PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1928 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor Editor Editor Nebraska Editor Telebrush Editor Marcin Chachiel Sunday Magazine Editor James Welsh Rosemary Mauger Philanthropist Bill Ellison Instructor Kaleb Rose Mentor Danielle Robinson President Kennedy Cage President Penelope Kennedy President Clinton Fencey President managership **Advertising Manager** Wayne Ashley **Aa't Advertising Mgr.** Bernie Palomke **Aa't Advertising** James Ingrick Telephone Business Office K, U. 68 New Room K, U. 23 Night Connection 2701K Published in the afternoon, five times a week on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Kansas. Published in the Press of the Department of Kentucky. Subscription Price, $4.99 per month. Einforced as second-class middl matter Septem- br 14, 1879. At 10 a.m., the army of Kansas, Kansas, under the art of March 3, 1879. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1928 AERONAUTICAL ADVANCE Trunc-eneac transportation by water may soon become a relic of the past, with the perfection of giant dirigible capsules of three the speed of the swift steamship. The flights of the R-34 and the ZR-3 which became the Los Angeles, demonstrated the possibilities of these air liners. Now the German Graf dirigible has crossed the Atlantic to further the causes of aviation. New safety devices were used in this great experimental flight, in order that the Shenandoah and Italian disasters should not be repeated. In inauguration of swift and reliable air connections between Europe, Asia and the Americas would be very helpful in placing these now widely separated continents on better terms. Also it would send up mail and passenger service. That time has not yet come, but the present flight of the Grifid dirigible marks another great stride toward stabilized communication by air. PERHAPS SO A few \*citicisms have reached the Kanman that its editorial page does not represent the true student opinion on M. Orfeld because the members of the editorial staff write their personal opinions which do not reflect the ideas of the entire student group. This job may be justified to a certain extent, but there are several other matters involved. The most important question is "What is the student opinion on Mt. Oread anyway?" The group at Kansas is so widely scattered that there is little unity of thought. Fraternity and security groups do not always agree with those outside organized houses. Few social groups have common views on many matters of student concern. Seniors and freshmen differ on many matters and even the engineers and the laws are not always of the same basic. And so it is with the majority of questions treated by the editorial staff. Before articles which directly affect the campus are published investigations are made to learn as much about the problem as possible. Beyond this it is extremely difficult to analyze the situation to the extent of representing the entire opinion of the group. More power to WDAF, reads a headline. Yes, what a relief on the nerves of radio listeners if this idea only comes to pass. The trouble is that it probably carries the reservation with it that static will increase in proportion. Only three more weeks remain be fore the present presidential campaign will be a matter of history. But in those three weeks campaign followers seem to be due to more than one thrill as the intensity of the contest progresses. The present outlook is extraordinary in more respects than one. A man of the older generation and a son of the sidewalks of our greatest city have divided states which for yours have been for the same party. Each of these states are becoming nightmares for the party leaders. Missouri, Texas, Minnesota, Tennessee, Kentucky, and the Daltonates are disregarding their usual custom and giving plenty of worry to the directors of the campaign managers. PROGRESS OF THE CAMPAIGN One important fact is noticeable in the past few days. Both parties have fallen back on the stair topics of prosperity and the tariff. The present tariff with its effect upon various types of industries seems a much safer subject for both sides than the discussion of oil or religion. The voters are used to it at any rate, and the two benders are not so likely to say the wrong thing about it. The majority of the voters do not seem to be very much interested in the tariff at present unless it concerns them directly. Of into the South with her manufacturing industries has looked with more favor upon the protective tariff, which is advanced by both parties at present. This applies, however, only to the manufacturers as it is rather difficult for the southern planter to see the present tariff as a benefit to him. As we have noticed in the next week, the medics have acquired a practice of the laws which we thought was exclusively their own—that of sitting on their own front steps and reviewing the daily student parade before classes in the morning and at noon. NO KICK YET? The funny part of it is that the laws have not presented. Their habit of standing on the steps of Green hall, singing their special songs, commenting on the styles as the students go by, or yelling "Mealt!" as some uninformed freshman passes the flag, constituted a custom which we thought was all their own. Anyone