第1章 PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEF | MARION LEIGH Associate Editor | James S. Welch Associate Editor | Alice Schultz Emotional Writers Virgil Ensign Paula Cost MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNKSLEY Surley Editor Lawrence Mcmanus Campen Editor Lila McDaniel Meadow Editor Night Editor Ginny Bauer Teeterbutz Editor Mary Werr Sunday Magazine Editor Nathan Miller Wildlife Editor Kansan Board Members ADVERTISING Mgr. KENNETH CAPE Act's Advertising Mgr. Fletch Nelson Director Assistant Mgr. Jeffrey Martin Director Assistant Kenneth Martin Director Assistant Maurice Uwetembe William Dunberry Margia Chackwile Randy Bandy Milind Houndley Robert Holmes Katherine Birth Catherine Hannen Arlott Circle Rosemary Mather Arloed Hirst Aroeld Hirst Katherine Moss Mary Worst Stella Brookeway Telephone Business Office K. U. 16 Home Office K. U. 16 Night Connection 270K1 Each Xtra卡 should be delivered to receive a phone 270K1 should you fail to receive a phone 270K1 between you and a check or an e-mail. Published in the afternoon, two times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Texas at Austin, on the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the postoffice at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1870. FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1929 KANSAS RELAYS The Kansas Rehubs bring to the campus each spring hundreds of high school and college athletes, many of whom are prospective K. U. students. Although the Athletic Association spends large sums of money on promotion most of the benefit derived is not measurable in dollars and cents, but in advertising and publicity for the University. The imprecision made on these visitors to the campus bodes good or evil for the reputation of the University. No matter how many records are broken and cups carried home, the real measurement of the school will be made in the little courtesies extended by students and faculty to the visiting athletes. The day of the Kansas Relays is a play day for hundreds who may return to become students, to say nothing of the college and university athletes who will act as broadcaster for the University of Kansas where ever they may go. NEW ROADS Kunans is to have some new highways through the action of the highway commission in authorizing the construction of roads to cost one and a quarter million dollars and the purchase of new machinery worth an additional quarter million dollars. This has been the second big project of the commission since it began working April 1. Two weeks ago the body authorized the construction of 392 miles of highways on the state system. At this last meeting the construction will consist of 392 miles of roads and four bridges. People of Kansas and other states can now drive through this state without hitting so much mud and causing so much comment on the subject. This state has been razed enough about its bad roads, and now there are prospects of compliments instead of criticism. The machinery authorized will bring the dirt and gravel roads to perfection, which shows that Kansas is not so far behind the other states in building up its highways. THE TEA SHIPPING ENGLISH The hold cutting off of England's three hundred year old tax on tea by Winston Churchill, Chancellor of the Exchequer, startled the dignitaries of the House of Commons out of their usual placidness. The removal of the tax on all tea probably affects more individuals than any other single item of the budget. The immediate and total abolition of the tax on next Monday cuts off $30,000,000 from government revenue and the price of tea eight cents per pound. Leading tea houses have already announced an eight cent reduction in the price. Winston Churchill's report brings a storm of hires from opponents who declare his action to be a master political move for Tory votes in next month's election. The tea-sipping English have allowed taxes on this very necessary luxury to involve them in more than one political difficulty in the Empire. If they must drink an average of ten pounds per capita, as they did last year, then they can well expect their political intrigues to center around a cup of tea. THE ENGINEERS' EXHIBIT Each year the school of Engineering and Architecture exhibits outstanding achievements in the fields of architectural, electrical, mechanical and chemical engineering, applied mechanics, mining, military, mathematics and engineering drawing. One of the unusual features this year in the mechanical man "Teleovx" which is to be demonstrated at the annual banquet. These exhibits take a great deal of time and preparation and are worth taking time to visit. The exhibition is not of the county fair type but presents interesting and unusual devices and achievements for public inspection. Those not in the Engineering School might well visit the other half and see what is going on in the engineering world. The Hawk's Nest Accents will happen, and the canny Scot who drifted through Lawrence the other day selling good goods, left a store with just a piece of a goods to hear him talk, nevertheless most of the boys who had stayed are hoping that wasn't all they got. Dorothy Dix says that breakfast is not only cane and eggs; it is a symbol of domesticity also. 