PAGE TWO THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 1. 1928 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-In-Chief Jason Armstrong Journal Editor William Owens Sport Editor William Orpichney Sports Editor Night Editor Mimi Hancey Alumni Editor Chelsea Kelley Alumni Editor Chelsea Kelley Alumni Editor on Rhodes Mildred Edinger Elder Erika Kahn Elder Alicia Sutton Herrer Platchee Brittany Patterson Ian Indeed Isabel Indeed Jennie Jenkins Business Staff BUSINESS STAR Advertising Manager Wayne Ahles Asst't Advertising Mgr. Beverie Paulette Asst't Advertising Mgr. James Jarrett Telephone Business Office K, U. 66 News Room K, U. 25 Night Connection 2701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week in the Department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and seven times in Journalism. The second class mat matter System b17, 1910, at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1928 PUBLICITY Desired by many, won by few and deepened by none—publicity. Some pretend to dislike seeing their names in the public prints, but they make no strenuous objections to it except when there is a reporter around to record their protests. There is apparently no limit to the lengths to which the most ardent public seeer will go to gain their ends. Mrs. Halldemann Julius sees out evidences of race discrimination or promotes companioned marriage; now we find her marbling around an Arkansas jail with placards. Someone in London is spending his money in a supposed effort to talk to Mars. He is really paying for newspaper space in all the papers of the world. The most modern and up-to-date procedure is to become a stowaway on a trans-Atlantic dirigible. EDUCATION OR DOLLARS? It's all publicity. The quickest and surest cure for these space bounds is to forget them entirely. A banquet held in New York city one night last week matches a stop to constrain whether the great stress now placed on the money value of a college education is justified. Business in New York paused for a few moments in honor of nine guests at that banquet whose combined wealth is estimated at 10 billion dollars. Only five of these men finished high school and none are college graduates. These nine men were: Henry Ford, Glenn H. Curtis, Orestia Wright, Thomas A. Edison, Charles M. Schwab, Julius Rosenwald, George Eastman, Cyrus H. K, Curtis and Harvey S. Firestone. All started as poor boys and without college educations have amassed fortunes and have made distinct contributions to American life. These and many other examples make us wonder if a college education is so necessary for financial gain. In a college education for that purpose, however? Such emphasis tends to make many students rush through their college work taking "snap" courses and caring little for a well-rounded education. More emphasis should be placed on the other benefits of a college education. The story of these nine men should demonstrate clearly that there is no royal road to success, even for the college graduate. SUPPORT THE TEAM Friday night K. U. students will have a chance to see the stadium brim full with the real Jayhawk spirit. The old grads with their enthusiasm should create some honest-to-goodness pupil in the present student body. It is the duty of every man and woman to turn out and lift his voice for K. U. The rally is primarily to let Coach Allen and the team know that every Jayhawk is supporting them. We want to make the hills tremble and reverberate the songs and yells for the队 and the university; we want to convince the队和the past and present students of our loyalty. School loyalty is a wonderful thing when correctly guided. It means everything to the players who give their strength and energy to defen an opponent. This rally will be impressive. Imagine the flares outlining the field and the sound of the bombs which will be exploded every three minutes during the program. So let's show the visitors that we have "that old pop" at no time must we let this demonstration subside. RECKLESS DRIVING A London magistrate recently deprived a man of his driving license for life in addition to firing him $250 for driving dangerously while drunk. This brings to mind rather forcefully the fact that we are lenient in the matter of traffic law infringements. Our courts have recently become more severe in the punishment of such cases, but offenders still escape with a short sentence or—for minor offence such as speeding—a small fine. In order to receive really severe punishment in America, a man must kill or at least injure someone by his rockiness. Is it because the whole pressure of our lives is carried on at high speed that we are inclined to consider this a minor offense? A man who consistently drives recklessly but has so far escaped injury anyone only because he is lucky is a potential matter to society. We wonder whether a short jail sentence for a habitual speeder or a drunken driver is as sane a penalty as a long suspension of his driving license. Jail carries with it the antigua of disgrace, but even that antigua is losing its effect in connection with such cases. On the other hand, the average American is helpless without a car. The loss of our驾船 would doubtless be as serious to many of us as the loss of our franchise. Another great advantage of this system is that the driver is kept from meancing the lives of others during the period of his punishment. A man who has little regard for hears to drive when he has been drinking has no right behind the wheel, so why do we allow him there? Europe's name for America is Shylock. But when a famine comes along it became Samaritan. Today's Best Editorial Wanted: More Light on the Stars Perhaps there is nothing more mystifying to the layman than the technicalities of antarmoners. On the other hand there is more education in this part of the story of the stars. But filled with technical terms an astronomical discussion, enlightening as it may be, does not miss the nuance that nihilizes the average listener with about as much information and entertainment as a short circulated radio report. At a recent meeting of variable star observers there was a discussion of the "graphic interpretation of the occultation reduction formulae." With the aid of an average