PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29.1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIER WM A. DAUCHERTY Catherine Hannon Managing Editor MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE MAYN Writer Composer Editor Composer Night Edition Night Edition Telegram Editor Telegram Editor Margaret Huger ADVERTISING EDITOR FLOYD NELSON Associate Adm. Mgr. Assistant Adm. Mgr. District Analyst District Analyst Harford, Kentucky Harford, Kentucky Sunday Staff Robert Colbertier Bob Rowe Devon Dickey Dale Helen Haden Holton Hannah Sunson Hadrian Sunson Virginia Wilminson William McCormick Carl Commings Betty Wilson Betty Wilson Maurice Miller Michael W. Arthur Colli Bradley Kobach Manny Foster Patrick O'Connor Chinese Brown Joseph Calhoun Arthur Coleman Riley Johnson Cain Johnson Colin Rodelbald Laminus Mann John Foster Telephonos Business Office K, U. 64 News Room K, U. 22 Night Connection 2701K Published in the afternoon, five times in week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Pennsylvania, the Times of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $1.60 per year, payable in advance. Single charge, no discount. Entered as the tenant to the account at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1929 A WORTHWHILE ACTIVITY Without for a moment discounting the value of the other University musical organizations, it may be said without fear of compulsion, that the University band is one of the most worthwhile and contributory organizations on the Hill. With the multiplicity of time abbreviating and more or less useless activities occupying much student effort, it is good to see certain other enterprises effecting training and development of those who participate, as well as performing valuable service to the school. The band falls in this later category. Membership in the band is no small achievement, J. C. M.Canles, veteran director, maintains high standards, both in his selections and in performance through the year, Band members devote a great deal of time to practice and in appearances. Soon they will be seen and heard at the stadium, spiritedly calling rooters to their feet at the kick-off, rallying dampened sprites in darker moments of the game, and blaring ecstatic joy when the hawkeye flitto to victory. Then, there will be the rallies, and basketball, and chlamasing weeks of practice, regular public concerts. Scarcely a week passes during the academic year when the band will not be participating in some sort of school activity. And whether busy or not, week after week, the band will practice diligently working up a high degree of quality which will be manifested in later concerts. Such has been the past; the 1929-30 band promises to keep up the standard. Congratulations, 89 members of the University band. You have chosen a worthwhile activity. The Pittburg Headlight comments pointedly that the Kannan's admission that students remember to write home is in place at the first of the semester, but is entirely superfluous after the first few weeks. Students begin to write home for money then without any urging. A. FITTING RECOGNITION With much ado and uprear, the members of the senior class in the School of Law have presented the lonest woman member of the class with a cane, the traditional symbol of upper-class law students. The privilege of carrying a cane is highly regarded by the law students, and is particularly distinctive to be bestowed upon a woman. Few women enter the law school, and fewer reach the rank of senior. Law is commonly recognized as a field for men. A woman faces handicaps for this reason. To achieve success in the face of handicap deserves fitting reward. The bestowl of the traditional cane upon the sole feminine member of the class last week be speaks the extene in which she is held by her masculine contemporaries Many of our ideas for paragraphic puns have gone awry since hearing on good authority that Clairman Legge pronounces his name in two pyllables. IT CAN BE DONE "College is a hard life." In this statement one roommate summed up his experience in the struggle for an education to another. Now, after working his way through until he was within sight of the completed requirements for a degree, and finding himself in another one of his frequent financial pinches, he was wondering, as he had wondered many times before, whether it was worth while to make the final exertion that long coveted degree. The other's story was similar to his and similar to that of many hard-working collegiate students over the country who, by working their way through college, win the admiration of their deans and advisers and instructors. High school, then college, one, two, three, and sometimes five years of student life find such students drawing a credit for a limited number of hours, while they struggle for a live-lihood. Outside of class they are working, here, there, at any job they can find, just managing to keep the "ball rolling" and stay in school. On the campus, they are hardly discernible from the regular, carefree college students who can accept a career career without financial worries; at least not those involving food and rooms. College, as summed up by those two roommates is a "hard life" and a real man's job; but their stories sustained