PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1. ___ WEDNESDAY, MAY 14. 1930 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EBITOR-IN-CHIEP ... CLINTON FEENEY MANAGING EDITOR___LESTER SULLER Composer Editor ___William Latham Writers Editor ___William Latham Mighty Editor ___John Pownan Science Editor ___Dunn Cookman Specialist Editor ___Irene Cookman Journalist ___Incorporated Sunshine Magazine Editor ___ Alumni Editor ___Sam Shade Artist Editor ___Henry Mason ADV. MANAGER...BARBARA GLANVILLE APD. WORKERS...MARIANA MAYEK Adv. Adj. Vol., Mgm. ...MARIANA Cleverway Assistant Adj. Vol., Mgm. ...MARIANA Cleverway Assistant Adj. Vol., Mgm. ...Joha Mats Resnitz District Adj. Vol. ...Katharina Neil District Adj. Vol. ...Robert Pearson KANSAN HOARD MEMBER Lester Worthington Lester Worthington Miller Moore Miller Moore Wagnerenger Battram J. Gulliver Clifton Pence Carl E. Carpenter Mary Barton Mary Barton Leduc Kohlschreiber Leduc Kohlschreiber Telephones Business Office K, U. 6 News Room K, U. 21 Night Connection 2701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Free of the Journals. Subscription price, $16.00 per year, payable in advance. Single application, for each. Entered on consentlence by the office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. WEDNESDAY. MAY 14, 1930 SACHEM INITIATES Sachem initiation was held last night according to the prescribed traditions of the organization. The chief Sachem preened in his full Indian costume, and the teapee and the campfire added to the solemnity of the occasion. The men chosen for membership received the highest recognition possible for any senior man. They were not only able to teach at University during the past four years. Were the importance of such an honor impressed upon every freeman on the Hill, the student body of the University would be greatly benefited. A DRUNKEN SAINT A few days ago, the senate had a hard time agreeing to disagree on Parker, but now the trouble is that too many want to disagree about who shall agree on Roberts. Kansas as usual, is coming into the spot light again over the liquor question. The recent liquor raids in and near Wichita not only constitute an active enforcement of the 18th amendment, but also serve to give Kansas more publicity. What with the prohibition poll of the Literary Digest, in which Kansas has been playing a prominently dry part, and the apparently successful raids in the southern part of the State, Kansas should by now have proved conclusively that she is quite in earnest about prohibition enforcement. The spot on our seattle, however, is the fact that jake parlaysism has a better start in this state than in any other, except for our southern neighbor. That was really unfortunate, as it gives Kansas the air of a saint with the hiecoughs. Shakespeare must have had a K.U. student in mind when he wrote, "Who steals my purse steals trash." "RED" IS OUT Cadet Christian Keener "Red" Cagle has been dismissed from West Point. Charge—marriage. The flashy redhead of gridron fame, the player who has done more for the glory of army football than any other in a decade, will meet his wife in New York immediately. How will "Red" greet her? Marriage to her is the cause of his disgrace; the proud honor of West Point-on-the-Hudson has been ruffled with this little school teacher from Louisiana. It has long been a tradition handed down from the Middle Ages that guards of honor should be unmarried men. When he a man married he resigned. West Point from the beginning has chung to this tradition, incorporating it in the laws of the institution. During the days of the armorous kings and nobles, guarded guards resigned to keep their wives from the unfortune of the military yard. Why should tradition persist in the military regulations of West Point? Why should the dead hand of the past be allowed to reach out and strike our great football hero from his pedesta? There may be good reason for not allowing cedites to live with their wives of West Point. It has in fact, been seriously advocated that co-education at K.U. should be abolished and some pretty good reasons were advanced too. But what harm is there in marrying a woman and letting her teach school? Like old Mice Liver-war, "Red" seems to be doing the best he can. Why not congratulate him? But then brokerage firms, college athletic associations, and other interests are offering fabulous sums for the services of the redhead, sympathies are a little misplaced. A year from now "Red" probably will be enjoying the laurels showered by a herero-worshiping campus on a popular coach. No doubt this will be a far more pleasant life than that of a "shave-tail" in an army cantonment. Hero-worship collegians make more congenial companions than privates in the barracks. Some people live and learn, but others just live. THE POOR PRESIDENT When Secretary Hoover was running for President, he made the unprecedented announcement that he would kiss no more babies "for publication." Soon he starts out into the middle-western backwoods of America for his summer vacation. The question that hangs tremblingly on the lips of the nation right now is, "Will he wear a five-gallon cow hat?" Or will he have 16 photographers on his trail every time he sees a fish? Pray give the President strength of character enough not to accede to foolish requests by stupid people. Shoo all the cameramen away. Leave all the babies asleep in their prams. Confinize the cowboys and the injuns to the respective places of business. Give the president some privacy and a chance