PAGE TWO FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1929 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEF WM. A. DAUGHERTY MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE MANN Bunday Editor JIM HAHLSTEIN Campus Editor WILLIAM MOORE Campus Editor WILLIAM MOORE Night Editor KATHERINE JOHNSON Bunday Editor DANIEL DUMMESWORTH Bunday Magazine Editor DANIEL DUMMESWORTH Chronicle Editor RACHEL CABOTTON Chronicle Editor RACHEL CABOTTON ADVERTISING MGR., MCT. **FLOYD NEBELSON** Assistant Aly, Mrc. *Maurice Clementine* Assistant Aly, Mrc. *Julie Roberts* District Assistant *Borriam Kennedy* District Assistant *Edith Johnson* District Assistant *Lester Sutherland* KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS Lawrence Mann Kathleen North Arthur Circle Betty Danniere Mary Ward William A. Dawberry Lekla Feldh Kelsey Clapper Marine Chevener Telephones Business Office K.U.65 News Room K.U.22 Night Connection 291K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin. Free of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple check. Mail to the address number at mailer@univer-sebastian.org or submit letter ser. 17, 1919, at the post at Lawrence Kannas, under the act of March 3, 1870. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1929 OUR OWN LECTURE COURSE Professors may be divided into two classes, those who demand fresh air at any expense in their classrooms, and those who don't have fresh air at all. The students, at the mercy of their instructors, get a sufficient variety of both in the course of their classes throughout a single day. Here is the fresh air friend. He comes into the class room, glances around in disgust, demands to know if every one in the room is not suffocating, and no matter how cold the day, orders every window in the place opened. During that class period students can only sit and freeze despite coat. Brave attempts to keep teeth from clattering and evidence of shivering from the instructor, who might think, if he noticed that they did not favor fresh air as much as he, or occupies most of the attention of the students during the period. Immediately after the refrigeration process may come one of suffocation. This instructor always has a cold and no wonder! He believes in saving every calorie of heat. Windows in his class room are closed carefully Attempts to keep away occupy the students of his classes. Needed: A campus thermostat. Of the two kinds the latter is probably the worst. Worst of all, however, is the succession, one after the other of the two types, the extreme following the other throughout the course of the day. Students, forced to live up to each professor's idea of comfort, endanger their health. If the University had a system of regulated heat and ventilation that was maintained throughout all the buildings the undesirable practice of each instructor regulating the heat in his class room to suit his own inclinations with little thought of the health of the students would be avoided. With the arrival of cold weather has come the nightly endurance contests to see whether you or your roommate will go to bed first on the cold sleeping porch. WE POINT WITH PRIDE Too long our worthy conquests have gone without reward; and while others may chain certain achievements after all it was at the instigation of a free press that students became aware of the needs of the Campus. When Raymond Nichols was an undergraduate his vigorous campaign in the interest of "Silent Seth", the library clock secured the running of this long silent gift. Sunday tennis was championed by the editorial columns and while a certain party may claim the honors of this and Sunday library hours, which were instaged last year, it was the ever watchful reporter who first saw the need for these and other changes. Apparently someone was not acquainted with the state laws regarding the correct way to hang doors and it was through the insistence of the editorial columns that the library door was eventually hung properly. And while speaking of the library—somewhat age the Kaman pointed out that there was undue noise in the library; recently quiet signs were placed in the reading rooms. Maintaining a policy which stands for equal rights for men and women, a short editorial recently appeared showing the partiality displayed by having the radio in the men's lounge of the Union building. It was moved to the main lounge this week. It was also through the hint published in this University organ: that the Memorial Union was opened on Sunday. Again we championed equal rights for all, and recently secured the promise of the athletic department to have three books at the game for selling tickets so that every one can be in their seats when the kick-off is made. While these are not nearly all, for it would take too much space to enumerate all of the achievements of the University Daily Kauna, we point with especial pride to our vigorous efforts to keep alive that laothose contemporary and campus radical, the Dove. If we are able to keep our contemporay from lying beneath the seal marked