PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1923 24. 26 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CRJFF WM. A. DAUGHERTY Chelsea Holmes MANAGER EDITOR LAWRENCE MANN MASTER EDITOR LANCE FELKIN SUPER Editor CLEA JOHNSON SUPER Editor CLEA JOHNSON SUPER Editor CLEA JOHNSON Robert Collection Editor ROBERT COLLINS Campus Editor WILLIAM MURRAY Campus Editor WILLIAM MURRAY Alumni Editor ERIK KENNEDY Alumni Editor ERIK KENNEDY ADVERTISING MARR. FLOYD NESSON Assistant Adm. Marr. Maurice Clementevue Assistant Adm. Marr. Richard Kennett District Assistant Barbara Kennedy District Assistant Eddie McKenzie KANSAN BOARD MLMBERS Lawrence Mann Katherine Borch Arthur Circle Betty Diamonte Mary Sawyer William A. Dungherty Edwin Edelman Maurice Leiter Lester Shuster Maurice Cleverman Business Office K, U, 66 News Room K, U, 25 Night Connection 2101K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Oklahoma, in The Free of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $1.00 per year, payable in advance. Single online, be each. Entered in receipt only. Registered at Lawrence University at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1878. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1929 PAY HERE The first thing a person sees on entering the Memorial Union building is a desk at the end of the hull bearing a sign "Pay Subscriptions Here." On special occasions, as when University fees are being paid, another desk is placed just inside the door and placarded with pay signs. The individual at the desk scrubinizes everyone who enters t. door. If a donation is in hand, well and good; if not, well, they ought to be one in-hand or—so it seems. At least, the atmosphere is not as inviting as it might be. With such a condition an this existing the Union operating committee is wondering why the project fails to "go over." They ask different students on the campus for opinions, but these students do not give their honest opinion because they have gone to the place, see what is to be seen there, and left with a feeling that they were not wanted. What person can feel at ease in a place where the everlasting plan, "Pay here" shouts from placards in every corner? It is true that money is needed to run the Memorial Union, but why plead for money every time a student enters the building? Would the operating committee use the same tactics in private business? They would not. The Union will be a success in time if the "pay here" atmosphere is taken away, and one of brotherhood and good fellowship takes its place. Considering the type of movies usually shown in downtown theater on week-ends, most students wish the nightshift parade could be held at the first of the week. HARK! What means this recurrent hum over Oread in the afternoons? What means this familiar buzz of the airplane winging through the evening dusk from day to day? It means the beginning of actual flying in conjunction with the aerialcraft branch of the School of Engineering and Architecture. The student flyers are from K. U., but the planes are foreign, coming into Lawrence as a commercial enterprise to carry on flying instruction courses for airminded Oread. Venturing, even pioneering, in the field of college aeronautics, the University is actually launched in advance toward that which should make Kansas the nation's air center. Yet student飞弹 is but a mere pebble in the mountain of rock to be moved by the University in fully developing the field. Looking abend to what should be, K. U. is seen as the pioneer air school of the west equipped with its own airport and its own fleet of planes for instructional as well as experimental purposes. On the staff of the aeronautical faculty, are specialists in the field, specialists who delive into the mechanics and physics of nerial navigation to perfect what is now an infant project. Out of the University, as has come most of the deeper contributions of science, will come the discoveries of aeronautical advancement. While yet in its infancy, the branch here has an opportune time to obtain efficient planes for the initial experiments toward aerial, transport advancement. In the field today, it is a lamented fact that the actual operation side and the production side are divided. Seldom does the man who design the plane and invents the improvements in accordance with the laws of physics ever sit in the cockpit and test the practicality of his ideas. When the production and operation sides of aeronautical engineering begin to interact, the two sided man college will encounter which the University hopes to attain, will come into his own in the paths of the air. Will that drone of motor and propelier increase as Oread grows older? Will next year find the University faecilities keeping pace with the "brain child of the age"? Should not the University of Kansas be entitled to tert in rank as an air college? "Straight Starts Preparations for Organizing Staff"-headline in Kansan. Evidently there isn't going to be anything crooked about the Jaya hawker this year. A BABE-LESS WORLD SERIES Chicago, press-tainted. Chicago holds the lineback today on the homeown Cube compete with the Philadelphi Athletics for the great American past-time honors in the first game of the World Series. And the big show is being staged without a Babe Rath-alk, to the astounded baseball world, which has followed the hard-biting Bombino in his spotlight role during the last several years. Yet, curious to note, another figure, not a hard-hitting,职十 worshipped diamond king, but a much inflicted manager, Connie Mack, holds the favoritism of the hordebord moth. Connie, after 15 years' absence from World Series competition, is lack in the arena to display his managerial strategy. And curiously enough, Connie Mack, veteran of baseball, comes into his own today to redeem an inglorious record gained when, in 1914, his team bumped into four straight defeats at the hands of the Boston Bruves. Now, he dominates the theme