PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, MARCH 30, 1930 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEP ___ CLINTON FEENEY Special Editor(s) Written Clarence Rump Ada B. Hammond MANAGING EDITOR - LESTER SUMMIT Sunday Manager Editors Editor - Wiley Rose Manage Editors Editor - William Nichols Manage Editors Editor - William Nichols Night Editor - Collew W. Chandler Night Editor - Vernice D. Baldwin Sparing Editors Editor - Helen Jones Sparing Editors Editor - Helen Jones Alumni Editor - Paul Foerster Alumni Editor - Paul Foerster Cover Coordinator Sunday Staff ADV. MANAGER BARBARA GLANIELLES Adv. Adv. Marry Phil Nelson Assistant Adv. Marry Phil Nelson Assistant Adv. Marry Phil Nelson District Marry Morgan Garrett District Marry Morgan Garrett District Marry Morgan Garrett Rahul Brown William Moore Jonathan Drew Ivan Cohanm Juan Cohnm Marcurat Brauer Maurice Neil Anatherine Morris Clerveau Ralph Mary Jenkins Bertram Katz Virgin Milton David Milton Micheal Ieyen Duncan Milton Kenneth Neil Nickelman Erin Groebke Eric Groebke Arthur Carlisle Business Office K. U. 40 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection K. U. 1012 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Georgia. Free from the Department of Journalism. *Subscription price: $149 per year, payable in advance. Single coupon. Be each. Entered an consecutive number of days at Lakeside at Lakeside Kansas, under the net of March 8, 1673. SUNDAY MARCH 30, 1930 CAFETERIA COURTESY A sign in the cafeteria reads, "You are permitted to pass others in line if it speeds up service". Such permission is very well after one has reached the serving counter. How far back along the line does it extend, however? Certainly not to the end of a line that extends up the stairs onto the floor above. It would seem that people who had attained mental development sufficient to attend a university would have enough respect for the rights of others to take their place in line in the order in which they reach it. Try it for a few days and see if Any day at noon an observer may see from one to a dozen pedestrians past 20 or 30 persons who are in line. The next step is to walk into the line near the mirror, way A. FRIEND IN NEED I've found one person who still heaves the weather man, said the Thoughtful freeman. May his faith be strengthened. Chicago's naughtiest boy has friend. Poor Aifores. Just out of jail, after a year's imprisonment for the most logical of safety measures; informed by the chief of police at Chicago that he wasn't wanted; informed by the governor of Florida that he would be arrested the moment he set foot in the state; hounded from pillar to post, unloved, quite without honor in his own country. Ah, but all is gloom; from Rapid City, S. D., comes a letter, signed by the president of the Chamber of Commerce. Come out to the West, it says; where a man "in judged by the life he lives rather than his record . . . Let him who is free from sin cast the first stone". Will "Swarface Al" Capone start new in the Great West, a man among men? Will Rapid City thrill to the rumble of the beer-truck and the stancate of the "tommy"? Will the cleaners and dryers of Rapid City receive their monthly caller and speed him on his way with tribute to that supreme figure of gangland? We commend Rapid City to its patron saint. Rapid City may need one. DISILLUSIONMENT Dinty Moore's place was raided the other day by Federal prohibition officers in New York and 35 cases of nassured liquor were seized. Now we are wondering if there are several Dinty Moores, or if our old friend of the comic strips, Iris, has gone back on us and is not all that he was cracked up to be. For years we have watched him and cheered for him in his efforts to get down to Dinty's and be with the gang. Never did the idea occur to us that the gang were anything other than good honest souls in search of simple divenation and fun. Alas? We are shocked to think that some wolf associate the gang with liquor. Of course at social events such as the ax handle makers' ball and the bearer makers' reunion the gang off-duty for all of these presentations were won by the least tiques, but everything needs an escape valve. The gang will be more than displeased to hear that their favorite hangout has won a discrepant name because of the action of a few prohibition officers. As the gang is composed of good honest laboring men with little money to start a libel suit we take it upon ourselves to set the world right about Dinty Moore and Jigsa, the heroes of our childhood days. HONEST Repression and honesty do not go hand in hand; a fearless facing of facts is the best way to happiness. fairst is the best way to happiness. This belief has done much during the past decade to change lives. We used to steer clear of certain thoughts. We did not acknowledge, even to our teachers, that we were influenced in our conduct by public opinion, by pleasure, by indifference. We made excuses; we discounted the effects of our laxes in conduct; "This time won't count", we assure ourselves. The healthiest factor that has emerged from the lambryths of many and varied psychologies is this