PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1927 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 EDITOR-IN-CHEEP ... MARION LEIGH Associate Editor ... Arthur Cieblec Associate Editor ... James Weich Editorial Writers Paula Cost ___ MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD HUNSLEY Burberry Editor V. Gorge Brown Counsellor L. Lawrence-Morgan Communications Editor L. Lawrence-Morgan Night Editor L. Loubey Horne Night Editor L. Loubey Horne Senior Editor L. Kathleen Miller Senior Editor L. Kathleen Miller Karagee Editor M. Messer ADVERTISING MGR. EDWIN W. MURRAY Foreign Airlines Bristol Australian Airways Arial Abc Airlines Airbus Australia District Assistant Kathleen Musa Kansan Board Members William Tamberby Marshall Chandler Jamie Brandy Milford Harden Kathleen Burh Catherine Hawner Katherine Burh Catherine Hawner Rosemary Mahire Aricle Cyrille Rosemary Mahire Arundel Tombing Katherine Mahire Mary Walter Stephen Brooksock Walter Moyer Business Office .. K 11 56 Technical Support .. K 11 57 Night Connection .. No phone to be delivered before each evening. Should you fail to receive a telephone 201K between I and K clock and monitor, call 201K. Published 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 Department in Mumbai. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the postmaster at Lawrences, Kannu, under the act of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, APRIL 2. 1929 TRASH! Cities which make a sincere effort to keep their streets and walks free from trash provide an adequate number of containers along the street. Only in very unusual cases will a pedestrian go to any great inconvenience for the sake of civic beauty, but if orderiness is made as easy as carelessness he will comply. The campus is a point of pride with the University, laborers are constantly at work keeping it clean and beautiful, and students are expected and requested not to drop paper on the walls. It is, however, about no easy to carry a handful of waste paper all day as to find a container for it. They are scarce on the campus and almost a minus quantity in the buildings. Why should not there be no neat crane in the halls of every building as well as waste-hackers in the rooms, and conscious containers at all exists? It is poor economy to make it difficult for people to get rid of their old papers and then pay men to go about picking them up. For Prison License Plates---headline. It has always been understood that prisoner had numbers, but it never has seemed necessary for them to wear plates. THE HOME-STRETCH Easter vacation is over, the last vacation before school is finished in June. In a way it is another beginning, the last beginning, as mid-semester grades were turned in just before the Easter interlude. It is half a semester late to begin studying, but to be very true—and how very true when spring finals arrive—it is better late than never. The part of the school year which remains is decisive. Although spring has arrived, the routine of classes will not be interrupted again and each student is confronted by the necessity for hard studying. The choice of studying or not doing so must be left to the student alone. Two months are not long, and if the choice be in the affirmative, the gains will be great. The reward is more than worth the time and effort. IS THERE A REASON? The periodical room in Watson library has not been opened for the last two months until nearly 8:30 in the morning, often later. Many students come to the door, rattle it, and are forced to give up their plans for early morning reading. When the rest of the library opens at 8 o'clock, it does not seem unreasonable to expect the same of the periodical room The report that 7,000 girls disappear annually from one city makes one wonder whether the one city of vanishing cream has anything to do with it. ALMOST TOO LATE ALMOST TOO LATE. At last, when the semester is half over, the student body is to have a second semester directory. Just why it was not published sooner no one seems to know. Makeup of the directory surely would not require much time, and if it does more people should be employed in compiling it. There is little need for a second semester directory that is published so late in the year. A lot of people who never even saw microphone, broadcast continually. The newspapers should be more careful. If they keep on printing news of Landy's missteps, such as miring his plane at the takeoff and landing without wheels, they will begin to spoil his reputation. Today's Best Editorial SMALL COLLEGES President Angel of Yale thinks the new canadians will "reflect the troubles of concession which have affected the social and moral features of Canada," and stresses that the small college is at its greatest vantage compared with the great university, which irresistibly attracts really great teachers and scholars. "Nowhere else," he declares, "it compares with our universities, its values of the spirit so readily achieved." We imagine a few hundred thousand living alumni of small