PAGE TWO TUPSDAY OCTOBER 9 1928 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANNSAS Lawyers, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Ambassador Assistant Sunday Editor University Editor Campaign Editor City Editor Night Editor Alumnus Editor Alumnus Magazine Nationwide Magazine Sunday Magazine Editor Lorelle Plummer Associate Virginian Writer William Ungherby Jotty Leigh Martin Leigh Marcen Chauvier Marcen Chauvier Bob Acknowledgement Bob Acknowledgement Bornegay Mahar Mildred Eldridge Wayne Fittin Ralph Pat Katie Dockhorn Alice Suarto Advertising Manager... Wayne Abbey Ask't Advertising Mer... Barnie Palenko Ask't Advertiser Mer... James Barrett Telephone Business Office K, U. 48 News Room K, U. 25 Night Connection 2701KJ Published in the afternoon, five times a week. Department of Information of the University of Michigan, 2024-11-19. Department of Information of the University of Michigan, 2024-11-19. Department of Information of the University of Michigan, 2024-11-19. Published in the afternoon, five times a week. Department of Information of the University of Michigan, 2024-11-19. Department of Information of the University of Michigan, 2024-11-19. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1928 IT MUST CONTINUE With every event which marks progress there is a counter-event which is difficult to accept. When machines are built and perfected many men are thrown out of work. When new ideas are conceived the older ones must either go to the background or be destroyed entirely. When towns grow up certain beautiful sights and landmarks must give way to buildings and factories. And so K. U. is facing this situation in regard to Snow hall, Take a look at one of the oldest buildings on M. Orland the next time you pass by Snow hill. It even appears as stately and stunned as the day it was constructed. Pay particular attention to the ivy which almost clothes the entire structure so beautifully as the leaves are beginning to turn red and yellow and brown. The edinburgh was created in 1884 in honor of former Chancellor Francis Huntington Snow and is one of the landmarks of the University. Students and faculty members will experience a feeling of sorrow when it is rised next year. It is indeed difficult to see such a landmark pass from Mt. Oread, but a new building with better equipment and larger and more commercial rooms is already riding on another part of the campus. TAKE ADVANTAGE Within a month now a large number of students on Mt. Oread will have that long-looked for privilege of costing their first votes in a presidential election. But before any student who comes from a first and second class city can vote he must register by Oct. 26, the day the registration books are closed. Registration must take place in the student's home town. Here are a few of the regulations that must be watched when the absent voter cents his ballot Nov. 6. The absent voter who lives in a first or second class city must have registered there providing he has lived in one precinct or that of city 20 days and has been a resident of the state at least six months. On election day the student should go to the polling place of the Lawrence precinct in which he lives and make an affirmative that he is eligible to vote at his home. After signing the affirmative he casts his ballot which is sealed and sent to the Douglas county clerk, who in turn sends it to the county in which the student lives. Seven days after the election the clerk returns with the county commissioners, checks over the absent voter's ballot and if it is found valid it is recorded on the official poll sheet. Announcement of the various polling places in Lawrence will be made through the Kansas prior to the election. Ever since most of us can remember citizenship and loyalty toward our country and the duty and obligation of franchise has been prescheduled to us until we have always wanted an opportunity to exercise these privileges. Now the chance has come. If you live in one of the larger cities, register if at all possible, then on Nov. 6 help select a president. A NARROW LITTLE WORLD Another Sunday has passed. For students, it has been another day of catching up on sleep and catching up on the news with perhaps a date drawn in. In most of us forget there is such a thing as news and we never see a metropolitan newspaper until Sunday. When the Sunday edition comes we perhaps single out the sports page or the dramatic department or the feature supplements are done when we finish them, will no more than a glance at the front page. Universities have been criticized and justify, for making a narrow little world for the students which leaves them at the end of four years out of touch with national and international movements. Many young graduates find themselves ignorant of government policies, bewildered by strange new laws and customs and with only a harday of the cultural advance made during the four years they have hidden away in the academic elite. Perhaps the biggest factor makes for neglect of the news is lack of contact. Fraternity and security houses often fail to provide a sufficient number of metropolitan dallies and weekly news magazines to encourage regular reading. Closes in history, sociology and kindred subjects might put more emphasis on the trends of history in the making which is recorded on sheets left at the door each morning. More students should participate in discussion groups, open forms, and lectures on current happenings. They should avoid limiting their interests to any narrow little world. campus Opinion ANTICIPATION What is a campus opinion column? It is a place to express campus problems, or is it a column to serve the interests of those few people who are able to maximize it. This column as established by the University Daily Kenan is imposed to be a column of free expression. The column is furnished by the Kenan of course, but only the fund of those few staff members who put one article in the waste basket and the other article on the front page. It was my pleasure to send an article to campus opinion Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. Sunday morning came and it was not published, Monday evening came and it was still comparisons by its absence. However, on Monday evening I received a message "Inside the column explaining the fairness of the Kauten, how it wanted to do right," "be a good boy", etc. The way the article read gave me the hope that Todday evening my dear campus opinion would be printed. But it is my secret opinion that the editor thought a "soft conundrum" for Dove "affirmed would provide a comfortable resting place to an innocent little article sent to the public