PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILYKANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, MAY 26, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MARION LEIGH Associate Editor Alice Neubert Associate Editor Embree Jantilis Editorial Writer Katherine North Rosemary Maher Wilson MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNLEY Makeup Editor Makeup Editor Sport Editor Sport Editor Magazine Director Magazine Director Broadway Magazine Editor Nadine Milne Editor ADVERTISING MGL... RENNESH CAFE Aunt's Advertising MGL... Felton Nelson Aunt's Advertising MGL... Murray Neal Aunt's Advertising MGL... Mary Krauser District Assistant... Kenneth Paduck GUNDAY STAFF Mary Bartram Matthew Berry Mary Evans Mary Eleanor Haskins Alba Gaskill Emily Roe Reynolds Bert Traumman Edward McKenzie Thomas Crawley Robert Culberton Roberta Culberton Betty Miller Homer Miller Marrion Graves Business Office Telephone K. 11. 66 News Room Telephone 281K Your Kenan is to be delivered before the appointment. Your telephone 571618 Should you fail to receive your telephone 571618, please call us by special carrier. 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 Press of the Jujust Interest in second-class mail matter System bri 17, 1920, at the postoffice at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. SUNDAY, MAY 26, 1920 THE WEEK The senate is now battling over the 150 year old secrecy rule which does not permit the roll call on presidential nominations to be made public. Someone told, but who? The tariff entanglement in the House seems to have been ironed out temporarily, for the strong sugar and building material interests have been big enough to break up agriculture's efforts to gain recognition. The Reparations Conference at Paris is somewhat at a stand still now, because the allied contractor powers do not want to accept Germany's condition of a suspension of annuities for two years, in case she finds that it is impossible to pay right away. President Hoover has appointed a committee of 10 to investigate law enforcement and especially the Volunteer act. The Federal Reserve Board's recommendation of an increase of rediscount rates to 6 per cent caused a break in prices on the New York stock exchange. WIIR, one of the oldest radio stations in the United States, which was ordered off the air the first of May, has been re-licensed by the Federal Radio Commission, and as the last news item, the conferences on the farm relief program showed the first signs of a break in the deadlock, when Representative Haugen weakened on the debenture argument, but no permanent relief is seen as yet. The Kansas City Star uses Joniett Shouse as the Moses of the Democrat party. Now do they expect him to snite the rock for the thirsty? TROUBLE ON THE FLOATING UNIVERSITY Word comes from Paris that the President of the floating university, along with several faculty members having trouble with his marine student body. It seems that the students became angry at the way the tour was being conducted by the administration and decided to mutiny. According to reports the revolt almost reached a climax at Bangkok but was quelled, only to flare up again at Paris. There are two sides to the story. A faculty member who has joined the cause of the students says they are disgruntled by the interference of the president's wife in their activities and discipline. The administration declares the students demand a de luxe pleasure trip instead of a serious educational cruise. Probably both sides have a legitimate argument. The record of the last university cruise, however, seems to point in favor of the administration. The students who returned from that trip boasted of the big time they had, of the ease with which they made college credits, and of their contempt for discipline. The tuition for the university affront runs in the neighborhood of $2,000. Men and women whose parents can plank down that amount for a tuition besides providing them with a liberal spending allowance are not generally very sensible. In all probability the faculty and administration of the university cruise had to put up with a great deal of horse play and lack of application from their students. It is small wonder that they occasionally be disgraced. SKIRTS Skirts are always in the way. They are up when they belong down and often too narrow to take large stride forward. These are not their only binders, either. They symbolize women who are hampered by them in a career. Lower pay than men, fewer chances for a job and slow advancement are only a few of women's handicaps. Yet today in Illinois a classic political struggle between a man's forces and a woman's occupies the stage. Still water may be deep, but it's more probably stagnant. Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick, daughter of Mark Hanna, the maker of presidents, and Charles Deenan, Illinois machine leader are the rivals in a fight which will see a finish. Mrs. McCormick is better versed in politics and government than scores of men who are above her in rank. Now she is out to revenge the defeat that killed her husband. A victory will mean to her the successful carrying on of Medill McCormick's career. To the rest of the world her victory would mean another great triumph for women in their fight for political and economic equality with men. Mark Hanna ruled his state for years. When Mrs. McCormick run for representative at large a few years ago she carried the state by an overwhelming majority. Now in this classic fight, will there be thousands who will not vote for her because they think her place as a woman is not in Congress, regardless of her ability? Will her skirts prove too narrow to take this step into the upper house of the legislature? No city government can be perfect, for if it wore it would be heaven. And it can't be heaven with the kind of people there are running the thing. Rent Your Car from Rent-A-Ford 916 Mass. Phone 653 VACATION will soon be here PROBIBITION IN ENGLAND Prohibition has had a severe negative effect, and it has been estimated that at the coming general election, 2,000,600 votes would be cast for the curtailment or the extension of liquor laws. It appears that liquor is not to be an issue. The leaders of the three great parties have come to agree that their respective candidates to ignore questionnaires from national promaganda groups. No official candidate, therefore, will be needed to say whether he is a Wet or a Dr. Firestone Let us get your car in shape for the home trip. Washing Greasing Tire Repaining TIRES Today's Best Editorial CARTER SERVICE In the last House of Commons there was only one out of 600 members who was elected on a bona-fide issue, not a political one. Mr Clinton had a hard row to hoe. The United Kingdom Alliance, the British equivalent of the Anti-Sanders' opponents, either to give or withhold its support from a candidate on account of his stance on the issue; or is it at liberty to finance his campaign. And these laws, being rigorously enforced against both sides, is perhaps surprising, in view of the fact that there are more women in parliament than that capital is not being made out of the lion question by one or other of the parties. The lion question have come to suggest that England is nervous about prohibition. Nor can we blame Philadelphia Public Lodger Call - 1300 PROHIBITION IN ENGLAND --- Our Contemporaries WHEN STUDENTS GOVERN Gay young Baptist blades at Dea Moines University, foothillhead of Mid-Michigan where they work on at their administration building, but missed their mark which was President T. T. Shields of the Board of Education who once wisely wrote in the face of adversity, crested softly into a close, thinking, thoughtful expression. Our Contemporaries --- oumble, that the police of the Moines are farfetely lescents. Eggs, traks, stitches, hattered from the booby Defended the boat and the booby Long he waited; lesser mea than he might have felt w免 frightened hairs, arm silicone. At length Six young Baptists became surely irked, however, and forced Fundamental precept long enough to secure a court iud. Classes coopered Monday morning; the students lattily. The good Dearbar, far to the south, said nothing at all. Canada has at some distance from the yellow fields of Iowa. Then, it was that Doctor Shields, swept by the breath of the right chest, swore a miracle. He took its portals. Even for young Bupets might not hurt elderly and sick children. University was closed; Doctor Shields hied himself to Toronto. Canadian Bupets do not throw things with each other. Some people will be shocked. Egg throwing, sack-hurling are hardly the things for University students to do. Others, not mine, winkle wink, winkle wink. Upvlebs sometimes lively muniac academic dallums; sometimes they do not. Des Moines had a fairly pleasant index, in fact, in interviews. No doubt. Let's tried to be raised against young Baptists egg throws. Minnesota Daily. Stovers Holes are left in Kansas City pay- ing, according to Arch Jarrell, who re- cently returned from there, because of the blowouts they came. A good city government naturally is for any thing that helps the tax base. After three years' suspension of the death penalty, which showed a halving of the number of murders, Porto or Corio, both states, Towers, has abstained that penalty. Somehow the argument of deterrence has slipped a cog noe. Perhaps the psychology by the popular. That is at least convivient. c. Philadelphia Public