PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1929 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEIF WM. A. DAUGHERTY MANAGING EDITOR · LAWRENCE MANX Bunday Editor · WALTER MICE Business Editor · WALTER MICE Computer Editor · CATHERINE HANSON Night Editor · LOUIS SCHULTZ Night Editor · LOUIS SCHULTZ Restoration Editor · ROBERT DIMANDEL Sunday Editor · CHRISTOPHER FROESEN Exchange Editor · LINCOLN WILSON Editor · WESTERN MOSS ADVERTISING MEG. ... FLOYD NELSON Assistant Adm. Mar, ... Maurice Givengroen Assistant Adm. J., ... Lindsay Kimmel District Assistant ... Barbara Kennedy District Assistant ... Edie McKenna District Manager ... SUNDAY STAFF Helen Haitien Peter Bellamy Wilsonville Willmann May Jane Kwong Lloyd "Diamond" Lance Spencer Angela McGraw Arthur Caldwell Mary Evans Mary Evans 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 Depot — the Journal of the University Press. Free of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.60 per year, payable in Square, Single copies, be each. advance. Single copies, be each. Entered as second-line mail matter September ber 17, 1935, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1929 THE STUDENT COUNCIL ACTS At last steps are being taken to abolish the pety rivalry and foulish warfare that has resulted in regrgettable deeds and hard feelings between our own university and that of the Kansas State Agriculture College. For several years this pregame hostility has been prevalent between the two schools, and has created unfavorable impressions to be given throughout and even outside the state. This year came the climax, with feelings and actions reaching deplorable extremes. While school rivalry may be a good thing, when it is carried as far as this it becomes malignant. The Student Council understands this, as is evident in the negotiations for an agreement to abolish the warfare. The sooner university men and women wake up to the fact they are no longer children and become serious minded enough to condemn such enterprises as this campus hostility, the sooner will all parties concerned be benefited. The Student Council should be highly praised for their intervention, and it is to be honored they will gain the desired end. OFFSETTING THE TALKIES The thoughtful Freshman knows it's true—that every organized house on the Hill keeps every light possible burning until 12 o'clock to carry thesemblance of late study. The American Federation of Musicians is launching an advertising campaign against the sole use of synchronized music in theaters. The federation is emphasizing the fact that great damage has been done to the cause of musical culture in the United States by the substitution of mechanical music in place of the real art. The widespread use of the "atlikes" has caused over five thousand theater musicians to lose their positions in the past fifteen months. The organization is justified in starting this campaign in an effort to regain these positions. But it it be doubled that mechanical music is seriously damaging musical appreciation. All the harm, if there is any, that is done by sound pictures is being more than off-set by the radio. The radio has created a public interest in music in millions of American homes. It is making the American people a nation of appreciative listeners to good music. The organization of musicians might have struck a more responsive chord to attract the public to its cause, even though it is undoubtedly true that the public would welcome the return of the theater orchestra in preference to "canned" music. The Utah Chronicle walks because there is no school spirit to back the Utah University winning football team. Somehow has a familiar sound. A SYMBOLIC FRIENDSHIP Two men, both young in years, but old in experience, chanced to meet recently at a table in a Berlin restaurant. One was tall, erect and muscular, a physical marvel; the other was of medium stature, eleratey, high-strung and alert. They talked much of each other, for if it had been more than ten years since they had stood knee-deep in mud of Flanders trenches, glaring hate across a 100-yard space of shell holes and darkness, glaring hate at each other. If either could have rescheduled the other, he would sprout at his throat or run him through with a bayonet. That was war. But now the two sat as an friends nermer the table. One of them, the tall one, was Gene Tunney, retired heavy weight champion of the world. The other was Erich Maria Remuner, schoolmaster, and author of the remarkable book "All Quiet on the Western Front." "War is nonexistent, terrible, in human, a thing that never should be reported." The German stated. And in return the American ex-marine said, "You are right, beyond a doubt. By writing your book you have rendered a great service to mankind." The ex-menaces now are friends. Individuals though they are—they might as well have been a