PAGE TWO MONDAY; MARCH 4, 1925 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANJAR Lawrence, Kanada Editor-in-chief 悬念部 M. Habe Associate Editor Miller T. Maude Associate Editor William J. Peltz News Editor William A. Dangrery News Editor William A. Dangrery Nort Editor Jawed Wade Sunday Editor Kubbe Juillee Night Editor Lavinia Magrane Night Editor Lavinia Magrane Almanah Editor Allison Sutton Almanah Editor Allison Sutton Exchange Editor Kathleen Perth Advertising Mgr...Edwin W. Murray Foreign Ace...Bernie Pomerantz Alibi Advertising Mgr...Kenneth Cage Alibi Advertising Mgr...Ford Kramer Midal Elhadee Warren, Pollin Valea Yew Alimin Dimoore Jeanne Jidlin Laye Tumbye Marie Drewery Diane Stewart Chronicle Brown Telephone Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 35 Night Connection 2701k3 Your Kenna should be delivered before 6:30 each evening. Should you fail to receive it telephone 20785 to 7 and 8 clock or a copy will be sent by your special carrier Published in the afternoon five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Alabama, over the press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter. Supreme bers 17, 180, at the post office at Lawrence Kanak, under the act of March 3, 1879. MONDAY, MARCH 4, 1925 HOOVER'S SPEECH In his inaugural address, President Hoover has definitively confirmed his stand on the question of prohibition which was indicated by his refusal to appoint William J. Donovan of New York attorney general. He intends to do something about prohibition. Every energy, he says, will be exerted toward the enforcement of the law and toward an investigation of alleged abuses which have grown up under it. The first change, he says, will be a transfer of prohibition enforctions from the treasury department to the office of the attorney general. Mr. Hoover shifted the responsibility of the farm relief from his address to a special session of congress which he had promised in his campaign speech. The more mention of sign of relief for the agricultural interests will give the farmers a favourable outlook on life. He said that the relief should not go unfinished, that he would attend to it himself. World peace, the thing that Mr. Hoover has been striking for, and which the people are heartily in favor of, was one of the main items in his address. He has fulfilled their expectations by the appointment of Henry L. Stimson of New York as secretary of state. He also gained the confidence of the people, when he said that the United States should not enter into any controversies that would force her into war. Stay on this side and have friendly relations with the other nations. Mr. Hoover can very well talk on this subject, as he has made several trips to Europe and only recently returned from a tour of the South American countries. There was nothing spectacular about the address. Nothing more or less than the people had expected he would say. Just a working out of a plan for his administration. It represents the work of the organizer and the executive, a man who plans before he talks. MISSOURTS PROBLEM The legislative body of Missouri, which is now in session, has before it a revenue-producing bill which seeks to impose a tax of five cents per pound upon all brew malt compounds from which home brew is made. The tax would be collected through the sale of stamps to retailers and it is estimated that the levy would produce three million dollars. Prohibition seems to have turned into a money making scheme, Boot-leggers are thriving, the courts are making money in fines. Thousands of law enforcement officers are drawing high salaries, and now, rather than trying to enforce the national law a state government is trying to acquire three million dollars at the expense of those who break it. Measures toward stopping the brewing of illicit liquor in private homes do not seem to be considered. If such a bill passes the Missouri legislature, it will be an open admission that prohibition cannot be enforced in the private homes of that state. THE SOUR OWL AGAIN Did the Student Council really full fit its purpose when it printed all the material it did about the recent Jun- Iron from number of the Sour Owl? Would it not have been better to investigate before making any announcement? Publicity, good or bad, makes it possible to sell many more copies of the magazine than expected. What if the Sour Owl is fired $109? That is a small sum and it seems like it is rewriting. It appears that the Council has defaced its own aim. The Sour Owl staff送出 out questionsnaires to the student body recently asking what kind of material it should print. The replies came in thick and fast. It should be modeled after such and such magazines of such and such universities. As a matter of fact, the Sour Owl is said to be superior to these magazines in many respects. Why have news stories originating with the Student Council scattered all over the state and other states, before an investigation is made? Any one welcomes free publicity. Educators and close observers of college life often beowal the lack of intellectual activity on the part of American colleagues. They cite the laxity of interest shown in burettes, literature, and other cultural lines as indications of neglect of the higher things of life. STUDENT INTELLECT This seems to be true locally in a number of instances. The meager groups which assembly at the Y. M. C. A. noon moon conventions tend to verify such arguments. A number of able speakers, more particularly experts in various phases of social conduct and foreign relations, are heard only by comparatively small audiences. The Hill lecture course is attended by more townpeople and visitors than by University undergraduates. Musical concerts and even dramas dumbly play to full houses. Fine arts recitals are heard only by those required to go, and English