0. T UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1930 PAGE TWO Official Student Tapes of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAB Lawrence, Kansas University Daily Kansap EDITOR-IN-CHIEF...CLINTON FEENEY Clarence Rapp Mary Bartram MANAGING EDITOR - LESTER SUILLE Sunday Editor Katherine Bellmer Managing Editor Leah Minus Kim Marketing Editor Leah Minus Kim Night Editor William Nicholas Sporting Editor Ceri K. Cooper Athlete Editors Owen Pearl Alumni Editors Owen Pearl ADV. MANAGER. BARBARA GLANVILLE ADV. Forage, Mgr. MPL Administr. Adv. Mgr. MPL Assistant MANSON BOARD Clinton Pence Clinton Pence Arthur Circle Arthur Circle Mary Woods Mary Woods Lacher Sather Lacher Sather William A. Dumbreck William A. Dumbreck Marine Clementev Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 2701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Houston. The Press of the Department of Journalism Subscriptions price, $1.00 per year, payable In advance. Single copies, be each. Mintage. 25,000. Proof. October 9, 1876; the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the art of March 3, 1879. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1930 A SOCIAL CENTER We have other social rendezvous than the Union building. The library does right well. It has certain features that deserve hearty encouragement. There is no atmosphere of "many-asy-an-enter" within the portals of Watson; there are no grim overviews deserved for the student must enjoy themselves. The constant shift in population, like the circulation of the blood, provides freshness and stimulation. One's friends come in to be greeted, one's enemies to be sneered at, and all the time important-looking books are at hand to give the appearance of the seeker after truth. Contacta, gossip, study, or the appearance thereof, the chance to make dates—what educative facilities doth our library afford! The Kansan expresses the sincere hope that more benches and lounges will be installed and that most of the books will be removed as wasting space. One book is enough for anybody to have in any one time. Books are no distracting. We'll know we are famous when th. Associated Press sends out stories of our slipping in the bath tub, as they did of Harry Lander, or forgetting our nightshirt, as they did of Cooridge. CONFIRMED Doctor Allen has added proof that Joe McDewell is right. Basketball players must not have dates until the end of the season. If this brings to Kansas the Big Six title, what could be more conclusive proof that women are useless on this campus? It might even add weight to the argument that they are detrimental. The problem is a serious one which has been discussed thoroughly from all angles. Women are beginning to wonder if their days are numbered on Mt. Oread and what steps should be taken to justify their existence in college. The situation looks hopeless. What the women of this University need is a leader, Ob, for a Carrie Nation. We wonder if our Uncle Si, on the farm, would agree with Tau Sigma's idea of a field scene, and working clothes. "HELLO WORLD" "Hello world! Dawgone ya! Don't go away!" These few words have done more to put a single man into the limelight than any words uttered since those by Patrick Henry“Give me liberty or give me death?” What home has not heard the characteristic southern drawal of W, K. Henderson over KKWH? Henderson has caused trouble aplenty in the radio world. His recent verbal fight against the chain stores has aroused much discussion throughout the country. He is a man who says he is not afraid of anybody, not even the government. He has started the people to thinking about the chain store system. It is rumored that already people are taking their trade away from the chain stores. What is this power that he seems to throw over the people? Is it his unusual frankness? Is he telling the truth, as he claims? Will his outbursts have any permanent effect? Another indication of spring—the life insurance salesman with his strings of figures. THE WEATHER Kansas weather is coming into its own. During the past few weeks it has had no rival as a topic for discussion among the learned and unlearned alike . . . and yet, among those purported to represent the upper levels of intelligence, is it asking too much to expect that a conversation may progress beyond banalties? Appropriately it is. Nine persons out of ten approached on the Campus not only confuse their remarks to this subject, but proceed to shift the responsibility for the state