PAGE TWO SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1920 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor in Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor Spirit Editor Speaker Editor William Writes Jerome Writes Sunday Staff Morris Stratton Buffalo Bills Betty McFadden Danny Rice Nathaniel Hawkins Nelly Brown Jim Killham Joe Killham Mary Warek Milwaukee Bucks Milwaukee Mary Warek Advertising Mar... Kristin W Murray Foreign Adv. Mar... Barbara Palese Am't Advertising Mar... Kenneth Cage Am't Advertising Mar... Foley Kearn Business Office 8:17:46 Business Office 8:17:46 Night Connection 2012/12 Night Connection 2012/12 each evening, should you fail to receive a email, should you not receive it between 'i' and 'c' and a check and a copy will be, he said. Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, at the offices of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September ber 17, 1800, at the post office at Lawrence Kansan, under the act of March 2, 1879. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 1939 THE WEEK Valickin's Day completed the have-na began by Leap Year, and Lincoln's birthday was observed by the entire United States. The "Lone Eagle," Lindbergh, accrued to the season with the announcement of his engagement to Miss Anne Morrow, daughter of the ambassador to Mexico. The first official session of reparations experts was held in Paris, and Owen D. Young, of the United States, was elected chairman. The Pops and the king of Italy agreed upon peace terms, and their representatives signed the pact and a concordat. The Soviet Union and Poland signed a protocol, putting the Kolleng treaty terms into immediate effect. Thomas A. Edison celebrated his 150th birthday, and Edward Decby, secretary of the navy at the time of the Tenpot. Donea affair, died, William M. Jardine, Secretary of Agriculture, definitely eliminated himself as a possible cadet infanturer. (16) Bobbie Trout, girl aviator, set new endurance and mileage marks for women. Dean Charles Gilley, of the University of Chicago chapel, was the principal speaker during the religious week observations, while two Fraternity members added Holl. TABOOS IN EDUCATION The recognition of Clarence C. Little, the outstanding and-minded president of the University of Michigan during the past four years, has been accepted by that university. A man of charm, distinction and intellectual courage, he tried to introduce straightforward thinking on bitherto taboo subjects into a Western college and he has failed. It is most discouraging news for progressive, contemporary educators in the universities. Because President Little believed in birth control, its antigonist roses against him; because he quarreled with the Daughters of the American Revolution he was booked upon with wide disfavor. Throughout the state he was widely criticized because he tried to open the university to new opinions. From this state of affairs it would seem that the real root of the university problem today lies in the home. Parents are not sending their children to college to become liberally educated. They are sending them to acquire the prestige of a university degree, but they want them to learn and believe the same myths and the same sentimental falsehoods about living and life which they themselves know and believe. The college student today who is really thinking is in an unusual position if he does not find himself severed from his friends and family for expressing his opinions. The average student has not the courage nor the inclination to face such difficulties for he has been too well brought up in the home. As long as sentimentality centers around false ideas in the homes and as long as colleges are supported by taxes from these homes, so-called institutions of learning can hope for no solution of serious急诊 problems. As long as such conditions exist, the universities will continue to accept the resignations of such broad-minded and true educators as Chrissie C. Little. NO MORE HELL WEEK? Hell Week is gradually being abolished by the fraternities on Mount Oread. In succession, organizations are banning the practice. It appears that the Greek letter societies have awakened at last to the fact that Hell Week is more detrimental to them than it is beneficial. However, despite the favorable reports made by many, there are some who have not taken the proper attitude towards its numilitation. Some of course, are sure to lag behind in adopting an abolishing agreement. They must be waited for, and perhaps penalized for any indiscretion in the meantime. As yet the riding of the evil is not complete, but a welcome change in the general attitude toward Hell Week, has been noted during the past few days. At this rate it will not be long until campus-wide abolition of Hell Week will be an actuity. DREAM ISLANDS The man may deserve no particular praise for such a journey, for he is wealthy and accomplishment probably came without difficulty. There are persons who may even condemn him for the wealth which makes possible such a seemingly impossible venture. They will call him crazy, or just another of the idle rich. The fact that he had the energy and desire great enough to carry out his vision and to search for his dream island will be overlooked. These persons do not realize that it does not matter whether or not the islands are there, or whether or not he is successful. He has given himself the satisfaction of at least attempting to make his dream come true. A Cleveland paving contractor recently set sail in quest of a "dream island" in the Pacific. He planned the cruise to fulfill a dream in which he visualized a sunken island off the west coast of Mexico. Students at the University could learn much from this man. All have dream islands—some which might find easy accomplishment if only a little