PAGE TWO A UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS MONDAY NOVEMBER 2 1000 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEF WM. A. DAUGHERTY MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE MANNE Monday Editor Mary Wurzel Friday Editor Mary Wurzel Canadian Editor Mary Hargyton Saturday Editor Mary Hargyton Night Editor Katherine Holt Kathleen Brown Senior Magazine Editor Nina Dimmett Scandinavian Editor Iris Plattmann Katherine Editor Iris Plattmann ADV. MANAGER MAURINE CLIVINGER Assistant. Adv. Mgr. Barbara Kennedy Assistant. Adv. Mar. Karen Puddick KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS MINNESOTA BANK MEMBER Lawrence Minn Arthur Christ Mary Worsl William Minn Leister Schur Karberer Beth Dunneman William A. Dawbursky William N. Weizen Weiten Leder Business Office K, U. 66 News Room K, U. 25 Night Connection 2701K3 Felixhed in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning; by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Daundt Press. THE PROFESSOR'S DUE Subscriptions price, $4.00 per year, payable by mail. Subscriptions for second-class mail must postmaster ber17, 1919, at the post office at Lawrence Kannai, under the act of March 3, 1870. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1920 THE PROFESSOR'S DUE It is only a moment of hours until we will all be packing up to go home for Thanksgiving. If we are not too busy comparing notes on various college activities, viewing the other fellow's idea of the latest thing in collegiate attire and taking in holiday dances, perhaps we will spare a stray moment to the contemplation of those things which we have to be thankful for this year. While was are at it, don't let forget the good old professor. We are all far too prone never to consider the professor as a human being at all, and if we do, merely to think of him as a cruel task-master. He never asked us to come here, but since we did come he is doing his level best to see that, as far as it is in his power, we get the best of what the University has to offer. If we don't know what we came for, he does, and so tries to help us. Some day when we wake up and realize what was the real reason for our four years attendance at college, we will find the knowledge that the professor has tucked away for us, or tried to tuck away, and be grateful for his efforts. Probably the Michigan co-ed's grandmother who was prohibited from bringing her airplane to college threatened to leave school when she was a girl, if not permitted to bring her bicycle. TO ARMS! Many of our leading colleges, and the students who attend them, are rising up in arms against the present day moving pictures showing "college life." They claim that such life portrayed by the pictures is altogether false and misrepresented, and harmful to the institutions and students. To realize that this is correct, one has only to see such pictures, and visit a college or attend one for awhile. This can be verified by any student who has just started to college for the first time, and who thinks college life is going to be like that shown in photographs. After several weeks this same student has a different outlook on life in an educational institution. His picture world is completely destroyed. It is about time for all the colleges to rise in protest against this practice of the movies. For the sooner it is curbed, the better off everyone concerned will be. The institutions will be benefited, the ideas and impressions of a college student will be corrected, and the public itself will have a truer and more intelligent knowledge of real college life. Movie fade-out to the contrary, we maintain from experience that no kiss is good for longer than a good, deep breath. OUT IN THE COLD Saturday's football game went out on the air direct from the press box —from three stations, WDAF, the Kansas City Star, KMBC, the Midland Broadcast Central, and KFKU, the University station. Contrary to what the student body was led to believe all through the year, the statement that the Big Six had ruled against broadcasting games, must have been a myth. Granted, however, that someone got the wrong impression about broadcasting the Big Six games, there is another matter to discuss. The sound-proof room of the stadium press box, specially constructed for broadcasting games, housed the visiting broadcasters from WDAF, and the University station was out in the cold—broadcasting from the roof. Probably the reactions is that the matter is of little consequence; yet considering that members of the student body are repeatedly called upon to provide the programs and build up the attractiveness of KFKU as a broadcasting station, and considering the fact that KFKU has broadcast most of the other home games, it seems that this concession to other stations is robbing the KFKU program of its headline attraction. As a matter of revenue, the arrangement may have been profitable —it surely should have been to justify the "sell-out" of KFKU. Was it fair to the patrons of KFKU or to the student body to take first preference away from the University's own station? Let KFKU broadcast University attractions; that is what it is