only by a cut glass (tomb stone our mission in this world will not be futile). And anyhow, we must be modest With the Jayhawk-K-Argile warfare over, the dams of women convening here next week should have a very quiet time of it. NOW WE CAN STUDY "Quiet. This Place Is for Study." Such is the pertinent reminder which greets a student as he enters the library, on a new sign standing in the front corridor. It is to be hoped that this gentle command will have good effect. It is time for some notion to be taken toward making the library less a social center and more a place to work. If a reminder is not sufficient, personal attention from library attendants will be required for particularly offensive students. At any rate, the appearance of the sign is evidence that the library administration are realizing the situation and are taking some steps to relieve it. Man riding with driver of an automobile. "Better look out, that can ahead might stop at that sign." And yet they call them signals. WHITE WASH "For if women did not have their men to laugh at it, they could not endure life," William Allen White declared in a recent address given before the New York Women's Press association. "Woman has laughed man from the jungles into the nake; she has giggled him from his naked beet into clothes," he added for emphasis. How true? Who cannot picture a primitive man and his 'laughing bride in the jungle?' She laughs and laughs until he, poor ignorant man, builds a house in order to escape from the noise. He rushes into his new invention, closes the door—and the experiment fails! He can hear her yet. And, as the sage has said, then woman giggled man from a state of cold nuity to a suit of clothes to keep him warm in the winter. Say, Mr. White, we need more giggles. Please ask the ladies to laugh a little louder because we still feel the cold when winter comes! John Dewey was seventy years old, Oct. 20. His life has been full of achievement, honor, and fame. "He is both by right of seniority and also American philosophers," says a writer in the Nation. He is known by right of esteem the dean of live to many men and women as a teacher; he has been a professor of philosophy at Columbia University since 1904, and before that time he served in the faculties of Michigan, Minnesota, and Chicago. He is known to more students as an author; he has written thirteen books, and his magazine articles are the most authoritative and widely read of the day. He has written books on psychology, philosophy, sociology, ethics, logic, and education. JOHN DEWEY Mr. Dewey was born in Burlington, Vt. He received an A.B. degree from Drinking in Belgium Goes Right Ahead When Liquor Law Enforcement Fails Bv GEORGE KENT Brussels...(UP)—Powerful groups of Belgian citizens have launched a protest against the light wines and beer production law effective here. United Press Staff Correspondent The essence of the protest is that drinking of hard liquor goes on pretty much as before the war, that the liquor is purveyed clandestinely. the university of Vermont in 1872, a Ph.D. from John Hopkins University in 1884, and LL.D. degrees from the Universities of Wisconsin and Vermont, and Pekin National University. It is safe and conservative to say that he has few rivals among Amorat can philologists. Campus Opinion --can learn to dance, by taking private lessons at --can learn to dance, by taking private lessons at Why Not Some Spirit? Editor Daily Kansan: "Why don't K, U, win their last game?" "Why don't the University get a worth while coach that will have enough football sense to show you how to play it," mentions tactics and perfectly perfect questions, such as these, are being heard from a bunch of scatter-brained, ninetypemaps who believe they "show it all" and think they could be better guarded—general than哈里斯 or Fisher. There wasn't a man on that football team last Saturday who didn't want to win as much, if not no-one. The teams in stadium—and yet students and others sit around and erase at some of the things the coach and team did. If some of these whistle-headed, fierce players would try setting a few facts, instead of taking the word of others and putting them into legible form to create more and more criticism, the University would be far better off than they were. When a team suffers defeat, the is the time when it needs backing out when it wins—and what is K. U doing? Nothing, but sitting back and crubbing. What do all of you may about betting behind the team, give them some money not backdidn't? How many all working for you—what are you doing? Richard Zimmerman Institute Will Attempt History of All America Mexico CIGY...The task of publishing a geography and history of all the Americas is to be one of the leading institutions in the American Institute of Geography and History. This ambitious and important work is expected to be completed within 2025. The institute will study the prehistory of the American, the archaeology, the history of the Colonial speech, and evauna in recent centuries. We will also include topography, geology, cartography, geomorphology, human geography, ethnography, and historic, biologic and economic地理。