lectures are very poorly attended. Debates are given to full houses as a rule, but convictions and special lectures in various departments are heard only by those forced to attend through class requirement. Those who make it a point to hear these special lectures and entertainments, find them wholly worthwhile and instructive, as well as highly entertaining. This being the case, it seems that such non-attendance cannot be attributed to the average student's lack of knowledge in the topics discussed. Many would be interested if they once began attending lectures and concerts regularly. Unless more students enjoy an interest in meetings and programs outside the regular class routine, it would seem that the college mind really is being rusty and derailed. PARIS STEALS A MARCH THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PARIS SEEMS A MARCH The new spring fashionings are being kept a secret by a syndicate recently formed to protect the styles from being copied prematurely. The American copyists cannot issue pictures of their version of the new styles, before they are really ready to be put before the buyers. About 750 gowns, carefully concealed in wooden cases, arrived from France and were taken to the appraisers' stores, without anyone having a peek at them. Shorter skirts, elbow shews, plates and tucks. No one here will know until the cases are opened. The members of the syndicate are reported to be well pleased with the results of their combination. Formerly the copies of the creations were in New York very often before the original models. This took all the joy out of the expectation of having a dress unlike someone else's. There were too many creation alike before on the street or in the ballroom, and no one had any individuality. No more of this if this plan works out this time. Said the man who went to have his team ahd, "What a fitting occasion!" Now that footprints may be used to identify criminals, it might be well for them to follow other paths. Yesterday we learned that it is alchemy that turns dress into gold. Before, we had always thought it was alimony. Washington - The House bill providing pensions for $125 per month for army officers and enlisted men, or their wives or heirs, who took mortar parts in the yellow fever investigations carried on by army soldiers in Cuba in 1800 has been passed by the Senate and now goes to the President. For Heroes of Yellow Fever Investigation Will Get Pensions of $125 per Month ( Balance Sheet ) There are 14 of these men, twelve of whom were private. A pension for Mrs. Walleer, Ridley, wife of Major LeRoy, who was in charge of the yellow fever work, in Cuba, was provided years ago, but recent efforts to increase this amount now presents an amount of $160 per month failed in the House, the chairman of the Pensions Committee there maintaining that such pensions must be held down within "reasonable limits." The bill as passed does more than make certain pensions of $125 per month for each of the men concerned. Today's Best Editorial It provides that the Secretary of War shall publish their names annually in the Army Register as a roll of honor, and that each of the men or their SILENT INVESTIGATION The Senator Robert F. Wagner is not the only person who would like to know why the United States Senate has placed the Vestibrio dermatitis to remain slumbering in committee. Many thousands of Americans who take passage in the Senate have been exposed to the eastern hemisphere they've interested. So are Africanian shippers on such vessels. So are all other passengers and security at any airport is essential to commuters. So actor Wesley L. Jones, chairman of the committee on commerce, to which the Waiger resolution was reaffirmed, said that the appearance significant in the light of the proved facts. There were 100 and 350 people among them were American lives. The Federal attorney's inquiry revealed a major discrepancy between the speculations that the lieutenants were boned, the crew undisciplined, and that the ship should never have been perished. Obviously, the steamship inspection service should be overhauled. Foreign ships pliny between American ports will subject to American laws of inspection. Unless the commerce committee nets promptly Congress will have adjourned before the Wagner resolution, the committee will place the public will place the obvious construction on the refusal of the commerce committee to report out the New York American Campus Opinion Edition Dalle Kursan: It seems to me that we the Kanisan a bit an elicitor in some of its policies and practices. Take for instance the habit of putting a poor cub reporter's name at the beginning of a story in an under-faced type than the story itself. This practice has its advantages no doubt that in such a "hy-line" automatically absolves the remaining hundred, or so students in the department from all grievance of that particular problem; maybe they might still be served with suggestion. Besides, there's a possibility that, if given enough training and the right tools, you might be able to reporters might some day develop into journalists. If, and when that day arrives the team of the Ledger, The Times, or another Star, choices to give them by-line in type only slightly smaller than the headlines themselves. I for one will be glad to have them. But consider the poor cub? What has he done to merit such exposure? And why in his future chances of earning an honest living as a journeyman, he has not had his neck. Some of the headless employer is liable to read the headlines in the Kenyan and remember the names that thrust upon him in the past, and those still, he might even read the stories themselves! It is too easy a risk to take particularly for a student who must have a job when he was schooling off his debts. Someone ago the author of the following, expounded