PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Associate Editor Associate Editor Editorial Writers MARION LEIGH James S. Welch Alice Schultz Virgil Ensign Paula Cost MANAGING EDITOR MUILLARD HUNSLEY Sunday Editor MUILLARD Campus Editor MUILLARD Mary Ward MUILLARD Night Editor MUILLARD Tinkerbell Editor MUILLARD Mary Ward MUILLARD Sunday Magazine Editor MUILLARD Wildlife Editor MUILLARD ADVERTISING MGR., KENNETH CAPE Advertising Mag. Marr. Pelton Newman Direct Accountant, Marc R. Meyer Direct Accountant, Mary K. Morgan Direct Accountant, Kenneth Cheverson Direct Accountant, Marquise Cheverson Kansas Board Members William Dunberry Marchan Chuckwheat Jacob Bundy Miller Hooded Katherine Birch Catherine Hancock Garcia, Chris Rosemary Moyer Arnold Lissomburg Katherine Mane Mary Worley Stella Brownwell Michael Business Office K. 11, 66 Business Office K. 11, 66 Night Connection Your Kenan should be delivered before the meeting. Should you fail to receive a phone 2024K between your boss and your supervisor, be sure to contact a special caretaker. Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Illinois Press. Trees at the department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the postoffice at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1929 Speaking before the Associated Press meeting in New York, President Hoover remarked in connection with law violation that "there is a possibility that respect for law as law is fading from the sensibilities of our people." There is more truth in the statement than the average American cares to admit. Our own selfish desires, and in many cases our lust for the dollar determine what laws shall be obeyed. If a law passed in the best interests of the public is harmful to a few individuals in that它 curtails their profits or restrains their freedom, they make themselves believe that the law was never made for them and continue to violate the net. A recent survey of child crime brings forth several instances in which the design for profit has lessened the respect for law. It was found that owners of possibly, cheap theaters, and dance halls permitted children to buy tickets or play even though the law prohibited. Producers were found who encouraged after school employment in street trades even though it was illegal under child welfare laws. Before a reorganization of law enforcement and judicial systems can operate at their best individual respect for all laws must be enforced. An individual may think that the breaking of one law on his part does not count, but when all citizens think that same a thing a law enforcement system cannot work. "Students of today are brighter than their parents," states a professor at the University of Chicago. Even the most skeptical of college students will believe that. New York newspapers hall the election of John F. Curry to the head of Tammany Hall as the passing of the political leadership of ex-Governor Alfred F. Smith; the return to the masses of the man who rose from the sidewalks to the leadership of his party and led it in a great campaign for the presidency of the nation. A GOOD LOSER Perhaps it is true, and if so one thing must be said, Governor Smith could not choose a more opportune time to retire from the political linelight. Departing now, he leaves behind him an enviable record as governor of New York, and a great fight for the presidency made in the face of almost inmountain obstacles. Best of all he takes with him the name of a sportman, a good loser. When he saw the tide turning against him in the recent election he admitted his defeat readily and with good will; his congratulations were the first to reach President However. In this last case, interpreted as his cellulose from politics, he has already taken the stand of a good loon, wishing the newly elected head of Tammany every success and speaking of him as a man of ability and courage. The brown derby may be passing from the political halls of New York forever. Al Smith may be a "hua-ben" from this day forward. But, as he passes out of the door and joins those crowds from where he came the new famous hat will be raised in sincere acknowledgment and, there will be a smile, the smile of a sportsman, and a good loser. IS IT FREEDOM? Recently, the M. I. T., Liberal Club of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology applied to the registration of the Institute for a room in which to hold a debate on "Military Preparedness." The registrar denied the request, saying that discussions at the M. I. T. on politics, religion, and militarism were booked upon with great disfavor and were therefore inadvisable. The Liberal Club appended to President Stratton and again met with res友友. President Stratton, to spare the club the trouble of holding its debate, generously expanded a view as to military preparedness that is henceforth to be the only orthodox view at the Institute. The president explained that there is no argument about the question for everyone known that preparedness is the only way to peace; discussion would merely provoke confusion and ill-feeling. Lect year the University of Wisconsin denied Mr. Bertrand Russell permission to speak in the university auditorium, because it was thought that her views on