PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17. 1929 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITOR-IN-CHEEP MARION LEIGH Associate Editor James S. Weich Associate Editor Alice Schultz Editorial Writers Virgil Ensign Paula Co Kathleen Brent HILLS AND HUSTLEY MANAGING EDITOR MILLEAR HUSSELL Sunday Editor Lawrence Mattson Campus Editor Linda Evans Mary Night Editor Glindys Bake Telegraph Editor Mary Ware Sunday Magazine Editor Nadir Miller Wildlife Editor ADVERTISING MGR... KENNETH CAPE Airtf Advertising Mgr... Floyd Nelson District Assistant... Kenny Hoyle District Assistant... Mark Krueger District Assistant... Kenny Hoyle Marine Officer... Maritime Cheverne William Duchery Mark Chadwick Milford Houser Imani Bandy Miller Houser Katherine Birch Catherine Haines Arnold Imborg Rosemary Makes Arnold Imborg Arnold Imborg Katherine Mans Mary Worst Stein Brookaw Mary Worst Telephone Business Office K. U. 6 News Room K. U. Fax Office 70341 Night Connection 26:04K Your Kaaan should be delivered before 4:08 the phone number you give to the telephone 26:04K between ? and *c clock and a copy will be sent you by special carrier. Publicize 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 Quarterly other of Johnston. Entered as recordmaster mail matter September 17, 1910, at the address at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1875. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17. 1929 WAIT AND WORRY A paragrapher said a few days ago that it is better to wait than to worry. It is interesting to note that a number of great men caught the significance of that long before the writer, Abraham Lincoln, in the midst of heated arguments, would calmly reach up to a shelf of books, take one down and read a few funny anecdotes just to help his fellow workers take their minds off their work. He would do this just long enough to give them relaxation, then they could continue the subject under discussion without worrying. Why did Lincoln do this? Because he realized that there is a power above which sees beyond tomorrow's battleline. Woodrow Wilson, that far-searing statesman, knew better than to permit himself to worry. That was the reason one would find all the latest Hawkwell detective stories in his library. When he was troubled with some weight matter, he would stop and read a few minutes. Herbert Hower, too, like detective stories and keeps the doings of Sherlock Holmes's all over the world at his finger tips so that he may read instead of worry. He too realizes that all of the worrying of all of the men and women in the world can never raise the value of the best bend or stock in the world a single point; hence, it is profifics. MARION TALLEY Nothing is so exasperating and at the same time so flattering as to hear someone palming off our wise-erax as their own. Another of our celebrities has failed us. After public recognition and help Marion Talley states that her vocal career has been a more incident in her life and at the age of twenty-two she is leaving public life without even the courtesy of advising the company she was connected with before making her press announcement. It is thought, of course, that there is some cause for the astonishing announcement besides the fact that she has an urge to farm. For the present, however, we shall have to take her word for the reason. It seems a breach of faith that anyone who has taken up the time of competent teachers and audiences during the formative time of her career should abandon it as a mere incident. Education, liberal or technical, is not a personal matter for when the public gives it has a right to receive, Marion Talley is disregarding this ethical right. Marion Talley's goin' to the farm She has a lot more faith in this special session of Congress than we have. CO-VOGATIONS June 1989! And thousands of new job-hunters turned loose on the world. In years past the great majority of these educated job-hunters turned to the vocation of teaching, but the field is fast being overcrowded. The position of "school marm" has always been considered the proper but unexciting work for the educated woman, but now she is turning toward it with growing disfair. Only 30 per cent of the 1282 class of Wellesley who are working have taken up teaching. Two or three years teaching school will yield a nice purse and a life certificate for the one who takes up pedagogy as a bridge between an irresponsible and a responsible home-maker. It is a first-rate temporary vocation, but few women, if any, enter it for a lifetime job. The professions and specialized fields, however, hold a different future for the feminine college graduate. Medicine, the stage, journalism and business preparation are all examples of special lines of work that women can pursue to greater or less extent after they are married. They go into these fields intending to follow them to some extent throughout a lifetime. Marriage is not a goal nor an end of her vacation. It is a probable and desirable co-vocation. Teaching is taboo for the woman graduate who sees beyond the marriage ultar and a home, and gets a vision of a future of activity outside the women's clubs and