pair of obscure men having fought and met again under the same circumstances—their friendship symbolizes the wholesomeness of peace and the futility of war. The Gam-Forbidding Professor urges that some sign be put up on the campus to indicate to the students which building is the library. JUSTIFICATION OF CRIBBING JUSTIFICATION OF CRIBBING The fact that many persons on the Hill consider cribbing justified indicates that there are about eight out of ten attending the University of Kansas for a Bachelor of Arts' degree rather than an education. Education is not a four-year loaf or a four-year round of exhausting activity in college. It is something far more significant, more difficultly acquired, and more inevitable than either of those. Education extends throughout all of a life. It cannot be chosen or rejected, but it can be directed. If an efficient system of cribbing is a person desires as a preparation for life, then it may be concluded from the 597 questionnaires given out by the bureau of school service and research that the University of Kansas will be made a pretty good school in which to enroll, by her present students. For the real student at a university, cribbing is never justified. ALL IN ONE A book seller recently advertised "All of Poe in one volume" meaning of course, his complete literary works encompassed in a single book. The phrase was deliberately sensational and designed as a catch for advertising. But to the popular mind such a statement is literally true; they expect to find, and think they do find all of the man in a single volume or a set of volumes. Unfortunately, however, the human species is more complex. You buy an author's work of a lifetime for a few cents and read it in a few minutes or hours. And when you lay the book aside, you may think you see the writer, but you don't—you may see an image of him. You do not see his struggles, his emotions, his deprivations, disappointments, joys, struggles, and disillusionment. These are but abadows that dance and play on the printed pages for the reader to delight in, but the real thing cannot be written. Those are things which must be lived by the individual, in varying and certain degrees. Cleveland_-(UP)_The United States is faced with the necessity of developing adequate terminal facilities if aviation is to advance as expected, according to John Berry, manager of the Cleveland municipal airways. He said that, "There are more national air races and is said to be one of the most modern in the world." Adequate Terminal Facilities are Needs Which Aviation Must Have Soon-Berry Major Berry believes that in the great rush to further the development of airplanes, inadequate airport terminal facilities have been overlooked. In this we may accuse literature of being false; it does not reproduce life, it merely sketches certain phases of it with one's limited vision. And perhaps this is well, for if there were only one perspective of life, it would be less than uninteresting—it would be futile. It was a resolute, but auxiliary student committee that undertook to manage a student subscription campaign on the campus to send the band to Lincoln. Realizing the attitude of many of the students and of the band personnel that the Athletic department should shoulder the obligation of sending the band on trips, their resolution was strong enough to overshadow fear of failure. And the campaign was on. WHO PAYS NEXT YEAR? As disorganized as the drive was in its hasty organization, make a by-stander " Sit up and take notice." Students will support a worthy cause and support it heartwarmedly. Yet, the general concessions was "We'll hit strong in this pinch . . . the band has to go . . . , but we feel that this is not a permanent measure of support, so well do it this time." It cannot be said that the squand who did not play were less entitled to the trip than the band, yet student sentiment demanded that the band go, and there was little mention of the squand. If athletic funds will not include band trips, as well as uniforms, railroad fares, stadium payments, etc., then football is boasting some of its earning power in the sport realm. The Athletic department, no doubt, wisely ruled on the standing of finances that the band trip was impossible, but student opinion was otherwise. Send the Karsan home. The Most Convenient? THE CAFETERIA Of All the Places to Eat Why Not The Most Convenient? A Trial Will Satisfy You. IS! A. G. ALRICH Snowflake Potatoes June Peas in Cream Fruit Jello Whipped Cream I Ice Cream and Wafers 719 Mass. Phone 26 Ship clearances at the airport av Engraving, Printing, Binding Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies Palms Cafe The landing area is served by three miles of four-foot brick sewer and 15 miles of 18-inch main latrals. The field is lighted by one hundred 600-lumens, 6.6 ampere series lights, the system providing green lights on the pavement and white on the boundaries and red where over construction is under way. The floodlight illuminates the field proper. There are also a 24-inch standard beacon and a special 7,000-watt heat lamp, alternating red and white, constituting a distinctive Cleveland Airport marker known to hundreds of Roast Domestic Duck Baked Young Hen Special Dinner Steak Breaded Walnut Cutlets Stationery. 