fine were given to them or others which would take much effort to bring them true. People are content only to dream, finding it enough if their dream works furnish an occasional escape from reality. Whether it is good or bad, any air castle deserves more tabmere idle contemplation in weary, discouraged moments. Many students have yet to learn and to know within themselves the greatest energy and desire which lead to the satisfaction of accomplishment. WHAT MAKES HAPPINESS Thomas Edison's seemingly cumulative statement about the lack of happiness in the world indicates a new interpretation of the word. The ingredient of happiness vary for different individuals, but absolute happiness assured could come only with a sense of completion, the culmination of plans, fulfillment of dreams, achievement or ambitions and perfection of one's life work, linked with spiritual and physical ease. It would seem to be a thing easier for the small man to attain than for the great; for the first can reach his peak and back during a comfortable old age, while the latter is seldom granted time to complete more than a few of his tasks. The very fullness of Thomas Edison's life indicates that there must be numerous tasks uncompleted and purposes unaccomplished. With knowledge comes the realization of how much there is to know; with living comes an understanding of how great a thing life is. Edison's life has been wider and deeper than that of most men and therefore he has, not a greater share of sorrow, perhaps, but a truer knowledge of how difficult it is to attain happiness. None of the high European officials seem to want Trotky to end his tracing in their countries. We can't blame them. No one likes to lose his job. Schenectady, N. Y., Feb. 16. Man-made lightning has now left the libr- oratory and gone out of doors to compete with the natural article in testing electric lines. This announcement was made here today by the General Electric Company in revealing the first details of experiments that have been made by their engineers in the Berkshire mountains in northwestern Massachusetts. Man-Made Lightning Now Competes With Natural Article in Electric Line The apparatus was mounted on a small truck, and placed at the base of one of the tail transmission towers. Outside the truck a spark gap consisting of two baskets spheres was used and from this wires led to the overhead spans. When the engineers operated the apparatus, a belt of hundreds of thousands of volts of electricity, with all the characteristics of lightning, was sent over the lines to be recorded with a special camera operating in a millionth of a second. The records were made five or ten miles away, at Pittfield, where the power from the Torners Fall Power and Light Company is received --- "Inside Stuff" Among ways of getting into prib information you want the HILL publi to have, one of the most effective is to ask them to help you self. Insider must break right down and confess that, while it's a lazy way of doing, almost any newspaper is available online so served up on a silver plate than that which has to be dug out by dint of patient effort. Good old burrow may have shortcomings, is responsible. Today's Best Editorial --- DIET FOR DIVORCE Absence of calcium hydrate seems to make men cruel and women nerdy. The mild irritability of canal produces irritability. Squabbling may be laid at the door of an unbalanced menu. Family blockings are distillations of too much beef and poultry. Word comes from Dr. George Walker of Baltimore that more lice in the diet will prevent复发. As much lime as found in a milk of milk added to the diet of a couple daily could help restore life and keep the home intact. The Baltimore medical eyex器 also recommends a California fruit for a happy home life. An orange day may lead to an orange day a man will make an ambiability a household word. Evidently the doctor might also have mentioned that an onion day will keep a lover hydrated if not oranges. The doctor might also have mentioned that an onion day will keep a lover cool. Divisive can be distorted out of the way to reduce Parks and Rec to commitment, and firmly establish the marriage altar upon continuity of happiness. The more vividly she depicts his displeasure for some time. Restaurant bananas and drug-store ideals are "distinguished." The doctor is on the right. Track. Instead of going to the lawyer, a quarrelling pair should repair to the grocery and get some plain soda. Instead of law, they need lime. Lime instead of law then to settle civil纠纷. Los Angeles Times —Minnesota Daily Our Contemporaries --- NOTE BOOK MEMORIES ARE YOU COLLEGIATE? One of the most ridiculous things of the month is the questionnaire that a dean in an Eastern college is sending out to 400 deans throughout the country on the subject of college men. He believes that the American man who has worked in college and wants to defend him. This is one of his questions: "Is a slackly appearance, as evidenced by gartersleeve socks, ruffled shirt and collar, sloppy shoes and wrinkled hair, typical of your student body?" That is a useless question to ask. Surely the Dean should know that a young man is a vain young man, naturally interested in looking his best, and the idea of coming to school in a bus is not so important. He's here for from his thoughts. nection, in your opinion, between the attempt to be collegiate and such problems as drinking, necking, no-nose diving, animalization and other ethical problems.1 The college man is not the only man in the world who drinks. It is clear that he does, does not brand him as collegiate. Collegiate is merely a word, a category of realities. As for the neglect of classwork, the dean should know that to be collegiate he must be in college and not just in school. He his classwork, so—that one answers itself. He also mentions