13286708 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 1930 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEF CLINTON FEENEY Associate Editors Harry R. Schmidt Knoeman MANAGING EDITOR LESTER SUIHLER Court Clear Managers Maitrey Editor Rappi Rappi Mainters Maitrey Editor Virginity Zones Sunny Editor Richard Zones Travelling Editor Richard Zones Sunny Editor Marcian Froehner Travelling Editor Richard Zones Sunny Editor Marcian Froehner Almanuel Kitchen Robert Person Almanuel Kitchen Robert Person ADV. MANAGER, BARBARA GLANVILLE Adventure Adv. Mgr. Associate Adv. Mgr. Assistant Adv. Mgr. Assistant Adv. Mgr. District Adv. Mgr. District Adv. Mgr. Notchit Govee Grove Lawrence Irwin Stanley Hankins Bryce Bunker Kevin Wheeler Harper Snyder Harper Sunny University of Virginia Mike Villegas Katharine McDonald Elizabeth Moon Gregory Rush Kate Schmidt Katie Schmidt Emma Freeman Kimberly Frost Katherine McDonald Katharine McDonald Telephones national Office K, U. 64 News Room K, U. 28 Night Connection 2701KJ 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, The Front of the Department of Journalism. Subscriptions price. $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single coupons, 16¢ each. Entered as second-class mail must meet the requirements of Lawrence, Kansas, under the net of March 3, 1975. SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 1930 DEADLINES The day has come when all orders for senior invitations are supposed to be in. It is doubtful if they all are. Very rarely does a rule for deadlines escape an extension. When there is a deadline set, it is usually understood that another may be made if the necessity arises. It is not because of the persons in charge of the activity with a deadline, that it is extended. It is the fault of the students. They continually put off everything to the last minute and then when they go over on the last afternoon of the allotted time they find a line so long that there is not an chance to get to the window before closing time. Each student wonders why all the rest of those people didn't get their invitations, or pictures or whatever it may be, before the last hour. They seldom seem to realize that if they would look after their own little part in plenty of time all congestion could be avoided. Cheer up! Since the groundhog saw his shadow February 2 we are now in the sixth and last week of winter. This beautiful cold weather will soon be over. WHAT IS TIME? What is time? Little we really know of it, but we do know that once it is lost it can never be regained, and many ever take this to heart? Consider for example the matter of appointments to meet at a certain time. One party fails to appear. The other waits and waits. His time is lost, or better, stolen, stolen by the party who was late at the appointment. If more than one person is made to wait—the injunction—the theft — is multiplied by the number of those waiting. There is an old saying, "Time is money." If so, many fortunes that have been stolen by some people who never keep an appointment promptly, and the worst part of it is that there is no law to prosecute them. Only one case turns the trick, and for some, social pressure means little or nothing. The Thoughtful Freshman says that he thought everyone had stopped using that old excuse about the typewriter being a poor spooler but a student actually used it in class the other day. Just another of life's disillusion. AN AGREEMENT—AT LAST! An unexpected note of optimism has entered into the newspaper reports of the London conference. Just when the affairs of the conference were looking their worst—just when France and Italy threatened to disrupt proceedings with their differences concerning nuclear parity—the other three powers apparently have cleared the situation by coming to an agreement among themselves. France has promised that she will not start a continental naval race. She has not promised to join in any agreement yet; but even so, the attitude taken by Foreign Minister Brindu has lowered the inst situation between France and Italy which had held back the other powers. The United States also has contributed toward settlement of the naval question by a move which will keep this nation from being entangled in any pact or European alliance. With the United States, Great Britain, and Japan lined up in their three-power pact, France and Italy are free to join the part whenever they wish. Any agreement that the latter two nations may make between themselves can do little to niter the situation as far as the plans of three major governments are concerned. So the outlook for a favorable