at length without fear not tiring concerning the hostility and hatred that he also stated "that something had be done" and it was done much to the extent that who so humbled a change. Realizing the strength of his personal comment through the columns of the Kansan, the writer again takes the opportunity to tell the world more about it. Editor Daily Kansan: Students visiting the student hospital are at once conscious of the question: "Why do students have to be present at the hospital for main five days, in a 10-room house such as this? In this the best the University can offer, in this day we see the patients who are modern and so efficient." In other words the hospital (and not the staff) is a degree to the University, in my opinion, I know I'm not alone in that opinion. In writing the epistle, which caused some unrest among hospital attendants, he instructed him describing the treatment received by the use of "vulgar" adjectives. He strained the point a bit and wished to emphasize that under the stern eye of his adversary. So he humbly hopes to more mature so he judgment, and will try once again to master it. We have at our disposal a great Pairs shall be presented with a gold medal. The Secretary of the Treasury is to decide which pairs will receive $000 and is to be appropriated for making them. the names to be carried on the roll of honor are: Walter Reed, James Carroll, W. J. Lazear, Arvidides R. Bailhard, A. W. Covington, William H. Dean, Wallace W. Forbes, Levi E. Fok, Paul Hamam, James D. Kissinger, John J. Moran, William Olsen, Charles G. Sonntag, Cydle L. West, R. Cooke, Thomas M. Bechtel, Michael Brandon, and Edward Weatherwalks. Senator David Reed, Republican, of Kentucky, served as a member of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, explaining the bill to the Senate, where it passed with no opposition. "He could not have proved that fact had it not been for the heroic assailance of about 25 men in his desperate attempt to retrieve terrible experiments in order to prove that yellow fever was not contagious but was contracted only in this one case." "Back in October, 1900 Dr. Walter Reed took his yellow fever experiment coed to Cuba and did one of the greatest things that had happened since the history of preventive medicine. He found that all existing theories for the cause of yellow fever were wrong, and he found that a mosquito of a particular variety. "Some of these men put on the underclothing and night clothing of persons who had died of yellow fever, and for a month slept in the stained and almost indescribable bed clothing of patients who had died of yellow fever." "Probably no finer heroism of humanity had ever occurred in the history of the world," she wrote. "The discovery of mosquito-inoculation had been proved to be probable, exposed themselves to the bite of infectious mosquitoes and when at night they entered a room, they were exposed themselves again and until they again did it." Union building, with plenty of room for leisure, yet it is used by only a small group each day. The group rebuilding there was not greatly outnumber the students visiting Doctor Caranuton's headquarters each day. A contrasting difference in the health of the other students with the other should be noted. In case you don't see the point, the dean in mind is that there is five new building seaviews, a hospital confined to tight quarters and overworked. I may take this opportunity of compending the staff for not rebuilding the campus. The University is increasing in student body every semester, and the need for a dispensary, more in keepake than in the aim of the school beyond a climax. One dollar additional to the fees of students would not step many from obtaining an education, and it might be that they are a sick one in a more modern building. By the way, the reference in the day complaint was to the need of warming a baby in a new furniture. A new furnace was installed the day after the other comment appeared, I What is more lovely than this evening star. There, in the twilight arching. cleansing bright- —C. M. B., alias A Student. Fair Venus, set like diadem of light Seeming so near, though distance measures fur? It lifts the heart, whome day grim troubles men. EVENING STAR Bearing it past the alters of the night, The Hawk's Nest On shining wings of visioning, in flight Look you, for beauty, in the western snace Address all letters to Hugh Realty, university Daily Kunen. Will exact numerous answers by Wednesay. To Paradise, where our high dreamings are. And holds its treasure in your seeking eyes: Of paling blue, before dark settles fast; A prayer will grow, when on your lifted face. "What's that five hour course you're taking this semester?" "The human heart." Its rays in pure serenity are cast in flight To Paradise, where our high cast That reaches into relics where Heaven lies THE HAWK'S NEST "A piper organ, What?" An arsenal of 300 rifles, a lot of machine guns and 30,000 rounds of ammunition have been found in—nose, you're wrong. It was not found in Chicago. It was found in Vienna. That's what makes them mysterious. A little song entitled, Lips That Touch Liquor Shall Never Touch Mine - At The Same Time. Ethel Knapp Behrman. —Cincinnati Enquirer The simple for today: As dazed as a color blind flca on a red header man. Our Contemporaries We read that the toosie fly has a peculiar song all its own. The Dreamy Malady! One of the worst places for a fell low to change his mind is in a revolver door. H. B. HIGHER EDUCATION COLLEGE MOVIES —Hugh Bently Cincinnati Enquirer Following vigorous protests on the part of undergraduate students at Princeton university, the showing of a video by the university banned on that campus. Similar action has since been taken by other universities in the country as to that picture and other materials. The criticism