PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1920 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas EDITORIAL-CHEF MARION LEUBH Associate Editor Arthur Circle Associate Editor James Weibel MANAGING EDITOR MILLARD RUNSLEY Sunday Editor Missouri Editor Campaign Editor Marie W. Hunt Lawrence Manager Nik Nimf Editor Timothy Horn Tedeschi Editor LaVere Manuscript Sandy Magazine Editor Sunday Magazine Editor Miller Mailer William Doubray William Doubray, MVP Jabal Bandy Jabal Bandy, MVP Kathleen Birch Kathleen Birch, MVP Kathleen Birch, MVP Arthur Clifford Arthur Clifford, MVP Armand Inesco Armand Inesco, MVP Mary Wiley Mary Wiley, MVP Nikki Brookswick Nikki Brookswick, MVP Advertising Manager Edwin W. Murta Foreign Adv. Mgr. Bernice Palombe Aunt's Adv. Mgr. Kenneth Cage Aunt's Adv. Mgr. Fred Reagan Business Office K. U. 16 Nokia Connection K. U. 16 NBMP Connection 270K1 Your Kenai should be delivered before the holiday. You should call telephone 202K1 between you full to receive the Christmas gift. You should call special agent by email Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter Septem- ber 17, 1916, at the postal office of Lawrence Kanese, under the act of March 3, 1870. MONDAY, M ARCH 11, 1929 WOMEN——VOTE! Thursday the women of the University will have the opportunity to vote for class officers and for other W.S. G.A. members. Last year there were only an approximate two hundred votes cast for the class candidates in the women's elections. Nearly two thousand women were enrolled, but only one tenth of those enrolled voted. If the privilege of voting was denied the women of the University, they would be greatly agitated, and without doubt would be unanimous in demanding their right. If the voting privilege were limited to a certain few, or to the number of votes cast in the previous election, another mighty upre would be caused. As it is, the privilege is considered a right, and rights seem to be meant to be neglected. Many University women feel that one individual vote would not make much difference in the election, but a small group could easily change the whole situation in an election in which 400 votes were cast. The present election is a challenge to the women of the University of Kansas. What will they do about it? Will they show by their attitude that college women are no more civically minded than their less educated sisters? Will they fail to avail themselves of the privilege of voting this Thursday, and permit an unprotected election to record their difference to their own self government for the coming year? COOLIDGE IN LITERATURE Ex-President Coolidge's career as a literary man began last week when it was announced that the first of a series of articles written by him, "On Entering and Leaving the Presidency," would be published in the April issue of Heard's International Cosmopolitan. Two other publications have made arrangements for the presentation in their columns of his efforts in the Library field. The Ladies' Home Journal will publish three articles written by Mr. Coolidge on "Promoting Peace," in the April, May and June numbers. The American Magazine has also received contributions from Mr. Coolidge. Two articles will appear in the early summer issues dealing with the "human interest" side of the presidency. No financial terms have been disclosed, but an indication of the sum he is commanding is found in the offer of the Encyclopedia Americana to pay him $25,000 a year and $1 a word for whatever he chooses to write without restricting him from writing for other publications. Once a president's term has expired he automatically return to private citizenship, with no particular responsibilities to the people. One who has relinquished the highest office in the land could choose no more honorable career than of literature. Any written records and accounts of his life he may leave behind him will be highly appreciated by future generations. temper gersonations. In however, in the minds of many, there is a question as to whether contributions to the three popular magazines mentioned above are worthy of a former president. Should he use his popularity for such monetary ends? For no matter how excellent a writer he may prove to be it is evident that his initial effort must be one command for his efforts, are due almost solely to his former high position. FRESHMAN ADVISERS The first few weeks of school are the crucial one in a freshman's college career. The success or failure of a student may, and usually does depend upon the outcome of those first few weeks. The transition from home to college throws him into a life that is almost entirely new. His main problem becomes that of adapting himself to the different conditions of t. strange environment. If he can be aided and guided during that early period, his chances for success are materially increased. The faculty adviser plan for freshmen is beig used with varying degrees of success in several institutions. Despite its obvious good results in many instances, college professors oftentimes cannot appreciate the problems of the