PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY JANUARY 22 1939 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas **InDesign-Info Chief** Marcia Chadwick Associate Editor Amy Cormier Associate Editor Arthur Clopton Staffing Editor William Dawberstey Staffing Editor William Dawberstey Millard Jenkins Camron Editor 1984 Bobby Telegraph Editor 1984 Bobby Pattie Tale Pattie Tale Jeanne Eubank Mildred Krohn bart bart bart Mildred Krohn bart bart Werflen Kikin bart bart Werflen Kikin bart Portweihle bart bart Dan Rhodes bart Bevere Weihle bart Alpine Leigh bart Alpine Leigh bart Pillah Leigh bart Advertising Manager Bernice Pielenco Ast't Advertising Mgr. Robert Arnold Ast't Advertising Mgr. Jim Murray Business Office E. I. 11. 60 Business Room J. N. 54. 30 Night Protection J. O. 2013. 8 Your Kaaan should be delivered before 6:30. Telephone 2013X 87 between and 8-x block phone should you fail to receive it? phonebook 201KHS a copy will be sent you by 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 California, as the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1890, at the post office at Lawrence Kahaa, under the act of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, JANUARY 22.1929 SERVICE VS. PAY It is refreshing to learn that there is one man, and a governor at that, who is not in politics for money during this day and age when corrupt politics, manipulated for personal gain, is receiving attention on every hand. Gov. Alvan T. Fuller, of Massachusetts, has declined to accept salary checks totaling $56,000 during his four years as lieutenant-governor and four years as governor of that commonwealth. He has retained the checks as savviers of his service to the state, allowing the money to be expended for other state purposes. Such action has saved the people many dollars in taxes. Although Governor Fuller is independently wealthy, he is to be commended for this action because there are too many greedy men who are willing to take advantage of the taxpayers today. "The more they get, the more they want," to be a fitting slogan for many of our wealthy politicians. More who prize service above pay are needed. FILIBUSTERING IN THE SENATE Prohibition politics being the unfinished and unfinishable business of the senate, the cruiser hill, which some persons understood had the right of way, has been forgotten. The senate is so far behind in its schedule, that the friends of the cruiser bill are looking anxiously toward the calendar and March 4. Stump speeches seem to occupy the senate's attention, although Senator Tyding managed to sandwich his cruiser speech between an attack on Secretary Mellon and the reading by clerk of an affecting piece by the late Thomas E. Watson, entitled, "The Song of the Barroom." That is the last that has been on the cruiser bill. All the business now before the senate has to be examined regarding political aspects and it is supposed this will take up time. Fulbristerhanging, the notorious method of defeating a bill without any arguments pro or con, was used in 1917, when a bill authorizing the armed of American merchant-ships was lost in the senate. The senate of the United States is the only legislative body in the world which cannot act when its majority is ready for action. There is only one method of controlling such procedure, and that is the clature rule of 1917, which fixes a closing date of debate and also limits the period of speech by a senator. If the senators against the cruiser bill bring up stump speeches, and have some one else do their filibustering for them, the rule of 1917 will have to be brought into use, and maybe then consideration of certain legislation will be finished before March 4. A DISAPPEARING ART Unless members of Congress have a radical change of heart, the pending divisible patent bill spills doom for the big producers of dramatics. As the bill now stands, it gives motion picture producers and producers of the talkings movies a chance to use plays which are copyrighted by the dramatic producer. Due to the lower prices which are charged for the movies, they can run the dramatic producer out of business by using his own play. The movie, if the bill passes can contain the same characters, have them speak the same words, and he shown on the same day that the play is shown. One New York producer has estimated that only three successful plays were shown last season. It hardly seems fair for **f** producer to be unable to protect what is his own. Many of the theaters in the larger cities have already closed. The new law would accuse the downfall of the art that is not disappearing, but which should be preserved. A BUSINESS BATTLE ROYAL It is not often that the family squares of America's giant business concerns become matters of public knowledge to such an extent as the present domestic difficulties of the Standard Oil of Indiana. Not is it often that the public and its interests are so directly concerned. Few Americans will shed sentimental tears over the fall of the Rockefeller force if John D. Jr. should fail to win the impending battle. But Americans will take an active interest in the attitude which the world's largest business organization is to take toward a gan who deliberately taward the efforts of the government to route corruption and bring justice to the men who despoiled America of the Teenot Dome oil reserve. Colonel Robert W. Stewart, the present storm center, was charged with perjury before a Senate committee and acquitted in a trial in which the judge ruled that there can be no perjury unless a quorum is present. And by failing to answer subpoenas, by declining to answer questions, and by withholding information concerning the Continental deal, he seemingly put every obstacle within his power in the way of the course of justice. If the Standard Oil Company keeps Colonel Stewart in