PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Puncher of THE UNIVERSITY OF UNSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF WM. A. DAUGHERTY CHEMISTRY TEAM MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE MANN John McInally Make Up Editor Lily Wardley Writing Assistant Mary Crawford Sport Editor Kathleen Brown Kourtney Brown Alumni Editor Richard Zimmermann Alumni Editor Richard Zimmermann Science Editor Mary Barrman Science Editor Mary Barrman ADVERTISING MGR. FLOYD NELSON Assistant Adv. Mgr. Marion Carewenger Assistant Acquisition Manager District Assistant Barbara Kennedy Edison Assistant Barbara Kennedy Circulation Manager Lester Salter Telephone Business Office K. U. 50 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 2701K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, 11 days in the department of Journalism of the University of Washington, the Front of the Department of Journalism. Subscription prices, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, for each season. Subscription fee for the entire season ber 17, 1895 at the post office at Lawrence Kauai, under the act of March 3, 1872. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1929 FOR BETTER RELATIONS Ramsay, MacDonald is coming to America, not simply to work on the question of cruiser strength, but in an endeavor to achieve closer understanding between Great Britain and the United States. As prime minister of Great Britain, not as the Labor prime minister, not as the leader of a political party, he will attempt to narrow the Atlantic. The principal questions to be taken up with the government at Washington are the preparation for the proposed five power naval conference, the cruiser problem, and the "I'm Alone" case. Prohibition of extreme measures against fleeing craft may be considered and it is hoped by the British that the question of freedom of the seas will come up. The general message of the prime minister is to stress peace and betterment of general relations. He seeks personal contacts in solving international problems between these two great powers of the world. If the two nations can meet each other half way, great things may be accomplished. ONE OF THE LITTLE THINGS From the number of dramatic assis- pants appearing for tryouts, the Dramatic club should be able to put on some good mob scenes this year. A prominent citizen of Lawrence recently had occasion to call a couple of organized houses on the Hill by telephone. At the first, after a very pronounced walk a more or less disgruntled voice announced the name of the house. The caller named the person to whom he wished to speak and heard the name shouted up and down the hall in an irritate voice. "He's not in" was the next retort, and the receiver was slammed up. Heitstätig, the citizen called the next house. Here he was greeted promptly by a cheerful voice, and while in this case also the party desired was not located, the individual answering the telephone made every effort to reach him. He takes a message, or to have the individual call when he returned. It all happened within a space of 10 minutes. Each organization made an impression on that man's mind that will be hard to erase or change—one very favorable, the other the opposite. The same thing happens many times a day. Many people come into contact with organized houses by telephone, and each gets his opinion of the organization by the way in which the call is handled. It's just one of the little things which may grow big. Lawrence anniversary celebration plans are being held up because no one can be found with the necessary gobling ability to handle the ox team in the parade. Many men would nominate their wives for the job. TEN YEARS AGO When agitation started among the students in 1919 to erect some sort of memorial to the K. U, heroes of the war, a committee was selected to study the situation and make a report on the general feeling toward the project and to report the type of memorial which would satisfy all concern. After interviewing most of the students on the campus and many prominent alumni and faculty, it was found that there were two distinct groups. The first of these wanted a memorial that would be a literal monument. A tower seemed to them to be the fitting thing. The other group felt that something useful to the campus should be built. Members of this second group divided into two classes, one calling for a stadium and the other for something that did not portain to athletics. In time the Memorial Union building was suggested. It immediately satisfied these people as the thing most needed on the campus. After a study of the situation and inquiry into what was being done in other schools over the country, it was decided to build both a stadium and a Union building as a war memorial. One million dollars was the amount of money necessary to carry the dream to realization. Today the stadium and the incomplete Memorial Union building stand as evidence of what students of other years have done. BEYOND THE HORIZON Annual news item “Fall fashion decrease long skirts.” Just save that story. It will be just as good next year. Two minutes' walk up the Hill . . . Snow hill, Fower pots, Chemistry, Administration, Prasse, Robinson gymmium . . . Magnificent structures housing