modern student. Conditions are not the same as they were when the professor went to school, and his attitude is not sympathetic. The University of Washington, is one of the first schools to realize this and now is trying the novel plan of placing five first-year graduates, not over twenty-five years old, in charge of advising college freshmen. It would seem that such a plan should be highly successful. Men who have just completed their college courses should be better qualified to direct beginning students than are professors who are likely to be out of touch with the real problems of modern collegians. GANG MONEY To read that a gangster was murdered in a card game is such a common occurrence that the reader thinks little of it. But to read that that murdered gangster was living at the time in one of the most exclusive resort hotels in America stirs up a little revolt within the law-having citizen. He doubles the worth of virtue, if indeed there is such, and thinks of the hundreds of ultra-moneyed persons who have gained fabulous wealth through questionable means. This gangster could live in a $75 a day suite, while the average man would be more than happy to have a $75 a month home and a spacious lawn for his children to play on. Other things the average man would like to include: perhaps an extra automobile for family use when he has his at the office, a trip to Europe or tours through his own country, education and sufficient capital to build up an honest business. All these things he might have with only a small percentage of the gangsters' questionable dollars. There are, however, some disadvantages to "gang riaces." Illegal competition, jealousy, ill will, shooting, and death make gang money costly in the things gold cannot buy. The racketeer loads an existence filled with danger, pulsating excitement, and a constant fear for life, liberty, and property in a lawless underworld. With such a picture gang money loses its appeal, and the average citizen is willing to content himself with life, liberty, and a little less property. The only truly "all-American" teams are to be found representing the Haskell Indian Institute. Two women in flungy recessed to duel over a man's affections ounds like a reversal of the days When knighthood was in flower." "Two monkeys on a Tear"—headline. Must have been very small monkeys, or a very large tear. Probably it was a tear of the movie variety. Most of the students who resolve that they wouldn't get behind in the work this semester have decide they're better wait till next semester to fulfill that resolution. Washington. The list of yellow fever murts grows and grows at scientists now feel hopeful that the death of Dr. A. Maurice Wokerman of the Yale University School of Medicine will be the last human sacrifice science needs to make to凑配 this disease. The discovery that a strain of yellow fever virus may be transported from the source of infection in rica or South American may be more important than the discovery that a strain of infection in america. This discovery now makes it possible to start research on yellow fever in northern countries where natural infection is unknown and where the conditions of experiment are easier can. Yale Doctor May Be Last Martyr Necessary in Conquering Yellow Feve This does not mean that yellow fever will not continue to take its of human lives for some time. But it does mean that scientists need to be prepared. --principle that transplanting should invariably be done during the dormant season. Restrictions will not prevent transplantation, except that there is a wholly reasonable provision for protecting zones comprising a hundred yards on either side of the fence, together with existing lines prohibiting the sale of cottons wild plants and other property in the ward, accomplishing the purpose sought by touches of beauty outdoors. The wild flower shower is already the most important current remountings ought to be apparent to everybody. Acquisition must be the back of the good interior and citizen. 10. 1.1.1 0.1.1.1 "Gliping" to reporters about Kansan policy does little good either for the one making the complaint or for the paper; and it is worth being brought to the attention of one of the executive editors. If it is not, voting it merely serves to irritate him; a well-cannied can do nothing about it directly. Today's Best Editorial -Brooklyn Daily Eagle. MR. ROOT HAS A FORMULA The entire issue could have been settled in 1926 if the United States had sent Mr. Roost to attend the meet- ing, and it would not that year. It can be settled now in the same way but it will require more time; since the Court members must also accept what Mr. Roost and others of the League Council agree to do. "Inside Stuff" It appears that Elliu Root carried with him to Geneva a formula probably approved by American Governors and that it would be possible our membership in the World Court with the Senate reservations unimplicated. Unemployment there is continued insistence on the unofficial character of Mr. Root's official proposals, but he was not able to persuade