power, it will increase existing antagonism towards big business, promote disrespect for federal authority, and give added impetus to the movement for government control of business. A REAL CONTRIBUTION The greatest achievement of Joseph Goldberger, United States public health service scientist who died recently, was his contribution to the world's knowledge of pellagra. His researches showed that the disease is due to an unbalanced diet and demonstrated how it might be cured. He was the discoverer of vitamine "PP" which is considered the preventative of pellagra and he found that dried yeast contained the health-restoring vitamine. Doctor Goldberger was stricken while engaged in a study of the diets thought to cause the disease. Doctor Goldberger, although born in Poland, was brought to this country as a child and received his education in America. His life had been given over to the experimental sciences dealing with the diseases which plague man. It was rather singular that, although he had given his life to such research, physicians were unable to diagnose his case. During his experimentation over a period of years he had contracted three dangerous fevers which were thought to have been factors in his last illness. Doctor Goldberger will stand out in medical history as one who gave his life to aid in the battle which man is waging continually against the harmful microbes of the universe. Kerosene found in Chicago milk—Headline. Chicago will never outgrow its primitive ways. The only reason we write to some people is because we like to think up lovely things to say about ourselves. Senate Investigation—Did the say "Everybody loves a fat man" influence the voters in the recent election. Chicago is to have a white cavalry to escort distinguished visitors, whilst to the more timid of these will probably appear as a second light brigade Dil. Fats, Rubber, Gas and Lubricants Are Among Products Made From Coal Pittsburgh, Jan. 21). The eleventh independence of modern man and his freedom from the accidental limitations of nature's distribution of natural resources under, on and above the surface of the earth was demonstrated at the University of Michigan during last week under the guidance of the Carnegie Institute of Technology. Oil from coal, coal from oil, oil from wood, edible fats from corn, rubber from carbon, burnable gas from water, wood alcohol from coal, lubricants from coal, soap from coal were a few of the possibilities, many of them practical commercial realities, that the coal conference reports added to the more familiar chemical processes of modern industry which now derive perfumes more fragrant than flowers, colors more varied than the rainbow, coke more useful than raw coal, gas more culinary than natural gas and a multitude of other everyday utilities from coal, wood, oil, nitr and water. "Inside Stuff" --power plant of sixty kilowatts runs on the temperature drop of thirty-three degrees Fahrenheit. In the warm weather, he is always cold, he proposes to build a larger power plant titilizing the free power of the son's temperature difference. Eventually he becomes fitter in his new invention. Telephone calls from a reporter seeking information are sometimes nuisance; but how much greater would the misuse be were every person who got the information from a reporter? A newspaper is an established means of communication between the various parts of the community it serves. Campus Opinion --power plant of sixty kilowatts runs on the temperature drop of thirty-three degrees Fahrenheit. In the warm weather, he is always cold, he proposes to build a larger power plant titilizing the free power of the son's temperature difference. Eventually he becomes fitter in his new invention. --power plant of sixty kilowatts runs on the temperature drop of thirty-three degrees Fahrenheit. In the warm weather, he is always cold, he proposes to build a larger power plant titilizing the free power of the son's temperature difference. Eventually he becomes fitter in his new invention. Editor Daily Kansan: If a person with second sight were decided to leave the world would usually be accompanied by patients concerning the whereabouts of articles which have been, lost or damaged. One of the latest thefts reported is that of several articles of clothing which were taken from a clotheshorse, and later found inconvenient and a trifle uncomfortable in this winter weather to find your wardrobe diminished in such a wholesale fashion. If the thief was caught, you might be indolent creature he might have visited several clothshores. In that way he might have obtained more of their clothing than would not have brought such wantern deposition to only one victim. Today's Best Editorial --power plant of sixty kilowatts runs on the temperature drop of thirty-three degrees Fahrenheit. In the warm weather, he is always cold, he proposes to build a larger power plant titilizing the free power of the son's temperature difference. Eventually he becomes fitter in his new invention. FORENSICALITY SUPREME Wittenberg college, which is located in Springfield, O. . . , has discovered a mass production method that has resulted in turning out not only students but faculty members in their contests with other colleges and universities. In the first place the candidates must be well prepared Wittenberg takes a heaping dose of them and after a thorough mixing places them in a room together, with his little speech and each proceeds to make himself heard. The greater the noise and confusion the student seeks to drown on his competitors. When the candidates have advanced sufficiently to be able to maintain consecutive speech under these distractors, they are poised in Hecklers are introduced in sufficient quantity to provide the speakers a few chairs are tossed in motion, and to further embrace the speakers in a few