layman might look upon this as the title of a receipt for taking rabbits from an empty silk hat. And yet, no doubt, the debaters on this subject could make it a more intolerable case who never have tuned astronomy. Perhaps there would be a far greater public interest in astronomy than in geography or the understandable interpretations of the results of studies which are being constantly made. To be sure, any explanation must have an sensational, such as the appearance of an extraordinary comet, or a complete 'lingering' story of the earth upon its axis, is Friday Special! CAT FISH CORN MUFFINS PUMPKIN PIE Silent Invisible Airplane Being Made at Experiment Station in Europe The New Cafeteria (Copyright 1987 by Valentine Software.) Paris, Oct. 31. — Airplanes that will be silent as they move through the air and practically invisible from the ground, may be one of the next steps in aviation. Already remarkable programs is being made in experiments conducted on behalf of various European governments, France, England, Russia and Germany are said to be conducting such researches. The silence of the aero-engineers is in many ways the simplest of the noise classes. In some cases the noise other sounds begin to make themselves apparent are the high-pitched notes set an by rapidly revolving air screw or screws. "The Union Building" "Inside Stuff" in Jim Dash, the hero of several of Insider's squabs, has a number of relations whom the reader should meet. Jim himself will need him himself. He here is: Jim is a useful citizen. He separates the parts—decks, technically—a headline, and the headline from the related items, such as announcements, the paragraphs in "Around Mt. Oread," and so on. He separates the parts of a news article into the parts of the country when a Senator Norris in Oregon made a statement which required explanatory matter or comment from the headline. Jim also kept the year under the same headline. And he separates the local newspaper's explanation or addition to a news story which relates to a local situation. jim dash --promptly taken up and described in terms that everybody can understand But the wonderful things that happen are not ordinarily translated in such terms as "two or more superimposed periods have been found for semiriginal forms" or "the laborious methods of harmonic analysis." — Christian Science Monitor When Jim goes off on a spree, he mixes things badly. So the intelligent newspaper reader, when he finds two unrelated items appearing to the well-wishers Jim and凑到 the mystery by deciding where Jim is looped. Campus Opinion HOOVER vs SMITH Editor Daily Kansan; Hover is an engineer, a capable administrator, who fed Belgian hobiles and has a benevolent desire to see everyone happy, if it doesn't come through. He sat through two oil scams? Yes, very silent, too. He is the admitted nologist of the power trust. In his speeches he has misstated figures on unemployment and revived socialism, preparation, turmoil and socialism. Smith is being beheaded as a progressive savior but what he is saying about the Teapot Dome, the Sacred Heart, has never lifted his finger to help the progressives get an honest vote. The new Tamaqua mayor, who only it doesn't get so rough about it, also a man is judged by the company he keeps, and the man of his national committee, or Hague, the corrupt New Jersey boss, who doesn't help the promoting of the progressive. Yet they advocate progressiveness. How about the Democratic imperialism in Haiti, the Republican unipersonality in Texas and this form of "progressive" government to continue?" Why not give it a chance? Intecte of using an ordinary two of four-folded propeller, tests are used to determine whether or not more blades or of rather a small size. These blades—unfolding a very large one—are shaped like zigzag and shaped specially with a view to looking the noise they make Plan Secret Demonstration Plan Secrets' Dethistication It is probable that before long secret aircraft are maintained already being conducted, will be conducted with large airplanes equipped with silenced planes and "noiseless" types of multi-bladed metal air screws; and the sounds these machines make as they rush through the air净化 they are produced by the illumination of external and friction producing vibrations. A more immediately practical field of research, and one almost equally fascinating one, has been made with "invisible" paints or dyes. In England the authorities have evoked a queen, ink dpope of the Middle Ages to make a big machine密切接触 to make a big machine密切接触 to make moving against a background of fire or smoke has been found host conspicuous when a high-flying machine comes into the eye of a high-airing directed on it A problem even more complex than those already mentioned is now reported to be under investigation in certain German laboratories. In the collection and in possible, with the elimination of tell tale windows. German Make Giant Monophones Recently German designers and builders have accomplished remarkable strides in the production of giant musical monophones simply by making them smaller than a minimum of resistance to their own progress through the air. Such huge craft have their masters tinker in a big single wing projecting on either side of the instrument when they are flying immediately towards any observer sheen from the ground these very large machines, wide spread through their wing span, is present an automatically small object to the But when such a machine, as it is flying, passes over障 until it is in a position almost directly above the wing, its shadow are formed and held under the lower surface of the large curved wing. It is these shadow under the wing, rather than the wing under the wing, draw one's attention to the machine. Secret Treatment Used Secret Treatment The secret treatment which it is understood, is being followed in German laboratories, and also at certain Russian experimental stations, is to devise special means whereby, owing to secret treatment of planerurfaces and adjacent body, heavy machinery may be used that when viewed from below, they no longer reveal so plainly the shame and size of a wing. in many respects such aerial research are the most significant—and also the most dominant—ever