colleges in this proposition. Not all great teachers should be pots that go with higher salaries. Perhaps the finest teachers are those who salary entirely, and get their reward by making themselves more interesting. The inspiration of personal contacts with "full professors" anxious to turn the souls of young men toward "the students of our universities" much the. The more rigid course of study is helpful where the small college has not yielded to the temptation of imitating the best professors in occupational studies. The lesser distractions of the mind from study are also to be considered. The greater opportunity of living is not to be forgotten. We do not think America could do without the small colleges. As between along without the great universities, But both are essential to the sort of educational development that is now taking place in the country. — Brooklyn Eagle, American. A ministerial student's definition in the ethics class: "Love brings heaven into being." Love brings Revised proverb: "A bird in the hand is not good table manners." --of, the. He knows not as they know the glory, the tradition of uncompromising and militant journalism of the University Kansan, of that never-to-be-forgotten time, has been handed down to them through the generations succeeding him. He knows not the aurn which time had lent the outstanding heroes of that campaigning, fearless newspaper. Easter Flowers— are loveliest in a new pottery bowl from — --of, the. He knows not as they know the glory, the tradition of uncompromising and militant journalism of the University Kansan, of that never-to-be-forgotten time, has been handed down to them through the generations succeeding him. He knows not the aurn which time had lent the outstanding heroes of that campaigning, fearless newspaper. Journalism Seniors Go Traveling (Edison) The following reports appeared in the Friday and Saturday issues of the Arkansas City Traveler which the Reporting III class, of the journal department edited.) If They Should Ask Us ... Let Him Ask Us ... Tomorrow a group of starry-eyed co-eds and garterless young gentlemen from the state university will be in charge of The Traveler. It is theirs to do with as they choose. Anything they say goes, even if they share all of our sacred cows out of the pasture. We shall do nothing except stand off and watch prayerfully. And yet . . . if you these young newspaper folk should ask us to, we might be persuaded to write a story for their edition, telling about those golden years of journalism on Mount Oread when the University Daily Kanran ruled the place with an iron hand. How we Kansan editors used to put the chancellor in his place! How we used to make the professors crawl into their holes! Ah, those were the days! Yes, we could write a story that would make these discreet, well-named young folk pop-up. But of course we had to be coached.—Ben Hihns, Arkansas City Traveler. Yesterday afternoon as tree group of starry-eyed coeds and garterless young gentlemen from the state university relaxed after press time, one of the latter brought his garterless shanks down from the table top to the paper-strewn floor with a bang and very touchingly read to his fellow-tellers Brother Bent's brag-andion account of the golden years of journalism on Mt. Orcand. Of course, they'd have to be coaxed, but the aspiring journalists, if Ben only knew it, could tell him more about that glittering age than he himself is aware The Kansas of Ben's day is held up to them as an idea to the attainment of which their mighty prayers are ever directed. He knows not that all classes in the department of journalism are opened with devotional exercises extolling the accomplishments of the hold young blades of days gone by in running the chancellor out of town for refusing to allow horses and buggies on the campus. Daily there are poured into their attentive and eager ears wondrous tales of how the prof dug such deep holes at the mere sight of the Kansas that oil started flooding the winding walks of the Hill; of how the Board of Regents didn't dare show their whiskers above the top of Fourteenth street for fear of being bombed by the Kansan as ally edited by Ben; of how the ways and means committee of the legislature was once almost seated into making an appropriation for a new journalism building at the behest of the Kansan; and of all the other achievements which Ben and his gang made and almost made. These things make up their precepts and guide their journalistic conduct. Day by day they tell the mountainous path to the ideal, so that when they have become senior they will go more or- lular, sheep skin tucked neatly under their arms, to wear, fessurely and bodily for country gentlemen. These discreet, well-nunnered young folks could tell him tales that would turn him pop-eyed. But of course they'd have to be cozied. -Mildred Eldridge, e292, published in Arkansas City Traveler. Lawrence, Kansas At the close of business. March 27, 1929 Well, I'm back from another vacation and like the rect of you. I suppose, am