closing of the London conference is now brighter than it has been since the conference was opened. We were told the other day that a famine never lasts as long as a financial depression. We警醒 heartily, 'We've been broke so long we don't know what money looks like, but we doubt if we could have listened quite long without something to eat. TO UNDERSTAND SOCIALISM A Socialist club could have an important place on the campus. Perhaps one person in a hundred really knows Socialism well enough to be able to distinguish between Marxism Revisionism, Syndicalism, Failismian Communism, and Guild Socialism. The main—and extremely important—function of a Socialist elitist would be to shed legs on Socialism, to explain what that system of economies really is. After an intelligent understanding of the subject is acquired, the Socialist elitist may be rejected or accepted by those who comprehend it. A club such as this should intersect very many kinds of persons. One with an open mind can only improve his education by attempting to learn exactly what it is that so seriously criticizes and challenges the existing order. UNEMPLOYMENT REMEDIES The Senate has wasted an imme- mount of time on a tariff whil ought to be vetoled. In the mountains ten per cent, of all the workers in the country have joined the ranks of unemployed. This is about the same percentage as that of England, of which we commonly think as the worst country in the world for em­ ployment. An economic system which depends for its maintenance on a surplus of labor should be removed. But even keeping the present system, it seems the worker is the overall safety active remedies for unemployment Compulsory unemployment insurance should be provided, especially for those who work by stretches and then lay off for long periods. The building in slack times of public works from a special fund, as proposed by Senator Wagoner of New York, should be adopted as an immediate, temporary solution. The creation of efficient, well-budgeted public employment exchanges should proceed at once. Private exchanges, which enter into agreements with employers by hiring and firing are a disgrace to the country. Trade schools should be built to teach industrial skill. The advantages from these would be enormous in all directions. The individual employers should build up more efficient production planning and better personnel management. Most important of all, a 40-hour week should be legislated into existence as soon as possible. The unemployment situation is the most serious immediate issue in the country. It is not a simple matter, to be solved by some panacea. It should take an important place in Congress's discussion. WHY BE FOOLISH? Motion pictures should be a great influence for good, and the directors of the larger companies are striving in a way to make them more so than they now are, but why do they allow some of the rot to appear that is now pictured on the screen? Very few pictures show natural or probable occurrences. Always the unreal, the disillusioning, the propagandistic fifth of distortions are thrown on the screen to be viewed by the viewer audience. We need the movies. The talkies are an important and valuable asset, but why not use the things at hand to promote the good of instead of bringing out the bad? We need an organization or sensible motion picture directors who feel their social responsibilities. . Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansas: The football field needs resodding And so a rodeo is being given to Turn the trick. The tennis courts need, well, many Things, so why not a three ring Circus or a baby show to create a Fund to keep them in shine? Because the tennis courts are probably made of concrete, they form a durable backyard for a wild wrestl show. One can understand why wild, study places are often used for wrestling. The Phere but why start wrecking the Courts on us. The Rodes is not a match. We are all willing to make sacrifices. And support all school activities, Budget, Fundraising, Courts, ankle deep with grips, just takes away that school spirit. What really matters is the ability to resist. We cannot strain the strain of making lines; one by one the strings are made. It is unfortunate that tennis players Are not income-producing athletes, but as students of the University of Athens they deserve some consider- Ation. All we ask is a fair deal. Love Set. Send the Daily Kansan home. All we ask is a fair deal. THE ECHOPHONE Something New in Radio Six tubes, exceptional tone, efficient operation. This little set at $62 should be attractive for your study. