Y FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1930 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS - University Daily Kansan MORRIS UNIVERSITY APT. 9 THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEP___CLINTON FEENEY Associate Editors Clarence Hunn Mary Barton MANAGING EDITOR — LESTER SULFER Sunday Magazine Editor Mery Warey Milkman Editor Mary Kissel Makowitz Editor Ivory Mao Kunwai Night Editor Jeffrey McCormack Night Editor William Nichols Shorttime Editor Warren Wynn Shorttime Editor Chelle E. Cooper Altman Editor David G. Jones Altman Editor Drew Paint Graham Editor Jim O'Connor ADV. MANAGER BARBARA GLANVILLE Adv. Adv. Mgr. Fidel Nelson Assist. Adv. Mgr. Marc Ducas Assist. Adv. Mgr. Mark Lafontaine Assist. Adv. Mgr. Lara Holder Assist. Adv. Mgr. Rachel Randall Drugs Manager Tommy Rudolph NANGAN BOARD MECHANISM Lester Burrell Mary Wooly Willie Moore William Moore Bacharun J. Gibbelli Hillary Murray John Penney Carl E. Kruger Mary Buerin Joshua C. Blissner Ulla Lillis Business Office K. U, 66 News Rooms K. U, 25 Night Connection 2301K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kanee, from the Press of the Depart Subscriptions price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, so each. Referral an recording made under serial number. Return to Lawrence Kannan, under the set of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1930 ANOTHER TRIBUTE Kansas has received another tribute to her interest in the Fine Arts, The Carnegie corporation, of New York, has granted $5,000 to the University for the promotion of music and art. The grant was made on the basis of a report, made to the corporation, on the work being done here in that field. The University has been almost a pioneer in this section, in bringing the School of Fine Arts up to the standard of the sciences and literature. That these efforts have been successful is shown by the very fact that they come to the notice of the American Federation of Fine Arts. We sincerely appreciate this fund, as it will make possible the completion of several collections and will thus add to the fame and beauty of our already praiseworthy Spencer-Thayer museum. Mrs. Tully, who has been engaged in a "dictionary of alang" for some time, has been granted a divorce from Jim. Evidently she has finished the job. Only 41.2 per cent of the sororites on the Hill participated in the inter-sorority sing, sponsored Wednesday evening by Muph Phi Epion. The reason for such a minority is not known. It seems to us, however, that the sororities showed very poor sportsmanship. When such an organization as Muph Phil undertakes to stimulate interest in music and singing, the least the groups can do is to co-operate. The sing was successful—for those who entered, yes. But how much more successful it might have been if all of the sororites on the Hill had taken part. CO-OPERATION Are the "Greek" women on the Hill so interested in social affairs that they have no time for music? This does not seem possible, for a large number of them are in the School of Fine Arts. Yet very little interest was shown in the sing—loss in fact than in previous years. Just what, we ask, is the reason? THE REDS ARE ON US Verily, it is a sine and a crime to be out of work. The man who is unemployed becomes at once a "red," a "communist," a lawbreaker to be railroaded to the houseguest on any charge the police can trump up. Annotated Press dispatches from Vancouver, Los Angeles, Chicago, St. Louis, Milwaukee, and Seattle were printed in the Kansas City Times Thursday telling of the activities of unemployed workers—"alleged communists" in the news stories, but a "red mob" of "communists" in the "Times" headlines. A parade of unemployed in Vancouver was postponed "on receipt of cabled instructions from Moscow." Who is responsible for the quotation marks? The dispatch does not say. One hundred and thirty-five men and women meeting quietly in Chicago were arrested by police. A crowd of 3000 in Los Angeles fought 300 police who were armed with tear bombs. The sensational newspapers and news sources used to call such revoltors "narchists", Now they are loosely termed "communists". It is quite possible that representatives of the Workers Party had addressed and accused crowds of unemployment; men out in the city apprehended. couch appeals. But we seriously doubt that such general uprisings are the works of mere cranks with no real cause for complaint, as the inference from the news item is. The attempt to label every iden-tumistic looks very much like ignoration of industrial inequality "comance or a conscious attempt to pooch-pooh any reflections upon our national "protestivity". HELL WEEK The use of physical coercion to train fraternity pledges indicates weakness on the part of fraternity upperclassmen. At least that is true if haring is considered as "training". The real reason for paddling is probably instinctive; paddling is done for the same reasons that lead children to tear flies apart or pull hair or bite or pinch. The Student Council has very wisely started a discussion of the merits of Hell Week. It is to be hoped that fraternity men see the obvious benefits of eliminating paddling. No coercion can or need be exercised by the Student Council on reluctant fraternities. Let a having fraternity try to compete at rush week against a nonhazing one and check its results. A fraternity is a religious brotherhood with close espit de corps and common ideals. The closer the bonds, the greater standards, the greater the fraternity. There are many ways to train freshmen. To paddle them not only brings frequent ruptures in the group and lasting internal dissension, but is either an admission of a sexual and brutal nature or a confession of an inability to govern by