Mr. However and with the State Department, followed closely by Secretary Kellogg's amenable note, prepared the way for solving the World Court. It is largely a question of interpreting the meaning of our Fifth Revocation. If its purpose, as most authorities say, is to right to bar advisory opinions by the Court in cases affecting the United States, that can easily be arranged. It is worth noting that certain a request for an advisory opinion where one of the parties concerned rejected its jurisdiction. It is also such refusal a permanent noiology. Camnus Opinion CAMPUS OPINION CAMPUS OPINION Drop around to the office sometimes! We always glad to chew the rab a bit with the boys who are disatisfied with the dear adult. I never thought improvements for improvement are always welcome. Perhaps you can see us right on a few points. For instance, how many teams are there in this room? If we are, we had always supposed that Big Six meant only SIX. And yet, my dear Mr. Anness, you say that we, in a very subtle position, are in the cellar position when the truth of the matter is they are tied for fifth place with the Kansan Aggies! In that case, who IS in the cellar position? The Kansas Angles, perhaps, or it Drke Dane? Wilbur Moore (A painter of illi- pary pictures—whatever that means. VAIN QUERIES Where does she walk, for whom love suffers late? And no, Mr. Ames, the sport writers do not write headlines, as a rule—and neither do they go down to the court or speak in letters in order that they may invariably correspond to what the copy really]. Yes, even linetype operators are here to have their weak moments, but to have them work in a way. Yes, when a team wins one game, and loses one, their standing is exactly .500. Mr. my, it certainly matters, because of those things, does it? I'll bet you're majoring in mathematics. Where goes she now, where fragile loneliness So false and beautiful, so dearly lost, Years have no chemical to drive her face. No April miracle can duplicate Nor any hemlock peer in bitter noy From out my heart, nor give another place. (Chiseled in noonday gold and midnight foot) Where goes she now, who was my Summer's snow— Where goo she now, whose pliant slenderness Where does she walk, for whom love suffers late? Hunger take the risk of working in tropical countries, where the chance of infection outside their laboratories is very high, and where living and worker conditions are no advantage except sometimes acceptable to disease. No idly dancing heed can duplicate Nor any serpent peer in artful- ness)— BERT COOKSLEY New York Times And whither coma, dear God, my first to know? And whither comes, dear God, my thirst to know? Further sairifees such as have been made by Lazaro, Moguchi, Stiles and now Wakeman, may now be avoided. All these men died of yellow fever contracted while investigating it in Africa. Two were killed in Calaua and two other three in Africa. This discovery that yellow fever virus may be kept long enough for transportation has just been announced in a new report from the Medicine and Hygiene by Prof. Edward Hindie, the Beit Fellow in Tropical Medicine, Dr. Andrew Sardela of the University of the disease back to London in the liver of an infected monkey that had been frozen during the voyage from Senegal to London, a prior study suggests. The basis of investigations leading to the production of a yellow fever vaccine by Professor Hardie and also by Professor Sanders will be presented at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. As Others See It Infected organs have been found in airborne infectiousness for at least 18 days and a fecal-ssuer fessor Hindle claims that live or blood dried without air will remain in the lungs. COMING BACK FOR MORE When the American marines on the American commissioner in charge of administration departed from San Diego, a reform transformed that spendshift and revolution-ridden country into an oracle in responsible management in responsive native hands. That those in charge of Dominican affairs are still trying to apply the principles of this new rule is indicated by the invitation timely extended by President Vauceless Fava, now 81, who has been accepted, General Dawes has become chairman of an advisory commission, the other membe- rors of which will go to Santa Domingo to aid in improving its national and municipal economic and financial ad- vocations. Those singular persons, whether Americans or foreigners, we charge for our work. The United States is to bully and degrade the weak republics of the warm seas, such as China, Japan, and Mongolia, having had an extended course in American "domination," turns to an eminent American for advice and counsel. It is also true is, of course, that the Dominican government has the best of its powers, and can govern and Americans individually wish it well and desire to be governed and sounds efficiently applied. The friendship between the Ameri- can is becoming more and more solidly based upon trust, courtesy and understanding. —Chicago Daily News New England's unfortunate experience with the fast-disappearing