opportunity, housing growth, development . . . A drive around Ad . . . a view over well-kept athletic fields, Potter lakes, the Fines and Marvin grove . . . the University a world within itself. Then, through the large open spaces between Marvin hall and the Auditorium, one may gaze on beyond . . . a white ribbon of a roof winding through a fertile valley . . . across the Wakarua and into the distant hills. Or look to the north . . . industry . . . radio tower stretching toward the sky . . . railroad following the river's banks . . . activity. And, in any direction, in the distance lies the horizon, hiding other world's beyond . . . worlds of teeming cities, farms and ranches, the ocean, ships and foreign hands. Small, then is our campus world—a transient world where students are for the moment, and then pass on beyond the horizon into the other greater worlds. Our campus world is a beautiful world and happy, but filled with trivialities. For those whose vision reaches out beyond the horizon lies the task of sorting the wheat from the chaff of petty things. And they, passing on to greater worlds, may sow the wheat of campus experience upon the fortile fields of later endeavors, to reap the good life in the end. "Yearbook Installs System." Kansan headline. Well, it probably needs one, but we bet that it is just another Jayhawker publicity scheme. First it was Mr. Sinclair, and new it's Mr. Full. POOR MR. FALL Mr. Sinclair told them it wasn't to keep him in jail; he even told President Howe. He's told them why they still don't do something about it. And now they are talking about trying Mr. Fall. And he's told them too, and so has his doctor told them, that he doesn't feel well. His doctor says that even though he looks pretty well he doesn't feel well, and it will just practically make him terribly sick if he had to be tried. Worrying for seven years about being tried has been very hard indeed on his mind, but they're going to try him, and they aren't going to put it off very much longer. That's just what they say. It does seem so unkind. Headline: "U. S. Ahead in Number of Accidental Deaths:" America First. "Boys who go to college, even when they go with the assistance of borrowed money, are in need of the proper use of formal dress a profitable investment for a life career." — Educational comment in the Kansas State Journal. HOW ABOUT RENTING 'EM? The cause of the above outlawed lie in the assertion of Dr. James E. Cox of Duery学院, Springfield, Mo, that learning to wear a dress suit should Snow Zacca Club meets this evening at 8:00 a.m in room 304 Snow Mall. All members are urged to be present for the meeting (HCAI HASEY, CAISM). SHOW ZOOLOGY CLUB OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. VII, 2014 Thursday, October 3, 1929 No. 18 The first meeting of Rai Sigmis P will be held at 7 o'clock this evening in room 290 Fraser hall. There will be no other meeting on Thursday, the WARNINGSTATE, Secretary. Kappa Phi will meet at Myers hall at 7 o'clock this evening. A members and new women are invited to attend. Publicity chairman. KAPPA PHI: EL ATENEO: La junta directiva del Attenue reunitra mamana a las dos y media de la tarea en la numa mero 113, E. Administration. DEVIDENT: PEDRO DEVIDENTE MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVES: Petitions to fill vacancies of vice president, college representative and School of Education representative in the Men's Student Council must be in the hands of the secretary before 12 o'clock noon Tuesday, Oct. 15, with the proper signatures and the usual filing fee of $1.00. are required of every boy who graduates from college. It is quite evident that neither the Drury official nor the Star's commemorate have gone into the matter with appropriate proficiency. A student of the subject will tell you that wearing a dress suit is an art, and cannot be taught or learned, even in the School of Fine Arts. Go to college to learn to wear a dress suit, therefore, in profitness and a waste of time. You either know how to wear a dress suit, or you do not. The learning period is an unknown quantity. For some, there in none; for others, it never ends. The matter of wearing a dress suit, however, really is not as mysterious as it seems. Good breeding and common sense seem to have about as much to do with one's proper bearing in a dress suit as when wearing plum-fours or a cow skin coat. All of which should be a great consoiation to those who cannot afford a dress suit. Campus Opinion BOB BORTH, Secretary. Does a man have a right to "play" An Answer to E. J. Editor, Daily, Kansas; In the Campus Opinion column there appeared recently an article by Carly Fiorina, a senior in the main purpose of the article was evidently to discourage the common practice of displaying everyday courtesies. Perhaps E. J., is so popular that he is becoming gripped at having to recognize so many greetings and wishes. I think that the impulse to greet a fellow man is almost an instinctive response. I greet his fellow worker in passing which makes him the most courteous as well as the business of the lower class, and the act is mechanical for whenever a greeting is expressed there is a value deeply feeling which accompanies it. fair with himself"? **?