bridge tenes—a feature where she will not have to choose between a vocation and a home, but where she can have her share of both. A dance is something to sit out from. THE POT OF GOLD The Mexican Revolution is about over, if reports from Mexico are true. The rebel leaders are one by one urinating on the federal forces and the rebel ranks are slowly being depleted by soldiers dropping out. They are tired of the revolution and one nothing to be gained by being shot at and half-starved. The revolt has run its course, as all unsuccessful rebellions do. The Mexican government proved too strong to be upset by force. It has the organization and sharpness, the money and morale, to back it up. It knew the revolution was coming months before hostilities actually began and prepared for it effectively. When every robber has surrendered, the new task of reorganization and rehabilitation must be begun. The government shall then have inspired confidence in its ability to cope with any situation, and will be respected. A new era is open for Mexico if she can successfully prepare herself for it. The government must educate the people, subsidize opportunity, and point the way to progress, freedom and equality. The task is not an easy one and its fruits will not be tasted in a day or a year. The trouble with Mexico lies in herself. And the quicker she realizes this, the closer she will get to the Pot of Gold. Cogitation brings conclusion to confusion. THE WORLD COURT When Elihu Root lays before the United States senate, the Root-Hurst compromise stating the conditions on which the United States may enter the world court more than just America's entry will be at stake. If the senate refuses, it is a foregone conclusion that the other members of the League are not going to put their signatures to it. And if it fails this time, it is probable that it will be a long, long time before there will be another opportunity to reject a similar plan. When the compromise is finally analysed it appears that the United States has in effect a favored position, in so far as it can quit playing anytime the game goes against it. Elith Root has occurred good terms for the United States, and as a consequence the senate should give the measure very careful consideration before rejecting or accepting, especially in view of the fact that the eyes of the world are watching. Report that President Hoover has taken action against the army leaves unknown the fate of the electric steel furnaces during the Administration that has --and Mexico is an injustice to keep her nationals at home as some Americaans have complained. Dr. Manuel Gano, who has made a study of the problem, has already pointed out that Mexican emigration is a modern movement, but one which has not been adequately empty country in another 50 years if nothing stopped it. -Boston Transcript Present Rate of Emigration Brings Mexican Officials to Fear Depopulation Mexico City...While United States authorities are occupied with the case of the Mexican worker in American fields and factories, the Mexican government on its part is investigating the home angle of the problem and devising means of keeping the emigrant at home. In the last century and a half, while the population of the United States has increased more than forty fold, that of Mexico has hardly quadrupled. Campus Opinion --and Mexico is an injustice to keep her nationals at home as some Americaans have complained. Dr. Manuel Gano, who has made a study of the problem, has already pointed out that Mexican emigration is a modern movement, but one which has not been adequately empty country in another 50 years if nothing stopped it. It seems that after all that has been said and written about keeping off the grass that this, like so many other rules, applies only to students. So I had to teach it across the campus with one of the instructors I started to cut across a small strip of grass. The instructor promptly informed me where the grass was. That now, I was on my way to a 1520 class and had the opportunity, before leaving, to pick up one of the most important of the high officals of K. U., strolling calmly and sedutely across the grass. Perhaps we don't think that an extra block would have made him any more disturbed than it makes some of the students. Editor Daily Kansas; It seems to me that if we are to have a "keep Off the Grass" rule on the campus that it might just as well imply to everybody, officials included. Our Contemporaries (Science Service) PROFESSORS AG'AIN Professors are most inconciidable. The restrictions which they seek to place upon our daily routine are most annoying. Stringent regulations are one way of attributing the bettermement of everyone concerned, but when they are merely inconvenient without also being benign, they have absolutely no justifiability. For instance, there is scarcely a professor, instructor or assistant on the Evanton crusps who balances the course with the preoperares. Perhaps they have entirely the wrong impression of why we sign up for lecture courses. What happens if one can't sleep so many more bourses? Sometimes the professors don't open ability to our课 room and they play