desire for honesty. We clear our minds of their cluster of superstitions, repressions and prejudices, and try to see what is actually left. We admit that we are creatures of instinct for the most part. To be sure, we are partly rational, but only partly so; for often reasoning gives way to simple childish reactions. If we can acknowledge this shift from the adult to the child, then we can be prepared for it and govern our actions in rational moments to cover those other times when we would act hindly. IS CULTURE WORTH IT Not so long ago the Count Keyser sledged after a tour of America that we had developed in original culture or new civilization unless it were among the BH-BIRCH of the Ocarrals, or the mountainains of Tennessee and Kentucky. More recently, an artichook appeared in Harper's which set forth that the only hope America would ever have of producing a distinctive civilization, would be complete isolation from the rest of the world. Cables, staircases, and radio should be eliminated if we were ever to develop our own distinctive culture. France, Italy, and most of the European countries have developed a distinctive culture, we feel sure that Count Keyserling would say. In times before the advent of modern inventions they had centuries of spendid isolation in which to develop their customs, traditions, and national spirit, so that a truly distinctive civilization should be evolved. But in the light of recent international negotiations, it may perhaps be questioned whether in their stubbornly nationalistic spirit these countries have not paid too high a price for their development. Campus Opinion The late Karl Kiyoshi, the founder of night's Campus Ginnion was undoubtedly right. The date rule was not changed to encourage mid-week dating. It was only to allow men to enter campus with any mid-week functions they desired with their gentlemen friend". The Ginnion has realized the handicaps of the former law. We recognize the progress the council made in so making it easier for men to how to act without abusing our new privilege. What of those students who brightened little freshman who suddenly and eagerly impure into the nature of the rules by which they are governed? They have the new rule and being only freshmen after all, they will in it only the right to have dates at any time during the summer period when they are their houses. They will not realize, as we do, that such thinking is an alienation from our high privilege. Even more than this they learn. They will discover that here, as at home, the living conditions have been much more passions. Is there no way of clarifying this rule? — V V Date Rules Again Budget conferences scheduled for Monday, March 31, in the Chancellor's office are as follows: 10:30 - Entomology; 2:00 - Zoology; 3:00 - Botany. BUDGET_CONFERENCES; You Can Live on Your Budget by eating at THE CAFETERIA OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII March 19 100 No. 143 APPLICATIONS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS; Applications for scholarships will be received by the chairman of the committee on scholarships every day next week from 11:59 to 12:45 or Boy Scouts will hold many local celebrations and a mass meeting of scouts from all over the country will be held at Independence Rock, Wyo. Boy Scouts will be presented with appropriate ceremonies at the graves of pioneers. On April 16, a covered wagon will leave St. Louis, reproducing what happened 10 years ago in the events in transportation will be graphically shown by airplanes. E. GALLOO, Chaleeman Nothing is good enough but the best. Se reunir el 13 Atenco jueves el 14 de abril a la cuatro y media por la invicie. He may imprimir un muestre a resistencia. EL ATENEO: You can also see your food before you buy it THEODORE PERKINS, President SIGMA_PL SIGMA: A regular meeting of Sigma P1 Storm will be held Monday, March 31 at 400 clock in room 2). Administration. All new members are required. The Men's Glee club will meet for rehearsal Sunday, afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in Murray hall. That's two good reasons for eating at MEN'S GLEE CLUB: JAY JANES: THE CAFETERIA The celebration will take place in schools, where special study will be conducted by teachers and historical societies will gather relays and old documents, locate sites for memorials and make a roster of the individuals who contributed to organizations will hold local and national celebrations on all significant dates throughout the spring, summer and fall. Installation of officers for the Jay Janes will be held in the Central Ad- ministration rest room, Monday, March 31, at 43:30 p. m. EUGENE CHRISTY, Director This year's celebration, in the response of America to the promotion of President Hoover, Feb. 21, 2015, included a ten-day tribute of the "Great Western Tide" that established American civilization on a continent. The celebration is sponsored by the Oregon Trail Memorial Museum and the Oregon Meeker was the founder and first president. When he died a year ago, at the age of 99, Dr. Howard R. Orriges, professor of English teaching in New York University, succeeded ADELA HALE. President. New