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII 14, 1930 No. 157 There will be an all-university convention Monday at 10 a.m. in the midwestern. Chester Rowell will speak on "Hawaii, The Laboratory of the Biology." E. H. LINDLEY LOAN SCHOLARSHIPS; ALL-UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: Loan scholarships for girls are still available. See the chairman any morning at 11:30, or by appointment. E. GALLOO, Chairman. SIGMA PI SIGMA: A graphic meeting of Sturm P] Sturm will be held at 4 p.m. in room 21. Administration building. All new members are expected to be invited. THEODORE PERKINS, President. SENIORS: All students who expect to finish their work for degrees in the summer season of 1920 shall all out application for degree cards in the registrar's office. RHADAMANTHI; GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar. Rahadhmani will meet Sunday afternoon at 3:30 at the home of Mar quest Hill, 716 Mainstreet, street JAMES WELCH, President. Pl Lumbia Theta will meet Tuesday night, April 15 at 7:30 in room 119. Princess Hall. Program is to be reports on educational magazines. Jayhawks Flown --and a GOOD Refrigerator See the smart new ICE Refrigeration now on display George Beechy, L.L.B. 12, judge of the Superior Court of North Carolina, December 1199, is a candidate for the Republican nomination for congress from the third Kansas district. Eldin L. White, R.S. 223, has been appointed to the position of general manager of the Utilities Engineering company of Louisville, Ky. Mr. White formerly manage of the Louisville branch of the Astra Oil Heating service. ZOLA SNYDAL, President Marion Allen, A.B.295 has returned to her home at Broken Arrow, Okla to receive her M. A. degree from Chicago at the March convention. Sturge Henry, A.B.781, b.c., author who has been in the employ of the Century club in New York, but recently met Nico France for a vacation. Lyle Fletcher, a student here in 1829, is now city editor of the Reporter and a past president of a letter to Fred Elwisworth, secretary of the Alumni association, he states that he never received any rebel's as he has never missed any of them and hopes to keep the rec Kevert Roemberg, a student here in 1923, is a candidate for clerk of the court at Iloh. Since he left the University in 1950, he has served as the Siena Candy company at Iloh. James C. Claire Dietrich, A.B.18 formerly of Kawau City, has gone to Universal City, Calif., for the film WITH ICE American Service Co. 12 Ivan Huntingstner, A.B,17, is a candidate for the office of state attorney. His home is at Beloit, where he is a member of the law firm of Gornuch and He received his LLB degree in 1923 from the University of South Dakota. Ice & Storage Co. featuring the Pain Whitman, Mr. Dietrich studied at the Schola Cantorum Institute of Musical Art in New York. John L. Lovett, a student in 1912 and Lawrence P. Smith, a student in 1913, were elected to the board of governors of the Intercollegiate Alumni club in Detroit, Michigan. They were elected representatives of western colleges. D, A. Kell'* Swenson, Ph28, who has been a pharmacist the past year in Concordia, will leave there to make his home in Burdette, where he plans to pursue a career in medicine for himself, according to the Concordia Blade-Empire. SAVE WITH ICE Wm. E. Brown, A.R.25 is at present publicity manager for Welded Products corporation in Kansas City. Eugene Maleer, f529, and a graduate in the R.O.T.C., has accepted an appointment to the corps of the United States army, according to information received from his employer. The Water MONDAY William Faribande and Edith Roberts in "Speed Mind." Also, comedy and Everyday News Feature. TUESDAY, Charles Farrell and Mary Dineen in "the River." Also comedy and Everyday News Feature. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kannas. —A course in the Lawrence Business College —A school doing well what it attempts to do. A Paying Investment To get fine clothes with the richness of appearance usually associated with custom tailoring, you no longer need to pay a SUITS FROM THIRTY-FIVE UP Suiting You. That's My Business Special 50c SCHULZ, The Tailor 917 Mass. Street Tennis Balls Bathing Caps Values to 85c OBER'S Society Brand Clothes Wilson Brothers Haberdashery Bostonian Shoes Dobbs Whether you take her flowers or candy for Easter, do it in a spring ensemble from Stationery Boxed Paper 1c Sale Clearance "Attend the Rodeo and Relays" Fine quality stationery- for every social use. Plain and fancy paper- lined or plain envelopes. Correspondence cards--- deckle or gold edge. 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