736 Mass. St The airport has a level field of 1, 185 buses, the greater part of which has been laid out with an eye to future expansion, 75,000 in buildings laid out around it, the administration building, constructed of brick along ultra-modernistic lines, having cost $100,000 per square foot, telephone graph, telephone and teletype communication services tying in with the transcontinental teletype system for airlines. The airport is located at States airport weather station, the first ever established at an airport and receiving daily reports from more than 400 points throughout the nation. It has five airport fort rooms, ticket office, customs and immigration offices, post-office and terminals for taxi and bus service to and from the interurban service every 15 minutes. vived when the full attention of the aviation world must be concentrated on maintaining it, as possible, especially in order to maintain the equilibrium of the avia The Cleveland airport has been the focal point of attention of aviation leaders for some time because of its advanced development. It was opened in July, 1925, and since then subject to constant improvement. Chicken Consomme Pineapple Nut Salad --- Watch your Battery Call us for rental if your's fails to start. PREPARE YOUR CAR for Winter Call 1300 Firestone TIRES & BATTERIES Give your motor a square deal and change to lighter oil for severe weather. Also, you need lighter gear grease. 75c Special Sunday Dinner CARTER SERVICE Kansas City Lovely Models for evening wear Appropriate Costume Jewelry Nanette 19 W. Ninth $15.00 crage about 2,200 a month, exclusive of field hops and student digits. The field is one of the key points in the journey up the air mail and passenger systems. Columbia Major Berry is one of the judges of the Lehigh Airports Competition, in which cash prices of $10,000 will be awarded for airport designs. We see where the Star's Roving Correspondent compares K. U., with Oxford and finds we are more collegiate. Well, why throw that in our faces? It's the nature of the species. St. Louis, Mo. Nov. 2—(UP) Police answered a riot early today, and found the high school stadium here the center of a battle royale between students of rival institutions. Officers were arrested later released The fight started when a group of students from Rosseau High School sought to raise their school cabs on the campus, but the scheduled to meet Solbad High in a league football game this afternoon after being forwarped of the attempt, and when poles arrived, bloody mots and brushes were present. Emporia, Kus., Nov. 2.—(UP)Dr John Bailey Kelly was inaugurator Provide through Provident The Provident Thrift Policy What It Will Do for You If you live it will pay you $10,000 at age 65. If you become totally and permanently disabled it will pay you $100 a month. If you die before age 65 it will pay your heiencyil $10,000 in cash, or in monthly installments as long as he or she lives. Now—while you are in good health and can spare the money —let us show you how small a coupon can be issued in force. Seul the coupon, Provident Mutual O. K. Ferging and W. B. Dalton McCurdy Bldg. 1201 Mass. St. Telephone 265 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIIH Saturday, November 3, 1929 No. 44 SCHOLARSHIPS FOR WOMEN: There are five scholarships for women which will be available after mid-seemer. Applications for scholarships may be made to Mia Gallo, in room 204 Fraser hall, on Tuesday and Thursday from 11:30 to 12:30 or by appointment. E. GALLO, Chairman, Committee on Scholarships. The Christian Science Society of the University will meet Monday evening at 7:00 o'clock in Room D, Myers Hall. RUSSELL BECK, President. as seventh president of the college of vector of the educational department Europa begins today. Director Karyl DeVore of the Presbyterian board of home schooling is set to be appointed. Electric Shoe Shop 1017 Mass. Shine Parlor 11 W.9th Yes! We Do Shoe Repairing While You Wait. Two Shops HOLEPROOF HOSIERY|| features the authentic Fall shades created by Lucile of Paris to harmonize with your new wardrobe. Sheer, clear and even in weave; pointed square and double-pointed heels. Hollowproof Hosiery ideally complements the newest fashion and fabric trends. $1.50 $1.95 Man Alive!! Walk? Not for me!-Not when I can rent a Brand New Essex Challenger from Bailey's -Drive-It -Yourself "Drive Away the Bailey Way" Ed Bailey, Mgr. 620 Mass. PHONE 2900 Jayhawk Operated We Deliver 620 Mass.