York - (UP) — The Covered Wagon Centennial, a nation-wide celebration of the emigration by covered wagon over the Oregon Trail which was made possible by the New York State Railroad. The Cafeteria Covered Wagon Centennial to Begin Over Old Oregon Trail April 10th The trip is a historical "fret" trip, because it demonstrated the feasibility and practicability of the covered wagon mode of transportation. It was the signal to hundreds of thousands of Americans in the East to start West. The date Dec. 29, is the 100th anniversary of the birth of the late Erera Kolei of Lutoko, who dreams that whose dream was to have the Oregon Trail perpetuated as a symbol of a fathers' love and as a means of teaching in vitalized and humanized form an important lesson for the future. April 10 is the 100th anniversary of the departure of the first covered wagon from St. Louis. It was organized by Smith, Jackson and Sublette of the American Fur company, and traversed the wilderness to a trading reefless at the head of the Wind river. ❖ He had gone West as a youth, and settled on the coast. But at the age of 40, he met President Roosevelt, who harnessed a team of oxen to it, and set out to re-traverse the old trail. He not only accommodated this, but also established the first graveyard greeted by President Roosevelt who have heavy approval to his plans. He is credited with establishing and he signed a bill authorizing minting of 6,000,000 Oregon Memorial Medals. Many of the coins were made in Colorado. automobiles that leave at the same time. There will be an essay contest in the schools with prizes for the best on "What My State Contributed to Opening and Building of the West." Osage Tribesmen Name Baby in Tribal Ceremon Pawhushua, Okla. March 28—(UP) —A child naming caricinal recently observed at an Orage Island settlemn near Gray Horse, Okla., was a girl with the same name. She will not be repeated many more times for their customers have an changed with money and mixing with other girls; little is left of a once haughty girl. The full blood baby came through the ceremony smiling. His hair had fallen after a powdered wig, implying that he was a girl. Great Spirit that it should live to see an old age without obstruction of any kind. He would have frightened a fringe around the lower edges. The baby went into gatson and buted his head with stripes from the sweaked moustache. Father and mother of the child to be given a name were seated in the east end of their great trame home. the chief medicine man and his dozen or more helpers sat on the south side of the hall, sitting on the north side. When all had settled to their proper places, great hollow square, symbolical articles to be used in the ceremony were placed. These consisted of cedar fronds or branches, a bowl of mash corn, and a bowl of water. The medicine men then began chanting. After this sing-song, which lasted nine hours, the baby was given over to a nursery and the parents passed him to six sister chers, and then returned him to their leader, who had taken care of them in a bowl of water, in which had been placed sacred paint and red cedar wood. The head, chest and then gently compress the child's neck and body. This net was an apposite graft health and strength that the child would grow to old age without complications. After each of the six chiefs of as many medicine clans had handled the child in the same manner, the head man of the clan moved forward, another forward and placed in her hands two little willow sticks, each of which presented a sacred name. The names represented by the sacred sticks, and Wa-sba-ge-wa was then a vital Indium personage, a clanman, and perhaps some day he may become Plain Tales From the Hill --is Heard in feature writing class. First student: "What would you do if you had to start a series of features in a paper?" Our Contemporaries Second student: "I'd give up my job". Overhead by the Eddover wrapper: "My professors don't seem to realize that spring is here and my thoughts have turned". "I always pride myself on being able to pass my own examinations" confesses one professor. The College Whirl They have them at the University of Kennesaw, and according to them the good fellowship fostered more than the bad. The agent—spent—to meet them. Do you want to foster the democratic spirit between students and teachers in your department? Do you want to encourage a better feeling and better understanding? If so, have departmental or better still, departmental -Daily Californian. English Want Bright Football London UPF A plea for the British club to be of London fans who note that no one has selected brown dressed as the football player, and no one out, and therefore suggest that the football itself should be painted Misfit Clothing Bought and Sold Save money by reading here. Money loaned on valuables 637 Mass. ABE WOLESON Phone 675 Tennis Rackets Restrung Promptly Are you tired of your old shirts? Brighten up your wardrobe with several of the new Pastel Broadcloth Shirts by Wilson Brothers that are on display now in our windows Six new spring shades— $2.50 $2.50 Here Your B Kansan D Kalendar for April Hang it up Now