PAGE TWO SUNDAY. OCTOBER 27.1929 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EDITOR/CHIEF - WM. A. MAGGERTY Associate Editor Catherine Hannon Chilton Woman MANAGING EDITOR - LAWRENCE MENN Bunday Editor Jane Lindahl Make Up Editor Mary Ware Women's Health Sport Editor Chris Brown Designer Kathleen Brown Senior Editor Mary Burttman Senior Editor Mary Burttman Tolghamer Editor Margaret Burttman Tolghamer Editor Margaret Burttman Alumnet Editor Ezumerman Zimmerman ADVERTISING MGR. - FLOYD NELSON Assistant Adv. Mgr. Marina Cuviewer District Assistant District Assistant Rebecca Kennedy Wesley Mc-Calla Hugh Kalllis Luke Innis Peter Jammison Leo Reed Samantha Bill Dainbarber Beosby Knapp Darius Hamilton Feeding Fossum Mary Langer Feeding Fossum Business Office K, U, 66 News Room K, U, 25 Night Connection 701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Oklahoma, on the Front of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single coins, be cash or check. Submit your application by September 17, at the post office at Lawrence Kanaan, under the act of March 3, 1978. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1929 THE WEEK President Howard ventured into the middle west for the first time since his trip through en route to Washington to take office. He made lots of speeches, for example, dedicating the nine-foot channel in the Ohio River, and elogizing Thomas A. Edison on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the invention of the electric light. Fifty years ago the week electric lights were invented. The Golden Jubilee celebration gave occasion for much newspaper reminiscing and reprinting of old cuts of the "dark ages." The Farm Board announced its intention of raising the price of wheat by means of loans to cooperative buyers. A similar plan or relief for cotton producers also has been introduced. The stock market took its most disastrous tumble since the break at the beginning of the war in 1914. Wall street was in an uproar and the tickers got four hours behind in recording the heavy selling. Business executives hurried to assure the public that the stock break was not indicative of poor business conditions in the country, but rather the result of abnormal speculation. Seven union leaders connected with the North Carolina textile strikes at Gastonia were convicted of second degree murder in connection with the death of a chief of police who had sought to interfere with the strikers. Labor sympathizers point to their conviction as another example of prosecution for belief and not for deeds, recalling the Scarce-Vanzetti case of two years ago. The strike leaders were thought to be Communists. The Briand cabinet of France was defeated in the house of deputies and was forced to resign for want of confidence. The defeat, of Briand, France's foremost advocate of world peace, and outstanding diplomat of the nation, is looked upon with great disappointment by workers for world peace in other countries. His success has not yet been chosen. U. F. Diteman hopped off for Fear across the Atlantic in the smallest airplane ever to be used in the long flight. Days after he should have arrived, he is still missing, and in general belief, he has added to the gradually growing toll taken by the Atlantic from those who sought to conquer her by air. Collegiate circles over the country were tossed into a general uprear by the report of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, exposing the tactics of many prominent university athletic departments. The investigators overlooked Kansas. A young radical of Italy pursued Crown Prince Umberto all the way to Belgium where the inter was calling on the future Mrs. Umberto, the Princess Marie Jose. The young radical had always wanted to shoot a prince, but his gun jammed, and somebody took it away from him. Albert B. Fall, ex-secretary of the interior, after eight years of dilatory justice, was pronounced guilty of accepting a bribe from E. L. Doheny in connection with the leasing of the governments Ek Hill, Calif., navy oil reserve. The public had reached that verdict a long time ago. Governor Reed told Kansas editors that he wished all governors could be twins. Perhaps he had read of the Siamese twin arrested in Los Angeles and who was pardoned because the judge didn't want to send the other twain to jail with him. NO ORBITARY NEEDED That no one has seen fit to write an obituary for The Dove, our dormant enemy and severest critic, is pointed out by a loquacious writer in the Campus Opinion column today. But he has himself answered any query which might arise from such a lack of attention. The Dove has died too often to justify any further last and rites. It won't stay dead. Eight now we have it on unofficial information that The Dove is evidencing some vigorous wiggles preliminary to its perennial resurrection, and Christmas is a long way off yet. Most any day it is liable to rise from its shallow grave and soar over an new-struck campus in rejuvenated fury. So there will be no obituaries published in the Kansan until we are sure of our ground. May that day never come. WE ARE NOT DIVIDED This is being written before the game against Iowa State at Ames. What is said here cannot be influenced by whether the Kansas football wins or loses. Therefore, if the Kannan sport page today records a victory for Kannan we shall believe it came through co-operation and teamwork good sportsmanship and fight. If defended is the outcome, we are going to believe the same thing; that a better team was met. We have been assured that, whatever alterations may have taken place in the inner ranks of the team earlier in the season, the team left Thursday night for