PAGE TWO MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4.1920 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Loyola University, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEIF ___ WM. A. DAUGHERTY Clinton Fenney... MANAGING EDITOR...LAWRENCE MANY Sunday Editor ...Wilmer Moore Monday Editor ...Rick Emmett Campaign Editor ...Catherine Hermann Tuesday Editor ...Marcia Duncan Night Editor ...Lucienne Sahni Wednesday Magazine Editor ...Neal Dunlap Sunday Magazine Editor ...Neal Dunlap Xchange Editor ...Wiley McKinley Monday Magazine Editor ...Wiley McKinley ADVERTISING MGR. FLOYD NELSON. Assistant Mgr. MER. MEGAN BROWN. Assistant Assistant Patricia BROWN. District Assistant Barbara KENNETH. District Assistant Eddie McKenna- District Assistant KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS Lawrence Maan Katherine Birth Arthur Circle Bettany Dumme Mary Green William A. Dumbearty Rick Redmond Marion Lester Louis Suter Marina Clevermore Business Office K. U. 6 News Room K. U. 2 Night Connection 2701K Published in the afternoon, five times week, and on Sunday morning, by students of the Department of Journalism of the University of New York at the Times of the department of Journalism. Subscription price, $499 per year, payable in U.S.A. Received as second-class mail matter September 17, 1891, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1870. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4.1929 LOVE AND THE PUBLIC It is not uncommon these days and nights to see a couple walking on the campus, arms interlocked, hands interlaced, forgetful of the world without in their puerile desire to find favor in the eyes of each other. They forget how they appear to others, who view them an a little less than morons. And rightfully. It is nice to have freedom and be unconventional and all that, but there are some things which we tactfully designate as "good breeding." It makes little difference who is responsible for the amorous gestures. The fact is that Friedian impulses should not be exhibited in the public eye. It is a matter of individual good taste. You may be criticized for your table manners; you may be censored for the clothes you wear; censored for the clothes you wear. But you need not be pointed out as lacking in public dececy and good breeding—if you have an ounce of tact. IT IS BITTER MEDICINE It's so aggravating when you had planned to turn down a date with a certain young man and then he doesn't ask you. If every person were to read "All Quiet on the Western Front" the chances are that there would be no more war for at least another generation. And by that time the world powers should have come to some arrangement which would make war impossible anyway. "All Quiet on the Western Front is a catalogue of the events which blasted the lives of the generator taking part in the World War. The story is equally true of any man who any great war the world has ever known or ever will. Therein lies the greatness of Erich Renner's book if mention it brings a grindance an "too horrible", it is because the word refuses to pay heed to any more gentle method of reproof. The pages of this book hold no love story nor detective yarn to thrill an easy-going public. There are some spots so hideous that one is tempted to pitch the book into a corner and refuse to touch it again. It is a bitter dose of medicine. That the world is not as heartless as the cynics would have us believe was shown by the radio call last Saturday night which resulted in more than 15 persons offering their blood for a transfusion in the hope of saving a mother and her unborn child. TEACHERS AND PROFS You like a teacher. You respect "prof." Occasionally, though, very rarely, you find one who is both teacher and "profit," and you are fortunate, indeed. The teacher is one whose personality opens your heart and mind to the best in character and feeling. He is like old wine whose flavor is rich and mellow and elegant. He is the kind of man to whom you would turn with confidence—the little desires and ambitions and hopes, things you cherish or hold good. His character seeps into yours, and you are one of his repositories. His facts are liquid which you relish drinking, and, what is more, he is something significant, a new meaning to life itself. Then, there is the "prof." He knows lots of "facts." He tells them, often interestingly, and when you have finished his course, you feel "educated." He has method and competence. There is no inefficiency, nothing that cannot be readily disposed of. But when you have finished his course, you feel un satisfied, and, like the child who was given a bottle of milk, "Is this all? I wanted something more." There is nothing more—the "prof" gives no more. He stands apart. He is like Pallas Athena, whom we should not expect to descent from her high altar, or like a hidden oracle, whose words we respect but whose self we can never know. The finest golden grains he keeps in a pouch we call self. He would part with them, no doubt, but he does