A Library of maps, books, and other data will be available in the institute's headquarter here. The new institution is to be of international usefulness in providing data on meteorological conditions for the design and operation of displaced boundary problems. Although much mapping has been done in the United States, only 48 per cent of the area has been topped by hydroelectric power. These map sheets were inadequately made and do not serve the purposes of agriculture, mining, the development of hydro-electric projects, sys- tems for electricity transmission and transmission of power today. In order to prevent counts, patrol officers are required to college authorize have 15-foot fences around the lower loadings of all fire encopes on dormitory buildings. The Ohio Union cafeteria has increased its efficiency by adding $1,000 worth of new equipment. A new kitchen and marmor surfaces have been installed. Better CAFETERIA in the Union Building Our Cooks are all Housewives whose aim is to prepare food as good as Your Mothers or Our Cooks The prosecutes principally from hotel and restaurant propellers, but includes a substantial liberal crime government maintain that since the prohibited prohibition has had been effected, detentions and crimes have - that the quality is inferior and often poisonous, and that hence both the government and consumer suffer. Prohibition first saw the downs in Belgium during the occupation, and was, in fact, a measure instituted by the German authorities. The Socialists who have ruled Belgium since then have retained the law an act of rebellion related to them has barely given over to industry as Belgium. The law permits the sale of beer wines and light spirits in restaurants and catering businesses, bakeshops, breweries, etc., while permitting them to sell in grocery shops although no such laws apply to restaurants or law, however, did not forbid the purchaser from going down the street to the next restaurant and buying another bottle. This very slight form of prohibition showed its flaws soon after the Germans decamped. It produced a large crown of spokeshouses operated much after the fashion of their American counterparts, and found ourselves in Antwerp, Brussels, Ostend, and other cities and resorts of Belgium. They operate behind delinquency store fronts, in bankhouses of apparently low-value enquiries, in upstairs rooms, and several have been behind elbows In cabinets and restaurants, in fact everywhere save the largest hotels and restaurants, the after dinner brandy or the before dinner highball can be obtained by the well known Traveler's Inn or arrive in旅馆 but it arrives. Now and then raids occur but they are gentle affairs. Conserver and correer are found but not very heavily, the officers are found and the low modified to permit them to serve liquors and brandishes during the dinner lobby, and it is probable that all of these events will be introduced and voted upon when the parliament meets this fall. Harmful European Moth Discovered in Florida Up to this time the European pine-shoot moth has never been recorded north of Washington, D. C. It was first reported in the United States later spread to the Middle Atlantic states and through the New England states to southern Canada. In the North it seems to continue southward, but it does not remain true, and for that reason it has not been a serious pest. In parts of Europe, however, it is very serious. It is fouled by its larvae, and should it get firmly established in the South because of the fact that the long growing season may enable it to develop four or five generations. Washington.—The European pine-shoet moth, first reported in the United States fifteen years ago, has been discovered in Florida. Plans for a constructive celebration on Armvie day on the campus of Texas A&M University have been previous celebrations, have been only mildistic holiday, and the peo Chances of Marrying For the Sweetest Girl You Know A Corsage or Box of Flowers from the Ward Flower Store 931 Mass. Phone 621 and Dying Are Computed Social Service New York—Your chances of marrying and dying within five years are higher with a bachelor of 25 years, statisticians of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Similarly a single young woman of 25 eyes has seven chances in a threetime contest, but she wins five years, but she has over six in a hundred of marrying and dying. A girl of 15 has the same chance of marrying and dying within five and one-half years as a woman of 35. This is because the younger girl has a much greater chance of marrying within the specified time, but also a much smaller number of dying within that period than the older woman. The probability of marrying and dying within a specified period is relatively small throughout life, but much smaller than the probability of marrying or dying within a specified period, the statistician pointed out. This is due in the fact that either the chances of dying are relatively small, as in