Ames in as fine a spirit as could be asked for. The players were fighting hard, but not at each other. They were out with it oneness of purpose to win that superceded any petty quarrels that may ever have existed. Such a team is worthy of support; in fact, it is mandatory to back such a team, through defeat as well as through victory. The Kansan never has thought otherwise. It has been severely attacked for having failed in its support. But the Kansan reduces to be blind. It demands a team with a spirit worthy of support, without which no coach can win games; and having seen the apparent end of the situation to which it objected, the Kansan is ready, not only to throw its influence behind the team, win or lose, but to call upon all others connected with the school to adopt the ume spirit. To be or not to be is no intellegent question for university students, be cause most of them do not know what they would be, even if they were. A CHALLENGE TO THE BAR A CHALLENGE TO THE BAR The policies developed which strongly indicated reform, at the fifty-second annual meeting of the American Bar Association held this past week at Memphis. The first is a pledge to support the Hoover law enforcement campaign. This is the first opportunity the national association has had to express itself since President Hoover's statements of last March. It seems to be an expression through the association of public opinion that the administration of justice has not kept up with the times. The public has long felt the need of the promised housecleaning in criminal jury trials. The second policy is an urge to uphold the standards in legal education, to keep high standards of admission to the bar, and to instict upon new methods for determining the education and character of those seeking admission. These questions being taken up in the same sessions with the attempted housecleaning in administration of justice prove the earnestness of the association. With sincere attempts to raise standards in the profession and a sinceré backing of President Hoover and his crime commission, the American Bar Association shows possibilities of doing Mine Owners Attack New Mexican Labor Code; Say Cost Is Too Great Mexico City, Oct. 28 - (UP)—A majority of the mining companies of Mexico would find it easier to meet the increased production costs required by the new law, according to the Mining Chamber of Commerce of Mexico. It is estimated by the mining companies that the increased cost would be $34% new law went into effect at its present constitution. "The result would be a suspension of work in all fields of work and would not be borne" the memorial states. A salary increase of almost 19 percent would accrue to the workers, according to the mine owners, if the provisions of article 101 were put into effect. This calls for a new regulation that would require miners to leave their places of employment during the rest and meal hours shall have the time "corresponding to such intervals considered as effective time within the normal period of the shift," which is made for 100 per cent overtime in cases where the obligatory holiday cannot be observed. In metalurgical shops, according to the mine statement, continuous labor is necessary, an increase in the payroll costs. The provisions of article 129 for the construction of 'hyphenic buildings' for the housing of employee workers in mining industry, it is contended. The margin of profit in the less productive fields is already so small, the opinion is that it is actually impossible to operate these fields on such a basis since it would be no necessary to investigate most of the critical required it homes for work This article is furthermore superfluous in the case of the mining communities, the statement adds, because many workers already own their machinery and are generally of loanee availability for workers in all mining centers. some great work toward a general national clean-up in jodlery efficiency. A four per cent increase would follow the application of the compulsory 'profit-sharing' provision of article 7, the mine employment estimate. TWO REMAIN Send the Daily Kansan home Aristide Béland has resigned as premier of France since the recent vote of non-confidence. Dr. Guíssac Streemann is dead. Only President Hoover and Premier MacDonald of the famous quartet of peace leaders remain. Can they carry on alone? Uriand was felled by his foreign policy which urged the French reunification of the Young republication, the evacuation of the Rhine district, and whole-hearted participation in the London naval parley in January. The French government does not feel as peaceful as that yet. There has been something of a governmental reaction in Germany since Doctor Streemann's death. Dr. Alfred Hugenberg's referendum bill has caused controversies. Just what will happen next is hard to forecast. Premier MacDonald and President Hoover, the two peace lenders left, have faith in each other. The extent of their influence is great. But the loss of two members of their cause doubtless will cripple their efforts. Perhaps the January parley will tell how much. S. O. S. to The Dove Editor Daily Kansai Campus Opinion Watching the editorial page of the official K. U., newspaper, as I have done these seven faithful winters, I noticed a few days back a somewhat new book by Dave Deve, campus pink sheet, as its curriculum loves to call it. A few days later there came another ambitious time, expressing hope that the much-used but widely entertained bird on the Hill for another winter. If she is dead, may her aides surreally comfort in the jolly old resort where most of our hope to spend time with her lies in storage let the wood-pullers