from obscurity to victory in 1928, and proved it wasn't an accident. De Pauls and Hartk have been fixtures at the track since 1927, and both have remained among the most daintiest. Shafer started a year later. Among the veterans Hartz has been the most consistent performer. Three times he has won two second place, twice fourth, and once fifth in his finishes. In the same number of stars De Paulo has a first, a fifth and a sixth, with three blanks, and Shafer a third and two tenth, with but one shut-in. Louis Meyer's picturesque performances in 1928 and 1929 have made him But we are, robed of our chance or a fair fight. Instead of an opportunity to tell of what we have learned, and how we have progressed during the year, we are at the mercy of our inquisitors whose sole purpose is to seek out the weak spots and to torture us for minor faults. Even our campus, the bulwark of all that is learned, that is old, that is traditional, has succumbed to the staccato of the times. Board walks gave way to sidewalks and with their going passed the opportunity to rescue the fair one from falling each time they crossed the street, and the passing of the board walks went the fainting beauty. Blushes are not of our generation. THE GOOD OLD DAYS Give back to the un spirit of the gay 90s. Let us revel in the cetany of those romantic days of yore. Our times are too mercurial; he is too void of wisdom, and we can never hold the lure of the parlor sofa; Bobbin jogging on a dog trot was more conducive to the dues of Cupid than is the hum of a limousine motor at sixty. THE GOOD OLD DAYS probably the most popular driver on the track, and the only one who can share that position with the three veterans. Others who have entered past races are Lou Moore (2), Zeke Meyer (1), Louis F. Schneider (2), Anthony Guarita (4), Katie McCormack, Rich Dellinger, Snowbery, Evonuol Cunzi, W. H. Gardner (1), Deacon Liz (1), John Seymour (3), Egbert "Babe" Strapp (3), and Sam Greco (1). All cars will be of entirely different construction than those which have been designed for other alternative specifications radically, and providing that two men must ride in each machine. Two of the major reason given for the change were that foreign entries would be attracted back to the Indiana state, and the driver would show more interest in competition among machine with approval. The list shown two foreign cars, which seems to justify the first promotion, but the public will find difficulty in marking them as foreign vehicles and their family models. There are only three entry names familiar to the lay motorbikes of America, and one of them has been widely associated more generally associated with race trucks than with the highways. Chrysler owns several cars with a ring of general familiarity. No high production manufacturer is presenting his product in competition. To gain the market, he must high speeds of previous years will be maintained, but they are nearly alone Only once since Jimmy Murphy broke into the 90's in 1928 has an average speed in excess of 100 miles an hour. He thundered across the finish line with an average of 100.13 miles an hour in 1945, but he managed a machine with the same name this year. Whereas average speed has increased but little in the past six years, attendance has been much higher, which watched Harroun elchin the 1911 grand final against Chelsea. Kech's triumph was Memorial day. The Campus Mews Spring Rhyme Three little birds a-sitting on tree, Singing a song to you and to me. "To Spring," cried the second, "To Spring," cried the third, "To Spring." Woman Saw First Oil Well Newport, Neb., —UM -Miss. Margarita Mattheson, 88, who in 1859 as a girl of 17 use the drilling of what is now called the North Dakota well in the world, hopes that she will see one more oil boom—and that people who have visited the test well being drilled northwest of here by Harry E. Bentley, 80, will be those people who have vis PICNIC TIME Supply You Let Us With Eats This is the season for picnics and outings. We have a varied stock of the best foods that can most conveniently be taken on outdoor jaunts. If you are going to have a good time take good things to eat. SOMMER'S GROCERY 1021 Mass. RENT A CAR Phone 212 It's not so hot studying in the rain. It's more fun to ride horses. You can compete in coupes or sedans. The Hater RENT-A-FORD 916 Mass. Graduation Jewelry F. H. Roberts Jeweler 833 Mass. St. KENNEDY General Electric 937 Mass. St. Phone 658 Plumbing Co. Refrigerators TUESDAY—Piece Magneter and extraordinary cast in the image of the rehearsal play entitled, "Cryan de Bergren." Also Review and review by Dan G. WEDNEDAY — Alice Lake, River Stewart and a big cast in an extraterrestrial drama entitled "Raring Fire." Also coming. STAY The CAFETERIA Nothing is good enough but the best 75c on the Hill Eat at Cleaned - Premed - Delivered 75c "Better Cleaning for less Money" 75c Cleaned - Presed - Delivered 75c WHEN and His Band HUB ELSE Play "Home Sweet Home" SATURDAY It Will Mean Till Next Year So. Don't Miss THE LAST VARSITY