PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEF MARION LEIGH Associate Editor Alice Schultz Associate Editor Embra Jallitte Kathereine Borin Rosemary Maher ... ... ... Walt MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNKLEY Making Editor Making Editor Import Editor Import Editor William Burrows William Burrows Sunday Magazine Editor Sunday Magazine Editor Nedilie Nielsen Nedilie Nielsen Kansas Board Members Marcia Chathouse Joseph Babbitt Jean-Louis Barbey Andrew Pijcock Joshua Perkins Arthur Cyrus Anthony Cyrus Armed Imborg Mary Woolf Stella Brooks William Dusberry Milton Haden Milton Haden Catherine Hamner Rosemary Makes Rooney Makes Katharina Mun Katharina Mun Stella Brooks Stella Brooks ADVERTISING MGR. KENNETH CAPE Audit Advertising Mgr. Flood Nelson District Assistant Mgr. Mary Kramer District Assistant Mary Kramer District Assistant Maureen Cleverman Business Office K. 11 6 Business Office K. 12 4 Night Connect be delivered immediately each evening, should you not receive it on time, should you not receive it a copy will be sent by your special carrier Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Kansas, from the Press of the Journalist Entered as second-class mail matter September her 17, 1910, at the postmaster at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1929 GRADUATES Eight hundred and eighty student, at the University are candidates for degree this year. This means that the greater part of this number have finished their education for all time and are going out to join the ranks of wage earners. Eight hundred and eighty students will demand recognition in the occupations of the country, and in turn will give their time, energy, and all they have profited from their years at school to the world. With that number leaving the University at once, and number equivalent to it leaving colleges all over the country, can all of them find satisfactory positions, positions that will make their years at school soon worth while? The under-graduate as well as the graduate asks this question. Close after it, however, comes another question. Have all these students used their time at college to the best advantage? Some have and some have not; every student and every professor knows that. The senior who had a good time for four years, and succeeded only in getting by 86 now wondering what he can do in the world, and possibly for the first time is experiencing the feeling that after all the world only owes a living to those who earn it. From the 880 here in the University that are asking for degrees every student who has part of his college education still aband of him can find examples, good and bad, to follow or avoid. A college degree, the student should remember, does not guarantee a satisfactory livelihood, it can only and where the graduate has given sincere cooperation in earning it. WORLD HARMONY The next resolution introduced by the United States into the current disarmament conference at Geneva passed with very little opposition. That was the resolution for full publicity of war materials pertaining to limitation. At the same time it is apparent in Washington that this country's representatives are in attendance only to "stand up for our needs" and let the rest of the world settle its own problems. America is not concerned with land armament as that is mainly a European problem. In the typical Monroe fashion, Washington marks that question "hands off." With world harmony at stake, with the nations gathered to work out an answer to the world's cry for disarmament measures, this country sends representations to a conference with instructions to "stuck up" for America. Even though the land, sea, and air forces are inseparably interconnected, America is only concerned in seeing that American ends are obtained and to the devil with the rest. World harmony over disarmament is at the point where compromises and sacrifices must be offered in order to advance the cause In that the theory of relativity implies that the whole must be successful or none, America is urging and promoting just part of the problem. As other nations must arbitrate and judge U. S. claims, so am America judge those of other nations. Is world disarmament "for all and for all" one "and" "Every nation for itself"? IBERALISM AT PITTSBURGH Certainly Mr. Melon now wishes that the matter had been carried on quietly, for he is a lover of tact and finesse. As it is, every student at Pitcharth and thousands of others throughout the country now know about the case. The action of the authorities made the school a laughing stock to fail thinkers, and has broadcast a lesson which otherwise would not have gone far beyond the narrow confinement of a Pittsburgh class room. The University of Pittsburgh is the latest claimant of a place on the roll of dishonor. There the school authorities refused to allow a meeting of the college Liberal Club, at which Prof. Harry E. Barnes was to have spoken on the Mooney