mayflower should give people an idea of how much effort just taken by the federal forest service with a view of preserving the more delicate appalachian west. It is good news, for example, that lilies, lady's slippers, bitterroot, rock popperia, adder's tongue, cliffrose, hemlock and weeping spruce and McNabb's cypress may not hereafter be lawfully taken into account in standing that the forest areas in a sense constitute a reservoir from which diminishing supplies elsewhere could be lost if the public generally would accept the forest service rule as a guide to all regions. But this is perhaps too PROTECTING THE WILD FLOWERS There is a kind of futility about most picking of wild flowers for the use in decorating homes. Few of the plants that are used for portionation well; wilted, bedraggled bouquets are not the beautiful things the originals seemed in their habitats and are now not so beautiful for the very real damage that is done by removing them. On the other hand, their destruction, due as it is to overharvesting, is the result of thoughtlessness rather than vandalism. But it should also be kept in mind that there are other types of disarray, the result of thoughtlessness rather than vandalism. But it should also be kept in mind that those which the forest service has proscribed, which it will still be permissible to gather, but to which they have not been sample, "plants should be taken only where abundance of a species exists," with care against overherring it. It is also possible that but dug up with plenty of earth left on the roots"; and it is a cardinal ---Portland Oregonian. Lemirgid驶到 the speed record area, then they were married by a Soviet official five minutes. They returned in fifteen minutes and one five more minute. The couple, married for 50 years of married life were devoted to a quartet over where the couple should stay. What strangen people those Russians are, to be sure—but wait a minute. They are well aware of her seventh husband for divorce. All his predecessors are living. Mrs. Richarda states that while waiting for the president's arrival she took her eight husband. Men are like street cars, she says, because if nigel passes one up, she can get an appointment. New York American The Hawk's Nest --smallpox by vaccination—is a wise and necessary sacrifice from the broader viewpoint. Another letter from "Rusty." From the tone of the last letter I gathered that "Rusty" was the boy, not the girl. Just a little too long winded for a boy. The first joke you offered I recall having heard in the fall of 1988 that a girl had written an English news-journal appearing at the same time as the story of the death of Charles I, while the third, for about ten years, was forbidding us to teenage. Here it silly. An old backpack man in Kentucky and never seen a pirate. One day he found one in the road, and looked into it said. "Wanl, by goch, this is a picture of pa, I never knew he had a picture of bisseh. I'll take this home and not it away." He took it up to his attic to hide it, but his wife was suspicious and followed him. After he had gone, she found the mirror on the mirrored and looking into it said; "Uh-huh! So this is the old hag he's been running after!" Curses or credit to "Rusty." The simile for today: As tempera- vental as nitro glycerine. Thanx to W. R. H. Then there was the guy who went to the tonsorial parlor for a throat specialist. "Hear about the new patent medicine they got out now called 'joy'?" "No!" "Yeah, people cry for it." "Yeah, people cry for it. — Hugh Bently Our Contemporaries YELLOW JACK'S FOURTH MARTYR The death of Dr. A. Maurice Wakeman of yellow fever on shipboard, he received from the University of the Rishelfer Foundation in Nigeria, where with other scientists he had been engaged in the effort to find an ear infection in a young man, one of its victims, is rendered more impressive by the fact that he is the fourth mortality of his students, Stokes, D. Hirley Nogueji and Dr. William A. Young gave their lives to the cause. Doctor Wakeman was when an Indian ran away distinction in his profession. We suppose the individual must wither to make the world grow more and more. Millions of human beings suffer from disease, hunger or one of life's four lives, of a dozen lives, of really great research men to the establishment of a suburban community from yellow fever—such a substantial immunity as has been afforded against . OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVI. MONDAY, March 11, 1929 No. 124 --- **2.1.3.5** The following are examples of the above properties: 1. $\forall x \in X, y \in Y, z \in Z, w \in W, \forall t \in T, \exists u \in U, v \in V, \forall s \in S, \exists t' \in T', \forall u' \in U', v' \in V', \forall s' \in S', \exists t'' \in T''$, where $X = \{x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n\}$, $Y = \{y_1, y_2, \dots, y_m\}$, $Z = \{z_1, z_2, \dots, z_n\}$, $W = \{w_1, w_2, \dots, w_m\}$, $T = \{t_1, t_2, \dots, t_n\}$, $U = \{u_1, u_2, \dots, u_m\}$, $V = \{v_1, v_2, \dots, v_n\}$, and $S = \{s_1, s_2, \dots, s_n\}$. 