not know how—or perhaps it is because he does not realize their value to the student. They say that half of what we eat keeps ourselves, and the other half keeps the doctors alive. We couldn't say much for his half if he ate at some of the fraternity house EX-SERVICE MEN There has developed a new type of ex-service man who would be of more value in some other business than as a waiter in eating places on the Hill. Notably is this true of the waiters in certain cafes whose proximity to the campus makes them convenient for the use of students. This convenience, the firms seem to think, is of such great value that the student is willing to suffer any indifference or "cockiness" in order to eat there. Anyone who is in business should cater to his trade. A business man does not depend upon geographical advantages to bring him business without responding with courtesy and affability. Often a person will choose an establishment which makes courtesy a speciality, in preference to one that merely "waits on people". A good firm will not tolerate insincere or friction by or among the employees. He knows this is one of the surest ways to drive customers from the door. Yet, on the Hill, one often finds the opposite condition. Usually the waiters are students, and they feel their responsibility is to the employer rather than to their fellow-students who enter the establishment. Too often the atmosphere is almost one of defiance: "Order something and see how soon you get it!" The customer is the humble worshipper who meekly proffers to King Waiter his unworthy order—subject to his approval. ON TAMMANY'S OWN GROUNI ON TAMMANY'S OWN GROUND At the time of midterm examinations greater problems face the majority of students than the outcome of the New York mayoralty which will be held tomorrow, but nevertheless, the activities of the Tammy Tiger always are of interest. The election tomorrow promises to be an abnormally close contest. Headed by the fiery Florio H. La Guardia, who is as fui in wirescracks as Jimmy Walker, the Republican forces seem to have usurped the control over Gotham's masses held by Tammy for generations. For eight weeks the little black-haired Republican candidate of Italian extraction has assailed "Tammany corruption," which he likens to the days of "Boss" Tweed. He has been making from four to eight speeches a day. Already he has proved himself a vote-getter, having been elected to Congress six times. Meanwhile the Tammy machine clicks on. The dapper Jimmie Walker and his past administration are defended with dignity by no less than ex-Governor E. F. Smith, Senator Robert F. Wagner, and other big moment of the Wigman. Tammy forsees victory by a half-million votes, expecting La Guarda's inroads in its own field to be offset by a lack of support among Republican "respectables," who opposed him at the time of his nomination. Archaeologist Finds New Eskimo Relics Which Show a High Civilization in Past Washington.—New evidence of man's prehistoric life in the Arctic has been dug out of the frozen rains of a very large Eskimo settlement on St Lawrence Island in the Bering sea by Henry B. Collins, Jr., archaeologist of the Smithsonian Institution, and G. Herman Bradt of Cleveland. (Science Service) Tammany may win again, but at any rate, she will have fought the battle on her own ground. La Guardia has appealed to Tammany's masses. Whatever may be the outcome, it is not likely to affect midemester quizzes or the score of next Saturday's game. St. Lawrence Island and the Diomede Islands in Bering Strait, may be called the metropolises of the prehistoric Arctic, said Mr. Collien, who has been a professor at Scripps Institution of Technology since 1974. The only excuse for cutting classes these days is—the night before. The Thoughtful Freshman declares that mid-semitesters are the fog that blot out high grade air canyles. HARD-BOILED BOSTON Some people think the only way to be a "big man" is to increase the food consumption. It is being reported that Boston is soon to be thrown out of its present apendible isolation, and that the Boston stage soon will be cluttered with bare legs and its bookshope filled with the disgraceful novels that the rest of the world has been enjoying these many years. What a blow this will be to Boston's individuality! For years Boston has been imbued with a personality that other cities have utterly lacked. It has been "far from the madding crowd," completely individualized. How shocking it is for such a city to degenerate back into the common herd! It is no matter that Boston's personality has been that of a straight-laced, self-righteous old grandma of the Victorian era. That is not the point. The subject for discussion is that the loss of this personality will put this historic city on a common level with other towns, when until now it has been "different." Some day Boston people will get used to seeing chorus girls and reading salacious literature such as "An American Tragedy," that the whole mass of the city's traditions will be