case. Andrew Melton has a good deal of influence at Pittsburgh and the university heads no doubt thought they were carrying out his will in banning a plan for a poor victim of injustice. THE "FLAPPER CUT" Doubleday the medidensois officials at Pittsburgh have now brought down the wrath of Mr. Melon for their thumb-fingered helping hand. The "Happer cut" is a new kind of a bob, yet not altogether a bob either. In fact, it was designed to serve as a step between short trees and long. Last week the International Congress of Hairdressers met at Vienna and decided to continue their fight against hobbled hair despite the little success they have had during the past few years. Malame and Monsieur have threatened their subjects for some time with long hair, but the threat has failed to materialize. Women still prefer the bob. The "Happer cut" has not been described at all clearly, but its main feature is no shaved necks. It is supposed to become both the bathing suit and the evening gown. The hairdressers hope to get the hair grown out on the back of the neck, and then perhaps long hair will follow. WHAT IS COMING IN ENGLAND? A slogan, "Jobs for Everyone" seems to be giving the Liberals faith that they will be able to unseat the Conservatives and Labor in the coming English election. With Lloyd borge at their head and his plan or construction they expect to be able to employ 600,000 of the new unemployed without increasing taxation. Such a plan was tried once before in the world's history to relieve a pressing economic situation; that was during the reign of Louis XVI of France. One of Louis' Controller Generals tried the same idea of construction on a large scale to increase prosperity. In that particular case it was not successful; it ended in general national bankruptcy which later led to the French Revolution. However, the conditions in the two different cases are unlike, as well as the nations and the peoples. Also the laws of economics and psychology are much better understood now than they were then. Economic gymnasms have more chance now of being successful than ever before. These sultans of the sheens, however, have more than hair to contend with. They have both the weather and the tempo of modern living on the opposition. Bobbed hair is simple and fits well into a burrying age. Moreover, summer continues to be with as upon every year, and long hair is hot. The cooling effect of bobbed hair comes from the shaved necks. As long as women must take cognizance of the weather, the hairdressers are going to have a hard time and a long fight to throw out the sob. Meanwhile, the "dapper cut" will probably go on trial. "Four hundred inmates of one cell block in "B" cellhouse have been moved to new quarters""—News from "Back Home" in the University Daily Kansas. Plants and Animals Make Possible Sensitive Films for Movie and Kodak Columbus, Ohio. If it were necessary to plant eaten by animals whose skins are used in the manufacture of gelation, we should have no sensitive film for our movie cameras or rolleis. So announced Dr. C. R. K. Mesa director of the American Chemistry Laboratory here in all before the American Chemical Society. "The sensitivity of films is not due to the grains of silver bromide only but is in some way connected with the presence of those grains of specks of some other substance," said Doctor Mees. "After a long and "Inside Stuff" --careful study it has been found that these specks are produced by an accidental impurity present in the gelatine. This impurity is called sulphur and it is by the animals from whose skins the gelatine is made. There is only a very small amount of sulphur in the gelatine, but the pound which contains sulphur, and when the gelatine is used for making the film, the sulphur reacts with the sulphur of silver sulphide on the crystals. (Science Service) World or national news which looks just like local news sometimes gets into the Kannan and cames confusion. Possibly most renders do not notice it, since the headline points out to them the type of story. For example, the headline might be for either telegraphism without a line giving the place of its origin in anthurna. The United Press in the past few years has taken to sending "bound and bound" articles to scientists of origin. These deal with widespread disturbances, such as storms covering large swaths of land. The news carries above them (line (United Press) to show they covered over the earth.) Sometimes, however, this line gets in muckup; and then the travel out board does more business. Today's Best Editorial RAILROAD VS. MOTOR American milbroads are not the only roads confronted by serious problems arising from motor competition. In this country, for example, the stream upon their passenger and freight traffic receipts by entering the motor bus and truck is an issue that has two services. Thus far they are meeting with only partial success, but with the inevitable bounding of this program of expansion