PAGE TWO 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1029 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITQR-IN-CRIEF ... WM. A. DUACHERTY Associate Editors MANAGING EDITOR. LAWRENCE MANN Sunday Editor. William Moore Campaign Editor. Rob Baldwin Campaign Editor. Catharine Hannon Night Editor. Robert Lathlin Night Editor. Rob Lathlin Sunday Magazine Editor. Nagui Ishimura Sunday Magazine Editor. Nagui Ishimura Korean Editor. Wendy White Korean Editor. Wendy White SUNDAY STAFF ADVERTISING MGR Assistant Adm. Adv. Assistant Assistant Adm. District Assistant District Assistant Clentization Manager SUNDAY 2019 Virginia Winnick Cory Freddie Carey Mahon Hugh Thompson Oakley Katherine Mary Battain Mary Wine Kathleen Moline FLOYD NELSON Marine Clervargen Kemesh Taddeiich Harbara Kennedy Eddie McKernan Eddie Luster Sublir Business Office K.U. 65 News Room K.U. 25 Night Connection 2018K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Alabama. Free of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single payment, for each. Entered as second-class mail into Sherman O'Toole Airport at Lawrens Kanaus, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1929 THE WEEK Harry Sinclair, ex-student of pharmacy, got out of jail at Washington, D.C. "A victim of politics" is his characterization of his plight—polities and lack of conscience. Secretary of War Good died, taking from the Republican party one of its foremost leaders. Upon choice of a successor hinges much of the future of the administration's inland waterways program, in which Mr. Good had been largely instrumental. With only nineteen dead and a score or so seriously injured, Mexico elected a president without assassinating the candidates. Pascal Oratorio Rubio, leader of the National Revolutionary party, was elected. For alleged drinking and possession of liquor, twenty-one members of the Gamma Eta Gamma fraternity and students of the University of Illinois were expelled by administration action. Business, industrial and labor problems were placed before the country by President Hoover this week by his favorite method of calling conferences of leaders in various fields. Labor and industry pledged to pull together toward better conditions with a minimum of strife. Leading railroads pledged to support action by the administration to better business conditions. Alumni and other visitors by the thousands flocked to the University of Kansas for the annual Homecoming celebration and the annual fracas between the Jayhawk and the Tiger. JUSTICE IN NORTH CAROLINA Or, perhaps it is fear of another epidemic that might vacate the town too soon before Christmas that prompts the Lawrence merchants to bring out their Christmas lights before Thanksgiving. The jury sitting in the trial of seven labor organizers for the murder of Police Chief Aderoht of Gastonia, North Carolina, found all of the seven defendants guilty of second-degree murder after deliberating the evidence fifty-seven minutes. The Gaston County Grand Jury has refused to indict any of the nine men accused of the killing of Ella May Wiggins, a striaker who was slain while riding from Gastonia to attend a labor meeting at Bessemer City, "Insufficient evidence" the Grand Jury reported. "Insufficient evidence" also accounted for the same Grand Jury's failure to indict seven men charged with the kidnapping and flogging of three labor organizers. At Marion, where the police shot down more than a score of unarmed strikers, the court of inquiry held some of the deputies for further investigation. But more important, it spent most of its time denouncing the "horid crime" of strikers who were "arguing honest tollers to refuse to go to work." These four cases tell a story with a painful point. It is almost unbelievable that North Carolina can be easily dispense with justice in its courts. To be an unfortunate workman, striking in order to get just compensation for his labor, marks him an outcast. He has no judicial address for wrongs done to him but he must pay a severe penalty if he interferences with the "rights" of others. To be an opponent of labor interests, gives a man the right to stringent protection if strikers harm him, and gives him immunity from punishment if he chooses to assassinate a few "communists". The murdering of strikers is not a crime in North Carolina but opposition to the evils of Capitalism always! At last a use has been found for the editorial dictionary. One young lady of the staff uses it to bring her up to a height convenient for using the typewriter. WHAT IS A DEGREE? What does a degree mean if you do not get what you want from your college work? It rarely happens that any particular college course, an outlined by the catalogue, exactly meets the needs of any particular person. If one intends to receive a degree he must meet specific requirements. That on half of these requirements have little possible bearing upon his special needs and interests does not alter the circumstances. Supposing that the degree is a necessity, due to the entry requisites of the field which this individual wishes to enter. Half of the time and money which he spends in securing this degree as well as half the money and efforts of the instructors and those who finance the college will be waisted. Why not create a more flexible standard for the granting of degrees, and thus give them more individual meaning instead of the usual seal of uniformity. Let the student, with the aid of a broad-minded faculty adviser from his field, decide upon the course that would be most beneficial for him. Upon proving to the administration that this course was best suited to his individual needs and worthy of the degree sought, he should be allowed to embark upon it. When the Prince of Wales entered trained the Order of Victoria Cross, seating at the banquet was by numbers drawn by chance. There's an idea for Washington society. COLLEGE AS ACTED "Come on, Bill, get that other quirrel. So, I've got a date tonight with Janice to go to the Prom, tomorrow night with Ruth for the Soph Hop, next night with Frances for the Kappa Etta Kat party"--etc.