PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS · FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1920 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEF WM. A DAUGHERTY Associate Editors MANAGING EDITOR | LAWRENCE MAN | New York, NY | Makes Up Editor | Mary Wurst Compares Editor | Charlie Moore Hires Editor | Michael Monroe Night Editor | Katherine Ulmermann Suggests Editor | Daniel Chen Suggests Magazine Editor | Duncan Stevens Exchange Editor | Margaret Cohen Exchange Editor | Margo Cohen ADVERTISING MGR... FLOYD NELSON Assistant Adm. Mar., Merrill Carever Assistant Adm. Mar., Merrill Carever Barbara Kennedy District Administrator Kiddie McMorrow KANSAN BOARD MEMBERS Lawrence Mann Katherine Borth Douglas McMurray Mary Wurt William A. Daugherty Linda Keddell James W. Smith Michael L. Moore Business Office K.U. 6 News Room K.U. 21 Night Connection 2761K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Free of the Juju's Subscriptions price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Simple price, be each. Entered as second deposit only. Office at Lawrence Kanna, under the act of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1929 A DAY OF WELCOME Strangers will occupy our downy cots on the sleeping porch tonight. The chances are that we will sleep downstairs on the davernport, unless some one else gets there first. Extra silverware will have to be borrowed from the neighbors at breakfast tomorrow. Fedges spent the day cleaning up the shack, or they should have. For the University has company this week-end. The notorious K-Aggees are not the only guests, either. Today and tomorrow, the University is host to the annual Kauai Editors' conference, business school instructors, Kansas music teachers, and our Dads. Incidentally, the K-Aggies will be here too, bringing their uncutthorde of supporters. So there are going to be some 'ull houses during the next two nights. Plenty of marty hosts will have to sleep on the floor, if at all. But we don't mind that. We enjoy being hosts, Welcome to you all, editions, teachers, dads, and even K-Agples. We'll sleep next week. DAD THE HONOR GUEST The 'results of the Aggie rules demonstrated the tendencies of economic forces to reach an equilibrium. The hatters have gained what the barbers are losing. New friends are fine, but after all old friends are best. One of our oldest friends is to be our honor guest tomorrow. There is never a prouder day in the year than that one which is set aside for the bringing down of our fathers to show off to the Alna Mater. If your own dad cannot be here it is up to you to show the others the best time possible in tribute to yours. It is good to see him shouting himself hoarse at the football game, listening to the entertainment at the banquet and viewing the sights of the campus. It is not necessary to offer a prize as an inducement to bring him to the banquet. It is more than worth the hat you went without to buy the tickets. At that is a more flash in the pan to what we should like to do for him. WOMEN AND WAR Oh! For those good old days. Days when men were men and women were women. Those days are gone, and evidently gone forever. It used to be, during war-time, the men went forth to battle and the women stayed at home, taking care of the children, tilling the soil and harvesting the crops. Now what do we have? Warfare, as executed by Kansas and the K-Aggges, finds the men trotting right along with the men to the field of battle. It finds them attempting the same deeds which the men accomplish, and finds them suffering the same consequences for the most part, which those certain unfortunate men suffer. Not satisfied with gaining woman suffrage, and equality with men in the business world, they also think they should be permitted to fight along with the men. This idea tends to break down the morale of the fighting soldiers, for no longer can they return from the battlefields to their homes, and find the women waiting to greet them, with open arms and tear-stained faces. No, a very different scene greets the returning warriors. The K. U. women should have stayed away from Aggieville! MEN, STUDENTS, AND ANIMALS When Conflusus opined that "man differs from animal only a little," most men throw that little away" he was not muking an extenction of University students. For one thing, there probably were the students in his day, and if there had been any, his own proposal would have been on his肩. For he was referring to the supposition that men have minds, and to the fact that most men do not make much use of them. And University students are no exception in this. Use of the mind involves "thinking things out," which is hard work. It is true, however, that University students receive more thought stimuli in general than any other particular group. Class work is not always of that nature; more often it is a mechanical role process, with the instructor hearing the instructions and the other stimuli are provided, interventions, for example Another factor which has provided considerable mental exercise in the past, and promises to do this year, is something overlooked by the majority of students, the Y. W. C. A. and the Y. M. C. A. forums, held