better letter than expected. The cables tell of the plight, which the British railways find themselves from the same angle as the dangers of the American lines. Statistics from the Ministry of Transport showing that the number of passengers than in 1927 but that the revenues fell off in spite of radical economies would indicate that the attraction of fares has not accomplished the desired end. More passengers and lower earnings will be expected by the British rail managers will be led to try the office of co-ordinating motor services after the American example is proved. —Philadelphia Public Ledger. N. Y. Times. The new 75,000-ton Cummel liner will have accommodations for 5,000 passengers. It may therefore be new to the fleet and not against unphosphated travelers. VARSITY Though the motion picture on the screen looks smooth, the microscope shows details of the particles of myriads of tiny particles, each a grain of metallic silver. They are shiny and light-colored, like silver bromide, which form the sensitive film that is exposed in the camcorder. "In some way or other these specks increase the effectiveness of the light to which the film is exposed in the film, and this increases the silver bromide so as to form a trace of metallic silver. These thin silver arts during development as a nuclear weapon are deposited by the chemical process until the whole of the silver bromide crystals are formed. This is important if the crystal of the film, therefore, after exposure to light become a grain of silver in the developed film, and it is of these grains of silver that are projected on the screen in composed." "The creamy white layer on the film is composed of billions of these tiny particles that are more on a square inch than there are human beings on the surface of Earth." "Recently, scientists have studied these microscopic crystals and have even studied the behavior of single crystals isolated from their neighbors. They have determined the way in which the atoms in a crystal interact, and they have measured the sizes and shapes of crystals which occur in different kinds of film. In the It Will Pay You Shows: 1 - 3 - 7 - 9 Prices: 12:30 to 1:30 - 25c 1:30 to 4 - 35 Eve. - 50c Coming Friday - Saturday Coming Soon "Lights of New York" and "Speaksay" fast negative film used in the camera for instance, there is in a great range of sizes, and the images are obtained, while in the positive film, on which the pictures are printed and yield is projected in them. The size of this film is nearly of one size, and this gives the life and sparkle to the pictures. The other processes so that these qualities are obtained; the distribution of the grain in the final time must be accounted for "amount." The Hawk's Nest --something swan-like about her. may be her big ugly feet. K. Uu would be an economical place to attend school if they would move Kansas City about two hundred miles farther away. The Federal Reserve System is supposed to give an ablative curricular grant to students who, in exchange for any student can stretch his monthly income so that it will cover thirty percent of his expenses. If it weren't for that silly business called self-respect there could be no better separation than that of being a burn. You know—see the world in a different light. It is no dawn of a new era for women to be getting men's wages. They always did. "Will you save me something to help the Salvation Army Roose," "Yesh, but what are they doing out?" "I'm taking subscription for a home for wayward husbands, can you give anything?" "Save, drop around late tonight and I'll give you my old man." A girl doesn't need to feel com- ceived if some bird tells her there it SPECIAL for Thursday Do you remember the delicious egg plant we had last summer? It was one of our favorites and will serve it for 100. The New Cafeteria "Nothing is good enough but the very best." OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Wednesday, May 8, 1929. No. 170 GIRLS' RIFLE TEAM: There will be a very important meeting of the Girls' Rifle Team Thursday evening at 7 o'clock at Fower Shoes. There will be election of officers and information concerning giving of awards May 15. Girls are not eligible for awards until due are paid. ADELA HALE, captain LECTURE ON CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE: GROCERIES, MINNESOTA MUSEUM IN MUNICIPALITY 901-352-4500 We are a library for fashions will be Thursday, May 9, at 4:10 p.m. in room 292 Fraser. We will talk on ink and color with the following individuals: NEMIWILM, WELMER SENIOR CLASS MEETING: COSMOPOLITAN CLUB; The regular meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club will be held Thursday at 7:15 p. m. ROBERT KOGER, Secretary. Hugh Bently. There will be a meeting of the senior class Thursday evening at 7:30 in Fraser chapel. CLARENCE MUNNS, President. That's all. -The Collegio ing in the physical education department. 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