of their health, their inertia, and all other maladies to the prevalent weather. It is either too hot, too cold, too windy, or too damp for any concerted endeavor. It was Mark Twain's policy to avoid being commonplace by refraining from discussing the weather unless he could do something to change it. Too bad he does not have more converts on Mt. Orad. A FAMILY OF ARCHITECTS Individuality in work and class exercises is the desire of students of architecture from a scholastic point of view. This does not hinder them from enjoying the inspirations of group-workmanship used, in most other departments. The large drawing-room on the third floor of Marvin hall presents a spectacle of friendship and of joy in work which is unusual. The unity and democracy of the architects reaches back many years. It continues with greater nest each semester as new students are assigned work on this individual, yet group basis. ROGERS LEAVES Dr. James Harvey Rogers, internationally known economist leaves the University of Missouri. Thus ends another controversy. We find analogous situations in other states where such theories as evolution are taboo. We also see a group of corporates in her constitution the prohibition of teaching evolution. Slowly, slowly do we grow into the oeratile attitude. The process of the loss of freedom of speech is barely perceptible, it seems; no slowly has it crept upon us. Yet a point of view is the only thing in life that can be permanent and an open minded view is what we are adjured always to bold. Compose Opinion Campus Opinion Why Religious Week Editor, Daily Kannan: If the religious week committee accrivaests believes that religion bears a dayly life, they are making a rather pitiful gesture in fostering religious week. Religion in so far as it offers a dayly life, (and certainly anything worthwhile in modern religion is very closely associated with matters of faith for the liberal church group. But if the stimulating influence of critical thinkers in the field of religion is in need of a more focused effort At the Recital Unusual lighting effects, clever conceptions, and masculine element characterized the Tau Sigma recital night. --with The first number was an artistic interpretation of *Batticella* ('Allee of Batticella'). Her name is Alice and Elizabeth Sheraton and Helen Loweanne in a dance of the three. The second number is Louise Louis Allen with Dorothy Bradshaw in an adagio link, and Ferd Snyder as Among the diversitements, "Pierrot and Pierretta," conceived and directed by Esther Mullin, was engagingly naive. This pantomime dance sequence, based on the novel *Easter Mullin*, Dorothy Preslieris, Allee and Elizabeth Sherbon, "LO-rientale" offered the eastern touch of the recital with Adab Murie Davenport and Louise Allen in solo, and a group with Paul and Cayla musicus as musicians. "The Storm," a rhythmic study in movement of the moods of the ocean, was perhaps the most effective of the interpretive group. It swept from the barren, arid north to the wind and waves made double impressive through the lighting effects. Marie Van Deusen, Anna Louise Bondy, Dorothy Braun, and John Curran gave a graceful interpretation in their "Vause Lacile." An impressionistic composition, in the Fields," was an attractive resolution of the harvest as a group con- Polish Holiday was a colorful folklady dance scene with Ruth Caskin in solo and Derothy Frederick playing the accordion for the group dance. A modern element was introduced in the Valise a Deux which Dorothy Prescik and Harland Carlwell prepared. The program is popular numbers of the program was the "Boston Fancy", a gay rollicking square dance of the 1880s vintage, choreographed by the choir ensemble and some top specialists; "Polly" with Iorothy Belle Bryant and Lois Smith; Rud Duel with Bob Hale and Murray with Marie Van Du霖 and Jock Dinkel, je, all of which were clever and well-received by the audience. The final number roasted by the audience. It required both roasted and sleverly conceived. The group dancers included Louise Irwin, Bernice Winterthorn, Virginia Evans, Mona Muncey, John Barker, Daniel Reid, Koby Jayne Fleicherstein, Virginia Deyn, Agnes Robert, Margaret Mike, Joan Silver Rebekh Thompson, Pauline Hancock, Barbara Bartlesdens, Kenneth Simmons, as well as those in specialties. The rectal, under the direction of Elizabeth Dunkel of the physical education department, was effectively staged and executed. General Nollett Retires Paris, (UP) - General of Division