2. $\forall x \in X, y \in Y, z \in Z, w \in W, \forall t \in T, \exists u \in U, v \in V, \forall s \in S, \exists t' \in T', \forall u' \in U', v' \in V', \forall s' \in S', \exists t'' \in T''$, where $X = \{x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n\}$, $Y = \{y_1, y_2, \dots, y_m\}$, $Z = \{z_1, z_2, \dots, z_n\}$, $W = \{w_1, w_2, \dots, w_m\}$, $T = \{t_1, t_2, \dots, t_n\}$, $U = \{u_1, u_2, \dots, u_m\}$, $V = \{v_1, v_2, \dots, v_n\}$, and $S = \{s_1, s_2, \dots, s_n\}$. 3. $\forall x \in X, y \in Y, z \in Z, w \in W, \forall t \in T, \exists u \in U, v \in V, \forall s \in S, \exists t' \in T', \forall u' \in U', v' \in V', \forall s \in S, \exists t'' \in T''$, where $X = \{x_1, x_2, \dots, x_n\}$, $Y = \{y_1, y_2, \dots, y_m\}$, $Z = \{z_1, z_2, \dots, z_n\}$, $W = \{w_1, w_2, \dots, w_m\}$, $T = \{t_1, t_2, \dots, t_n\}$, $U = \{u_1, u_2, \dots, u_m\}$, $V = \{v_1, v_2, \dots, v_n\}$, and $S = \{s_1, s_2, \dots, s_n\}$. Y. W. C. A. ELECTIONS; The annual election of officers for the W. Y. C. A. will be held Tuesday, march 13 at Hewlett Park. The ballot will be counted on March 15. Ms. JANITA FEYDA, President, will mark the closing of the election. ETA SIGMA PHI: Eli Sinnor Phi will hold initiation services on Wednesday, March 13, at 7:30 in the Christian Museum. MILLED HOMOON, SECRETARY PHI LAMBDA SIGMA; PHI BETA KAPPA: Plat Phlam Sarma will meet in Westminster hall Tuesday at 5:00. Mrs. After will tell about her work with the team at ZAHEMSE FOYTE, secretary. THIS THING CALLED HAPPINESS Yet the man who voluntarily risks his life to save from peril myriads of further mysteries, another myriads who are yet unborn, deserves a first place in the thin red linen of Walt Disney. Such a place is assigned to Walt Disney as Noguchi and Stokes and Williams. Because they died well he will be better fitted for Brooklyn Daily Eagle tensions. "There is no such thing as happiness," said Thomas A. Edison, as he wrote in his book *A Gift for Everyone* a day after five days ago, and an he looked back over a life of service and resilience. It is rather atunting at him now that people are responsible for more of the comforts that have been added to human beings by science. "People of persons—the one man who has a right to all the happiness in the world—should make such a state." The Council of the Kosovo Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa will move to the election of new members on Thursday, March 10th at 10 a.m. in room 3204. In the same state from which Edition flung his challenge of cynicism to the headlines of ten thousand news—quickly, unobtrusively disprove the contionion. No bald headline were made for him; no gift was his gift to the United States, a gift that was the overflow of happiness from his own heart—a carillon tower Edison has his reward in the sight of his name on practically every invention that has added to the comfort and joy of life, in the past fifty years, in the speeches of eloquence that follow him wherever he penetrates into the unseen, through a technical commission, Bok, on the other hand, rejoices with the squawking ay and the cloring caw of the coyote and the little brown wren; with the sardonic crow and the impudent sparrow. His happiness is in the light of his colorful yellow and brown bodies flashing through the air at the sound of a score of charion bells in a tower that in unassured for beauty of archi- It is still possible to use big words in small talk.—Los Angeles Times SOMETHING TO GOBI Alaska is getting publicity from a half-dog and half-bear. What this country needs is a bad half-boy and half-bear. So it's an even killer — Atlanta Constitution Dr. Roy Champon Andrews is again leaving California to explore the Monolong Desert. This time he is not particularly interested in dinosaurs, but his knowledge is kind and let the rest of the world Gobl. — Los Angeles Times Apparently California was not so enthusiastic about Hoover as supposed; there was not even a slight earth trimmer on March 4. Cincinnati Enquirer Charleston News and Courier When a gang in South Carolina go out and kill a Negro it is a lynching, but when a gang in Illinois go out and kill seven men it is an incident It Will Pay You Send The Daily Kansan home. to take some work in the Lawrence Business College. Special rates are made to U.K. u.students who with brief courses in shorthand, typewriting, bookkeeping and banking. We arrange classes to suit your convenience. Society Brand Clothes Even college men change their minds When college men find a style of suit they like, they aren't in any hurry to change. But once in a while, a new wrinkle meets with their approval, and they take it up. For example, this Spring the best-dressed college men are wearing suits with a tecobon effect. The coat is straight-cut and full, as usual, and has three buttons—but the top button is worn open, the lapels rolling gracefully to the second. The authentic version of this style, as college men know, is to be found in the new Dunlin, by Society Brand. $50 Others $33 to $65 IT'S THE CUT OF YOUR CLOTHES THAT COUNTS