an important questions were too radical. More recently, at the University of Missouri, the head of the psychology department was dropped from the faculty because he countenanced the issuing of a questionnaire which sought to gain information on sex problems. With these three outstanding cases and innumerable minor ones in mind, one wonders if the universities are teaching students to think or if they are teaching them to only repeat what hey hear. Youth is sure going to the dogs proof of this is found in the case of former sport editor of this illus- tious sheet who has fallen on low as a write love stories. SENATOR COUZENS' GIFT The announcement of a gift of 10 million dollars by Senator Cousins, to "promote the health, welfare, happiness and development of the children of the state of Michigan and elsewhere throughout the world," will be hailed by philanthropists and humanists alike. It is a gift conceived in sympathy and broad-understanding. Undoubtedly, Senator Cousins is a believer in humanity. In promoting their welfare and happiness, he is confident that the results, good citizens, are well worth the cost involved. He stands with Rockefeller, Baker and others in the conviction that the future welfare and prosperity of this country lies in the hands of its children, that only through them may be laid the foundations for a constructive, solid, progressive generation to follow. The country, the world, in fact needs such men as Senator Couzens; men who are repaying what they believe to be a debt to society. And the work is none the less commendable because such men can afford to be bequeath large amounts to humanity. The magnanimity is not in the obligation but in the actual doing. Humanity believes in such men as Senator Couzens because they believe in humanity. WHAT? We clean, shine and dye all kinds of shoes. Where? BURGERT'S Shoe Shop Across from Court House New Pharmacy Bill in Legislature Will Make Druggist Truly Professional Man Cleopatra tried out a selection of poison on her slaves to find which was best, but then, in her time she was not acquainted with the movement for better spathacries. It remained for men such as L. D. Havehill, dean of the University of Kansas, to see the necessity for personalizing numbers of the drug trade. How Cleopatra must have spirited as her mother held her nose firmly imprisoned between her fingers and said, "Come, now, Chow, he a good girl and take the stick girl!" How one might be tempted to pick the stick girl'! How one must have stormed out of the room after taking her dose of danoor oil with muttered impremences against all "punch" apothecaries. After all those times have changed very little from these days, when she had piled his债. The main differences which have occurred are not so *sc* By LaVerne Munt much in the drugs as in the standards and restrictions that have been placed on the modern drugist. The most recent movement is an effort to make of the druggist a truly professional man. One of the outstanding methods of bringing this outward attention in a bill which was presented in the recent session of the Kansas leisure业. This bill, which passed the House with only four dissenting votes, went to a committee in the senate. It provided the course for all pharmacy students. It was only a few years back when the drug stores had in stock some medicines, and it was the duty of the chemist to crush them in the mortar and mix them properly. Now the spicy small bottles are not so much unmistakable in the modern drug store. They are all securely enclosed in monotonously regular bottles, although the wife enters the drug store and asks the clerk cautionily for so many ounces of ephedra she feels that he is suffering from it. Her knowledge that this is a rare drug, which, although it has been in the possession of the Chinese colonists, has been revealed to the western world. She does not know what mandarians in trailing, yellow, silken robes keep on wearing their clothes to use when they felt a hay fever attack approaching. She does feel certain, though, that the drugstore would be able to handle it in the proper proportions. She places the same confidence in him that she would place in the dieter who prescribed it for "It must have been ludicrous to persons at large and decidedly discouraging to the men themselves to be in the position of the cowboy who was a master of the game, pastries or the celebrated chef who was forced to conduct a course in di- "The real genesis of our present activity in attempting to have a state law passed that would require druggists to complete a four-year course in the war," he said before they could be registered, war in the late World War), said Dean Havliwell. "This war caused those men who had training and many of whom were graduates in pharmacy to be called as common privates in the army. George's Lunch GOOD FOOD ALWAYS staffies for the mules. His job was to dole out their daily ration of bay, "The skillful hands of the chemists were put to misguiding the hurt of a woman," said Dr. Monson, a multi-colored flag in vain paracryses as a member of the signal corps, or polishing some major's boats. These mises were due to the fact that the pharmacy graduate could not exhibit the professional man" said Dean Havenhill. 