for. Companionate marriages seem to work better in Kansas than in Texas, muses the Thoughtful Freshman. THE TIGER PASSES The death of Georges Clemencen recalls again a career marked with high successes and haunted with the spectre of failure. During the World War Clemencen was regarded as one of the great and since then he has been held in sincere respect by all the world, but things were not always so. As a young man he was often in rebellion with the existing government of France. He believed what he be believed, and acted as acted, because he felt it was for the best interests of humanity. When he spent some time in calle in an obscure Massencastus town cobbling shops, the inhabitants of that village little realized that at some future time he would rise to lead the destinies of a great country in one of the greatest moments of history. Refusing the benefit of clergym men asking that no woman be with him when death came, the Titue showed to the last his grim, hard beliefs. To him, pump was nothing. Dignity was a baule. The fact that he dug his own grave some years ago shows clearly his beliefs on such matters as death and glory. The freshman cap disappears and now how is one to know the seniors? FOUR YEARS AND TEN WEEKS And lol. The years had passed and Joe Student was well launched upon his career as a student in one of America's finest universities. He had entered the institution with an ambitious aim in his eye and thought of success in his heart. He was going to prove to his beloved parents that he was who could conquer the world. But Joe was pledged to a Greek society and became an "activity man" that year. First indeed, he certainly did make his grades and good ones, and he was initiated. The following years however, found Joe a little less ambitions about his studies. He just couldn't find time enough in the day for everything. Fraternity spirit and loyalty are major parts of college, so Joe couldn't be quite interested in the intellectual side. He must attend meetings, for he was treasurer. Then too, there were rallies on the Hill and University concert courses, and lecture courses to attend, and he wouldn't be patriotic if he didn't spend a few hours working in the interest of the Y. M. C. A. finance campaign or for the Red Cross Roll Call. And he couldn't miss the Varsity dances and the football games and the meetings of the Sigma Zexis club, of which he was president. On. Joe Student was a busy man—in fact, he was much too tired after OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII Monday, Nov. 25, 1929 No. 63 ETA SIGMA PHI; The regular bi-weekly meeting of Eta Sigma Phi will be held at 7:30 o'clock in room 210 Frenshall. The program will be a discussion of Roman books and manuscripts. RUTH WARRINGTON, Secretary. MEN'S GLEE CLUB The men's glee club will rehearse Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in Marvin hall. EUGENE CHRISTY, Director. 'HI_LAMBDA_SIGMA1' LIMA DEL MUNDO, SALVA La Llamada_Sirena will meet Tuesday evening at 5:30 in Westminster ball. MARGARET KILBOURNE, Secretary. PEN AND SCROLL: There will be no meeting of Ben and Sroll on Tuesday, Nov. 28. CLARK STEPHENSON, President K. U. BAND: The next band rehearsal will be Wednesday, evening, Dec. 4. Fat member will please check in his cap at this time. I appreciate and will all for your splendid co-operation during the football season, and wish you a pleasant Thanksgiving vacation, J. C, M.CANLES, Director. COMMITTEE ON RELATIONS TO OTHER EDUCATIONAL INSTITUCTIONS. A meeting is called of the Committee on Relations to Other Educational Institutions on Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 27, at 4 o'clock, in room 203 Administration building. The meeting is for organization and reports. I, C. MUSEHALL A meeting of the K. U. Fencing club will be held in room 202 Robinson gymnasium, Tuesday, at 4:30. MELVIN DUOGLAS, Chairman. K. U. FENCING CLUB: working at all these strenuous activities to do justice to his studies, But Joe loved college life, so he he spent ten weeks in summer school. Then he received the coveted sheepskin, showing that he had completed one hundred and twenty hours of work in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Campus Opinion --mother. And did she get her inspiring qualities straining her eye studying the spectrum of helium? or making specifications for some proposed pile of concrete and steel? or wryness to cord? or antiquated newspapers? No she didn't; it came to her as love from out of the skies! Truth, Beauty, More From J. D. K The velissitudes of today in a good measure determine what we do to tomorrow the way this girl is accepted she will be. We should also must she follow. I think she has exceedingly important play in our world as well as a hard one; she is the one that makes life worth living and gives her power and guides man to his destiny. It is as she wishes it; to drive him to Hell or to Heaven. When I say Hell myextinction or worse; when I heaven, I mean Beauty, "Neoaphraneism." By Kumanu I would think if you really think you can set up any criterion to which women must adhere, regardless of the acceptance they meet in your culture, if you ever