advanced by these schools has been to the effect that these pictures have portrayed college as a playground of American youth, to the exclusion of graduate college life that is so virulent end. Daily Nebraskan Of course there is little that can be done to dispel this multimission created before the eyes of the public. The same is true, even have taken a step in the right direction by protesting the showing of such moving pictures. But as some wont limit, as a consequence the public at large is still left to entertain erroneous rumors and distortions that since the American public is so avidly interested in the master, it is impossible to get what college life really consists. Doubless, there are no institutions in the country which get more publicity of the unfavorable sort than college. The supposed strength of public attention. Business men, aware of the popularity of material of this sort, have capitalized on it by flooding novels, short stories, jokes, and moving pictures over the country—all of which pretend to profty college Today, as never before, the question of higher education is discussed and ever debated upon at every gathering. We all know that college folks are slowly, but surely, "going to the dogs." Then, on the contrary, others insist that a college education is the only way to a successful salvation of the common conversation. Both views are radical. College students are neither better nor worse than the rest of the world. Institutions want them for the purpose of scholastic learning and not to influence the morale of students. The seeds of morality are usually planted in the age of plaques, potholes, or bad work. Therefore, it is readily seen that college sadism has an exceptional good or bad effect upon a student, because his character is usually before he enters the university. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVI. Monday, Matiary 4, 1929 No. 108 A PETTY. PARTISAN MOVE SENATE MEETING: As Others See It --fortunately for the country and for the Senate's own self-respect, that body has manfully reversed its fossil vote on its own right of Nicearau. The marines will not be recalled just yet from that unhappy country. They will be kept there until it is safe, and they will be recalled as Nicearau interests, to withdraw them. The place that cooks I place that dish to please that longing for good homemade food. CONSULT MEETING. -Butler Collegian The New Cafeteria Nothing is good enough but the best The University Senate will meet at 4:20 p.m. m. Tuesday, March 5, in central Administration auditorium. E. H. LINDEN, Chancellor The vote of 38 to 30 on Friday would have made it impossible to use DOROTHY WINSLER, Chairman Dean Agnes Rushall will speak concerning K. U. alumna and their careers at a combined meeting of the W. Y. C. A., and Vocational Guidance Conference to be held at Myers hall Tuesday, March 5, at 1:30 p.m. HOPEFIT WINNER Chairman "Huh! I want people to see this new Spring Suit I got at Ober's!" E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. Yet, with all this modernism, our colleges and universities have given the young people of today something new. They have given them a fragmentary knowledge of books. They have given them a practical knowledge of problems of modern life and taught them to meet and make their beings. This is common sense. "Goodness, Tom! Why don't you turn out the light inside the car?" However, colleges and universities have changed greatly in recent years. They are no longer the old alma mater where students were few who had to troll and studied for many years. They have broadened their scope to a chance to stuyn within its walls. Even the type of student has changed from a graduate student to a proverbial书-worm of past days, but has evolved into an all-roman university. This has made them abrasive football, cheer leading, dancing, and campus politics until it is a comussoe of everything that is important. UNIVERSITY FACTS: Faculty members who are interested in the balloon, "University Fuchs," may secure one by calling at the chancellor's office. Correct University Styles — $33 to $65 Most suits have knickers to match if you want them. Y. W. C. A. VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE: VOCATIONAL TALKS: AGNES HUSBAND. Dean of Women. All freshmen women are required to attend the vocational tailors. Bull will be taken, March 5, Tuesday, Myer hall, 4:30 p.m.; March 6, Wednesday, central administration auditorium; 4:30 p.m.; March 7, Thursday, Central Administration auditorium; 4:30 p.m. Philadelphia Public Ledger any part of the naval appropriation in keeping an American force in Newport RI and Nantucket, Massachusetts moved by a Democrat and supported by twenty-eight Democrats and ten Western Republicans. The ship was reversed on Saturday by a vote of 48 to 32. Fortunately, no real harm was incurred and the Senate signature will be used for all and more than it is worth by enemies of the United States in Latin America. It Will Pay You Suppose the six-month old walt that is to be given in a grab bag at an Oregonian theater is won by the youngest son of a family of fourteen. to take some work in the Lawrence Business College. Special rates are made to K. U. students with which brief courses in shorthand, typewriting, bookkeeping and banking. We arrange classes to suit your convenience. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Tonight: Tornorrow Shows: 7/3 7/9 Prices: Mats 10-13 Nites 10-50 A Wife Starved for Love which did she choose? VARSITY THE HUSBAND who did not understand THE LOVER who offered he the romance she craved GARBO in Wild Orchids On the Stage THE STAGE PERSONS *Datings of Harmon Land* Direct from a tour of the entire Publicly Circuit News-New Collegians-Oddities Coming Beautiful in Natural Color. Monday Tuesday Wed. March 11 12 13 A COMMONIST STYLE 1