PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR IN-CHIEF MARION LEIGH Associate Editor James S. Wheel Associate Editor Alice Schultz Editorial Writers Virgil Ensign Paula Co THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ADVERTISING MGR. - KENNEDY CAPE - Advertising Mgr., Ford Newton - Advertising Mgr., Ford Newton - District Assistant, Mary Karen - District Assistant, Mary Karen - District Assistant, Maurice Cleverman Kansas Board Members MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNLEY Sunday Editor Lavender Maureen Campus Editor Lute Leibson Mercury Mary Night Editor Glindis Hiker Telephonist Randy Rudy Dummies Sunday Magazine Editor William Erwin William Droeschly Marjorie Chawker Isabel Bandy Milton Hines Katherine Birch Catherine Hissen Katherine Birch Catherine Hissen Arthur Circle Rosemary Mahar Rosemary Mahar Arnold Imborg Rosemary Mahar Mary Wurst Stella Brooksman Mary Wurst Business Office K. 11, 12 Office Suite K. 11, 12 Night Connection 2016K Your Kauras should be delivered before you. Should you fail to receive phone calls (210) 839-3500, should you fail to receive phone calls by your special carrier Published in the afternoon, five times week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism at the University of Texas, the Free of the Department of Journalism. matter of Administration. Entered in second-class mail matter System 17, 1816, at the postmaster at Lawrence Kansas, under the net of March 3, 1879. INCONSIDERATE FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1929 Quizzes have always been condemned as evils, but necessary evils, and let pass without further comment. There are times, however, that they are positively obnoxious. As surely as a concert artist or prominent lecturer comes to the campus for an evening program, many students cannot attend because of quizzes the next day. These artists' series are designed to draw the interest and support of the entire student body, but many professors fail to recognize it. Their four or six weeks quizzes are all important. Usually, the interference is not intentional. The instructors simply do not think; they are just inconsiderate of students interests. This week the best talents and energies of the University are turned toward music. Concerts are given both afternoons and evenings. Many students have to and others want to attend these programs, but certain professors show no consideration for them or for the promotion of music. These who take time for something outside and above textbooks suffer the consequences. With a little thought and foresee, professors could schedule their examination at more opportun time for everyone concerned and help promote broader interests among the students. Some profs say that grades worry them more than they do the student, but the profs don't have to break the news to Mother and Dad. GRADES VS. EDUCATION Prominent authorities on education attending the third-day annual session of the Inland Empire Education Association have taken the stand that the system of grading or marking students should be discarded. There is no question but that the present system of grading is fair neither to the student nor the professor. In courses where the final grade is based upon the last examination, the student has a good chance of making an "A" even though he knows nothing about the course. The value of cramming the high points of any course is well known to both students and professors. Where the term grade is based upon a term paper the students ability cannot be fairly judged, especially when he is taking five or six three hour courses and the papers all come due the last two weeks of school. A term paper usually shows the students ability along one phase of the subject. What he known about the course in general may be worth much more or much less than the grade received on the term report. The main defect of any grading system is that students come to believe that marks or grades are the real ends of an education. Most of them are working for an "A" or "B". The real purpose of the course is host sight of in the effort to get a grade. THE TARIFF SNAG The Ways and Means Committee in writing a tariff reliction bill has run up against a real snag. The project of a waterway from the Great Lakes to the sea by way of the St. Lawrence River and the Wetland Canal is in danger it Canada is displeased with the new tariff law. On the other hand farm groups are very much against any tariff concessions that place Canada in connection with the waterways project, and are pushing their demands for protective rates on cattle, wheat, and dairy products. To appease both sides Congress will have to go carefully. The farm elemenet has long expected farm relief and naturally is attempting to force a higher tariff. If the waterway project also is a form of farm relief, and the Ways and Means Committee is "between the devil and the deep sea," it It has been estimated that debates on the question will take till the first of June. Congress will think it is doing well to have a satisfactory solution by that time. A bill providing that judges may accept fines on the installment plan has been passed in California. Now the prisoners will want to serve their 'time' the same way. PHILIPPINE SUGAR Should the United States show partial toward one of her importing islands and not the other? For 26 years she has had a reciprocity treaty with Cuba, which can be terminated by either party giving the other 12 months notice. Congress decides as it sees fit what the tariff relations between the United States and the Philippines shall be, and how long it shall continue. Our relations with the Philippines are thus fundamentally different from those with Cuba. The island in the Pacific is helpless at the hands of Congress. The Timberlake Resolution asks us to turn back the pages of history and alert the worst form of colonial exhibition of over a century ago. The United States has always had the reputation of acting fair with her territories. She has had 20 years of fairness and unselfish helpfulness, but it looks like the upsetting of our policy. The sugar interests are mixed in the serramble, not those of the United States, but the Cuban interests, and at the expense of the Philippines. "A Quiz After Fatal Blast!" (Headline in K, C, Star). That is not surprising to college students, only our quiz comes first. WOMEN FINANCIERS Woman is no longer the timid, obeying little creature that she was in years gone by. Day by day she is becoming less and less dependent upon him. She is quickly adapting herself to the industrial age and making a place for herself in the economic world. Until recently, man, as head of the house, held the purse