Nollett, who commanded various American brigades during the fight against Germans, was placed in the reserves after 49 years of active service. He has fought in nine campaigns and won two two-class battles. He commanded the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor. After the war, he was an Army lieutenant colonel and commanded the Interalised Military Control Commission in Germany. Planes Reduce Egg Crop Ostertail, California. (UPF) Ostrertail, poultry pasture. yards fling themselves against, chickenfences, often causing death, and resulting in serious infections of the poultry, who stopped laying in some instances, according to the poultryman, who have died from fetal cord fields flying in the vicinity. Planes Reduce Egg Crown One Week From Next Friday Is the Date of the JUNIOR PROM JOHNNY JOHNSON and his Pennsylvanians Norman Thomas will speak at an all-University convention Friday morning at 10 in the University Auditorium. ALL UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIIF February 19, 2030 No. 118 Quilcl club will hold its regular meeting in the room root of central Administration, Wednesday night at 7:00. Answer call by a brief review A Two O'clock Formal Party at the Union Building QUILL CLUB: CATHERINE DUNN, President. COSMOPOLITAN CLUR: The Cosmopolitan club will meet at 7:15 Thursday night. JOHN SHVELY, Secretary. V. W.C.A. ACTIVITY GROUP LEADERS; Hour IV of the training course for voluntary activity group leaders will meet Thursday, Feb. 27 in room 110 Prater hall, at 4:30. Professor Steven Sternberg is hosting the session. GLADYS FURNESS, Chairman. Experts Can Tell in Five Minutes if Duplicate of Finger Print Is On File Washington—Despite the hundred of thousands of finger-prints which the bureau of investigation of the Justice Department is investigating, it only five minutes for experts there to discover whether duplicates of some submitted finger-prints are on file, states department or chief of the Investigation Bureau. Sixteen hundred prints received in one morning's mail will be classified and letters regarding them will be courted nor nurse need any further convincing about the reliable evidence of finger-prints, Mr. Hoover states, because while a man's apes can change his fingers, prints never do. Some public mistrust of fingerprints resulted some years ago, Mr. Trump, who is the former known criminal escaped from Leavenworth penitentiary, his finger-prints were sent to Washington as a basis for an ordinance order. These prints did not print on a high-resolution print classification on file in the department. The chief of police in the town where this criminal was originated said that he had taken of this man, and these were found to be entirely different from the Leavenworth The explanation, Mr. Hoover said, is that prisoners were employed in the identification work at Leavenworth. They conspired to mix the finger prints up, so that those actually going one she wore partly of one man and partly of another. Nebraska Coach Promoted Laramie, Wyo. — (UUP) — John "Choppy" Rhodes, noted freshman football coach at the University of Nebraska, was chosen as director of athletics at the University of Washington. He will assume his new position July 1 in order to conduct the summer coaching school. William R. Schimiz, engineering student at the University of Ohio, has been prohibited from driving his car on the campus for the remainder of the semester. The action was the result of a violation of one of the campus traffic rules. Schimiz pled guilty. A Paying Investment —A course in the Lawrence Business College—a school doing well what it attempts to do. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Diamonds You can get the best values and latest idea right here. "AT DIMOND HEADQUARTERS" Copyrights Thursday Specials Try our Swiss Steak at Noon Try our Grilled Steak in our 30c Plate Meal at night New Cafeteria FREE BISCUITS Music Select Your Choice for Every Ticket Holder Will Be Entitled to Vote Prom Queen Virginia Derby Arretal Lamberton Gladys Reynolds Lucille Henderson Arnette Bailtes Fern Snyder Wilma Taylor Dorothy Atwood Loraine Mace Elma Jennings Doris Dixon Loix McNeal for COE'S DRUG STORE Slide Rules - Drawing Sets - Fountain Pens Ink - Erasers - Pencils Open till 11 p. m. — It's Handy COE'S DRUG STORE We go to the post office every night at 11 p.m. — Let us take your late letters down for you. Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie Simmonds will play Varsity Dance Saturday Arlie