their contempt for it in ways most understand. One of their pet projects is to teach us how to love. They rattle away in a dreadful monoface until they see the class slipping away, and then without result, they leave in the class that are really enjoying the lecture, they suddenly burst forth with a volley of syllables that somehow wake a student from a sound sleep. The professors might be justified in their attitude of thoughtlessness if the students themselves didn't show up to these meetings, then them. But, can anyone say that there breaches a student who would even so much a think about the prof's role in the course, that they might be called discourtese to the prof? In return for this display of courtesy, we do not want to teach students to more considerate toward the student body and govern their actions. CREDIT FOR PUBLICATIONS WORK BURGERT'S Shoe Shop Seiberling Daily Northwestern. Students at many of the larger colleges receive credit hours for work in teaching or research. The University State college is the last institution to give credits for student work on publications. It is given through the SALS program and to help them in the campus. Editors and business managers of all publications arrange interviews that will allow credit for their work. A college editor writes more each day than any course in English or foreign language, one year in newspaper writing, he does more work than one would in four years of English courses. Is it worth the money for the writing he does? Student workers on publications Work on publications contributes much to over- education. On the business side, the experience the college business manager receives is equal to any education a course in commerce would have he could not receive credit for it? Across Street From Court House Wear Rubber Heels for Comfort and Satisfaction Unemployment and economic misery at home are back of the migratory movements, and one of the first reevaluations of Mexican migration to the Mexican Department of the Interior, according to an announcement of Ministry Felipe Canela, is to stop the deportation of Honduran banians, Hungarians, and groups that form undesirable competitors of the Mexican at home, or those that use the country mercenary stepping up to replace United States. The desertion of the country for the city has decreased the utilization of its resources and forms a problem to its resources and form a problem that confronts the nation. A plan for the co-operative explication of the problems faced by workers and unemployed in now being worked on by Minister of Industry, Commerce and Labor, Ranon P. de Jong. The Department of Industry, Commerce and Labor, on the other hand, is formulating constructive means of alleviating the unemployment problem by gathering on unemployment, indicate an abnormal concentration of population in cities and other centers where a practical desertion of rural regions where resources are frequently abundant, but where the population concentration is at times as low as one inhabitant in each housed square kilicre. work long hours every day on pitiless small salaries, and in nine cases out of ten, school work suffers because of it. If credit were given for the work on publications, the college editor or business manager would not have to burden himself with so many tasks that he could do none of them well. Daily O'Collegian. DOES BEAUTY NEED BRAINS Every once in a while a man whose sophistication is otherwise impractable will insinuate that a beautiful woman is never intellectual. Of course, it is obvious that r rehemly woman doubtless has much uninterrupted time in which to be at home. The most important is her bed, but any beautiful woman probably has learned during the first eighteen years of her life all she will ever know about men and a great deal more than she can ever put into practice. This leaves the beautiful woman plenty of time in which to take up more intellectual interests. The daughter of a world-renowned her investigator interacts distracted in the presence of men on account of her intellectual interests during her first eighteen years. There is, it seems, no end to the splendid honors and recognitions that come to a man after he is elected to some office. Mr. Makaricheff, in San Francisco the other day, a Mr. Makarischeff, a naturalized Russian lawyer to the Court to change his name to Houtu. Washburn Review. Home Service Laundry and Dry Cleaning H. D. Hearn, mgr. 1245 Conn. Work called for and delivered Phone 1329 The Hawk's Nest "Did Bad get along with that blind he had last night?" "Well, he got a long night right." "Well, he got a long good-night if that's what you mean." All genius are half crazy. The sur- sure way to get crazy is to go without sleep. All genius exist on about five hours. You can have a nice sleep and become a genius. Listen and learn at the "talkies": All guarians call their sweeties "baby," and all sweeties call their guangers "baby". The hypnotist was frantic. He had Joe College in a deep sleep and couldn't wake him up. “What shall I do?” he cried. “I must wake him at once or he will die.” Then some wise guy had a bright idea; he ran to the powerhouse