at some leisure. Amen. We are a great outdoor people. We are lazy. Put the two things together – miniature golf. Get the older generation to playing and immediately hey start to think of their youth– and then the next move will be outdoor checkers. WE CAN START JUNE 10 We see that Mr. C. M. Harger of the Abilene Reflector predict a bright future for us in country journalism. He says that we "highly complimented" both Senators Allen and Copper for their votes on Judge Parker, and that Allen voted for, and Copper against. Far be it from us to reject such praise from Mr. Harger. We did not "highly compliment" either senator; that would be "polities," and, as every young Kansan editorialist as well as Mr. Harger knows, politics is taboon in the U.K.D we say each was to be complimented for making his position clear. In other words, neither senator straddled the fence. Now if Mr. Harger wants a bright young editorial writer, starting, say, the tenth of next month, the Kansas State to glide to enter negotiations. Laws of Heredity Keep Mental Diseases Alive Does one have to be behind in one's studies to pursue them? Science Service London..Citizens of Great Britain annually gamble on horse racing approximately one-half the amount of the National Budget. Last year about Washington—The laws of heredity, working relentlessly, keep alive from generation to generation some of the benefits of heredity, Rudin eminent German psychiatrist, declared this morning at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. Rudin, eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the German Research Institute for Psychiatry in Munich, reported that if one parent is afflicted with an abnormal form of hearing at least 33 per cent of the children of the family will suffer from this malady, and in addition another 33 per cent of the children are abnormal in some other form. If one of the parents suffers from Huntington's chorea, which is a severe form of St. Vitus dancer, then these parents will have the same hereditary disease, he has found. Among parents who have dementia praecox, about 50 per cent of them suffer from a voluntary sterilization of the hereditarily diseased or hereditarily defective was advocated by Professor Rudin Eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the German Research Institute for Psychiatry in Munich, reported this morning at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. Rudin, eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the German Research Institute for Psychiatry in Munich, reported this morning at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. Rudin, eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. Rudin, eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. Rudin, eminent German psychiatric genological studies at the International Congress on Mental Hygiene. PENNSLYANIA LAW TEACHER GOES INTO SENATORIAL RAC British Race Devotees Bet One-Half Amount of National Budget Annually Philadelphia—(UP) —Leading the fight of the liberal forces of the State of Pennsylvania in the present bitter Napoleonic factional primary in Prunts While Beale is well known to the people of his state, his fame beyond the borders of Pennsylvania appears in both lawyers and law school graduates. (United States) From 1898 to 1901, Bohlen lectured at the University of Pennsylvania law school. He was professor of law. He then was promoted to a full professorship and held the position until 1923 when he left the faculty of the Harvard Law School as Langdell Professor Law. In 1898 he received a Ph.D. from Syracuse and on Dec. 6, 1929, the University conference conferment on his honor. During the past year nearly $35 for every man, woman and child in Great Britain was on the ponies. A marked increase is anticipated this year. It has often been said that Great Britain is the greatest gambling nation in the world today. Such an assertion seems true when facturing DRAMATIC CRITICS GO EASY ON NOVEL ONE-ROLE DRAM New York—(UP)—The recent opening in New York of a play with only one person in the cost showed conclusively that a one-role play is but an impossibility and that this city can still have an entertaining critical wit with a barbed tweeter. Bohlen, as a candidate for the senatorial nomination, has the backing of the Pennsylvania division of the association Against the Prohibition of Immigration. She is the president of the women's organization for national prohibition reform. Thus, because of the lack of an acid critic, "Courtesan" fared better than "Dear John," and the Thespian in the feasible melodrama written by Irving Kaye Davis, did the poet, who wrote for many persons, with imaginary persons and a telephone, but that best The telephone, incidentally, rang three times in the first act, six in the second and seventh, shareholders of the New York telephone company would object to this. Tennis Attire for Sunday And one thing that dramatic criticism in Manhattan needs is a reviewer who can kill with a phrase. There exists at present no Eugene Field with his tatterness such as in the memorable remark on "the king played the King as though afraid someone else would play the ace." ON NOVEL ONE-ROLE DRAMA Read the Kansan Want Ade Schenbachet, N. Y. — (UP) —Union college students may now play tennis Sunday afternoon on the campus of the University. In granting the privilege, President Day decreed white trousers must be with white shirts or white wearers. Paris, May 14- (UP) - Gold medals of the American Geography Society will be presented Jean