PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS University Daily Kansan TUESDAY FEBUARY 4, 1975 Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas **Editor-in-Chief** Marcia Chandee Associate Editor Rossen Hunt Associate Editor Architect Arthur Clerk Assoc. Editor Karen Clayton Assoc. Editor Jeff Dockey Sunday, October 21 Walter M. Millard Commis. Editor Milford W. Millard Commis. Editor Kevin Grosby Telegraphic Editor Kerenchy Vaughn Pilot Editor John Seng Pilot Editor John Seng Imagineer Tiger Midland Elkhart Jennings Earnhardt Philip Ellis Martin Foster Martin Krebbs Larry Peterson Dan Rouse Vern Vera Alice Sutton Philip Leach Marlin Leach Philin Edwards Advertising Manager ... Beiren Lee Palmale Aa&' Advertising Mgr. ... Robert Armentr Aa&' Advertising Mgr. ... Ed Morrison Telenhous Business Office ... K, U, 66 News Room ... K, U, 23 Night Connection ... 2701KS Your Kansan should be delivered before 6:40 each evening. Should you fail to receive it, you may call Kansan between 7 and 9 o'clock. A copy will be sent to you in special series. Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Missouri at St. Louis, at the Zone of the Departments of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail number Seventh- seember 17, 1610, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the set of March 3, 1870. ENCOURAGE OR DISCOURAGE? TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1920 Statistics included in a recent bulletin by a specialist in higher education, show that 45 per cent of the men and 23 per cent of the women enrolled in the colleges and universities of the United States are earning part or all of their expenses. These percentages would be materially increased if many colleges did not discourage self-supporting students. The cost of higher education is continually increasing, and unless students are permitted and encouraged to earn their way, many will not attend college. The institutions that discourage working students are placing the attainment of knowledge upon a financial basis. Many clichm that working students cannot comply with the best schedistic standards. But, after all, are grades of prime importance? Many man who were failures in school have been successful in life, and others who have made high grades have been unsuccessful. A university education should be judged by what it does for the participants. Working students learn to utilize their time to the best advantage, and to spend their money wisely. They may be forced to sacrifice many social activities. Self-supporting undergraduates can obtain a vision, an understanding, and a desire for the better things of life, just as any others do. They should be encouraged rather than discouraged. WHAT NEXT? Ten years ago the radio was greeted as a triumph in scientific development of communication methods. Today it is recognized as but a step. Wider fields are opening, the newest of which is television by radio. Television was successfully demonstrated in April, 1927, over a distance of 325 miles by telephone wires, and 22 miles by radio transmission. Since that time it has progressed to the stage in which its use for home as well as for commercial purposes is apparent. A few companies now have amateur sets on the market. New permits will have to be issued by the Federal Radio Commission on very low frequencies because of the fact that television can be heard and would interfere with the regular channels for broadcasting. Some one has said that one can hear what a person looks like, and it is only fair to prospective users of television that they may be troubled by "fading" and "static" just as radio fans are. Experimental work in television was done chiefly in the laboratories of three large electric companies. The main point of difficulty came in the necessity of scanning the field within 1-16 of a second, the period of "persistence of vision," the fact that only reflected light is available and the source cannot be very strong without discomfort to the subject, the matter of synchronizing the receiving and sending equipments without constant "tuning," and the development of a screen which will show the reflected light as received. These questions have been solved; the equipment is on its way to perfection. A prominent radio executive recently referred to television as an "infant still too delicate for any but laboratory treatment." It is an unre can, yes; but it is a nautilus Heroconda. Dean George C. Shand has suggested that by the next presidential election television will be a regular adjunct to the campaign. Predictions for the future, however failures, are no longer safe. One can only say, "What next?" PICKLE STYLES-CHANGE Pierre argue have changed. The Pickle Packer Associations has decided that the 1929 model carousel will have long slender lines instead of the twins and bumps naturally associated with it. A professor at the University of Michigan, after years of experimentation, has succeeded in producing a seed which he believes will grow a slightly elongated. The proposed reformation in the pickle's style is but following the general trend of fashion in other industries. If the change in the cucumber family is successful, the idea probably will