during the noon hours once a week, with lunchroom optional, these events present prominent authorities in the field of religions, economic, and social questions. Not bound by formalities, these speakers pause for questions from the crowd. Every one participates. It is not a one-man affair, like a classroom. Dr. Burris Jenlins, of Kansas City, Mn., was the speaker at the first forum last week. A capacity crowd attended, and considerable interest was displayed. The next forum will be held Oct. 25. The success of the series will be measured, not by the size of the crowds, but in the degree that those who attend distinguish themselves from the animals observed by Confucius. NOTHING DONE FOR INDIANS With Haskell Institute, the nation's largest Indian school, situated in such proximity to the University, it is difficult for University students to realize that the United States has not in general played fairly with the Indians. But only a little contemplation is required to bring to mind the truth that, for years the government has been shoving the Indians to one side as much as possible, giving there nice little play pans of land good for nothing else. It is not entirely unknown, also, that advantage of all kinds has been taken of an ignorant people when Fate brought forth riches from seemingly worthless land. President Hoover named noted men to behead the department of Indian affairs. Six months later little can be observed to improve the situation. The admittedly had conditions existing on March 4 must still exist. It is pertinent to ask how much longer must the original Americans await the constitutional privileges granted to peoples of foreign extraction. **TODAY-- GEORGE WALSH in a football thief from the story"** *Minutes To Go* "entitled 'THE KICKOFF'." Also Collec classic. GOMORROW - CULLEN LAWREN and Peggy Monogrammett FIGHTING FAILURE "Alba" Also Albert Vaughn in "The Wild Irish Dog" and Fox Ellen Many Months Required to Reach Lost Mayan Cities Sighted by Lindbergh Washington, Oct. 18 - In discovering four ruined Maya cities dotted on the great unexplored area of the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico, the airline flights of Col. and Mrs. Charles Lindbergh and Carnegie Institute archaeologists have given a better conception of the line of growth of the ancient city. The newly discovered cities lie in a line stretching northwestward from the Old Empire regions of the Maya, located largely in what is now the state of Guatemala. The capital city of the empire is Guatemala City. --in makes that fit particular feet— --in makes that fit particular feet— Plain Tales From the Hill And He's Married! Puttin' On Dawg At the K Club meeting last night, members were discussing the time for the next meeting. The following Monday was suggested. One man objected because of fraternity meetings. Some one then suggested Teresa Giel in Narration and Description class: I "feel just like a little fox terrier" when at a *St. Bernard* I try to eat it, but the subjects given us in this class." Mr. Stutesman, the proprietor of "Stutes" says he isn't afraid of invading cow college. We wouldn't be either if we had a haircut like him. No one believes anything they see today, a lecturer told a group the other night. That's all right then. He's still right, with shaved heads still have hair. Roland Logan "poke up. "No, can't have it Tuesday—sorority meetings that night." The subject chosen by the Midwest debate conference for men's debates this year is the issue of national disarmament should adopt a policy of national disarmament." The conference formulated the following question: "What does it mean that the chain store is an evil?" The apparent inactivity of some cf the famous flying squadron Friday morning was probably due to extra-victimry the last few nights. As a remedy for the malady of sleeping in class we suggest that there be a good live lecture of material not repeated verbatim from The newly found ruins connect the old area with the New Empire relic site, the Pleasant Hill peninsula. Chichen Itza is the outset of understanding example of this New Era. Flying over uncovered dense tropical jungles, the Lindbergh party sighted three rhinued cities definitely determined to be "new." A fourth city, one of the largest found may be a new discovery, but it may prove to be one seen by Dr. Thomas Gansen some years in the vicinity of Lake Baikal. Many months and perhaps years will be required to investigate and explore the cities located from the air, and therefore it is important to extend from the enveloping vegetation, there will be available a better idea of the spread of the Maya, who more than once built primitive simplicity to a complex state with highly developed religion, government and monumental architecture. How and when the center of the Maya was occupied by the New Empireria to the New Empire has been one of the unanswered questions. The connecting cities now will probably supply the archeology. The four discovered ruins are located in flat country. From the air the raised temple mounds could be seen twenty miles away in some cases, and they feature about a hundred and fifty feet to shroud the glistening white stones