PAGE TWO TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1930 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEIF ___ CLINTON FEENEY MANAGING EDITOR — LESTER SULLER Sunday Editor Katherine Bellmer Makunen Editor Josh Mair Maxwell Night Editor William Nicholson Sparting Editor Carly Wilson Alan Hunter Carl Willett Douglas Poe Frank Fu ADV. MANAGER BARBARA KENNEDY Advise, Attn, Mer, Mgr Associate Advt, Mer, Mgr Assistant KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS Clinton Carter Arthur Carr Betty Dainville Mary Wood William A. Bassett Luke Leibach Judy Lichtenstein Maurice W. Clewther Maurice W. Clewther Telephones Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 2701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on午夜 morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin. Free of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price. $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies. Be each. Independent prize, five, for year, parish district. Written by the clerk. Entered in second class must mark September her 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrences, under the artist of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1930 PARKING AGAIN! Have you ever driven your car into a jam and found that the cause of the trouble was some egotistical, selfish nincompoop? Everyone has had the experience, but few would expect to have it on the campus of a university, yet that is exactly the situation here. Day after day students and faculty members park on the drive cast of Fraser on the wrong side of the drive and healed in the wrong direction. Others with the same parking rights have to suffer the penalties, bent fenders and scratched paint. Common sense, the spirit of sportsmanship, decency, and good manners condemn the auto parking system now in Vogue in Fraser drive. Probably carelessness, more than any intention to do wrong, is responsible, but regardless of which is the cause, the effects inconvenience others. When we ask for proper parking we are asking for sportsmanship and good manners; surely they are not lacking among the students and faculty of our university. We gather from various newspaper reports of the F. A, U. fire that the real feature of the blaze was the fact that university students got up at 7:20 to see it. THE D. A. R. BLACKLIST This results the blacklist of the D. A. R. and the covenition it awakened early in 1928. Our own William Allen White was classed as a socialist with Irving Fisher and Norman Haggood; Jane Addams, President Neilson of Smith, Dean Pow of Harvard, now on President Hoover's investigating committee, Bishop McConnell, who is soon to speak at K. U., Will Durant, who debated here last fall, Carrie Chapman Cump, John Dewey, Senators Borah, LaFollette, and Norris were all barred, with many others, from polluting the women of the D. A. R. with new ideas. Dr. Valelev Parker, prominent New York feminist, has resigned from the D. A. R. because she resents the organization's attempt to bar certain individuals from speaking before D. A. R. chapters. Some members of the organization protested, as Doctor Parker has just done, and dropped out. Mrs. Brosseau, the national president, was supported in her stand, however, by a vote of 2000 to 14; and the rebellion wished Later the organization denied even having made a blacklist. But now Doctor Parker asserting that there was a blacklist, has resigned. It is to be hoped that her resignation is the beginning of a new era. Gang wars have become as common in Chicago that they talk about closing the schools—to give the city more publicity. HERD TACTICS JUSTIFIED It is inevitable that the wholesale roundup of known police characters which occurred in Kansas City Saturday night and Sunday morning will be censured and criticised by many as being unjustified and too inclusive. Much of this criticism will come from local characters, and some of it from the scattered free souls who value personal liberty above community welfare. And their evidence will in a way be substantiated in that many of the persons arrested will be released as being innocent of any present charge. Where intolerable conditions prevail, however, drastic measures are necessary. And for entirely too long a time Kansas City has been a little Chicago as far as its crime record is concerned. With crime mounting to unprecedented heights, the time is fully ripe for some corrective action. It is admitted that Kansas City patrolmen and detectives know the crooks, and if such is the case, something was necessary to arouse them from the agony that they have displayed concerning such knowledge. But viewing the benefits to he derived from such a course with the welfare of society as a whole in mind, and not merely from the viewpoint of an individual municipality, the action of the Kansas City police in sending their criminals packing to other communities will arouse strong emotions in the surrounding territory. Out of sight out of mind—but whose sight and whose mind? Dr. Valeria H. Parker says the policies of the D. A. R. are inconsistent "inconsistency, thy name is woman". ON TO NORMAN! The Men's Glee club will enter the Missouri valley glee club contest at Norman, Feb. 14, thanks to the support of townpeople and Lawrence merchants. It is a regrettable fact that such a worthy cause as this should not be better supported by the University public and financial provision made for the success of the club. Every year the club has given concerts to raise the money. This year, for a time it appeared that enough would not be raised. The band was sent to Lincoln last fall by the students when it appeared that other means had failed. We were proud to be represented by the band in support of the team. In this case the Glee club uses a stray farther; it represents the University itself in a contest. Not only should the Glee club be sent; provision should be made new for such occasions in the future. SOUTH AMERICA DECLINE! SOUTH AMERICA DECLINES The persistent refusal of Brazil and the Argentine Republic to sign the Kellogg anti-war pact has been the cause of unfavorable comment in the past by the United States. That these countries have reason for their lack of enthusiasm and faith in the Kellogg pact is shown in "La Prensa", South America's foremost newspaper. This paper as quoted in the Washington correspondence of Charles P. Stewart said recently: "It is impossible to have any confidence in these ardent declarations in favor of peace and respect for international law as long as we know the law to be set aside whenever American capitalists seek the protection of their government for their invasion of Latin-American countries; or as long as we are certain that, without any declaration of war, troops will be sent against the nation of any small republic which resists American invasion, and that in all future official communications these patriots will be classified as handis." This