who dared imitate or jeer it would be deemed to eternal tounge-lashing. But they haven't said a word. The results of the new fail should prove interesting, however, from the viewpoint of the young doctors. They get to see all the students before the lawyers do and can form their opinions and make their wise-cracks first. If it continues long, it is possible that the K men and Satham members will move the flagging several hundred yards and form the paddling quad in front of Dyche museum. Then after the freshman run through the line the doctors can take them inside for treatment. Heretofore the laws have allowed the beneweners to go or their way without the slightest sign of sympathy. You can rent a car cheaper on long drives than any other transportation. See Kansas U. beat the Aggies via Rent-A-Car way. The fact that those in minor sports averaged higher grades than those in the major sports only indicates that the latter takes so much more time in energy in practice and contexts. Anyway, football players have the reputation of being poor students. If the M, U. team which walled Centre college Saturday 60 to 9 was really the second team and the first eleven is of better calibre, then the Tigers should show the Jayhawkers a little opposition this year. Rent-A-Ford Co. 916 Mass. Drive it Yourself Phone 653 The regular meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club will be held on Wednesday, day, Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. M. K. RAO, Secretary. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY Y BULLETIN Vol. XXVI. Tuesday, October 16, 1928. No. 29 W. A. A.2 The Women's Athletic Association will meet Wednesday, Oct. 17, at 4:30 p.m. in the gymnasium. The board will meet at 4. The regular W. A. Candy side will be held Wednesday, and it is necessary that each member make the required contribution. ALICE GASKILL, President. NEWCOMERS' CLUB: The Newcomer' Club will have its first meeting of the year at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 18, when it will be entertained at ten by Mrs. Kim B. Hwang. CHORAL UNION: The Festival Chorus will organize Tuesday evening at 7:30 a.m in the antiquity of Liberty Memorial high school, Fourteenth and Massachusetts streets. The Vervil "Reunion" will be being with archival accompaniment to attend. Attendance will not be required if the faculty are invited to attend. There will be no free non-accompanied meals. D. M, SWARTHOUT, Director. PHI LAMBDA SIGMA; Pia LaMura Sigma will hold its regular meeting Tuesday evening at 8 a.m. in Westminster hall, all members and players are expected to be present. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan: It is unfortunate for the women who are seriously interested in politics that a woman who was influential in politics has never been nominated to the common should approach politeness. Not only is she dragging down the statue she had built for herself in her party, but she is hurting the progress of other women in politics. There are many other women who require the position she has had, it is too bad that the eyes of other politicians (who judge the whole race) see what one of us should be captured on her. Her own party had said once that she was speaking on some subject without the authority of the national committee. Mrs. Willebrand is so summarizing the whispering campaign by her indirect remarks against Smith that her position is a very foolish one at the present time. Our Contemporaries We bear incessant talk and constant demands for religious and political tolerance. Why not an equality of educational opportunities? There is, perhaps, nothing as important, as necessary, in the organization of college life as the recognition of this quality. The will to learn should be an away, to attempt to see the other person's side of the question and to make only constructive criticism are the essentials for this platform. Far too often we find ourselves in the presence of a too narrow standard. STUDENT TOLERANCE The student mind is continually demanding uniformity and objecting to the individual does not conform, nor do students considered their peculiarity. This is in many ways depending on what the group who become bad causes of the deviation, who are the misfits, the wrong people or who leaves life so difficult. No doubt must of it is their fault, nine tenths of them would probably disappear if they were willing to think, talk, act, and play, or simply follow a pattern. But how much better to have them bound to the other group become between them there exists understanding, because both are in student tolerance - Indiana Student. The trouble with college life, according to Doctor Feehan of Brown, is "not that it is ivory, but that it is so often trivial". He doesn't like the social aspect; thinks it makes him a victim of being an outsider in the activities, musical, dramatic, athletic, and such, seems to him a fictional *way* of time and energy. Burning the revered doctor's indulgence, we conceive that it is just those extracurricular duties that save the college student from being burdened by burdens. If proper educators would discover that the four years'散期 spent in college is not a more time for hypothetical after-life, and would contrive to make it a vital and exciting experience in itself, the students should be able to deceive their own private ways of keeping the old place on its feet and going somewhere.