song of the World Series production. Connie Mack is the wizard behind the scenes, the man who pulls the strings, the general who is pitting experience and educational hardships to attain a favorable outcome on the 120-foot square. Interesting from the viewpoint of Chicago, that team too is living down an unfavorable record. The last time the "Windy City"s"representatives entertained the World Series fam, an afternoon arose when it was discovered that the Cubs had sold out to the Cincinnati Reds "for a consideration." Now both records have been redenured atainness by the march of time. As a whole, both teams won the public favor as they battled through the season to become pennant winners of their respective leagues. Today the radio, the press wires, the barber shop conversations, will center about what is going on in Chicago—and the Bambino will sit in the press box to turn out syndicate comment on a "Babe-less World Series." News item—The department of building and grounds is back at its old sport of moving the stadium fence. In a rather irreversely jocular mood, The Kansas Sunday mildly queried as to the fate of its apparently dormant enemy and friend, The Dove. The Kansas is serious in this matter. It hopes that the Dove, like its early forerunner, the sacred Phoenix of pagan Egypt, merely has been consumed by the fire of its own making, and will subsequently spring from its own ashes with vigorous rejuvenation. The campus needs The Dove. From its peaceful attacks the University student often finds a needed and vigorous source of thought stimulus. It is not that the individual always finds views or opinions that are in accord with his own, nor should they be, but The Dove is good barometer of certain reactions which are needed on the campus for the thinking student. FROM ITS OWN ASHES? For the past four or five years The Personalities of Early History of State and University Linked Closely Together Four thousand students each year wander around 100 acres of University Park, where they take classes in $3,000,000 worth of buildings. Next week with the delicacy of Robinson park, we suddenly realize that our university is arium. There is an awakening that we know little about the personalities of our students. On his way to the gold rush of 1849, Charles Robinson, a new England doctor camped on Mount Olive. Already taken by his friends when he returned to New England, he was still interested in the colonization of Robinson Formerly Owned Campus when agitation started as *t*, whether Kansas would be a free *o* Dove has provided an encouraging source of inspiration. It has received national attention for some of its statements. The question of the right or wrong of its views is of little consequence—but the question of whether students are content to sail nearly on, not giving a thought to things about them—is more than of "some consequence"—it is alarming. And if the silence of The Dove is my criterion, such is the case. The Dove cannot die. Or if it does, then some new sheet, dedicated to free expression of thought and belief, will rise in its place. People will always think, and to think is to doubt. To give public expression to these doubts is not only a blessing but an accelerator of progress and enlightenment. The University needs the Dove. Fortunately, those who swear at us usually have the least influence with the Almighty. PRISON OUTBREAKS The number of prison outbreaks which have occurred in various parts of the United States in the past two months, is not only surprising but genuinely alarming. Until more thorough investigation has been made, it is difficult to say what is the cause of the most recent. But in the more general aspect, it is safe to say that serious defects in the organization and direction of the prisons have been contributory causes, and that something vital is lacking or is responsible for these violent outbreaks. In the government of an institution of the nature of a prison, where antagonism, prejudice, hate, suspicion and numberless other evil are found at their worst, necessary precaution must be taken to promote harmony, fraternity and restraint. Harsh treatment, poor or insufficient food, absence of recreation, bad living conditions and indifference, may breed discontent or ill-feeling which will ultimately grow into open rebellion. Inmates obviously have been brought to prison from environment which, if not hostile, is at least abnormal. And to thrust them again into an influence which is abnormal at best, is merely to find them a new home under similar conditions. Thus it falls upon the government of the prison to provide the best and most helpful surroundings of which it is capable, and produce harmony within the individual and about him. Send the Kansan home. SUITING YOU That's By Business SCHULZ THE TAILO 30c Special Meal Evenings Well Balanced Many are pleased with it. Why not try it? a slave state, Mr. Robinson was sent here as an agent for the Massachusetts home rear the home of Prot, W. C. Stevens, Just as John Brown led the fighting forces, Mr. Robinson led but don't run" anti-slavery men. A. A. Lawrence Financed Founding Another personality closely connected to Lawrence, for whom the town is named. On condition that Kannan was invited, he said the school would be in a town for him, he financed the founding of the University. The first chancellor, Rev. R. W. O'Fallon worked for two years without a job before his passing of severe verity. It had failed as a Presbyterian school, but under his leadership a new curriculum was developed. John Fraser Played Big Part As first governor of Kansas he vetoed a bill to have the state university founded at Marathon. Then he led the effort to move the university which he owned, in exchange for some other property. He served as temporary chairman on the first board of re-organization. An aggressive determination was characteristic of the second chancellor, John Fraser, who came to Kuwait as a student. He's