that old Horatio Alger asserted, "Bays, it can be done." Perhaps the concert committee can schedule an appearance of Wilt Riggs again next year. His name sells many enterprise tickets, at least. THIS WEEK Florence Trumbull became Mrs. John Collidge at the season's biggest newspaper welding. En-President Coolidge contributed $ n $ 50,000 trust fund as a wedding present to help out between John's $ 30 n week pay days. Martial law was declared in Borger Texas, where all law seemed to have failed. Borger was highly insulted saying that martial law hurt her business. Gov. Dan Moody is investigating. Harry Sinclair wants to get out of jail. After several month's of reflection he has figured out that he is innocent, "Unfair," he cries. Has justice slipped again? Senator Howell, of Nebraska stirred up a rumpus in Washington. President Hoover could enforce prohibition in the District of Columbia he tried, the senator declared. Hoover replied, "Give definite facts," he told the Nebraskan. he Mr. Shearer got in trouble all because he tried to collect a little salary for having tried more or less successfully to break up the Geneva arms conference, or so it seems. Naval limitation would do the ship builders no good, of course, Mr. Shearer represented the ship builders. Mrs. Lois Pantages drew a man slaughterudied in trial for death of Japanese gardener in motor accident. Mrs. Pantages was alleged to have been intoxicated when she ran down the man. Once when a wealthy woman did not escape justice. Jake Flake identified and jailed for series of bank robberies, the most serious of which was the Lamar crime of several years ago. The last of the Lamar handis now has been apprehended. However sprang a surprise on congress and the country by speaking unheralded on the pending tariff bill. The flexible clause is "Progressive, not despite," he declared, in advocating its maintenance. Headline—Edited Paper 60 Years— Without a Pay Check. He must have worked on a college newspaper stiff! A poor man may get a sandwich for a dime and a wealthy man may get a ten-course dinner under the present social system. With these soundless typewriter you seem to accomplish as much with something like about less than the expected result. It was a popular woman last night whose whorsey wasn't holding open house, and still could boast of having a date. ANOTHER TOUGH PROBLEM IN INTEREST. HANOWK, China, Sept. 25, - (UP) — Modern Chinese girls in Hainan no longer are deprived of the privilege of going to barber shaves. The select boys force that the ban on females writing hairdressing establishments and been lifted. Lifting of the lan means a victory搐ing the war against the prohibitable lan, for the borers as well. The latter chain that the restriction has been a severe blow to their business. Then come General Wong Iran, Chief of the Public Safety Bureau, who declared that it was great moral action to gift him shop and have their hair dressed by men. A proclamation was issued and all officers in the city were warned that they would be placed on duty for five days so they should ever be seen gating at. Barber Shops Reopened to Women in Hankow, China: Great Feminine Victory Barber chose "for both men and women" in Hankow had a munchroom growth and thrived in the early days of the National Revolution. Fed-up with the restrictive regime, the thousands of girls and even middle aged women began to wear hooded hair and there arose a huge demand for barbers for women. The barbers' florery music like "The Red Rose" or "The Paradise" came into existence overnight. Women hair dressers not only catered to the fashioniness and not a few of the working class were attracted to the trade. Grocery shop employees, off-the-shoot hairdressers, were known to have given up their jobs to learn shaving and trimming. On Other Hills The University of Indiana has a large research facility, the building. The building stretches high and of Gothic architecture, according to Robert Frost. Dagwood's room in the basement is --for not only the women who had been for the sake of equality of woman tention to both their female and male patrons in the same parlour. "Our public safety chief was of the公開 public safety chief was of the公開 "and morality is going updownhill. We have to promote deprivation of liberty things like even in hardware." The student self-help industries of the Oblitaia A, and M. College have a new addition, a printing department which will turn out cards, handbills, and letters under the students in the school of commerce. About 825th worth of clothing was recently taken from the Sipaura Alba university, where she is a freshman. The clothing was taken while fraternity members were in chapter Members of the Eagles Club at our local University, who were arrested last year for bouncing on the sidewalks of bourn, are causing considerable trouble to the offenders and investigators. Greek letter organizations of Indiana University pledged 225 men during a five day rush period. The junior class at De Paul University recently selected a class garr. wool jacket with leather bound packs, and the men selected blue heavy The war against the ban was started at once, but an long as General Wong Luan remained in office he law had to be deferred. The change of government brought here