Brunhes, professor of the College of France, and Enle Gautier, professor of the University of Paris. The United States Ambassador Walter E. Edgé will make the presentation at the American embassy. Member of the Racecourse Betting Control Board, a governmentally controlled venue, amounted to waiver on horses in 1930 will exceed the 780,000,000 sterling mark. This amount is almost one-half of the total amount of money of the Exchequer to run Great Britain for the year 1950-51. It exceeds that amount nationally in the United States for motion picture, theater and lecture admissions and is over three times the fortune of the sport. It is five times as much as is allowed in the National Budget of Great Britain for education, 24 times the amount in the domestic, six times as much as all pension taxes, totals the total income tax estimated at 260,000,000 searing, or net income taxes. Post Office, 20 times as much as the cost of enforcing law and administering justice in the courts of the country, an important job that requires the interest and management of the national debt, and over three time the amount to be spent on the army Horse racing bets made by Britons are equal to five times the amount saved to Great Britain by the London Naval Conference. During the past year about 66,010.000 sterling was turned over by the totalizers. The Racecourse Betting Control Board, of which Lord D'Aberson is a member, estimates that over 85 percent will be handled by machines this season. Last year the raunt attendance, and consequently the amounts of money wagered, increased. At Hurst Park the record crowd was 48 per cent at Chipotle and 48 per cent at Haylock Park. Attendance so far this season has been in excess of last year. The record crowd at the recent game was much larger than the 1923 turnout. While approximately 300,000,000 starling is gambled on horse racing every year, a like amount is earned by charity letter pools, greyhound racing, professional sprinting, booking and wrestling contests, and automobile speed classes. Cricket matches, general elections when they are held, rugger events, boat races and automobile speed classes. In Great Britain it is possible to understand why the Briton says, "I never gamble on anything except horse racing or an occasional football match." Toughest Skull in West Ely New. — (UP) — Police officers killed the skull in the West Beib Tucker carrier, an argument with Bessie Moe Tucker, and she terminated it by hitting him with the hammer. They broke the sappet the sappet but didn't even den the skull. The blow, however, broke the sappet. William, N. D. (UP)-In order to guarantee preference to local men, a register of unemployed is being underwritten more because of reports of activity, many workmen from surrounding lo-ribes have been hired to local men unto an unemployed status Suit Sale Now On---$18.50 and $25 Naturally it will be the style leader whose straw hat first adorns the rack. It's the Dobbs, of course $5 Others $2.50 to $8.50 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XIIX Wednesday, May 14, 159 No. 180 ALICE SHERBON. There will be an important meeting of Quack club at 730 tion. Election of officers, new members and major Quack awards. Also plans will be made for the picnic. It is important that all members be present. ALICE SHEPARD QUACK CLUB: PI LAMBDA SIGMA: MARGARET KILBOURNE, Secretary. P. Lambla Sigma will have an important business meeting Thursday, even in 7 o'clock at Westminster hall. WEDNESDAY DANCE UNION OPERATNG COMMITTEE WEDNESDAY DANCE There will be a dance from 7 to 8 tonight in the Memorial Union build. Kappa Phi will hold its annual senior farewell meeting Thursday evening at 7 o'clock in Myers hall. THELMA CARTER, Publicity Manager. KAPPA PHL: WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB Members of Women's Glee club will please meet at radio station KFPU Wednesday at 7:48 pm. AGNES HUSBAND, Director. NEWCOMERS CLUB LUNCHEON; The Newcomers club will hold a luncheon at the Colonial tea room on Thursday, at 1 p.m. All members who wish to attend please notify K. E. R. MRS. A. ELIZABETH HOWER, Secretary. SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: The annual hike of the Snow Zoology club will be held Thursday at 5:20 o.m. Please meet at snow hall, rain or shine. IRMA CASEY, President. MACDOWELL FATERNITY: The annual MacDowell picnic will be held Thursday. Members are to meet at central administration building at 5:30 p.m. This is the last meeting of the month. WILLIAM VANDEL, President. Frigidaire Hydrator before buying an Automatic Refrigerator Shimmons Bros. Plumbing, Wiring and Frigidaire 836 Mass. Light Lunches Drinks and Candies lunch during the morning and afternoon The Cafeteria Go to the head of the class! Answer these: What is the best all-round flour? Who makes the clearest-toned radio? Which is the smartest of the new car models? How can you make your roof both beautiful and fire-proof? Where would you go for a stylish afternoon frock at a moderate price? Why do up-to-date women have so much more time to do the things they like? All correct. Go to the head of the class. In the school of civilized living there are definite rewards for those who study carefully. They are better clothed, better housed, better fed. Their money goes farther. They have more beauty in their lives, and more leisure for enjoying beauty. And the text-books they use are the most interesting ones in the world—the advertising columns. When you read the advertisements you are taking a practical course in domestic economy