1011 Mass. Phone 961 Of the present thirteen or fourteen hundred drug stores in the State of Kansas and perhaps two thousand in other states, more than 1% of the drugstores who have completed a four year course. According to Dean Haynville, who is chairman of the state's board of acting under the Association, this will provide for the physician and the druggist dividing the responsibility concerning the welfare of the individual. In conjunction with the presentation of the bill in Kansas a similar law was passed on April 20, which pointed out the necessity of a pharmacy corps being formed in the regular army. It said in part: "The purpose of the legislation is to designate specializedization and separation of medical practice into several specialties; veterinary medicine, nursing, and pharmacy. Those who practice either branch must be systematic in their training and education to charge the particular service required of them in the interest of society." The bill was also accorded to the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, it will not effect the druggist who is allowed to work in the hospital but will be working at the business for 18 months. The latter will be permitted to work five years to make good their Efforts to control the druggist by state laws is not a new thing in this region. An effort to build on the founding of Harvard, Virginia passed in law which regulated the fees of the apothecaries and surgeons. It also restricted the activities of such weakers as Mrs Taxi-our best food to students at a price slightly above cost. Car Storage Phone 12 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Best in the Long Run — Bostonian Shoes! Not the cheapest per pair but least expensive per year! $7.50 and $10 Masters who formulated a "Tuscacora Rice" which was guaranteed to cure consumption. The Hawk's Nest The state medical society put an end to the activities of quick Indian drug dealers and others in the state of New Jersey in 1772. This manner became the basis for drug down through the "Pure Food and Drug Actions" missed in recent years. The modern men diffuse little from the ancient Egyptian when it came to being humbled by these quince. They wore naked and under the heel of the Mycenaian greyhound, date blooms, and muses hoofed loots in oil was guaranteed to cure falling bones, and drugs such as hekane, fennel, squid, woodworm, myrth, castor oil, mastic, opium, cinnam, anise, pepper, almond, peanut, almost any property under the can. Certain men always have the interest of John Public at heart though these are the men who have looked to the drugstore for personalizing the druggie. This will of course, mean closer selection but it will also mean a higher salary standard for the men engaged in the work of greater protection in the assurance of greater protection. --our best food to students at a price slightly above cost. One California track man, who was here for the Relays took a picture of the Kaw river so he could show the team that Kansas athletic field looked like. Turn about is fair play. Californians are always having "animal weather." I could have explained to them that weather is "ground" for the Relays. New York, April 24. -Fat or thin teachers are not wanted in this city Well, when Ziegfeld begins nicking out the teachers I'll go back to school. I saw a new name in my girl's notebook yesterday. "Say, who's that?" I said kindly grappled. "I don't get jeons," she snorts, "that's my psychology readings." We Serve The New Cafeteria Nothing is good enough but it's cool. the very best OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN VOL. XVII Thursday, April 25, 1929 No. 159 ALL.UNIVERSITY_CONVOCATION: The annual Honors convention will be held Monday, April 29, at ten check in the University auditorium. President W. A. Jouget, of the university, will speak. UNIVERSITY_BAND: All members of the band are requested to be at the monument Monday, April 29, at ten o'clock, in uniform, to play in convention; also to be in front of the Administration building for the band convert Monday evening from 7 to 8 o'clock. J. C. M.CANLENS, director SCHOLARSHIPS: are scholarship for 1920-30 are available for women students. Applicant will see the chairman of the scholarship committee in room 310. Song of the Seasons Song of the Seasons In Summer he swore that his love was true blue. EUGENIE GALLOO, Chairman. Similes for this the 26th day of April (better known as the rainy month): *As welcome to the multilingual world, as bringing a check from home.* In Springtime he swore it in rhyme. An old show: The Big Parade show- daily at the corner of fourteenth and Orcad. Shows; 8:20, 12:20 and 1:20. In Autumn his love was divine, In Winter he said, "I do worship but you." Now later in time he is swearing once more. once more. He has married a girl, but not one of those four. Blown on a bugle —Hugh Bently It Will Pay You to take some work in the Lawrence Business College. Special rates are made to K, U. students who wish brief courses in shorthand, typewriting, bookkeeping and banking. We arrange classes to suit your convenience. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 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