to the barbarians and to the decisioners of total power position, which was drawn up and submitted to the new mayor. The argument in favor of lengthy document equality for social bond being the main point emphasized by launching a big program for social reforms in lines with Kumutmiminism is that it was forced by the public safety bureau. The teachers, however, are outweighed by furish guaranitics and the usual moebles between wains and loveliness far below within the school. The students and the women are envy that they must not allow their pre-erasure to cause "morality to governably." Campus Opinion aile. Emery Union Pilots It appears to us that there are a lot of "pickers" on our campus, plus more that are quite uninteresting. The only two that are not the only one-fourth of the student body paid the optional $250 fee for the course. In the completion of the Memorial Union building, certainly bears out my contention. In no other school are the students allowed such an easy and reasonable plan of payment of Union fees. University students must commit their support along with the regular fee of the institution. At the University Council this summer, Mr. Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the K. U. Alumni Association, was laughed by his bye-recipient after he declared severe disproportion to the support of the Union project. In no case did any school supported charge a lesser fee than the minimum compulsory. A compulsory Union fee in Kansas would do away with the compulsory fee among the undergraduates, since the compulsory system of student wages began last year. W. C. Remodeling, relining, repairing, cleaning and pressing with snappy services. Call us for your work. SCHULZ THE HILDR 917 Mass St. PARKING OF CARS; The Book Nook 1021 NISTOR, PHONE 666 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVIIH Sunday, September 29, 1929 No. 14 Beginning Monday, Sept. 20, no car will be permitted to park in the parking space on the campus unless it bears a 2020-University of Kansas license. JAY JANES: There will be a meeting of the Day Janes on Tuesday, Oct. 1, in the rect room of central Administration building. JANE KIRK, Secretary. Historic Background to Be Portrayed in Mock Features of 75th Anniversary Kansas history which is closely linked with Lawrence in its national fight for admission as a free state seems to make it feasible to hold the university at a historic flood at this city. With Kansas history we find the most interesting border conflicts, as the Jones raid and the Quantrill rallied, related with Lawrences. This historic background will make the Anniversary Celebration exceedingly interesting. A three day program on Oct. 10, 11, and 12, has been planned which will tell the story of the event during the skaters and late fitties. At 9:00 a. m. of the first day the Indians will leave the various school houses and congregate in 1000 block E at the early settlers arrive at school houses and proceed to the 900 block B On Friday at 9:00 a.m. the Early Settler's Monument in Robinson park will be open to visitors, a historic parade through the business district at 1:00 p.m., which will feature boats from the different schools; and civic organizations of the city. Something New FICTION POETRY DRAMA NON-FICTION CHILDREN'S BOOKS AND RENTAL LIBRARY We are featuring a 30c Meal each evening. Have you tried it? If not begin now. New Cafeteria in Union Building Shipments of new books are arriving daily, and include many first editions. James Branch Cabell, Eugene O'Neill, and Edna St. Vincent Millay are represented on the fall lists. Come in and make your selections early. Fraternity - Sorority or K. U. Seal 50c up The University is preparing to run four boats in this parade, Dean Shaun will be in charge of the Engineering boat which will portray the progress of the school. Keithen of the school of design will fashion a float typifying progress. The two boats from the School of Design will appear in the direction of Professor Allen Crafton. Following this will come the band concert at 3:00 at the stadium where he is performing. Leo Michaels, general council for the Union Pastile, and Arthur J. Warwer, governor of Nebraska. At 6:30 a pioneer’s club in Lincoln will be given Union building where an address will be given by Elijah Lawrence, son of Daniel Lawrence, in opened. At 8:30 a night football game will be played at the Haskell stadium when the Indians will meet At 2:15 Kansas will clash with K. B. T. C. of Emporium at the Memorial stadium in the first game of the year. To detain the expensive fees associated with a organization, organized a budget of $2,000 to be collected from local contributors. Karl Kohrs, bursar of the University, is subchairman of the finance committee. He announced that the faculty would be selected individually in the different departments. On Saturday the dedication of the garrison airport will take place at 600 in the morning and at one in the afternoon. County schools all river a parallele. STATIONERY Crested with Two Book Stores It's no more sensible to go to an evening date in knickers and sweater than to hunt in a dress suit— have an oxford geey or blue suit by Society Brand for the evening and see how much more enjoyable your social affairs become! $35 to $65