** To recognize a greeting is to play fair with the other fellow and in a social world which is the more important? **?** I wonder if K. J. him every time he goes to class, is going to class in a dark mood and feeling "low" and then the difference it makes when someone speaks and speaks. There is nothing mechanical in the sex life which matters through all stages of that sort. Of course the idea may be carried to an extreme perhaps and again there are some who prefer to be shut within their own side of the crowd. To believe the crowd is he who is best known to the crowd, unless he is a genius, of which the world as con-]aciously lacking, so my advice to the freemasons, an anbome and to continue smile for the crowd and to continue to speak and vect acquainted. —A. L. C. YOU AT YOUR VERY BEST We know how to make photographs and we know we know THOMPSON'S STUDIO 829 Mass. Chicken and Noodles Swiss Steak Special Desserts Free Biscuits Music Thursday Special Special Plate Lunch New Cafeteria in Union Building Plain Tales From the Hill Shivery mornings— Warm noons— Shivery evenings— Typical Ober Top Coat weather! And they're just $25 to $45 Shivery mornings— A little girl of Lawrence out for a walk passed some law students. "Auntie," observed the five-year-old, "there were some men who weren't weak carrying encas." And the anse was weak, the weakness an another sort. Unkind! Yes, we have it on authority. set of Them Die In Bed Most of Them Die In Bed Two men were painting the two roos on the fence when they woken up when speedy and noisy Looke-head-Vegan flew over the camp. "Billy, you'll add one of them, 'bom' to some guys now if they their necks?" It All Dapends! A few days are the head of a University department was surprised to learn that a staff member of his own building. The hit of red paintboard claimed to be a "third Warning" and asked him to paint it, in detail, the Head called up the Administrator, and learned that a spokesman from Scotty to tag the car back of his building. Scotty, of course, didn't stop, and Scotty and Cart. And Scotty was lenient. A Feline Interruption A Feline Intervention A big green paws play at center raised a tennis racket on a gray Monday evening as Miss Bash Greetz was playing in the faculty recital The said candidate in the Administration building was crowded. Miss Florence Snow had been taking care of the cattle, which because the cat invaded on laying out her jab. Miss Snow sat in about the fourth row. Then the cat jumped over to the bed and coming in and taking the seat beside Misa Snow. For嘛, the cat didn't like dreams. Anyway, right now she'd come onto the platform and began PARKER Pens and Pencils TWO BOOK STORES --would appreciate your trade Ve Tavern Lunch ... 12:00 to 1:30 Dinner ... 5:30 to 7:30 14th and Tennessee An Opportunity to Buy and Save We Offer moving in white-dipped talk about as if it were a Bermuda Easter lily. Even Mies Orenst had to laugh. All Dresses, Hats and Coats 10% off Extra Special — A group of dresses, sizes. 14-20. values up to $12.75 in the lot at $8.75 or 2 for $15.00 Friday and Saturday Berkshire Hosiery Special $1.25 pr. $1.00 pr. $1.50 Service or Chiffon Silk Hose $1.35 Service full fashioned hose WOLTER'S 823 Mass. Send the Dally Kansan home. Phone 893. Phone 893 Laridon Beauty Shop 817 Market Tonight - Tomorrow Look Your Prettiest For yourself and others. Be sure and call early for a convenient appointment. ARSITY ALL TALKING MOVETONE DRAMA AITMAN wife- Robby Goldman, Gildenhurst, of Hawkeye. Hawkeye Star - beloved by all. With the "writing style." With four clear letters. Cambridge - all four. Parker Dulfein Prairie for a first writer in a new direction. For a first writer in a new direction. VARSITY FRATURETTES Hotter n Hot "JAN GARBER'S BAND" Varsity News SATURDAY ONLY Richard Barthelmess "AFTER SEBEN" A darktown comedy riot Smiling Little "SUNSHINE SAMMY" "DRAG" It's Coming Soon "HALLELUJAH" All - Singing - Talking All- Singing- Talking In School . . . Parker Pressureless Touch Does Everything but Your Thinking - To grow Parker Dinkofold a pen of life belonging to him, you must complete a permanent pen in the owner's direct to the factory where he will be born. ... and Clears the Track for That *Guaranteed Forever Against All Defects Parker Duofold 5-7-10 Parker Pressureless Touch — presented in Ducofol Pens — anais no one to strain his muscles and exert his mind to do its job of writing. The ink connects with your paper a split second sooner than the point, and its flow keeps pace with the speed of your hand by contact stone — not by pressure! Pressureless Touch is Geo. S. Parker's 47th improvement, combining capillary attraction with gravity feed. A census of pens in 13 technical schools disclosed that Parker led in popularity to a 1.0. It was voted the favorio by students in 55 colleges. And a nation-wide poll conducted by the Library Bureau proved Parker the preference by 25% over the second pen and 48% above the third. Non-Breakable Barrels - 28% lighter than rubber, holding 24% more ink than average, size for size. Step up to any pen counter and select your color and look.Look for the imprint, "Geo.S.Parker - DUOFOLD.B." THE PARKER PIN COMPANY, Jerseyville, Wiscinnon, Goffen and Sandhustain; New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Buffalo, Dallas.