sentiment is startlingly different from that expressed by the majority of American newspapers, which tend to forget the state of affairs in South America and Central America. We have not forgotten; they are ready now to call imperialistic every more on the part of the United States. The policy of the United States in Nicaragua has been judged by American papers as simply a matter of police protection, a matter that was quickly and efficiently handled and an quickly forgotten. Latin America called the move imperialistic, and presented it deeply. It was an action, apart from the question of the ethics of the matter, which is to be deplored because it has been the cause of hard feelings, suspicion, and an antagonism that has kept Brazil and The Argentine from ratifying the Kellogg anti-war treaty. San Juan, Porto Rico—(United Press) An uninterested and unorganized movement sweeping suddenly over the island's entire area and affecting thousands of field workers within a few days after its start showed Governor Martinez that the government had lost the way of the referendum is hard and the Missouri trail full of youth pouts. Roosevelt Fears Strike by Porto Rican Cane Laborers Will Discourage Investors Governor Rosevelt's program of economic rehabilitation includes as a significant factor the proposal of attracting to Porto Rico for the purpose of fostering and developing new industries large investments of Northern capital. He regards this measure as $\textcircled{4}$ capital. He regards this measure as an effective contribution to the solution of the island's unemployment problem. The news that labor discontent has assorted itself in the form of strikes in a dozen or more centers of Porto Rico's principal industry, with it, is that the capitalists Northern capital and thereby increase the difficulties of reconstitution. There was a general feeling that the core workers by their abrupt return were giving Roswell the chance to mediate showed little appreciation of the efforts he has been making to assist them. The insistent insist that had the workers set their grievances before him before they arrived, he would have saved themselves and their dependents unnecessarily suffering and would have spared the island a great deal of its resources. To what extent the reports of labor conflicts will keep away investment is problematical. Certainly it would be difficult to visualize Porto Rica as a community in which violence and disorder even under abnormal conditions, The hurricane experience of a little over a year ago emphasizes the island's essentially polar tide; the water is cold, and the town was nightly in complete darkness, yet no crime wave was not out. Although he neither authorized nor approved of them, the cane stries, battlements, and battalion ingress, lead of the Port Rican branch of the American Federation of Labor, the Presidency of President Ronald Reagan. Before the labor troubles began, it was generally accepted that the union had no influence on the holders and agriculturists, would oppose iptolam for the office when it became unprofitable, and most oust Antonio R. Barchee, whose党校控制 them were determined They were also eager to punish Barcelo for his withdrawal from the organization at the time. He was a vigilant conservationist in recent years had won the confidence of the land holders and helped secure a lease. They felt that he could be KENNEDY Plumbing Co. trusted to keep the demands of labor within reasonable bounds. 937 Mass. St. Phone 658 General Electric Refrigerators The report of strikes in the can section quickly revived the old fear and suspicion of the labor Senator and the executive Employees of labor are now plainly afraid that Iglenes would give the labories an aggressive self confidence to deal with. As a representative of the employing group remarked recently, "If Iglenes is elected President of the employees will expect to run the island." As a result of this fear of increased assertiveness on the part of the workers the conservatives of the workers agree to an agreement in which minor differences will be put aside in order to present a solid front against laissez-faire management. To barrele to Barcelo the Alliance may agree to take him rather than allow the workers "to run the island." Already it has been made known that the making by one group to the other. A determined effort will undoubtedly be made to find compromise candidates, but that is not likely. Nevertheless there is more than a possibility that Senior Barcelo may withstand the latest attack on him and maintain whatsoever many others in the past. Read the Kansan Want Ads --- PROTECT Your Car with Good Brakes We adjust them on Cowdrey Brake Tester and refine them if needed Good Tires Old smooth tires on your wheels are not safe. Put on some new— Firestone Gun Dipped Tires They hold all records for speed and endurance CARTER SERVICE Call---1300 Vanity or no Vanity That new spring Society Brand suit we have for you will make you wish you had a triple mirror Outstanding values at $50 with two trousers OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII February 11, 2030 No. 108 Several Wailuku hooligan schoolchildren are available for the spring semester. Application should be made on any school day. From 9 a.m., to 1 p.m., email **mccleary@waiuku.edu** or call **360-572-4100**. WATKINS HALL SCHOLARSHIPS; E. GALLOO, Chairman. There will be a regular W. A. A. meeting at 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday November 12. The W. A. A. board will meet at 4. ELIZABETH SHERBON, President. W. A. A. : CATHERINE DUNN, President. Quill club will hold its regular meeting in the rest room of central Administration on Wednesday at 7:30 a.m. QUILL CLUB: HARRIET ADAMS, President. DELTA_PHI_DELTA: There will be a meeting of Delta Phi Hall tonight, Feb. 11, in the Little theater in garden hall, at 7:30. Attendance is required. PHI CHI THETA: Actives and pledges meet in room 112 west Administration at 5:00 p.m. Thursday, February 13. COLENE SERGEANT, President. Students from A to G, inclusive, may obtain their grades at the Registrar's office on Tuesday, Fri. 11. GRADES: GEORGE O. FOSTER, Registrar, COE'S DRUG STORE For $1.00 Canvas Note Books With paper free We also have: Engineer Supplies, Note Papers, Fountain Pens COE'S DRUG STORE Open till 11 p. m. We Deliver That's all we ask Genuine NEW Willard Battery The Willard Battery men CARTER SERVICE Call --- 1300 University Concert Course HOROWITZ Pianist Wednesday, Feb. 12, 8:20 p.m. UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM "The most successful concert artist with the American public to appear in the decade since the debuts of Heifetz and Galli-Curci" Boston Globe. "He has 'it'—for his like one would have to go back to the early Paderewski"—Chicago Evening Post. Single Admission $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 Round Corner Drug Store Bell's Music Store School of Fine Arts