spread. The tomato will have its shiny pluminess reduced to a more sheer smoothing. Turnips will be slenderized until they can not be distinguished from parsnips, while beets and onions may assume the proportions of asparagus. Round pumpkins will divide from their fat proportions until they will resemble carrots. After all, long slender leaves in the vegetable family may prove monotonous. All the delightfully queer, intertwining humps and individual bumps may disappear. But, even so—there is no assurance that even the specially grown, slender cucumber seeds will produce slender pickles. DICTATORSHIPS Seven European countries have discarded their democratic systems for the more questionable dictatorships, during the last few years. This change has been brought about by temporary breakdowns in the parliamentary systems of the weaker democracies. The many warring, political factions probably constitute the real cause of dissatisfaction among the citizens of these countries. The result of this discontent has been the adoption of the dictator regimes. The dictatorship is merely the question of the personal ascendance of a politician sufficiently ruthless, courageous, independent and popular to impose his will on the rest. It appears that the purpose of this form is to impose the personal policies of one man, the dictator, over the parliament and the people. If the policies of the dictator are progressive, honest and farsighted, he might be a benefit to his country. But now, when the government has multitasking tasks to perform, it will be almost next to impossible to find a man who is unprejudiced, honest, experienced, and universal enough to govern a country as well as or better than a democracy. Today's Best Editorial PROHIBITION ENFORCEMENT The house recently by a vote of 240 to 141, defeated the Senate amendment providing for an appropriation amendment. The vote, so the correspondents seem to think, is a declaration of independence from the Anti-Saloon League, which strongly favored the amendment. It will take to enforce prohibition no one seems to know. All that is positively known is that it is not enforced with anything like strictest. Perhaps 20,000,000 would not have been sufficient. It is by no means wholly a question of finance, though it is partly that. It is hard to enforce any law against someone who disregard without the slightest qualms of conscience. It may be that some people who voted for the big appropriation, mostly Democritus, did so for the purpose of embarrassing them, but when other hand, others did so for the reason that they wished to leave the authorities no excuse whatever for opposing the law—a perfectly honest reason. From its own point of view, the Anti-Salaon League made a serious blunder in lining up for the amendments to the constitution, defent for it, and, more that that, a rather joyous refusal of members, hitherto submissive, to bow to its dictation. Some of the old fear of the new constitution, congressmen has died out. And that is a good thing. Congress has for many years been far too敢die in its own hands. The Anti-Salaon League, and other organizations of similar character. Indianapolis News Daily Change in Latitude on Earth May Be Caused by Movements of Moon Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 2. "The risks of the earth may shift a little each day as the moon rises in the ocean, causes the sky, and acts in the west. This may be the cause of a daily change in the latitude of a place on the earth, that has just been discovered by Dr. Harlan T. Schoenier, director of the Astronomical Laboratory at Harvard University, here." He also wrote by Ms. Margaret Omcan, a graduate student at Radcliffe College. What they have discovered is a variation in latitude of any point on the earth's surface, dependent upon whether the moon is rising, setting, or in middle of its passage across the sky. The variation is nearly ten times greater as an way that can be explained on theoretical grounds. "A snow progressive shift of the skin about which the earth rotates over a period of months and years has been known for a long time," explained Professor Station, but that there shift exist a only offset due to the presence of the ice crust on the surface of the present investigation were found. From the results of other investigation in progress at the Astronomical Laboratory we were led to believe that the moon must have caused a deviation in the direction of gravity from its rest position. "Inside Stuff" "Riding the pony" is a daily task around the Kasan office now that their website has been updated. The graph operator, has retired until next semester's editing classes need help again. "Riding the pony" is the official role for new students wearing a pair of head telephones and writing down United Press news items as they are read on line. In the half hour a day of this exercise the Kanan got its news more than it can use in addition to local copy. Home Service Laundry and Dry Cleaning --someone who would advance a patient who will not assume the responsibility of first consultation will seem radical, but after a moment it will begin to dislike, or the provider that no means which would work out in the event he does