undertaken. The evolution of a machine which will rush through the earth is one possibility which is not necessarily illimitable. are practicem Send the Daily Kansan Home Have You Your New Obercoat ready for Homecoming? If not come in tomorrow $33 Our Contemporaries Others $23.50 up to $75 Store closed during the game Saturday. Ober's HEAR TO FOOT OUTWITTERS THE GALLERY The great stamped is on! Prize fighters, kings of wart, actors, society bads, and titled nobility have joined in what will probably be known in histos: as the Old Gold Rush of 2013, when the gold rush of textile testimals before the eyes of the guigible vary from tobacco to dam remedies. Shades of Lydia Pinkham Back in the days of the monthly plumage, grateful cohorts filled the ogues with testimonials. The custom has never灭敌 out, but until recently, we knew it was bad. And ever, it seems that we now have with us a great revival; the testimonial is again coming into its own. We've always been searching for chinning luminary of the screen or titel member of foreign nobility conducts for our benefit a blindfold test which proves beyond a doubt that we are highly trained at art. Or a physician of apparently international fame recommended yeast for practically all bodily lilies so that we are immediately moved to buy a yeast cream. To this end, we yeast, believing that therein we shall find relief, or at the worst, that one will offset the other. From the depths of these stories, people toduce people to lead their pictures and signature. "The Minnesota Daily." As Others See It JOURNALISM IN THE SCHOOLS It is of especial interest to note the attention given by the Ohio Teachers' Association, recently in research on the city, to the subject of journalism. Said Miss Helen M. Drodly, teacher of English in Woodward High School. "There is tremendous interest in high journalism at the present time." Miss Dudley's presented figures should be easily accessible to lovers of America, its institutions and traditions. Despite the banker salutes of the nation, the fact of free press in this country cannot successfully be disputed. If high school pupils give to the development of journalistic thought, they will be learning how to realize, however dimly, the needs of the American press, they will be rendering a promising and immensely vital contribution to the industry and its government, now so often and menacingly assemblied by those who believe in the power of public opinion or may be the public Adherents. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Thursday, November 1, 1928 No. 44 ELECTION DAY. ELECTION DAY; There will be no classes on Tuesday, Nov 6 election day, and the library and administrative office will be closed for that day. This is to give opportunity to those students and employees who may find it possible to do so, to vote at their home towns on election day and return to the University in time for their usual schedules Wednesday morning. Watson library reading rooms and desk will be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. E. H. LINDLEY. ALL UNIVERSITY PICTURE: DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS; All members of the Drum and Bugle Corps will meet at Fowler shops in uniform at 9:25 a.m. m. Saturday to play for the Housecoming parade. KAPPA PHI: The attention of all students, teachers, and other employees of the University is called to the all-University picture to be taken in front of Green hall at 11:30 Friday. Everyone is urged to attend, so that the picture may be truly representative of the University. E. H. LINDLEY. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY. The regular meeting of the Coomopolitan Club will be held at 7:15 p. m. Thursday, Nov. 1. M. K. RAO, Secretary. CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING The evening of the Christian Science Society of the University of Kansas, Thursday evening at 7:30 in Myers Hall, room 18. Kappa Phi will meet at the Methodist Church at 7 p.m. Thursday evening, Nov. 1. Members and planners will please note change in time. RHADAMANTHI: The regular meeting of Rudhanianta will be held Thursday night at 7:00 p.m. in green hall. All members are urged to be present. VIOLA BELL. Secretary. There wholly is no attempt to teach high school a knowledge of technology, and it is difficult. Puddy well said, it is the place to acquaint knowledge concerning all post-secondary technology. of greater merit and stability than our own. These young students of journalism will be recognized as vital units of the Nation's future most powerful and most dependable armies in the enduring struggle for freedom, faith, a right social order and the maintenance of the economic fabric of American commerce and business. These students will be benefited of education and an enabling and saving culture—they will become the failure and mothers of children wadded to the service and idols of contemporary, representative, true democracies. a keen news sense, alert observation and the character that a worthy and valuable officer will in time need—that is, when the school may instruct its pupils in the journalistic field concerning what the student sees. It must also be timely. It mostly is. —Cincinnati Enquirer. A recent survey shows that there are approximately 10,000,000 families in the United States owning radio sets. On the basis of 4.3 members to a family, it is estimated that nearly 41,500,000 persons constitute the total radio audience of the country. That is probably too high an estimate, as it doesn't take into account these fave whose sets are so poor that most people who have them merely for parlor ornaments. —Los Angeles Times University Concert Course Second Concert A Pianist of International Renown and Famous Orchestral Conductor Appears in a Recital of Piano Music Ossip Gabrilowitsch Tonight 8:20 o'clock University Auditorium Single Admissions Now Selling Round Corner Drug Store Bell's Music Store School of Fine Arts A season ticket still available at a big saving in price for the remaining five concerts—Gabriellalowisch, Elman, Flenzabye String Quartette and two concerts by the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra (60 men) at $5.50 and $5.50, according to location, at School of Fine Arts office.