forgotten. Boston, the cradle of American literature, will be so vulgarized that it probably will revert to the days when the censors were so liberal as to approve of that dangerous novel. "The Scarlet Letter." Plain Tales From the Hill Results of tutorial classes in rhetoric have uncovered some very interesting changes in the scenery to which they had been handed to a class started thusly: 'Standing on the porch of Marvin bail, the Kansas river went flowing Maybe During a Tornado Freshman: "What is this unbridged book our teacher was talking about." Speaking of Tough Assignments Freshman: "That must be it; we have to hand in a list of the words in it." Friday's Kansan reports that a large number of the engineering faculty went to Lincoln Friday and Saturday for the meeting of the so-called Prosecution of Engineering Education. Yeah, that's a likely story! The average K. U. newspaper reader was as surprised at the Carrume report as papa is on Christmas shows him what Santa Claus brought. "You don't mean Webster's Unabridged dictionary?" Oh, Goodie, Goodie! Van, the animal man, stopped a Kansan reporter on the campus Saturday morning. "I tongtud I could get in two hours, but I guess I'll have to make it six." He chuckled again. "And den maybe I flunk it." "I'm studying the yo-yo," he chuckled, letting it roll down and climb back up a couple of times before he jumped around encouragably at the end of its string. Read the Kansan want ads. "Do you want un item?" He reached in his pocket and pulled out a handsome new yo-yo. who lived in the north many centuries ago were especially interested in making their everyday possessions fine carving. Tere too, ceremonial, the foundation of the social life, flourished most, judging by the quantities of carved ivory objects found. There was a huge heap of the ancient village, Mr. Collins and Mr. Brandt uncarted ivory and home harpoons, meat picks, and many strangely shaped carved ivory pieces that could be used to occupy the same region today and live under somewhat similar conditions can help解 the historic ivory puzzles. There are no such instances in the modern Ekimo household. Midsemester Reports Due. Van Three successive stages of Eskimo culture are traced in the possessions dug out of the hard earth, and the individuals show the finest and most intelligent workmanship. The layer above this contains articles decorated in lapis rosea on the mountains and on earth and recent villages contain the craftsmanship of modern Eskimos who have lived within the past century and painstaking skill and the love of design that their distant ancestors had. It all shows, Mr. Collins points out, that the Eskimos that white men never meet belong to a culture than the Eskimos of today. The age of the most ancient Eskimos may never be determined, but at a rough guess they may be said to have been children of the culture than the Eskimos of today. The age of the most ancient Eskimos may never be determined, but at a rough guess they may be said to have been children of the culture than the Eskimos of today. The age of the most ancient Eskimos may never be determined, but at a rough guess they may be said to have been children of the culture than the Eskimos of today. The age of the most ancient Eskimos may never be determined, but at a rough guess they may be said to have been children of the culture than the Eskimos of today. The age of the most ancient Eskimos may never be determined, but at a rough guess they may be said to have been children of the culture than the Eskimos of today. Skulls of the oldest Eskimos have not yet been found, but the expedition has brought back skulls of the later prehistoric stage of Eskimolc culture. Campus Opinion Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan: The following article which appeared in the Lincoln Star Sunday is another uncalled-for and underserved attack upon the Kansas football team and incidentally upon the officials who referred the Nebraska to a person who is in all probability not qualified to pass judgment; Sports Editor the Star: Not as a partisan of Nebraska, in the mid-1970s he longed to align with thousands of others who saw the Saturday Kansas-Nebraska game. I brand the mark of severe violence that he inflicted on who offered in that game for failing to demand the removal of an officer from the unportmountainlike act of jumping on Sloan, when the whistle had already blewn, and injuring him so deeply. Not only should the man have been regroved from the games, but Kukushka had half the distance to the goal line for this disgusting act on the part of the coach. in the eyes of the public. Yours for clean sports. Along with hundreds of others with whom I came in contact after the game, this would have been a difficult task for officials to do to punish Kansas. Nothing in the way of punishment can redeem a team in the eyes of clean sportsmanship loving public, and it is sure that Kauai will be able to lose only to lose a game of football, but to give the player a black eye Such