Ledger 八 - Topcka Daily Capital Mrs. Chocolates Martha Washington Miss Saylors Chocolates Chocolates SUNDAY DINNER 12 to 2 6 to 8 The Green Owl Tea R Ack Those Who Have Been There Phone 44 Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday "HEARTS in DIXIE" Hear The Old South TALK and SING On The Motion Picture Screen WILLIAM FOX PRESENT FOX MOVEMENTS All-Talking All-Singing, All-Comedy Triumph HEAR and SEE A Musical Degoa of the South by Walter Weems with STEPIN PETCHIT Crooning Workers in the Cotton Fields Bustling Crowds on the River Levees Weld Voodoon Ceremonies in the Uplands Real Old-Fashioned Southern Barbecue Good Shipment to Hawaii Hilarious Plantation Wedding of Crinoline Days PAUL SDONE Production The Hawk's Nest --now sold at amazing new low prices Thursday. Friday. Saturday— "Caught in the Fog" With Conrad Nagel and May McAvoy One advantage of being able to write good letters is that after all of our girl friends have read your letter, too will you talk your are just grand. "Lawrence Milk Supply Safe" says a headline. Then the breaking of the Boverstock dam wasn't so serious after all. The athletic coach tells his men how competitive athletics develop instinctively self-reliance, etc. and then explains that he does just as I tell you to. And don't be too mad if the dairy man brings you blue milk. Maybe his cows are discontented. The average college student's brain starts working as soon as he gets up in the morning and doesn't stop until he gets to class. A case where the insult precedes the injury. Getting paralyzed by one of those four-tone auto horses just rolls Kolloye paws over the body. Most college students never do any of their work on time, but all of their purchasing that way. And the height of presumption is to put one of these aforementioned musical get-out-of-the-way signals or a Ford car. -Hugh Bently OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XY1 Sunday, May 26, 1929. No. 185 ALL UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION: ALL UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION. The last convention of the school year will be held Monday, May 27, at 10 o'clock in the University auditorium. Dr. W. T. Foster will be the speaker. E. H. LINDLEY FINAL ORAL EXAMINATION FOR PHLDA. Two final oral examination for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of Mr. John Gin will be held Monday, May 27, at 3:30 p.m. in room 101 chemistry building. Mr. Gin's major is chemistry, and the graduate will take this examination in open to members of the faculty at the University School. B. E. STOUFFER, Dean RESEARCH COMMITTEE OF GRADUATE SCHOOL: There will be a meeting of the research committee of the Graduate School on Tuesday, May 28, at 4:20 p. m. in the graduate office. E. B. STOFFER, Chairman. SENIOR CLASS MEMORIAL COMMITTEE: UNIVERSITY BAND: MEN'S AND WOMEN'S GLEE CLUBS: UNIVERSITY BAND: The band will play at concession Monday at 10 o'clock in the University auditorium. Members of the band are also asked to meet at the Armory at 5:30 a.m. m. Thursday to play in the Memorial parade downtown. J. C. McANLESS. SENIOR CLASS MEMORIAL COMMITTEE There will be a class memorial committee in the Afternoon Tuesday, May 28 at 4 p.m. JOHN FOSTER, Chairman. GENES AND WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB Members of both glee club requested to come to the stage of the Monday morning. Monday morning. MISS AGNES HUSBAND and PROF EUGENE CHRISTY, Directors. Phone 12 Car Storage TAU BETA PU Tau Tan Beti PU for election of officers will be held at Mar- keley on Monday, May 27 at 7:30 p. m. ED RANDALL, President. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. We Have Eastman and Ansco Films for Your Camera Hike While in try our cool Limcades, and Fresh Fruit Orange-ades. They will down a man-sized thirst. "Handy for Students 11th & Mass Phone 678 "Handy for Students' Rankin's Drug Store The Ideal Graduation Gift 1936 is the number of a luxuriously sheer all silk chiffon with a dainty piced top. The price $1.95 1921 is the biggest buy in an alil silk chiffon on the market. Lovely McCallum sheerness for a moderate price $1.50 Other numbers are priced from $1.85 to $6.30 and may be had in all the new shades for which McCallum is famous. McCALLUM HOSIERY "YOU JUST KNOW SHE WEARS THEN" THESE remarkable prices offer you the opportunity to enjoy McCallum luxury and save money at the same time! The stockings described above are the same McCallums you've always loved, at prices you have paid for ordinary stockings! These stockings come in all the lovely McCallum colorings. And McCallum colors, as you know, have guided the trend in stocking fashions for forty years. She—wear them—let the stockings themselves convoy you! INNES'