dissonance if he does it because it is to get some answer down to a final, the idea of being collegiate is far from his mind. If he does cheat it is to get some answer down to a final, the idea of being collegiate is far from his mind. There is no need to explain what a college man is. The public knows, that he is a college man. He is what the movies and college stories would make him out, it is not his time explaining to this group. This generation has often been accused of keeping its brains in its notebook — pityy saying that has a lot to do with it. You can't easily way of avoiding the burden of +over the lines for distribution to the labor Artificial lightning generators capable of producing a ball million volts or more were attached shortly thereafter, and a few weeks ago, 5,900,000 volts were retained in Pittsburgh laboratory equipment. They led to the discovery of many additional facts about lightning voltages, but the work necessarily was confined to this region. lightning, enemy of electric tran- mission, has been slipped by electric tran- mission and is now being transferred a half century ago, to transient power over wires. Today lightning is still the major source of interruption on airplanes and ships, but they are continually developing new tools and methods of attack so that the chances of achieving an accident can be even lower. Having obtained one record of an actual lightning bolt and its effect on a steel conductor, we were able for engineers to duplicate the performance at will. Lightning characteristics had been determined, and we could use them to so arrange their high-voltage generators that, on a smaller scale, the current was doubled when and where desired. Work with actual lightning on high-voltages transmission lines, wie wir bei der Elektroseismendearth in the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains last July. General Electric engineers obtained an电缆 from a high-speed camera showing the effects of a natural strike of approximately 100 kV on the Work With Real Lightning Construction of a portable impulse generator made it possible to apply surge voltages at different places in the plant. The Electric Company lines. Approximately 40 miles long, and extending from the Connecticut River to Pittsburgh, the system consists of volts and are carrying 65,000. The impulse generator is so constructed that the engineers have available high voltage lines, and either high or lower voltages. Impulse Generator Built In the early days of electricity it was customary for generating stations to be crippled during thunderstorms, and most boots had combat boots. Such crippling also a supply of oil lamps and candles for emergencies. Such provisions are hardly necessary today, for engineering investigations have proved that they will protect equipment against the surges caused by light- He had an idea that was sound. He wanted to get things into his head, not into his notebook. He did not want to have to make the painful effort of trying to visualize the pages he was writing. In this situation, he wanted to really know and make his own the material which he came up to study. keeping things in ones head, and a useful servant that saves us unnecessary bother often becomes the person who controls our very thinking. There is a story of a young Scottish man, coming up to the University for a degree, and learning one of his books, concerning his books. When it came to the subject of note books, and I was not sure whether he should get, be burst out, "Note books. Note books." What the delicacy my hold There is a difference, of course, between that reference material which needs to be kept away in the library and who nobody should be foolish enough to try to find it. There are many things that with an educated man become a part of himself. It is a disease that can be made worse and should be able to make for himself if he has any place at the University. -MeGill Daily ning. And the work that is being carried on today is bringing nearer that day when interruptions will be even more infrequent. The Hawk's Nest --shown the stuff of champions. New York World. As a result of the trick makeup and the pun column appearing in the Next week, Hugh Beard is in receipt of four black hand notes, two unexposed hand grenades, four stick of dynamite, and a caw of poison. He'll need to work with someone one to send a wiper. Mr. Benit is very fond of smokes. The simple for today: As absent minded as an absent minded professor for forgetting to remember that he was not absent minded, that member that h was absent minded. Sing Sing '90: I hear they sent Charlie home at the end of the first term. Sing Sing '08; Yeah, they discovered he was a crook. When you come in from the track after a long gruelling run all tired and dirty, and you rush to the shower to clean off all the dirt, but water so that the temperature is exactly right without further manipulation-Ain't it a grind and glorious challenge? Enjoying the carcasses of the warm water, all at once the aqua flow is pumped out. You can still emmassed in sunday, and then you discover that the junior has forgotten to light the heater-Ain't it a mess? Or feeling like you've feel'd? Now, ask I nik if Customer to Tot Hamle Man; How do you sell your tamales? To Tumle Cudgel; Well sir, wizz! To Tumle Cudgel; that for bern deign four years now. A Western Bunion telegram received by a faculty member; STARTED TO GRADUATE A A PULLED-OUT PHYSICIAN. IF HE READ THIS STOP SENDING CONGRATULATION STOP LOVE AND KISSES Hugh Bently POLLY As Others See It --shown the stuff of champions. New York World. CONCRESS STILL NEEDED Although he does not expect to live in it, see it. Senator Carper of Kansas, predicts that the day will come when a large number of students and Board of Directors after the fashion of a big business corporation. In