accusations of unfair play are dangerous, especially when made without absolute proof for the point in controversy. Mr. Glazer claims not to be a partisan of Nebraska and wants the state to sack the sake of upholding clean sport. If this is true he sadly distorts his aim for anyone who can seize upon a purely accidental happening and distort it until the act has assumed proportions of a great violation of sportsmanship by violating the spirit of that code. EMIL G. GLASER, 1904 K St Lincoln Neh This disgusting blunder, while of no real importance, is simply another example of a fan discontented at the showing his team made against a supposedly inferior opponent and should be given no more credence than to the teams from forth the sport page of the Dee Mores Register last week. THE CAFETERIA Invites a Trial From You Prisoner Lost on Way to Jail Shows Up Later To cast any apperions at the judgment of the officials is still a worse breach of sport etiquette. The men, in whom the officers were men, called the plays as they saw them. If there had been any intentional violation of the rules in the game, the players would have the first to recognize it and penalize the offending team. The fact that they did not do this is the best refutation of the criticism brought forward F. L. F. Until fans can witness an athletic contest and impartially criticize the players, he will be some who are prone to suspect the members of the team opposing their hopefuls of dirty work especially in the sport. The main concern is a principle in the incident. This seems to be Mr. Glasser's predicament as his paper's sport columns to express his pieve. An apology is in order from him. Yours for unjudged judge- Good Food St. Louis, (UP)—Although Sam Morfa has been a resident of St. Louis, she was in the crowd at the Union Station and missed his train. It is not unusual for travelers to miss train but Sam Morfa was unattended for he was a member of a party of Federal prisoners being taken to the County jail at Mexico. Reasonable Prices The following morning Sam knocked on the front door of the jail and asked for admittance as a passenger. He had caught the next train. Conveniently Located The Cafeteria Union Building Read the Kansan want ads. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIIV Monday, November 4, 1929 No. 45 K. U. BAND: All members of the band who did not make the trip to Nebraska will please turn in all equipment Wednesday evening at 7 at the auditorium, unless you can present a bone file doctor's certificate of illness. These students must be signed in by their professor and presented during the balance of this semester. J, C, McCANLES, Director CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY; The Christian Science society will meet this evening at 7 o'clock in room D, Myers hall. RUSSELL BECK, President. KU KU MEETING: COLLEGE LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS; There will be a Ka Ko meeting in Fraser hall at 7:30 Tuesday night. It is important that all members using on the trip to Kaikoura be there. BOTANY CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Rotary club Tuesday, Nov. 5, at 1121 Leuven square, at 7359 (clock) All members and prospective members are welcome. MARCIA NEED, President. SQUARE AND COMPASS; The College League of Women Voters will have a dinner meeting Tuesday at 5:30 p. m. at the Union building. All the women of the University who are interested in the League are cordially invited. PHI BETA KAPPA COUNCIL: Squine and Compass fraternity will hold a short business meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30 in Snow hall. All members are expected to be present. J. RAYMOND EGGLETON, Secretary. The Phi Beta Kappa协会 will meet this afternoon at 4:30 wckl in room 103 Administration building for election of new members, including new officers and chairmen of the societies. JAY JANES; MEN'S GLEE CLUB: The regular weekly meeting will be held Tuesday, Nov. 5, at 4:00 o'clock in the rest room of the Administration building. JANE KIRK, Secretary. Rehearsal of the men's glee club will be held Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock in Marvin Hill. No section rehearsals this week. SCHOLARSHIPS FOR WOMEN: There are five scholarships for women which will be available after mid-seminar. Applications for scholarships may be made to Miss Gallow, in room 304 Fraser hall, on Tuesday and Thursday from 11:30 to 12:20 or by appointment. E. GALLOL, Chairman, Committee on Scholarships. A course in personnel work is to women who have hopes of becoming offered at the University of Orkney or means or directors of personnel work, such as an apprentice, a trainee or a doctor. CHOICE CUT FLOWERS Whitcombs Greenhouse Phone 275 Ninth at Tenn. St. Among the greatest of Society Brand's new values ASCOT FLEECE OVERCOATS Luxurious fleece fabrics that give exceptional wear. Tailoring that's far finer than ordinary. You get all that in Ascot Fleece Overcoats See them they're strong values In blue, brown or oxford gray $50