superiority. A FRENCH CABINET The recent difficulty in France caused by the late downfall of the Tardieu ministry seems to be an example of the superiority, in one phase at least, of the separation-of-power theory embodied in the government of the United States. It is rather difficult for the people of this country where the administrative officials do not depend upon Congress for their duration of office, to understand the numerous changes of government in France. The French premier and his cabinet, depending as they do upon a favorable majority in the Chamber of Deputies for their period of office, are never secure. The slightest issue in question may turn the confidence of the Chamber away from the party in power, and thus make the choice if another premier necessary. In the present case, a similar situation is threatened with results that may prove disastrous. M. Tardieu, premier, who had sent a French delegation to the London conference, was defeated a week ago in a vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies. The London delegation had to be recalled with Tardieu's fall; and the naval conference, therefore, has been delayed. Now M. Chautemps, leader of the Radical Socialist party, who caused Tardieu's defeat, has himself failed to get a majority in the Chamber. So M. Tardieu is once more trying to form a solid government while the delegations at London await the outcome. International proceedings thus are delayed, as well as important matters in France. While the United States government has suffered severe criticism on the score of its separation of the administrative and legislative departments, still this very arrangement prevents such an occurrence as the present French crisis. During the Tau Sigma recital the East India goddess danced to the strains of "Japanese Sunset". This seems to us a good argument to put just one piece of music on a record. And now it is the youth of the country who are in part responsible for breaking the effectiveness of the Eighteenth Amendment and for hampering law enforcement in general. At least such is the opinion of W. E Atterbury, Republican National Committee, for Pennsylvania, as stated before the house judicial committee. IS IT REVOLT? He says that one of the unexpected developments rising out of the amendment is "the revolt of the youth of the country against being deprived of personal liberties which their parents had enjoyed". It is true that young people enjoy certain liberties and are demanding more and more of them. But it seems likely that did not the adults either told of their liberties or set an example, with them, the young folks would never have known what they were missing. If some adult were not violating the law by selling liquor to minors, many young people would not now be consuming it in such astonishing amounts. Youth influences youth and in some cases one young person may have been responsible for his associates' drinking. It is not, however, the youths who are now being condemned who were responsible for enforcement of the law of prohibition. The disregard for law is not so much the effect of revolt as it is a game in "follow the leaders". He who looks at his own quiz paper may be excelled in his class. But he who looks at his neighbor's may be expelled from the school. Hot Dog Palaces Oust Usual Roadside Stands New York—(UP)—The hot dog beautiful, the wenier stand palatial, the Frankfurter esthetic, will come into being for hungry automobiles tours of the coming summer. The artists of Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, J. Beginning of construction of six 'bit' dog *cadentrails* in New York on Thursday, the company was named in Women's Home Companion, published recently. All of these are to be built from piles by famous architects who received prizes of $1 million. Her successful campaign against the unlucky and unsustainable roadblocks that of other women's organizations against bill bounty and similar blight. The prize competition, started several months ago, brought forth hundreds of contestants. The judges awarded the marriage of the hot dog stance with filling stations, which also included the 40-second Berlin, — "Bellevue me or you, the Illinois prisoners of war are still living in Russia, 16 years after the outbreak of the war and 12 years after the armies. They would like to return to their homes, but cannot do so because they have not enough money, to pay for the long journey." [London Military Museum] Hungarian War Prisoners Lack Funds for Trip From Russia to Their Homes This surprising statement was made to the United Press by Dr. Bela Fabian, member of the Hungarian Chamber of Deputies and one of the leaders of the Democratic party, during a recent visit to Berlin. He has undertaken to bring the 10,000 Hungarians home from Siberia. in the matter. Himself once a prisoner of war in Turkestan and Siberia, he has published a book entitled "Forty Men or Si Horaces" to which the prisoners were subjected in the Aviatic camp. The book is entitled "Forty Men or Si Horaces." He was a soldier on the freight cars used for military transportation and that carried those 10,000 and many, many others to the extraordinary human document. "These ten thousand people, Fabian told the United Press, I've scattered all over the country in a territory covering one-sixth of the inhabited world. They are their living as hunters in Kamchatka and Jakutak, as workers in the blazing cotton plantation in the steppes country, as factory hands in the cities of European Russia and as soldiers in the army facing the enemy." Doctor Fabian has made several brief speeches in the Hungarian parliament on the subject, urging the government and the public to act immediately. John D. Clark, former president of the Midwest Refinery