with which time has dealt severely. Only by flying low over the area can you see the ruins; the ceilings be seen and studios from the speeding plane. CHOICE CUT FLOWERS Of the three cities discovered in Quintana Roo during the most fruitful fourth day flight, two are located sufficiently near lakes to allow early exploration by parties transported by boat. The Lake Bacaan is probably more extended in area than the others. The last city discovered and the one near Whitcombs Greenhouse Phone 275 Ninth at Tenn. St. FOR COLLEGE WOMEN est the coastal rules of Tulum is the least accessible of the three due to the absence of water near it on which an airplane might land. "Wilbur Coons" "Johansen Bros." "Enna Jetticks" Correct Footwear Everwear Hosiery We feature extreme sizes and widths Everwear Hosiery Trudel's solution was simple: He walked to the green, tipped the cup against the side of the cun and claimed the par-five hole in two. After making a tee shot Trudel discovered the ball clung to the face of his club, attached by a piece of chewing gum. The rules say a ball once in play may not be touched by player's hands until it is in the cup. Air travel will become a routine part of the Carnegie Institution's archaeological work in the Maya region. The program also light amplifiant airplane and equipment, Doctor Kidder indicated on his return to Washington. With the use of Pan-American Airways buses at the airport, this year program of detailed aerial exploration could be carried out for about $50,000 Col. Liebinger will act as an adviser to the archaeologists with a geometrical aspects of the work. The flights over Coha on the fourth and fifth days of the Joint Carnegie Airways exploration began. The way explorations were of historical interest because the city has been seen before by both the pilots this time. In 1932 Dodier Kidder and a companion, J. Eric Thompson, new of the Field Museum, arrived in February to visit the University of February when Col Lindenborough located it during a Pan-American Airways trail blasting flight that it seen again Chewing Gum Gives Ex-Mayor Hole in Two Manchester, N. H., —(UP) —Ex-Mayor George E. Truel, ardol golfer, has given the rules committee to mull over during the winter. We Remodel - Reline - Repair Clean and Press both Ladies and Gentlemen SCHULTE THE TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Service with a Saving 747 Mass. Fight Jayhawks Fight Be there and help Kansas win their first big home game. After the game visit our ountain and luncheonette. Meet" "Where Students Always Special for October OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVII Friday, October 18, 1929 No. 31 U. BAND: 75c All members of the K. U. band will meet prominently at 9:30 each day, presiding morning, Oct. 19, at the auditorium, with instruments and in full costumes. J. C. McCANLES, Director. Lanchoe for Purple Popsters will be given at the University edifice Saturday, Oct. 19. Women with last names beginning with A through M are to come at 11:00 o'clock; names from N through E at 11:45. Bring tickets for game, and be in full costume. **ADELA BALE, President.** --- JAY JANE LUNCHEON: ACTIVITY BOOK: The activity book must accompany the activity ticket to all football games. ATHLETIC OFFICE. AGNES HUSBAND, Director. VOMEN'S GLEE CLUB: Women's club will sing at the Doo's day banquet Saturday night. Those not attending the banquet will meet on the first floor of the Union Building on Tuesday. JAY JANES; Mass. at 14th Check in all money and tickets for Varnity dance not later than 12 *clock* Saturday, at the business office. The Red Band will play at the rally at the Auditorium at 7:50 this evening. Members are to come with instruments, and in uniform without capes. Any members of the Blue Band who wish to play at this time may do so. J. C. McCANLES, Director. RED BAND: All Jay James are to meet at the Auditorium for the rally at 7:30 sharp this evening. ADDELA HALE, President. Turner's Outlet Store There is nothing like studying in an easy chair for a hard quiz. You are always welcome to come in and inspect our stock. Study in An Easy Chair Phone 431 928 Mass. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWKS LOOKING FOR "AGGIE MEAT" After the game there'll be lots of "Aggie" money spent here by Jayhawkers for Dobbs Hats Society Brand Clothes and Bostonian Shoes Go in and win Kansas! Cleaned - Pressed - Delivered Suits -- Top Coats Condensed Official Statement THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK Lawrence. Kansas At the close of business, Oct. 4, 1929 RESOURCES Loans and Discounts U. S. Bonds (secure circulation) Relieves Company Fiatures and Fixtures, and Risk Deposit Vault QUICK ASSETS $1,278,941.11 100.000.00 46.500.00 Cash: due from Banks and U. S. Treasurer $748,271,916 Banking services grants $109,531,476 Liberty Bank (at market price) $111,823,066 TOTAL 1,252,738.66 $2,678,179.77 LIABILITIES Capital Surplus and Profits Reserved for Taxes, Interest and Contingent Fund Circulation Dividend Checks Outstanding Deposits Deposits $ 100,000.00 159,060.04 26,500.00 98,550.00 57.20 $ 204,123.52 Above statement is correct 57.20 2.284.012.53 2.294.012.53 GEO. W. KUHNE. Cashier.