chairs are tossed in motion from time to time and their efforts to disconcert the speakers consist largely of inappropriate but more than reasonable effort. This recipe is said to have resulted in a product from which undesirable additions and other manifestations of the budding orator are almost, if not entirely, eliminated. It is clear that this product has itself likely a test of this nature they are ready to do on the traditional habilitation of the debater and answer the public forum. Success today in practically every field depends upon specialization. The physician attains his reputation by limiting his attention and study to the specific human anatomy. The lawyer confines himself to criminal or civil law; in civil law he harrows his field down where it is infancy, until at the age of fifty or sixty his hopes are realised, and he is looked upon as a national hero. He completes his undergraduate work and hurries off happily to seek an M. A. in some dutty corner of literature. He can tell you exactly what he can tell you exactly what ten other scholars were wrong in supposing that someone other than Dr. Dryer was the Flockon. Christian Science Monitor Shakespeare and Moller saw men a man... looked at men with humili- thoughts, thoughts, inspirations, and emotions by their actions, not by a microscope. They saw humanity. Our Contemporaries THE ROBOT FACTORY The college man of today is doomed to specialization. . . . The trend towards extreme specialization in business, science, and education has been a central day society, that colleges and universities have incorporated it in the curriculum. --power plant of sixty kilowatts runs on the temperature drop of thirty-three degrees Fahrenheit. In the warm weather, he is always cold, he proposes to build a larger power plant titilizing the free power of the son's temperature difference. Eventually he becomes fitter in his new invention. From Europe, to the first one this year's coal conference as to the first one in 1928, comes the most ingenious and successful oil blend other things. Dr. Carl Kruchak, Derny Dyo Trust Trust, told how through the magic of catalysis and hydrogenation, a fuel made from gasoline, lubricating oil, kerosene, paraffin, alcohol, fats and nearly any other hydrocarbon that the market requires, he introduced the Heidelberg chemist whose hydrogenation process, first reported to the 1926 coal conference, is now used and produced by some companies. It announced the conversion of the cellulose and lignin of wood into artificial coal, the process used by mature millions of years ago in the manure Low Temperatures of Interest Low Temperatures of interest Forgotten has been more interested in low temperature carbonization. Instead of cooling the coal to a low temperature, familiar by-product cake ovens of America, the volatile matter in the coal is driven off at a much milder rate than previously believed, more of the valuable liquid and groomed products of coal. Low temperatures extend to America, and in fact, the largest low temperature carbonization plant in the world is now being built. Coal production in America has actually decreased in recent years due to the increased use of oil as fuel, because of lower energy costs. Mines, reported to the conference, the oil industry is borrowing the latest coal research developments to make its production more efficient. The German method of liquefying coal requires a plant set to work getting a larger percentage of gasoline out of crude oil. Combustion Methods Developed Since large amounts of raw coal will still be burned despite the new treatments and transmutations that are possible, new combustion methods have been developed, which has propelled its first new-gasing vessel, the S. M. Siever. In Germany an internal combustion engine of the type used in the powered coal and abroad locomotives fired by coal dust draw trains. For power production coal or other combustibles are not a necessity as combustibles are now replaced by Georges Claude, the French scientist, whose name and genius is associated with ammonia synthesis, liquid air and neon lights, proposes to replace some of the falls of the ocean. In Belgium a Academic college encourages specialization in students so much as the law college on the Medical school, computer science on the university, a liberal education in science, classic literature, and art is a thing of the past, and there is no place for it in modern life to restore it to its former pedagogical glory in this age of progress and futility. . . . Will he turn to worthless work? No, will he regulate himself with sensational movies, cheap music, and empty books? If given even a slight start towards an appreciation of the best professors in our field, a man may develop his own tastes and enlarge his sensación and perceptive faculties. Much time is wasted in building the "practical" courses which go beyond the theory and vainly seek to teach that which can be taught by expounding on them with great fervour in which a group of students play that they are journalists sitting around a copy desk or "big business" in the library, and such "courses" with a start, just a start, toward better things? Minnesota Daily The Bachel's Nest The new administration expects to observe strict economy. As a result the University Daly Kanman will be at its height by the end of 2016, under Seed Condensed type. So Alfred B. Fall is to go on trint again! It's a hard road to down-Fall. "First class?" asked the postmaster as he weighed the envelope containing the mannequins. "I hope so," modestly replied the blushing young author. "Couldeid Takes His Outs" reacts a headline in an Eastern paper when it took his first immigration. The paper must have been a little house, What. Girls that smoke aren't so hot; it' all smoke. Full many a shapey shank is here to blush unseen and waste its beauty in a trounger log. Mary a man can turn his Ford at a profit now that it is proposed to give $50 reward for every machine found which contains alcohol. Now come word that some of the daintest lingerie is made from wood." That's right—notting can boat a barrel, in a pinch. The Missouri pander hunters might re whistle to their marry. "Wipe feet on carpet!"