attempt to obstruct our vision while they may. If she is prosperous for more battle, let them have some shelter but Dead or alive. The Dove will not be forgotten before tomorrow. No one apparently has heard a woo of "fierce" from the old north风塔 of Fraser hut, and no one has seen a Karian with an obliteration. Even L. I. who have followed the heroic affairs of the矿 kedar columbia ever since she first sailed to Alaska, have not been her first little hop over Mount Orcad—even I am unable to do either thing in the columbia map. Maybe she is fitting herself with stronger wings and larger H. E. bomb racks. It really doesn't matter what has become of her. I say it doesn't matter, because she already has died several deaths, and another wouldn't faze her. On several occasions I have inked in her the words "I'm not here to nearly imitate remembrances. Each year in June she has passed out completely, never to appear again as quite the same as she did before." Her tened old carcass is dragged about the HBI almost until Christmas time, the subject of many an exultant but ill-advised memorial, until the intellect rushed through her eyes, how chickie her into action and she presents herself for the second semester, with new blood surgical in her veins. A cut has mired liver who is so many a how many a Dove may nurse? And suppose that the final demise allotted her by the Fates has come. Is not her soul still marching out? It may have been, as she whobbleds, whole months before her mural appearance? What of the new liberty in discussion of cities and lox-box lunch parties, in the columns of the esteemed Kanan, itself? Does anyone deem possible, even with the whispered words about camp politics, athletics, military, religion, rice, sex, and so on—dose those days when she considered themselves another under a setting-hon administration and the "Student Opinion" column open only to those who contended the trampling of the camp —B. Winegar Crone, '25. More Echoes of the Akgie Game The Campus Opinions and editorials appearing in recent issues of the Kansan about sports and sportmanship have been rather interesting, but disliked by many. One writer often we must undergo a deluge of Editor Daily Kansan: HOLEPROOF HOSIERY Nonchalantly magnifique, a bit of poise and self-assurance—custum in perfect harmony. A shade of hodgepodge of Hoistery. Sheer . . . a breath of Paris abuse and ridicule because of our lack of "sportmanship", by the lactic characterized little group that uses the word "Our Team". Their main ambition and aim in life is to have everybody yell, yell until they are harsite, to prove that they are not stiflers. If they are not stiflers, R Rahal school of Mount Oreon, and spend each day at the stadium, or the auditorium in case of bad weather. The trouble with the group who wants us to yell and scream, all at a given signal and handshown, is that they do not know what "Our Team" means. The team that we hire in championship means, "Our Team" is a highly specialized group of athletes, part of whom judule because of love of sports and of being able to contribute of the profit in it, which is carefully trained and groomed by an athletic director and certain of his minions, for the athletic director and coach to profit by the existing rule. As for sportmanship, the fellow who yells is not necessarily a good sport, but a very good measure of sportmanship. We do not mean by this that a student should keep his mouth tightly shut at the football games, but when he sees someone please, without praise or criticism. Then, perhaps, the team will get more buckling. At least it will be buckling that really means, some Lucile of Paris, famous color authority, selects the colors in *Joleproof Hosiery* to harmonize with the season's outstanding shades. By another spectator of the Aggie game. This is not meant as a denunciation of the team. It merely means: Let us do our own yelling, and think our own thoughts, without being hurt. We never criticize and find fault. School spirit and sportmanship never were and never will be harm of criticism, accusation, or plausible plot for more time. Read the Kansan want nds Sheer, silk to the top, picot edge . 1.95 Smart service weight, picot edgr 1.95 A HOT-Spark is very essential in cold weather. Are your points and coil in good shape? now is the time to have your battery inspected so you will not be delayed the first cold morning. Now is the time to change your differential and transmission to WINTER grease. TIRES and BATTERIES Call 1300 CARTER SERVICE PREPARE for Cold Weather OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVII Sunday, October 27, 1929. No. 38 ADELA HALE, President. A special meeting of Jay James will be held Monday afternoon at 4:30 in the room front of central Administration building. Pledging services for new students is scheduled for Wednesday. Crested Stationery JAY JANES: Fraternity - Sorority University Scal 50c and Up TWO STORES Plate Lunch 35c Sunday Noon and Evenings. Blue Mill Sandwich Shop FREE New Victor Records For Old For a limited time only we will allow ten cents credit for every Victor Record you bring to our store. We will accept All your old Victor Records, regardless of age, size, or type. We will give you new Victor Records in exchange for your old Victor Records. We will pay for a complete new selection of Victor Records for your choice, without the expenditure of a penny. One condition — They must be unbroken. Bell Music Store Everybody warms up to the "It girl". Now she talks—and what she says—and HOW! She'll capture your heart as the slang, plucky, lovable little shop-girl with the snappy chatter. 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