-That is how the college student spends his time and his parents money going to school to get an education, according to the moving pictures one sees depicting college life. Just one big beast hast after another, just one date after another, and no studying at all—in the movies. This is one of the present day practices that is bringing much undue criticism against higher institutions of learning. To think how many people there are who never have attended college, and many who never have visited such an institution. These individuals see a show that portrays college life as pictured above, and immediately come to the conclusion that these are the real conditions and practices. They do not get to see the other side of it, the classes, students studying and attending lectures, and educational gatherings. No, they are only shown a much augmented social whirl and glamor of fictitious college life. That such a thing as this is unfair to the universities is unquestionable. It is unfair to the students. If a board of censorship can cut out immoral offensive scenes, why can't they also alter this vilenp portraiture of college life? Sororites of K.S.T.C. of Pittsburgh have been limited to three rush parties. The Pan-Hellenic Association gave the reasons for this rule asuting down expense and saving the energy of the girls. Six medals of gold, silver and bronze are offered each year to the ext. all-around students, men and women, at the University of Oklahoma. Fresh traditions may be burned in oligacy at the University of Washington homecoming boothfire. Freshman and senior students their green hats into the firehole, to show their disgust for the old tradition which was revived there this year. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVII Sunday, 14. 1929 No. 62 ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE OF GRADUATE SCHOOL: There will be a meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Graduate School on Monday, Nov. 25, at 3:30 p. m. in the Graduate office. E. R. STOUFFER, Dean. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH—FACULTY: There will be a meeting of the faculty of the Department of English Monday, Nov. 25, at 4:30 p.m. in Room 205, Fraser hall. ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE OF GRADUATE SCHOOL MATHEMATICS CLUB: Mathematics Club will meet in Room 21E at East Administration hall at 4:30 p.m., m. Nov. 25, Miss Ella Hakker and Mr. Philip O. Bell will speak at 8:00 p.m. At The Concert --is the Place to Eat W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman Ry John Shively VELT STAFFORD, Vice-president Those who remained in the University Auditorium Friday night after the rally heard a concert which maintained itself on a fairly high artistic plane until the final descent which reached its depth when the Kansas glee club gave as a purling word to the crowd. "To Hell with Old Mirza." After this farewell message, Professor Christy walked across the stage to shake the hands of the Missouri director, Marshal F. Bryant. This anti-disturbance trial was approved on the whole well balanced, and had a good quality of tone, it was the Missouri club which sang with greater restraint, more delicacy in shading and, on the whole, with better effervescence. The Kansas first tenors did not al wai remember that high tones were not always song with greater volume and brightness, but bartonies and basses, when he heard the Kansas club. He heard pri marily an entire glove club, perhaps because the two joint numbers did not measure up to the par of the groups by the individual clubs. The last big grouping was the better. The somber "Florate Fill Israel" was in conformity with its religious quality, while the familiar "Blind Ploughman" was more upbeat and an wildness of the large group. The K. U, glee club was outstanding in its first group. The opening game was given, with a good crosscundo, and excellent work by the accompanist. The big number of the Kansas singers was "The Deathhouses Army," which was vigorously played on the bench. Pebbly gave her usual good performance in the "Pirate Dreams," in which the Kansas club hummed a good accompanist. For artistic work, Missouri players performed the martial "Sword of Farrarra," the well-interpreted "The Winter It Is Past," and the gay "The Sheigh," was the better. The club performed as a unit. But this group was closing the number of the other group, "Swing Along," owing to the sparkling, lazy accompaniment which was something different. The lyrical quality of the group seemed, but the round, "Row, Row, Row Your Boat," was more an exercise in crescendo and diminundo. Campus Opinion Editor's Note - Many months, yeen, even years, have passed since any momentous problem aroused so much discussion in the profession of women of Women," instituted by Joe McDowell's treatise of the subject in the Campus Problem Series. And when you get getting a little overworked? But if you must be heard, be briefer. And another word, a challenge. And whether you want your names run or not. Summer f scholar-this applies to you! We like it better. So until we know your name. --is the Place to Eat But wait; provadaes are, generally, only half truth. Let's try Homer, when Matthew Arnold calls the greatest, as well as the first of poets. Wise --is the Place to Eat Not having much wisdom of my own—for that depends on character—I would remind my fellow students and alumni, if I may, of certain wise counsel over the centuries. Will you not pause and consider? For, as my first quotation instructed me, "The teacher's interaction—See Solomon's proven ability it may well be stated in reverse order. So, in effect, the fools say