-McGill Daily. SCATTER-BRAINED As Others See It KEEPING THE REAIN IN TRIM KEEPING THE BRAIN IN TRIM Until a few generations ago science did not know that consciousness had its seat in the brain but it was not obvious that all of that organ, in distributing the resources of the human body, that the brain retained its powers long after those of other parts, the limbs, the alimentary system, even the circulatory system, had been lost. *Fronius Tirex*, in an address on the human brain, maintains that while usually this favored portion of our bodies best resists the intrudes of time it does never suffer to some degree from the toxic processes that break down the viper of the northeast. According to his view the brain ages more because of internal poisoning than from any other cause. This comes measurably near to saying that human beings could remain brain-young indefinitely if they could keep their systems fairly free of internal stress. That is why an age advantage the individual locus the habit of using his brain so actively, and that as it uses becomes less it loses some of its powers. As between the two views there seem to be a difference: those who value their mental life will adopt both ideas alike, and while doing their best to keep their bodies free from the harmful products of sickness and bad living, will go on keeping their minds alert by using them as much cough to keep them in training. In other words, while a sound brain may require a sound body to keep it sound it may also require a sound mind, one that keeps the habit of exercise and the interest and joy of exertion, not in some single narrow field but in the whole range of the real facilities—Brooklyn Eagle. "My neighbor says," writes M. F. "she is so tired of political沸腾speeches and staltie that she has decided to vote for this here Will Rogers, who is conducting the whispering campaign, and Henry Allen White, who went to Europe to keep out of the war."—Kansas City Star MODERN FETISHES IN FRANCE Novemvies nobody believes that a rabbit's foot or a lucky penny will naturally be luck. But squares anyone is invene to carrying some money or having money in her luck and the certainty that she can do no harm. Just now France is enjoying an epidemic of fetishes of all kinds from fancy darts to pet tiger cubs. To be really lucky the fetish must also its owner's personal as well as its perfume blend with her customer. Animals are the most popular bearers of luck. Poodles, foxes, leopards and monkeys have been adopted by well-known actresses. One fashionable hia was used to show promancing poses in a dress on a leash with a live lobster on a leash. For less exotic tastes, a live turtle works as well. It would hardly do as a feefor an aviator, but it should suit bulkers and campers perfectly. It travels where it likes, doesn't believe in danger and carries its house on its back. Puglists, as a class, are great believers in luck. Before an important match, the friends of one box over- A New Feature The changing of the size of our sandwiches to the standard size at only- 80 Toasted, 12c The New Cafeteria whelmed him with gifts—a bottle of scent, a penny with a hole in it, a warmer, an elephant's hair, a butterfly, a pearl, a diplomatic official are held to belong to a more intelligent group, in America, their friends are not above invoking the aid of fetishes in the shape of fruit. The first American fresh potato, fresh potato — New York Times. “Shirts-Shorts” Shirts 75c up to $2 Young fellows wont wear anything else—for underwear, we mean. Lots of girls wear 'em, too. Sleeveless, buttonless knit shirts. Gym style drawers in bright effects. We'll show you any number of good looking patterns in rayon or cotton. Shorts 75c up to $2 When you use the Remington Portable W Eliminate the drudgery and slowness of writing by hand—get a Remington Portable. Your work will be nearer and you'll get it done far more quickly. Remington Portable is the smallest, highest, most compact and most durable computer notebook board. Carrying case only 4 inches high. Weighs 8½ pounds, net. WRITER's cramp may sound like a joke to some, but to the student who has spent several long hours at his desk on her hand, it booms as a very real malady. Cash or convenient terms. Rimington Hand Business Service, Inc. 91 Wiyamette Street St. Louis, MO 63107 Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 737 Massachusetts Ave. that makes rain welcome Coats for Rainy Days That have a smartness Bullene's exclusive but not lenient The "La France" A French Trench Coat of showerproof gabardine or rubberized plaid back. Bellows pockets and belted. Two prices A Leatherette Sport Coat — 4. Raglan sleeve rain coat, suede lined, with bellows pockets and belt. Black and colors. Plain Glagette at $ 7.53. Alligator Glazette at $ 6.95 The Glazette $7.50 and $9.75 Valteria Pressing puts the shape in the garment where it should be. The shoulder of the coat is pressed the same as the rest of the garment, instead of being steamed out with a pad as in the old way. We have the only Valeteria unit in Lawrence. The cost is no more for this Deluxe service. Lawrence Steam Laundry 1001 New Hampshire Phone 383 "We clean everything you wear but your shoes" >