forceful. His forceful obtained legislative help which had seemed impossible to get. Fraser hall is named New Cafeteria in Union Building The founding of the University of Kansas is closely linked with state and Lawrence history. The early personalities of the one belong to the James Marvin was the third chancellor, and was followed by J. H. Lippincott, Snow and Frank Strong, who served for 18 years before Dr. E. H. Lindley took charge for Marvin hall, where he worked as son of James Marvin. Frank Marvin was a professor in the School of Engineering. Light Metal Foreseen As Aircraft Me Pittsburgh — Beryllium, a light metal now worth $200 a pound, is likely to find commercial utilization by the company W. H. Gillen, director of the Battelle Memorial Institute, Columbus, Ohio, predicted in a report to the Ameri- Although now in the rare metal class, beryllium, because of its light weight, only a third that of alumina decreases in the weight of aircraft. Novitiate not Aroused by "Gabriel's Trumpet" Los Angeles, Oct. 7—(UP)—The "seven tales of Galeas the trumpet" never sounded to summon Willa Campbell from a tromble tomb where for four years her corpure lay alongside those seven wipers. But when she met whether the 16-year-old girl, mollitate in a mystic order whose tements in a tortured body have been gained by use of weird animal sacrifices, was a martyr to some bizarre rife of the cult. She was consigned to the darker side of life, and her body had been preserved with ice and spice for months in the belief she was a saint. The body of Miss Rhoena, who died on New Year's eve, 1925, was taken by her husband to a nursing home of her step-parent's home yesterday. In another casket were the bodies of seven puppies, which, in the symbolism of the cult, represented the seven sisters of her late mother to proclaim the murn of her resurrection. Authorities believe the girl may have been sacrificed to test the resurrection belief of "the divine order of her soul." The step-parents, who adopted the girl in Portland, Orca, when she was two years old, said she died of an unicured tooth, but admitted the doctor had made the diagnosis. Mrs. Mc, and Mrs. William Rhoads, were held as material witnesses. 'Automobile Dumbwaiter' Solves Parking Problems East Pittsburgh, Pa... An automobile dombwainter is the newest suggestion for solviet the parking problem in urban areas. As a house engineer today, the car is driven onto a platform, a button is pressed, and the car is moved to an empty platform appears for the next car. When the owner wishes to retrieve the car, he can drive to the parking area. The car is immediately delivered to him at ground level, ready to be driven away. Occupying as much space as a car would be impossible to build in any capacity desired. FRATERNITY RINGS Some new heavy weight stone cut rings. Suitable for crests—just received. $5.00 to $25.00 Swimming Caps by Goodrich Rubber Co. 50c-60c-75c 85c - $1.00 Now 1/3 discount Why Walk? Why wear out shoe leather by walking when you can rent a car to ride in at a very low cost? Call 433 Call 434 During the week we have extremely low prices on all models of cars. See us about special rates on long drives. RENT-A-FORD 916 Massachusetts OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol.XXI Tuesday, October 4, 1929. No. 22 ATL UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: All-University convention will be held in the Auditorium at 10'30'clock a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 9, Dr. F., W. Blackburn will speak on "The Early History of the Christian Church." COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: The Compton公馆 Club will hold a business meeting at 7:45 p. m. Westwednesday, Oct. 9. BOH MYERS, President. WOMEN'S RIFLE TEAM: ROTANY CLUR: EL ATENEO: MYRON PEYTON, President. Tryouts for El Atencio, K. U. Spanish Club, will be held on Thursday, Oct. 10, at 4:30 p. m. in room 113 east administration building. Prospective members please give names to Recurlo Tugade or to their Spanish instructor. CL ATENEO: There will be an important meeting of the Botany club Tuesday, Oct. 8, at 7:30 p.m. m. at 1212 Louisiana street. All members are to be present. K11 K11 MEETING: El Alvarez se remira en orden de la tarde, la primera del día, jueves, lo de octubre a la cuatro y media de la tarde, en un mail al 109 Admite- **Nombre:** *Mariana* **Domicilio:** *Cortes de Valencia*, España **Fecha:** *2024-10-17* PEN AND SCROLL: There will be a Ku Ku meeting Tuesday night at 7:20 in room 200 Frozen hall, BOB CARLINGHOUSE, President. Pen and Scroll will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in room 213 Fraser hall. ALEX BERTSEPT, JR., President. it was stated, and installed in old or new buildings. The first attempt at an all-University Dad's day at Marquette has been set for Nov. 18. The Mar- ketsu will climax a tentative program Remodeling, relining, repairing, cleaning and pressing with snappy service. YOU MUST like our work. SCHUCH YO THE TILOR 917 Mass. St. The Best Abridged Dictionary— WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE Webster's New International Recommended by the English Department of the University of Kansas See It at Your College Bookstore or Writer for information on the bookstore's website. A Short Call to Accurate Information — here is a companion for your hours of reading and daily work. You will be in need of time you could use. A wealth of readily information on 100,000 facts with definitions, ephemeral, pronunciation and use in its 1,256 pages, 7,100 illustrations. Includes dictionaries of linguoy and geography as well as general terms of language. G. & C. MERRIAM COMPANY Springfield, Mass. --- 75th Anniversary Celebration, Oct. 10-11-12 In Stage Coach Days men's clothes were necessarily built for wear and not for appearance Now-a-days "It's the cut of your clothes that counts" and an extra pair of trousers doubles the wear. Society Brand Suits with two trousers— $50