radical to remedy this evil. As Others See It We must seek some means to do --someone who would advance a patient who will not assume the responsibility of first consultation will seem radical, but after a moment it will begin to dislike, or the provider that no means which would work out in the event he does radical to remedy this evil. The past six months have witnessed a decided slump in German development, with the number of unemployment relief on Jan. 1 is compared with 1,360,000 a year ago. The cotton and wool textile industry has not seen an industrializing ability for home consumption, have suffered depression. The trade deficit for 1928 talks about $450 million. We find that expansion, however, is not the main thing for which we are going to learn. We teach *city*—a practice that never pauses—out by which we can hope to gain The inscription that Germany can easily meet the $300,000,000 annual demand in flooded areas down the Dawes Plan is in the budget by a study of the Reich's budget or by the Department of Commerce's recent report on economic conditions in the Reich. GERMANY'S FINANCES German has uncompensated male violence, and his capacity to pay reparations. It must not be forgotten that her capital is on the wrong side of the story. The experts will not find that an easy way to reconcile French demeanies with German's capacity to treat men. Brooklyn Daily Eagle Minister of Finance Hirdering appears to have made a real effort to conform to recent suggestions by Rehmann on down the defence budget, he has materially reduced allowances by the Reich to the States, he has cut figures for every government department. The total expenditure of $2,350,000,000 in under last years' budgets is down by half. Half of this will be caused by additional taxation. The other half has been taken care of temporarily by the Minister of Finance, but must be met when due use of Finance Minister Hirdering's bone that his proposed extraordinary taxes will be removed at the end of one year will be paid. Phone 1329 In 1850 there were 65,000 young men and women attending college in the United States; in 1890 they were over 813,000—an increase of more than 1,140 per cent. The numbers have exceeded the combined populations of Nevada, Arizona, and Delaware. College education has become a fathom for many people. By the year you have been replaced by the moody teenage learning minds of today. Experienced teachers our cue from twentieth century industry, we have come to feel that a large enrollment means a great union. EDUCATION According to the United States college of the national board, college education line costs the general cost of living. The average minimum cost at a state school is $156,900. Naturally with this diversion comes the question: Is it worth the cost? THE COST OF A COLLEGE EDUCATION Work called for and delivered H. D. Hearn, mgr. 1245 Conn. "The most delicate test for change in the direction of the vertical is to be found in the precise observance of a geographical depth of geographical depth locates the position of the earth with respect to the stars with the order of necessity of about a handful of the second of a billion years of earth's surface. The investigation was begun last spring of several thousands of such observations for the purpose of studying the tberbersburg, Md., one of the stations of the international altitude survey. It was the recent methods of this study which enabled us to light the variation of nearly a teeth of a second of a inch in altitude, depending upon the altitudes of the moon. The maximum value occurs at 30 degrees about the horizon." Latitude Observed at Harvard Thousands of observations for instance of the Naval Observatory at Washington have been analyzed at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, Sir Stennett announces those appear unmistakably to adjust the results of the previous study. The fact that the observations represent a range and systematic attitude is greater and systematic and represents a range nearly twenty times larger than any other observation. There bears little room for doubt in the reality of the variation. Several hypotheses are being considered to explain this phenomenon due to a combination of causes. "Theoretically," says Professorotion, "soon the earth will take place under its crust. It grows faster and volves about the earth. But from other considerations we do not think that this can be sufficiently large to affect the evolution of a temporary wave in the earth's atmosphere caused by the moon only after the moon has become a star and produce some of the shear noted. The most direct influence on the earth's instantaneous axis of rotation. As a last resort it may be necessary to consider movement in the earth's interior." "The importance, however, of the discovered effect, need hardly be emphasized. We can appreciate determination of star positions from the minute changes of which much of the knowledge of our stellar system depends. The advantage here lies in having noted metallies by further remembrance. It may appear necessary to apply new case studies to older ones, but not hitherto recognized. Well known discrepancies between the results for And so I have with you, my