that the teachers, the poets and its none of your business." Concerning Wine. Concerning Wine, and Women, and Wisdom e. Daily Kansan: Now another proverb—from the father of Solomon, this time: "The fool hath said in his heart 'There won't be one of Winston Churchill's characters in The Crisis decided: 'There won't be one of natural, the soul began by depriving human teaching and example goes on to despise Nature's law and the nature of God' by? Ask the winds, and the skeletons beside the road over life's desert—and the alives of thirst and loneliness. So do fools, I mean, in their hell on earth." Odysseus gathered from his stormy experience that "blue measure (that is, moderation) in all things is beast!" He read a copy of the Roman philosopher echoed the sentiment—"Eat certeus modus rebus." He add elsewhere a warning no so often quoted—"A thing that has no use for me is nothing handed by deliberation and measure"—referring to the love of man for man. To碛en all moralists, Horace exclaims, "No one lives that is free from vice; the beat man is he But to balance the argument better, and to give women their due consideration, albeit, as is often the case, they are treated here as an affectionful creation, let us have one more question. Sophocles has Antigone say that her sister must be human enactments, and two dressing King Creon; A last word, from the modern British writer, George Adam Smith, on the danger of wealth—"Coddle your wives," he wrote. "They are equal, but they will torture weak things. On the Hill at this moment is a vicky young jackamies—soft in the skin, with no strength, but a young heart. To him the poor man is—well, sort of contemptible." "And his eyes are so tight that he can't hunger." Still, law is love, and Irving Flower is right when he says: "The deprivation of these things is emancipation. And pain is, after all, just the same." “Your decree is for a day; this law that I is follow for i.e.” That is the key sentence in our defense of all who revere an inner law and trust their intuition in defiance of legal opinion, though death be the penalty. Strictly shaming, however, her exact wording only for women, peers or SCPRS. SPECIAL R R K Genuine Gladstone Bags $8.00 Arthur S. Wettig 732 Mass. St. Auto Electric Co. 709 N. H. Phone 406 Official Service Automotive Electrical Service Left Hand Found to Be Best 'Eye' of the Blind Columbia, Mo. (UP) — A blind person can read read type more rapidly with the left hand than with the right hand and contends to the general belief among teachers of the blind, has been reported as the result of experiments by Josephine M. Smith, at the physicist's laboratory of the University of Missouri. Why the left hand should prove more skillful is explained by Miss Smith on the grounds that the hand must be used to grasp something like the eye, the reading hand is an instrument for perceiving rather than an instrument for motor activity. The right-handed person, whether blind or visually impaired, can use his motor skill and uses his left for feeling. Use of the left hand in feeling occurs in locating a keyhole, brushing the hair, and many other situations, the psychologist wints out. Knowing Exact Location Is to Be Survey Purpos Prineton, N. J., To determine with great precision the location of any portion of the 3,000,000 square mile purpose of the triangulation system spread in a vase not across the country by the U. S. Coast and Goodfellow Describing this gigantic surveying problem to the National Academy of Sciences, the chief of the division of geodesy of the survey, explained that when the first and second order of tautness ten years hence will be no place within the country more than 25 miles from a station on the continent, it has been determined with great accuracy. Students in the college of education at the University of West Virginia may be assigned to teach illiterate persons living near the university. This will be their share in the motion-attempt to stalm out literacy. KENNEDY Plumbing Co. 937 Mass. St. Phone 658 General Electric Refrigerators Everybody Knows the Jayhawk Cafe Sunday Noon and Evenings. Plate Lunch Meals and Fountain Service 35c Convenient to the Campus 1340 Ohio Blue Mill Sandwich Shop We Deliver Phone 509 A. G. ALRICH A. G. ALRICH Engraving, Printing, Bending Rubber Tools Supplies Stainless Stainmaster 736. Mass. St. You Know the Score The Cafeteria Always Scores For Serving Good Food DICKINSON MON · TUES · WED UREIA GARBO THE'KISS with Conrad Nagel Holmes Herbert Special Attraction "THE OLD BARN" A Mack Sennett ALL-TALKING Comedy USED CARS THUR FRI SAT MIGHTIEST of all powerful Bancroft entertainments! THE MIGHTY 1925 Ford Coupe 1925 Buck Touring 1925 Dodge Roadster 1923 Oldsmobile Roadster 1923 Buck Sedan 1923 Buck Hardtop Many other specialties Lawrence Buick Co. Phone 402 700 N. H. for Economical Transportation Ford Touring—good condition. Priced to sell quick. 1928 model A Ford—sparton coupe. A dawning and priced right. Save the depreciation of new one. Demonstrate. Ford Coach—excellent motor and good appearance. One you can feel proud to own. Dodge coupe--good transportation. A low cost. 2 good Ford coupes—just what you need for this winter. Low cost and up-keep. HAMILTON Motor Co. 7th & Vermont Phone 534 Adorable Prints under your to peep from Nanette Fur Coats $15^{00} 19 West 9th Phone 156 Rock Me to Sleep in Your Arms Mistakes --- VICTOR RELEASE I'm in Love With You The Web of Love Blue Steele's Orchestra Blue Steele's Orchestra --- The High Hatters The High Hatters Love Me *Nat Shilkket and His Orchestra* *S Been a Long Time Between Time Leo Reisman's Orch.* --- It's Unanimous Now That's Where You Come In It's Unanimous Now Chick Endor That's Where You Come In Chick Endor --- I Can't Sleep in the Movies Any More I Can I Sleep in the Movies Any More *The Happiness Boys* Sergeant Flagg and Sergeant Quirt *The Happiness Boys*