ready to bolt away more time studying. Many students, no matter how much I hate the quiet class periods to recurrent from their Easter's to-and-firing. --gives mid-commission examinations. The there is hope. Those who live by give before they are arrested, the sword shall persist by the taxes, and those who take it will be prosecuted. Condensed Official Statement The Lawrence National Bank QUICK ASSETS Hurrah! The new student directories are out now that three-fourths of the school year is gone. Not more than half the information is out of date. I gave up green watermelons ane sour cream during Lent. Was it forethought or only a coincidence that made the faculty above up mid-semester exams so they came during Lent? The Hawk's Nest Loans and Discounts - $1,370,593.31 U. S. Bonds (secure circulation) 100,000.00 Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures, and Safety Deposit Vault Another on the Scotch. Sandy took up sleight-of-hand he could go to church. Now he can palm coins. QUICK ASSESS Cash: due from Banks and U. S. Treasurer - $612.234.76 Municipal Bonds and Warrants - - - - - 173.815.07 Liberty Bonds (at market value) - - - - 235.709.07 TOTAL 1. 021.779.53 LIABILITIES $2.532.872.84 40. 500.00 Instead of speaking of the United States as being in North America, why not say it is North Mexico? Capital Surplus and Profits Reserved for Taxes, Interest and Contingent Fund Circulation Dividend Checks Outstanding Powder Batting, suit designers are shunned greater freedom in this year's models. What are they trying to do, gild the lib? $ 100,000.00 148,496.60 20,000.00 100,000.00 533.30 2,164.324 Another on the Scotch Another simile bigosh: As changeable as Lion Chaney immersionating a chameleon. TOTAL **2.532.872.84** Above statement is correct! GEO. W. KUHNE, *Cashier*. A fellow who jump, the gun nowadays, means a college professor who OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Tuesday, April 2, 1929 No. 139 BUDGET CONFERENCES: The following hall conference will be held Wednesday, April 3, in Johnsonville, GA. To attend Dramatic Arts午 11:00 pm; Journalism 2:00 - History; Political Speech There will be a special meeting of Tau Beta Pi in Marvin hall at 7:20 this evening. EDWIN S. RANDEL TAU BETA PI: EDWIN NEWMAN, President. Quill clubs will meet Wednesday, April 3 at 8 p.m. in the rest room of the Administration building. NAOMI DAESCHINER Betsi Chigia Stigma will meet Wednesday afternoon, April 3, promptly at 1 in room k16 Administration building for a very important short business meeting. QUILL CLUR: BETA CHI SIGMA: SQUARE AND COMPASS; Square and Compass fraternity will have a dinner Wednesday evening, April 3, at 6:15 sharp at the Green Owl tea room. Initiation of pledges and election of officers at the Maconie temple, immediately following the dinner. H. E. CROSSWHITE, President, LECTURE FOR ENGLISH STUDENTS: Prof. C. G. Dumlap will speak to English students and others interested Thursday, April 4 at 4:30 p.m. in room 265 Fraser hall on "Hogarth." He will show his Hogarth folio. W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman of Department. A. A. U. W.; The American Association of University Women is announcing an evening of all songs at the Univitation church Wednesday evening, April 3. A small audience will be invited to join us for a special celebration. CLASSICAL CLUR: Every member of the Classical club and others interested are urged to be present at a special business meeting called the president, Ruth Warlington, for Wednesday, April 3, at 4:30 in room 219 Forsher hall. LUGENE KNECHTEL, Scriba. Applications for scholarships for 1920-30 should now be made. The scholarships are for both men and women. Applicants should see the chairman of the Scholarship Committee in room 310 Fraser from 11:30 to 12:00 every day or by appointment. FUZGENIE GALLO, COORDINATOR SCHOLARSHIPS: Yale men decide which is best cigarette... In the recent cigarette test made at the University, OLD GOLDS were chosen by the students as the best. The cigarettes were masked by black labels so that the names of the brands were concealed. Each label was numbered. This was judged to be the most sporting way of testing the merits of the four leading brands. Some 208 Yale students were asked to smoke the four disguised brands without knowing their identity. OLD GOLD CIGARETTES WIN FIRST IN TESTS AT YALE When the votes were recorded it was discovered that OLD GOLD (Cigarette No. 3) had won. Old Gold was given 63 first choices, which was 11 per cent ahead of Cigarette No. 2, 34 per cent ahead of Cigarette No. 1, and 53 per cent ahead of Cigarette No. 4. They were merely to choose, by number, the one that was most appealing to the taste. The Nws supervised the test on January 18 at various fraternity houses and in the Nws office. A group of Yale upper-classmen comparing the four leading cigarette brands. The four leading cigarettes . . . "MASKED" with paper sleeves to conceal their brand names. NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD Limited Pty Ltd, Ed. 1989