get perplexed in trying to get at the ultimate analysis of anything? Think the former question first. Perplexities that you will even begin to find for a moment. I am almost sure you will soon find yourself in such a labyrinth: perplexities that you will even begin to find for a moment. I am almost sure you will try to figure out who you are and where you came from; don't tell me what it is. If you're something like a little child when asked why it loves its mother, says, "Because." As far as I can see the two questions are the same answer. Each give some督促icipation, but that is all. Not I ask you to take things to the last What great men do not give their mother credit for their greatness? Abraham Lincoln said that he owed whatever he amounted to to his 1925 Ford Coupe 1926 Buick Turing 1927 Chevrolet 1928 Dodge Roadster 1930 Oldsmobile Roadster 1931 Dodge Sedan 1932 Buick Cadan 1933 Buick Coach USED CARS Lawrence Buick Co. Phone 402 700 N. H. Now do any of you think that the wild nights a few boys have shown a few girls, the hot, glowing. Chestier, bolder. More muscular, snuck, or that purpelain social stuff will give them a sound and beautiful aspect of life? They can't get their hair down from a simple, quiet, romantic life; Music heard from out of the skies. The Fine Arts will help them to see how they should not show them any such beauty until he has begun to take life seriously; too unphilosophical; too selfish. Many other student specialties. If the loving kindness, slucrey, truthfulness may be preserved in our college girls of today, what a wonderful future is held for us. But if You Can't Eat at Home Tuesday But You Can Eat at THE CAFETERIA she can't make anything except priglig women (or wifes) in the world, because she encounters in this world and partly the road she chooses that determines her usefulness. Let The Girls Alone —J. D. K. Editor, Daily Kansan: The Kavanagh of Nov. 20, contain the immeasurable of J. H. K. which he would have taught in which Hamlet was reading made up as he said, of "words, words, words." This colossum should have liver a more urgent education or rights. He, at heart, should have first seen the light of day in some other state than in Karteo. He would have learned before the law, and where educational opportunities are equal. In some of his own educational institutions for males only; and these, we would recommend to him and all equally improvisational men. A man of heroic mold, we think Kansas University has graduated a long line of brilliant, women whom this meteoric genius will never equal. But to go away from him for the sake of his career, she will offer several examples. Please point to some man whose medical studies in the last five years have helped him to overcome an oratory investigations made in chickens' diseases by Gladia Henry Dick, and Tarnah Rumliffe Hill. Why did the 1911 Nobel prize in chemistry go to Ms. Marie Skidmore Curie? We hope that J. D. K will consent to let the girls work out their own salvation in their own way. would hardly make girls, who happen to be his neighbors, responsible for his low grades. L, P, L, A theft of $209 worth of instruments from the University of Ohio has been reported. Be be the work of students. One student has been arrested and other arrests have been made. WE SPECIALIZE IN Good Shoe Repairing Try Us Electric Shoe Shop 1017 Mass. Shine Parlor 11 W. 9th Prices Mat. 30c Eve. 50c All-Talking All-Laughing All-Singing ARSITY Shows 3-7-9 with the fun makers de luxe Tonight-Tomorrow THE GREATEST ALL-TALKIE ALL-LAUGH SHOW — 'SKINNER STEPS OUT' GLENN TRYON and Merna Kennedy A million dollar bluff and a million hafs for you — **see it**. Hear it! **today**. O. U. Plans Unique Department A unique department for the pre- emergence of the American de- sign consideration of the problems of the American Indian will be established on the campus of the University of Oklahoma if plans of President W. Kennedy are approved. "It is bored that this will be the beginning of a program of studies in Indian languages, history and tradition," he added. "There are more students of Indian descent in this university than in any other. If some institution is not willing to accept such a kind, much of the past curriculum of the Indian will be lost." Read the Kansan Want Ads. 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Phone 395 HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES New and Used New and Used KNOLES BICYCLE SHOP Phone 915 1014 Mass. C. C. COBH Radiator, Body and Fender Work Radiation bewrd, bent fenders rolled and brakes welded. 10 East 8th. Phone 486 Stylish New Gloves — Warm, Stylish Spats — New Shirts and Neckwear Homegoing OBERCOATS $35 The home folks will have you on display during the Thanksgiving holidays—you know how it is. You'll want to measure up to their expectations and an Obercoat will help you do it. Aside from warmth and comfort Obercoats possess a certain something that sets the wearer apart from the crowd without making him conspicuous. They have what we call in America "IT." You'll find wonderful values at $35—and others up to $85. Name Dobbs Hats — New Wool Scarfs — New Bostonian Footwear