'I often eat with my hands,' she never served at fraternity bounces. She: What I mean by saying that I'm a nit-wit? I'll not speak to you until you say you're sorry. He: I'm sorry you're a nit-wit. And then there is a simile which goes like this: As peaceful as Hill politics. Teth other day I asked Heinie how he liked my puns and he replied, "Puns? Sure. I didn't know dot you vas a paiker." How do you like my Italian watch? I don't see anything Italian about Don't you see the day go? When the boss took golf on doctor's order would you call that the Pasteur cure? Pulled in a Pullman Hugh Bently M. Hoover has dispensed with a secret service guard, perhaps she's a Girl Scout and doesn't need any. Indianapolis News. For Those Spring Picnics Get your food and supplies here. We have everything you will need. Fresh cakes and cookies are out specialty. Sommer's Grocery 1021 Mass. Phone 212 Reusch Garage K. U. Professor of Chemistry Was Instigator of Industrial Research The place to get the auto HOME-MADE PIES Our Specialty 735 N.H. Phone 1108 "service that pleases." Your Favorite Kind Is Fresh Daily Professor Duncan's plan was to the effect that if a large manufacturing company wanted to build a particular industrial problem in the field of chemistry that that concern would pay a certain amount of money and he could work with them to help they would work out the details or make new methods that would do away with the trommantaneous annual loss to the company. Twenty-two years ago the University of Kansas became of supreme importance to the great manufacturer concerns of the East and a flood of correspondence from the greatest business seen in the world poured into the office of the department of chemistry at the University. by Howard N. Monnett George's Lunch 1011 Mass. St. The person directly responsible for this interest on the part of the East was Robert Kennedy Duncan, then professor of industrial chemistry here. Professor Duncan and devided a plan that was unique in the annals of business and education. He realised that business was emerging upon a new era of industrial activity and that many manufactures were losing thousands of dollars annually due to waste material and complicated systems of manufacturing. After two years spent in perfecting his plan, Professor Duncan finally put before the world his idea of Industrial Fellowships in a series of articles than ran over to the North American Review due to the business believes to be sol- 1907. Fellowships for Two Years All the fellowships run for two years. All the fellowships are to support the fellow—usually from one to two thousand dollars a year—and must be supported by a season of new processes discovered. The fellow was appointed chairman of the Strong at that time), the director of the chemical department, and the professor of industrial chemistry. He research and to have been a member of the University. The fellows were approved by the professor of industrial chemistry, to whom they forwarded, periodically, reports of the progress These reports the professor sent to the founder of the fellowship. Apollo was not the only disputed questions as to matters of fact. On the expiration of the fellowship, a didger objected that he had completed his memorial micrograph on the subject of his research, containing what he and other dissidents were said to have forwarded to the company founding the fellowship and another was forwarded to the university. At the end of three years the University had the right to publish these memoirs and make them of the Students Eager to Work "A," for the fellows appointed to the tasky " of his articles in the North American Review, "he pits his youth and strength and creative ability against the force of his inner knowledge of the condition of the business, believes to be solvable. He is eager enough to do this because, while guaranteed a sum admirable to support his