strings. He was the last word in economics or business. But things have changed. Today woman plays an important part in business and finance. She no longer leaves the management of funds to man, nor does she seek museleine advice concerning the investment of money. Today women control 41 per cent of the individual wealth of the country. Fifty per cent of the stockholders of the United States Steel Corporation and the American Telephone and Telegraph Company are women. Income tax figures reveal that 139 women pay taxes on incomes in excess of $500,000 and that 44 pay on net incomes of $1,000,000. Only 123 men paid the tax on incomes of $500,000. With woman now in control of 41 per cent of the individual wealth, and that acquired in the past few years, it is logical to expect that she will continue to increase her financial power. The girls of Boke Idaho have adopted Marion Talley as their ideal. That is, they're wearing overalls to school, now. Send the Daily Kansan home. Our Contemporaries NET ANOTHER TRAGEDY Among the many tragedies of youth unaffected by various penetrating writers should be listed the seriousness with which youth regards its own self. Some girls feel themselves entitled inadequate because of the lack of physical beauty, and some men feel their lack of self-confidence is one person thinks life is dull and inseless because he failed to make the fraternity that spelled paradise to him, and another feels himself wrickened if he nust to work after afternoon. It seems to occur to only a few of them that there is no one thing that runs the race, and makes good use of the attributes one has, the lack of others will never be felt or noticed. The only exception is when someone is essentially, physically, morally, and spiritually perfect is the crying against fate because the odds are not in one's favor. The thing that makes existence interesting is the effort one makes to grab a measure of happiness and success against odds. The Hawk's Nest Washburn Review 4 As a rule I may absolutely no attention to anonymous communications at a letter that found its way to my eek recently presents such an occurrence. that there is much confusion today as to what religion really is? An answer to this will be given Sunday at 11 by the minister at the Uriatan church, 12th B Vt. Sts. ARE YOU AWARE It will be different. structive suggestion that I cannot vote! From passing it off to my devoted readers. Mr. Hugh Denley "The Hawk's Next" University Daily Kaman, Wisconsin, Konao For some months I have been reading you connections, and have surfaced in several ways OF YOUR STUFF IN BLACK-FACE TO CREA IT DOWN THE READERS THROUGH. I could no longer have a single thought. Is there another vacation to which you can return, and forget this awful craving to be in the human world and cure yourself of this terrible attack of奶,and coffee, (exercise that shows how outragious your disease is). Testimonials always appreciated, Thanks, Rugh Bently We Try editorial writing, try advertising trade from H. Bently not to Strive to Serve Meals Like Mother Did Bring her to the Cafeteria A delightfully luscious combination of ripe red fruit, frothy whipped cream and cool ice cream. Try one. They Satisfy The Cottage Fresh Strawberry Sundaees $ 20^{\circ} $ Speed 12th & Oread FOR MOTHER Tommy Novelty Leather Bags, pouches or with back straps, with chic leather trims, for $2.95. Silk Bags, in plain black, or grosgrained silk, or embroidered, at $2.95. Tooled Steer-hide Bags, with suede linings, French plate mirror, and leather coin purse, for $4.95 and $8.95. Hand-embroided Handkerchiefs, with delicate French roses or pastel applique corners, for 25c. Others, $50 to $1.00. Silk Hosiery, in all the new spring and summer shades, full-fashion with pointed heels, for $1.39. count, try anything one. My suspicion is to run the Hawk's Next column in blank the root of the year. I hope you will pardon my frankness, but I have suffered so long, and if you think that my testimony will bear other sufferings, you may bring your picture and send it a free bottle. You're very trusty. Constant Reader Pio Bona Philoho Old Subcriber How Gold Prospector "Went Scotch" Minneapolis, Minn. April 30, 1928 Larms & Bro, Co. Reymond, Va. Dear Sir: Twenty years ago last winter I went to the Real Lava Gold fields in Colorado, over 140 miles of snow and ice. I traveled from Hinson in four weeks' time I ran out of Mileworth. I was glad to get 'must any old tobacco.' One day, another. I dropped in to Dian Fangwen's room, a multi-piece piece of furniture with an improved table, both these 120 miles from the street. I hurried up to the mirror to look at my chanel for a picture. It wasn't clear why I didn't carry my clutch when my clutch came from my pocket. I handed it with biewenmei. The mirror was so shattered that I couldn't hold it but a wrench. I earnestly请求 for a minute, and stepped ahead to advance about three steps ahead, not saying "You to hear me." I waited. "You to hear me." I waited. "You to hear me." I waited. "You to hear me." I insisted. I fell him what happened to my Elijahson. He understood right away. He said, "Now, Elijahson, you understand right away. He said, "Now, Elijahson, you understand right away. He said, "Now, Elijahson, you understand right away." Yours very truly, C. M. Bake C. M. Bahr Edgeworth Estea High Grade Smoking Tobacco OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVII Friday, May 3, 1929 No. 166 SCHOLARSHIPS: Additional scholarships for 1929-30 are available for women students. Applicants should see the chairman of the scholarship committee in room 310 Fraser Hall from 11:30 to 12:00 every day or by appointment. -EUGENIE GALLOO, chairman New Garden Belt $1.50 So dainty—smart—new—all that she needs and just what she requires in a garter belt. In flower motif brocade with striped elastic insert in the back. The fastening is side front. Model R123, sizes 26 to 34. Priced K The image contains a single block of text with no visible content. It is formatted in a way that suggests it might be part of a document or a presentation slide. However, due to the limited visibility and lack of context, it is not possible to accurately recognize any text. Therefore, no answer can be provided based on this image. Mother's Day VARSITY Saturday Night, May 4 KARL JOHNSON and His Orchestra 2. (1) $A = \begin{bmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ -1 & 0 \end{bmatrix}, B = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}$ and $C = \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & -1 \end{bmatrix}$. Find the equation of the plane that passes through $A, B,$ and $C$. Union Building 9 till 12 Couples 75c Stags $1.25 No Charge for Mother