—sign on entrance to the University building during the stormy weather. That's odd, we always thought one used a bath towel, As Others See It --ment—or something like it—that is meted out to other murderers. THE PATHOS OF IT! "I am happy," said John Blymer, after his sentence to life imprisonment at York, Pa. "it is pretty sexy. It was a big brother; I can eat and sleep in peace now." There is strange habits in this remark. By all accounts, this Pinnacle man had an affinity of criminal tendencies. He was a poor farmer—a simple soul. He really believed in the things he saw, but he wasn't afraid of this was delusion, creating a fear in his mind, that impelled him to the crime be committed. Nor could he be punished by prison. He acted on the ground of insanity . . . It is right that the person who murders "witches" shall incur the punishment or something like it—that is Yet the fact that Blymayer is saved from the electric chair, which is the means of punishment for first degree Time Is Precious Save it by eating at— The New Cafeteria "Nothing is good enough but the best" 25% and 50% Discount on Stationery Values — 50c to $7.50 Two Stores OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XVI Tuereid, January 22, 1929 No. 91 ********************************************************** BOTANY CLUB: The Botany Club will meet tonight, Jan. 22, at 7:30 o'clock at 1121 Lego st. EVELYN STONER, President. WATKINS HALL SCHOLARSHIPS; EUGENIE GALLOO Cheirman. The committee on scholarship announces several vacancies in Walkins hall for the spring semester, and invites applicants to see the chairman on Tuesday, Jan. 22, or Thursday, Jan. 24, from 11:20 to 12:00 at 310 Foster hall, or to telephone for an appointment. W. A. A. MEETING: Boston Evening Manuscript ON CRIME PREVENTION The report of a study based on the life histories of 145 men, 20 years old, who worked in the New York state penal institution during a two-months' period has been made to the New York "Homes commission" of the state. The methods of effects of crime. The method of approach has been taken to emphasize up on the demoralizing environment or is men's circumstances from his membership in a class. Typically he has come from a demoralizing environment or is men's circumstances is sufficiently powerful to force a criminal career, if the right choice. The chief moral of the report is to the effect that intensive study by social workers, psychiatrists, statisticians and the formulation of a program that shall be a substantial improvement upon the present system of ignorant The majority of the persons studied, the subcommission notes, were committed early to institution. The majority of the persons committed other offences . . . Ex- The repiral meeting of the W. A. A. will be held at 4:30 tomorrow. Jan 22 in the excommium ALICE GASKILL, President. nor murdered in Pennsylvania, implies that justice in York County has compassion for the believer in witchcraft and religious consolection—"them shalt not suffer a witch to live." In some degree the sentiment of people in genocide camps is profound and terrible. The enveloping mystery afflict it with the horrific story of the years of the untutored human soul are profound and terrible. The enveloping mystery afflict it with the horrific story of the poor wretch Blymeyer, with his joy in the walls of the prison so long as they imply deliverance from his evil sorcerer, who lives among the public and private effort to relieve the heightened communities of the land of the consequences of their actions and enlightenment among them. Some of these discoveries carry their offence moral, 'The report of our experience in fact a great deal more is known about what is necessary to prevent criminal activity in there. There has been too much emphasis upon the value of the Baume commission's famous policy of punishing criminals to the neglect of such proposals as the commission now offers or which are among the ranks of such offences.' —Springfield Republican The fighting soul of the man spoke out then. Many men have faced death laughing, have tried to flout the last bullet, because they did not recognize it. New York American cept in "possibly five instances" the lives of none of them had been touched by settlements, community organizations or volunteer recreational activities were clean commercial investments; price ranges were low and so on. Pitbets, it was found, were easy to obtain and in no instance was the person selling the items a threat to safety. Stricken to the heart, Marshall Foch listened to the physicians gathered at his bedside, then grewlated. "Well, bitch, hit me," I not. "But I?! I resI!!" They are bravest who recognize danger, realize their own weaknesses, yet refuse to surrender or admit defeat even to Nature's tremendous forces. They are the men who never conclude it while they are alive. A SOLDIER OF FRANCE Your Application--- Send the Daily Kansan home. Don't let a few cents block the way for your dollars. Should be accompanied by a photograph that shows you at your best. For after all your likeness will play an important part in your landing that much desired position. That fraternity shingle should not be left around to soil. We let us frame it (Gpposite Court House) Winter or summer— rain or shine— light or dark. Agla. the most reliable film 1115 Mass. D'Ambra Photo Service Phone 934 FLANUL FELT NATS in the new shades and shapes for spring are here. $7 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS 1