achievement, he is accured, a fair share of the spoils should be succeed. It is a game in which he has a chance to win any advantage. He is certain and he is certain of a "square deal." The fellowship appealed to the business men of the East and the first one established was by probably the largest manufacturer of laundry supplies in the country at that time. It had for its object an investigation into the investigation proved a great success and immediately others were founded. This project of Professor Durcan's attracted universal attention and it followed in his footsteps by an education for energy and activity along modern lines of thought, a reputation that was earned by a graduate University became the hope for biop business and the pioneer in a new way of teaching science. A followup was established to search for a new distastease another to find a way to utc the constituents of waste buttermilk. Another fellowship sought to improve the chemical composition of new properties in crude petroleum, another to discover new utilities in Portland Cement. One was created to work on optical properties of glass and its chemical constitution. Another fellowship sought out new utilities for zoome. The last and most interesting discovery was the duetless glands of animal organisms. All of these investigations proved successful and manyEnsured clamoured establish fellowships here. While the American Petroleum Industry was about to hit it, it might have been superfluous signals on filling stations, Not to speak of superfluous filling ---N. Y. World More Pretty Slippers in Jobausen's Footwear- Attracted Universal Attention This pattern may be bad in Ever Wear Silk Hosiery $1.75 - $1.50 This pattern may be bad in Black Kid" or patent- Very narrow, AAA's to B widths. Moderately Priced at High Arches, pretty vamps and graceful heels are always combined in— Jobansen's Style Slippers Kleenex 38c Ever Wear Silk Hosiery $1.75 - $1.50 Hinds Cream Cotty Powder $1.00 Cotty Compact Both Listerine Special 69c 50c $1.00 25c Woodbury's Soap 19c $1.00 Service with a Savings Store No. 23 747 Massachusetts Street LAWRENCE, KANSAS 89e ATTEND THE RELAYS THEN STOP AT THE Gillette Blades 3 $1.00 CROWN FOR SANDWICHES AND OUNTAIN DRINKS FOUNTAIN DRINKS 50c Non-Spi 38c $1.50 Houbigants Powder 98¢ 10c Ivory Soap 4 for 29c 15c Lux Flakes 2 for 17c 25c Listerine Tooth Paste 18c 59c Glazo 38c $1.00 Lucky Tiger for 69c 45c Kotex 29c 3 for 85c Stillemen are requested to report at 11:45 and subsend at 12 o'clock Sat uday for the Kansas Relays. Please be on time. R. O. T. C. MEN: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vot. XXVI Friday, April 19, 1929 No. 644 HERBERT ALLPHIN, Head Usher. Jay Jane are asked to meet at 11 a.m. look at South Park on Manhattan for the street Saturday morning, April 20, in forensic forces. Be at the stadium and street corner. JAY JANES: BUGLE AND DRUM COEPS; MEL DECKER, JR., Captain. All members of the Bugle and Drum Corps are requested to meet at Fowler shops at 5:30 a.m. m. Saturday in uniform. NOTICE TO PREMEDICAL STUDENTS; TO FRIENDS OF PROFESSOR E. MILLER: Students who are planning to enter the School of Medicine next September should apply for admission as soon as possible. Blanks can be obtained at the office of the Secretary of the School of Medicine, room 10 wet administration building. O. O. STOLAND, Secretary. TO FRIENDS OF PROFESSOR E. MILLER, and his birthday on April 25. His address is 558 N. Lake avenue, Pendleton, Cal. GEORGE O. FOSTER. The Graf Zeppelin, on its present parations for an anecdan flight, trip, carries hau gas, which is dif. aer- ferent from the blah so freely used by some aviators, during their ocea. Read the Kanun winode. Read the Kunsan wan-ads. SUITING YOU thats my business SCHULZ the TAILOR 917 Massachusetts St. Saturday Schedule Breakfast 7:45-8:45 Lunch 11:30-1:30 "Nothing is good enough but the very best" The New Cafeteria Closed until Monday Morning --- Society Brand Clothes Dunlin, the Society Brand style worn by college men everywhere College men know this! We don't have to tell you college men what the new style in college suits is. You know. In fact, you yourselves decided it. But we do ask you to remember that this store is headquarters for the Society Brand Dunlin—the college suit now being worn by well-dressed men on every important campus in the country. The Dunlin, as you know, is the authentic college model. Straight, free lines. Notch lapels. Two buttons to button, and a third to be worn open. $50 Other Spring Suits $33 to $65 IT'S THE CUT OF YOUR CLOTHES THAT COUNTS ---