the case of younger persons, or the chances of dying are small in the case of older persons. Latest World Language Has Mixture for Baso Paris, Oct. 25—(UP) A new sport of international language is being perfected in Paris and may soon become a rival of Europe. It is called "language games." Its adherents as the "universal tongue of peace." Occidental is said to be so simple that almost anybody can read it with understanding. The vocabulary of this new form of speech is a mixture of English and European languages, English, French, Italian, Spanish and German form the nucleus. The grammar is comparatively easy, there being no irregular verbs nor complicated conjugation; verbs are often bewildered in a wheel-boy. In the psychological tests given at the opening of school at Coe College, Cedar Espaida, Iowa, the results showed a higher mortality among the Freshman girls than the boys, and the cold of the two girls frigides the girls one girl but the medium of the fair sex was better by twenty points than that of the boys. Yale University spends $2 for every dollar that the students pay for tuition. Fellowships, scholarships, and loans were given to 1,200 more but last year university in this manner was $844,538. Faculty salaries have been increased this year as a result of the increase amount of money which the school receives. Yale University may borrow money without advancing any security. Touch Typewriting Enroll with us and be our skilled teachers help you ever on the difficult places in teaching your hobbies. Special attention classes for University LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kanns. YOU, TOO. Plain Tales From the Hill New Who Has Had Experience With The Navy? A sweet young bodybobby proposed to write an article for her feature writing class assignment on the teacher's scaffold at the idea. "You'd have had to be brought up by a General to write anything like that!" he pooled. Marion Rice Studio Phone 953 Over "Bells" "If it turns out good, we may go on the road with it," he enlisted. "Well, I was brought up by a Major," she replied timidly. They Were Theta's. Too Probably Have a Long Run One of the hopeful members of the Chance movement is giving for a part in "The Devil in the Choice," was gossiping about the He Was Comfortable Then "Yeah," drawled one of his bearers, "probably pursued by an indigent public." They Were Thea's, 160. Here's one for the believe-it-or-not, face. A model A roadster carried 88 women up Indiana street in high. One of the big and popular men of the faculty found difficulty in finding a comfortable seat at the PUI club. They had to stairs, and he was found on his knees talking to one of the women He hardly explained, however, that he had been a student at UCF. No Apple Polishers in This Class An instructor in the department of biometry confessed over a cup of arnine tea the other day why she knew she should do joke tests and had the joke in four years, although it's hard to believe she has haught that long if you judge by her sucker. The first joke she told was 2. this one: "They laughed when I spoke to the water in a perfect French and be came back with a little more. Then she waited for Joke No. 1, so she waited three years before she told another. Then, she nasserts, the three engineers in the class "practically smiled." But she did not touch the capabilities of engineers. Just Received by The man of the southern class at Washington State College this year is one of the most famous with their switch pockets just below the switch pocket. The women are in front of him. Insures a clear highway Scientist Finds Historic Doughnuts in Oklahoma Dr. E. B. Renault, who has just returned from a two-months' expedition to New Mexico and Oklahoma, wrote in *History*, made the discovery in caves near Kenton. This is the first time that traces of the old Mojave Desert were found. So far, heasant as Olkhonian, he stated. Among other relics be found in the caves were sardales, bone hounds and impala. The animals were also seeds, bones of animals eaten by the Basket Makers, bags of shelled corn, and a bag made of shrimp. The animal fossils were also seeds, bones of animals eaten by the Basket Makers, bags of shelled corn, and a bag made of shrimp. The animal fossils were also seeds, bones of animals eaten by the Basket Makers, bags of shelv NEW KLAXON HORN Auto Electric Co. 709 N. H. Insures a clear highway Phone 406 Denver, Co., Three doughnut-like cakes, with the familiar "boughnut" hole in the center, have been used to make Basket Maker Indices. The cakes represent food of Indians who inhabited the South-west in prehistoric times before the Pueblo came to inhabit it, and making of making pottery was discovered. Kelowna Service Sold on easy monthly payments. Typewriters rented and repaired. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 737 Mass. St. Phone 548 New Bostonian Oxford$ 7.50 and $10 why didn't you check your hat?" "Huh! Think I'd risk this new Dobbs out of my sight?" Fall Blocks and Colors $8 Others $5 to $10 where Society Brand Clothes are sold