teacher, the problem. Will you help me do? How will you work on it, class who will work in or on the class who will not? That question you must answer yourself, the office world will come a day for answer. way with the college students who We specialize on parties and holiday candy. We fill any order. Alva Northwestern. the position of stars from, widewy separated observations may yet be explained in part at least by this phenomenon." --customers both new and old. The Hawk's Nest STILL CHERING Representations of the fact that Huey Flemmett shot out in five houses Wrestling Appreciation and the Great Gigaton Glionet, he has been allowed to enter on the old queue of 10 people. The old bird mysteriously fades out of the picture some time soon, you know that he is looking for a new friend. Toilet? Gr-Free-Up! Twitty? Gr-Free-Up! (The old bird himself) If all the students who have returned home because of nervous breakdowns, were lined up end to end, they would lie. From what we have been able to discover, it seems that either Helio-Dae or Ceres are a branch of punk stories at the University. Since so many are afflicted in the same minorities, we have almost forgotten them; they back up against a hot sieve. We read recently that the first cell experiment was undertaken in 1927. It showed that the part of the membrane containing of tobacco users? They've evidences The fellow who first said that "It's the woman who pays," must have been a Scotchman. Our Contemporaries INTERESTING PROFESSORS For lack of interest and indifference in choices students are often blinded by the fact that it is the fault of the instructor. INTERESTING PROFESSORS Students readily respond to an increasing personalism. Enhancement of the instructor's relationship with an instructor in a class will bring the corresponding interest on the part of the students. There are instructors who have little difference and burden in their work. They indicate or leave the impression that they would much rather be spending their time in more proficient manualizations than mere of personal interest. They are expected to exhibit interest in such a class when the instructor would need it. A most boring and uninteresting class in one in which the instructor uses the same typed notes from year to year, conducts his class in the freshly cleaned classroom, fresh and up to date before the students. His manner of presentation Omaha Hat Shop We clean your hat, repair your shoes, shine them and deliver them to your address. 717% Mass. Sta. The Book Book LOOK AT IT, STOP PHONE NUMBER Phone 255 WELCOME! The cafeteria opened this morning. Start the new semester right with good food at popular The New Cafeteria New Cafeteria 'Union building' Read the new books FICTION POETRY DRAMA NON-FICTION CHILDREN'S BOOKS AND RENTAL LIBRARY while they are still new The outstanding books of the year are in stock and on our rental shelves. Rates. 3c per day, minimum 15c, or 6c per day on $5.00 books. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVI I July, February 5, 1929 No. 96 --become state and dual. Although the microbial in each class is now to the students in that each week, the students will need to harm dramatics of the subject if he presents the facts in the same way he adds nothing to the subject facts. 1. The committee, on authorization announced two vacancies in Wakka hall for the active position. The chairman will receive all day tomorrow in the symposium also Tuesday and Friday in room 210, Fraser, from 10:30 to 12. E. GALLLO, Chairman. W. S. G. A. ROOR EXCHANGE The W. S. G. A. Cust, Exhance, on the third floor of Watson library, is baiting and selling second hand books this week. Pereland Oregonian Oklahoma Daily Parks no longer distracts fans for America. This has become commercial as well as situational. In the course of time, games more It is and not an infirmity, angel of fiction, has been written for, because it describes where we are receiving every single last tiny thing like a number in a time clock with eyes. Some people are as painfully good that they would rather be right than be pleasant. — Winston Churchill LUCILLE CARMAN, Manager. from Rent Your Car 916 Mass. versus the old custom and comes to the U. S. A. for the latest examples of elegance in attire. Phone 653 If the fountain pen is generally a nuisance— If the fountain pen has a broken cap— A minister says that self-identity is subversive of right living, and that one should not indulge themselves, but who, we ask, . . . "Portland Ogrannan" If the fountain pen scratches- -Washington-Evening-Star If the fountain pen leaks— Better get a new one before the semester starts. It will be good for your nerves and your temper. Rankin's Drug Store "Hardy for Students" 11th & Masa Phone 678 No matter what style camera you use, Aqfa will give you The Best for Every Camera the first match of two open tournaments. Athlete Aphy is the choice of all of the top players in all of the world. Superior Take Apple Inc. cash end, it cash no more than the film $a million of its earnings. Abrams Productions, Inc. U.S.A. E 17TH ST. NEW YORK, N.Y. On Sale at D'Ambra Photo Service --of all Leather and Sheep Lined SALE COATS 59.35 to 519.75 Values 20 Per Cent DISCOUNT