and blew the whistle. When people praise this stuff I doubt either their sincerity or their sanity. "Snatter, Sambo, is you broke?" "Say, listen, big boy, if Cillacas was selling six for a quarter, I would lay a barretat (nightlight bulb)." "Plants are heartless," says the scientist in the theory paper. No, it should be easy for someone to provve that plants are related to wee- I found my ideal girl the other day, but she's not half as interesting as the one I've been dating. Hugh Bently As Others See It HIDDEN WEALTH We talk much of natural resources and of wealth that waits in rocks and earth, and in the universe's enterprise. Yet nearer to hand and of greater worth is an unold store that will not wait long for discovery and harvest. It contains hidden genius, goddess and usefulness of men, whose discoveries make and whose losses leave it poor indeed. Rarely do men reach full stature and strength under the pressure and perplexities of the busy world. They often suffer from unkind circumstance, by unkind circumstance, by ignorance of their own powers and possibilities. They leave at last their full work undone, their full worth unknown. They leave the world power than it might have been had they had resources been discovered and used. Some men have the wisdom and means to free their fellows somewhat in their possibilities. They can bring their encouragement and teach their confidence. They can discern the prowess of ambition and draw them to the surface where they may live and thrive. They can realize the riches of the heart, It's not too hot to eat biscuits, they are still served free every Thursday night. The Kansas Relays--the next lecture on Contemporary Literature for freshmen will be given Thursday, April 18, at 4pm. p.m. in room 281 of the Wilson Building. The will be led by WWEEMK, a WWEEMK instructor. Our Kodak knitting service is non plus ultra. If you know your latin know what we mean The New Cafeteria Make arrangements to park yourself in one of the K. U. Stadium seats and give yourself an athletic treat, next Saturday. "Nathia is good enough but the very hot." See America's best at the Gateway of the West parade and strive for supremacy before your eyes. For your convenience we are open evenings and Sundays. D'Ambra Photo Service 1115 Mass. (Opposite Court House) Phone 934 OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVI. Wednesday, April 12, 1929 No. 152 TO FRIENDS OF PROFESSOR E. MILLER: Prof. E. Miller leaves his 960th birthday April 25. His address is 558 North Lake avenue, Pasadena, Cal. GEORGE O. FOSTER. MENAECHMI CAST; Members of the cost of "The Memoirs" are asked to assemble at 3:30 Thursday in 2921 Fenner hall; photographs of the cost in continuity will be provided. KAPPA PHI: EL ATENEO: NOTICE TO PREMEDICAL STUDENTS: LECTURE ON CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE: El Atenco co reunira jueves a las cuatro y media por la tarde en la sala 113 Ead. Ant, para la session ordinaria y un programa del día de octubre. Kappa Phi will hold their annual春期 bowet at the Metohist Church Thursday, April 18, at 5 p. m. All members are requested to be at the church on this day. CLASSICAL CLUB: Students who are planning to enter the School of Medicine next September should apply for admission as soon as possible. Blanks can be obtained it the office of the Secretary of the School of Medicine, room 10 west administration building. O, O, STOLAND, Secretary. mind and spirit. To do this is to invest in humanity and to become a partner in its best work and shareholder. Philadelphia Public Land Ledger Omaha Hat Shop 717 Mass. St. Dean Brabant will speak on "Political Institutions" at an open meeting of the Classical Club Thursday, April 18, at 10am in room 209. Foster bad, Jr. and Rachel McIntosh will speak on "The Presidency." SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: The Snow Zoology Club will hold its last regular meeting on Thursday evening, April 18 at 12 s'dinex in room 304 snow hall. Doctor Schaeffer will give an illustrated lecture on "The Spiral Movements of Man." An exhibit will be shown, including the MEREPIETH OLINGER, President, and important announcements. A dispense from Washington is to effect that Postmaster General Brett M. Moore's postal system more efficient. We are glad to treat that work has already been done in the area, and stead of our country addressing being Rural Delivery No. 11, it was changed to 21. We clean your hat, repair your shoes, shine them and deliver them to your address. PHONE 255 -N. Y.World. tion for us but a great saving in ink for the addressgraph people. Westerday we saw man digging fish worms. We can't decide whether he is an optimist or spring is here. —Columbia, Mugianor. Phone GUFFIN TAXI 987 7-passenger cars 24-hour service Calls promptly answered day and night. Ragged Rundown Heels Are Disgraceful We Fix 'Em While U Wait 1017 Mass. St. ELECTRIC SHOE SHOPS Two Shops 11 W. 9th Tennis and Golf Shoes for Men and Boys DERRY Black or Tan Calfskin $10 10 First, you want comfort—then style' and long wear. You get all three in Bostonians—and no excuses! Others from $6 upward where Society Brand Clothes are sold