company, has been appointed a professor in economics at the University of Denver. "The assumption, however, that all Hungarian prisoners of war were confined in the camps was erroneous. Many of them worked on their own and there were none. These prisoners may never have heard about the presence of Hungarian committees in Russia, or at any time before they had enough money to join them. (Science Service) "The Soviet government has declared that it does not regard those in its alien living in Russia, and it consequently refuses to assume the obligation to send them home. The ten thousand Russians remain unable to raise enough money to pay the passage. Another 400,000 Russians do the Soviets demand a valid Hungarian passport, which can only be obtained through a considerable delay and expense." "Relatives of these prisoners are receiving letters from them from each republic of the Soviet Union; three of them have been posted in the Borjai Soviet Republic. All these letters express the same feeling: a desire to return to their governments in 1920 and 1922 concluded agreements covering the exchange of prisoners of war. However, the Hungarian committee accused them of not providing the prisoners did not put pressure the territory between Kransomarsjak and Vladivostok because there were no conceded camps between these two On Other Hills Coe-de at Morningside College caused the college men, who were waiting on tables, to go on a strike. A break-free table cloth in plainness. The following fraternities have abolished "Hell Week" at Penn State: Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Chi Rho, Delta Chi, Delta Upsilon, Alpha Kappa Delta, Acacia, Kappa Paiol, Tan Kappa Epsilon, and Pi Epioniol P。 A 10 per cent, reduction in the monthly remittances to the University of Texas from oil royalties was felt because of the decrease in the price of crude oil. The University of California alumuni are to establish a $1,000,000 fund for the association. The money will be used to maintain the association as a solidly organized body; or for the benefit of the university. James H. Winston, member of the Chicago Rhoeas scholar committee, recently started a campaign against students can students for Rhodes' scholarships at the Oxford University. The university has established a network of Parish, goes into effect DWARFIES A new breakfast cereal Served the first time in Lawrence, at New Cafeteria THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, Jannette, Wisconsin. Office and Subsidiary, New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Buffalo, Dallas, San Francisco, Toronto, Camden, London, King. in your Union building 13 other breakfast cereals to pick from on our counter. a Pocket Duoildo to a Desk Pen. So whether you want a Desk Set at once or later, if you now get the Convertible Pocket Dueloo Pen, all can be opened easily and set. A tapered end comes free. You save the price of a second pen. College Humor Magazine Asked 137 College Pea Dealers See Parker's new streamlined shape that sets lower in the pocket of the suit. The sleeve is not halfway down the cap. And see the name, "Gee, S. Parker, DU-FOLD," that guarantees it for life! Wise Business. Office and childcare. New York. "Which Pen Do Most College Students Demand?" 45% Said "Parker Duofold" One big reason for Parker Duo-Water is the following populist appeal: "We're going to be for the price of one—for pocket, for pocket, for pocket" (19). Duo-Water verses the Parker in 21 seconds from In the new census of 137 college pen dealers, 45.11% say Parker is the official college pen — more than 20 times over the next two nearest makeats In a recent nation-wide magazine poll of 12 vocational pen markets, Parker was first in out of 12 vocational markets. $94.72\%$ of the vocational market. R. E. Protsch Merchant Tailor 833 Mass. Like 2 Pens For the Price of One Remaining the improved pen and two markers to park in a tower to Park-2. Put these pens on Pen. This technique allows future users to write with more ease. GUARANTEED FOR LIFE 17. 4% greater ink capacity than average Certified by the Mayer Laboratories in December. It provides that school arbships shall be awarded by districts instead of two to each state and territory as before. An exact duplicate of the largest meteorite ever found in the United States has been placed on the porch of McClure hall at the University of Oregon. It will be left permanently on exhibition. The meteorite is 10 feet long, 6 feet high and weighs about 15 pounds. It has the outstanding characteristic of haloes and deep pits which indent its surface. Those were probably caused by friction against the air through the air. Read the Kansan want ads "Some Factors in the Development of Human Personality" will be the subject of an address by Dr. H. H. Lane, Sunday at 11 at the Unitarian Church, 12th and Vt. Sts. Humanism and Religio- nism, which was alluded to Otto K. Fraukshaw at 7:30. A welcome to all. CHOICE CUT FLOWERS Whitcombs Greenhouse Phone 275 Ninth at Tenn. St. THE CAMPUS QUEEN for 696 "When I have to plan the Party I just call— as we give the cream of the parties they always have the cream for the occasion. Specials This Week-End Bricks Fruit Salad and Pineapple Sherbet Vanilla and Cherry Sherbet Kold, Kandy Kold Kandy Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. 202 West 6th ... { Concentrating on } WILSON BROTHERS Haberdashery See Our New FAN-FLARE Multifold Cravats More Stylish, Longer Wearing These new ties have no lining. The silks fold over on themselves seven times. This produces the nearest thing to absolutely non-wrinklable neckwear ever brought out. Wilson Brothert designed the Fan-Flare Cravat for us — sent us their smartest Spring patterns. $1.50 and up Other New Spring Neckwear $1 and up