Rasby, Missouri has even won the Nobel Prize for that some have been retained in name, but The Senator believes the "reform" in the direction of simplicity of government will come much more slowly. The theory of natural analogy between business and government and the desirability of realizing this ideal in practice is that of former, who fail to perceive the practical obstacle in the way. The democratic principle of election of representatives by popular vote makes it impossible for a party to govern the Federal and State Governments are business corporations, in a sense, but they have to do with more than the political matters involved in the life of the people at many points. Senator Carper suggests that the democratic idea would be preserved if Congress were reduced to the size of the electors elected by the people. But broad representation in the essence of democracy, although Congress seems to be effective operation. Philadelphia Public Ledger STRAIGHT ROADS DANGEROUS It is on the roads "called straight" that most accidents happen, in one State at least. Statistics gathered in California last 2,500 miles of roadways in the month of October as having occurred while the motorists were drived over. STRAIGHT ROADS DANGEROUS This recalls the tradition that unloaded guns have killed more people than loaded ones. More people are injured falling on stairs than are hurt in football encounters. Bathroom tractors treat a treacherous treatment of bathers. It is hard to realize the necessity of being on guard against tables, tabs unloaded grain and straight roads. All roads are unloadable before abad at curves, even though modern Blue Mill Sandwich Shop Plate Lunch 35c Morning and Evening OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Sunday: February 17, 1929 No. 106 AAVY Sunday, February 17, 1929 No. 106 WOMEN'S CUPE CLUB WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB. Regular referral of the Women's Clee Club Monday afternoon, Feb. 18, 4:30, in the midfourth of March ball. All members are expected to attend. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY: New York Times More and more it becomes apparent that the modern woman is making a place for herself in the sky. Within the past three months the women have been boosted from the 8 hours 6 minutes peak set by Viola Gentry to the 14 hours 5 minutes and 37 seconds peak set last Monday. It is noteworthy that thirteen years clamped before Chamberlain and Aecuba doubled the twenty-four hours endurance record set by the world record. It must be conceded that the comparative slowness in the rise of the record curve was due not to hack of endurance on the part of men but rather on technical limitations of their motors. Only the most obvious dangers with a driver's full attention. On the road, you should be alert. He feels free to look around at the passengers in the rear seat to see if they are wearing protective eyewear. The roving glance forward reveals imminent danger with hardly warning. WOMEN IN AVIATION Still, it cannot be denied that women are showing a remarkable ability in piloting, an occupation not to mention the profession of daredevil. What seems most astonishing at first thought is the earliest days of airplanes, when manned after all, is a quality which has been demonstrated by women since the earliest days of aeronautics. Quimby, who flew onboard Quiminy, one of the earliest of American pilots, who flew across the Channel in 1912, only to be killed a short time later, broke the world's long-distance record by飞翔 from Chicago to Birmingham and so on, down to Lady Bird Gardens. He went on to heart of today, who have crossed oceans and spanned continents. In a sport that rigorously tests our skills, he mined of the male, these women have Regular meeting of the Christian Science Society of the University of Kansas will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday in room B8, Meyers, hall. All student members are welcome. highway commissions have done away with most of the bad ones. Special attention is paid in planning our meals, so you may choose from a variety of vegetables. at any time on our counter. The New Cafeteria Nothing is good enough but the best S. D. PARKER THE VOICE OF THE PEOPLE IN ITALY Next month the "general parliamentary election" will take place in Italy. It will be a most curious afternoon; the national parliament of 400 persons is to be elected by the voters of Italy at one fell blow. The Fascist Grand Council, which will choose the 400 candidates, for whom there is no opposition. Then, at the formal election, the voters are prepared to vote on the ballot and the other marked "no." The "yes" ballot is printed in the national colors of Italy and can readily be discharged from the box to the election official after a moment in a private booth to ponder on the momentous question presented to him, whether or not it is secret only in a technical sense. In this way do the sovereign twelve millions of millions of Italy elect the "200 ... that maintains this quant fragment of the system of representative government of Italy," and the government has been consumed on the funeral pearl of enslaving dictatorial ship. But these it is—the form of representative government grow larger in number of governance. Will a new structure of representative government grow smaller in number of governance? Or will a superintendent trust in the benevolence of a single cheetah answer to the question of Italian thought? Time alone will tell. Cincianati Enquirer. Br-r-t-r It's Cold! INSIDE SERVICE Drive in our steam-heated plant and let us service your car while you wait in comfort. EVERYTHING EXCEPT MECHANICAL WORK CARTER SERVICE 2. 10 When She Bares Her Shoulders in her evening gown, no stockings can compete with the satiny texture of her skin—except Holeproofs. $1.50 --- $1.95 。