expression column. It is also my anticipation that "Inside Depe" will carry quite a lengthy list of people and stories furnished member of the staff since three days should be long enough time to acclimate "Inside Depe" to our interesting column from new on. Perhaps with the next campus opinion, the name of the paper will be changed? What would be a good name for the paper? "Leo Boidie" Our Doctors limit their work to diseases of the Stomach and Surgery. Send The Daily Kansan home. X-Rays, Radium and Quartz lamp used where indicated. The Lawrence Hospital and Training School Mary L. Gleesmann, R. N. Mgr. Come in and see our new steel cut buckles and Rhinestone Ornaments GIRLS. Burgert's Shoe Shop 1113 Mass. St. There will be a general meeting of Pen and Scroll at 7:45, Tuesday evening, Oct. 12, in the Rest Room of Central Administration building. All members are welcome. PEN AND SCROLL: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXVI Tuesday, 9 October, 1928 No. 23 LYLE GIFFORD, Secretary. INSTITUTION OF Mining Engineering Students of Mining Engineering will meet at 7:00 a.m., Oct. 9, at 1346 La C. M. YOUNG El Aviador tendrá un primer ascensor del año de la juvenia, 11 de octubre a las 1:20 el tarde de la tarde en el corte de cuerva, 26 de julio, su duración a las miserables de 3:00 el domingo. EL ATENEO: G. M. ROBLES, Presidente. QUILL CLUB; Quail Club will hold pledging service Wednesday evening at 8:00 in room 222 Central Administration building for students' eclipse latent but not pledged last spring. All members are urged to be present as a very important business meeting will follow. A college campus observer, after noting the recent aerobics of Mrs Mable Walker Willbridge, reminisces that women in politics should be all women. "You shouldn't wonder just what use the unfair sex would then have for politics, anyway NAOMI DAESCHNER, Chancellor. --another eight years of unfavorable legislation under a Republican administration. "Inside Stuff" 2. Various Ideal for the Bettermother of the Kantian is served to the fill. Ideal from both sides and without the offer of the Kantian is served as soon as condition requires. Editor Daily Kansan: "Several members of the K.U. AI Smith club and most of the Hower organization were wondering why a student was not able to play the organization now is only two days old and yet the committee has found plenty of room for activity. "Kees with the first story in the book told the evolution of the club, where there were evidences of discrimination. For those readers who do not understand the inside working of a newspaper office we might say that the student before it goes to press is the copy reader who is supposed to correct the story but not to change the body of the story in any way unless it is in accordance with that does not conform to Kangan style. "Of course it is a known fact that most of the Kanan staff are Republicans. However, that is no indication that the students on the Hill are mostly Republicans. And even if most of them were Howard many, any political story should be run in its entirety. "Here is one concrete example. In the paragraph stating the fact that there would be no prizes offered, a 25 word paragraph, mind you, was changed to read thus: "Why can we forget about other instances of unfairness in the story. If such tactics as these are right then we have only to expect "We are going to fight clean, hard and fairly, and we want to see every one also do the same. We say let the community fight clean, and we make it fairly, Committee on Fair Play. Leo Bodde." Here is the whole of the paragraph referred to, as it was in the original copy: "It is the plan of the Democrat not to accept my benevolent request for a vote. We will be no huge prizes on 'Why vote for Al Smith, etc.' (sic) as it is expected that all good Democrats will vote for Smith anyway. The reasons why one should vote the Democrat are too many, but that a context would only be a repetition of something very evident. It is felt that only in the case of the Republican platform where issues are perplexed not so clear that a context would be of adjudication, according to the chairman of the Lit committee." The matter contained in this paragraph was pearl opinion, only the last sentence being attributed to any source, and such a word was used to describe the matter as a matter of routine. As Mr. Bode says, the copreacher is supposed to make the story conform to Kansan style; and that style holds that all matters of opinion which is not the statement referred to be longer than the reporter be clobbered. Recommended by the English Department of the University of Kansas. Each of the Hill political clubs has had two stories in the Kansas. The Republican stories have totaled 18 inches and the Democratic ones slightly over 29 inches. In each case there has been one big story and one little one. One whole story from the Republican side, because it was the same type of "hooey" that was contained in the narrograph Mr. Biddle complains of. Mr. Biddles' letter was intended by him for the campus opinion column. Hot Sandwiches WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE We Deliver The Best Abridged Dictionary—Based upon WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL Ice Cream In Study Hours. These questions about words, that arise no prerequisite in your reading, writing, and listening, are really information. New world like dhyacharya checharan, checharan; lattice); names such as Cabell, Hoover, Simone, snake Guantanamo officer, anglers, a muslim, an amelie. Over 106,664 averaged 1,260 illustrations of 1,256 pages printed on Bib纸 Paper. Son, It’s Your Calling to learn or Write G. & C. MEKRIAM CO Service Field, Moe Cold Country Club Note Papers Note Papers Face Powder Cigarets In fact, anything you need from a drug store Just Call 521 Coe's Drug Store Open till 11 p. m. It was used here in order that what he had used to say and Iain's comment on it might be together. If he cares to have it run in the campus opinion column it will be reurn there in its own place, and if the opinions dealing directly with the Kannan or its policies, will be noted in this department. What Kansas Editors Say EX-CHAMPION STILL UNPOPULAR What a fine spectacle Gone Tunnel is making of himself. It is no wonder the ex-champion never was a popular figure. The other day he took one camera away from a photographer, opened it, and exposed the film; he threatened to break another camera if the operator did not let him alone. At the time of the wedding ceremony a hostile crowd, presumably murchued by the disgruntled news men, gathered around the building itself to ducted (self disgracefully generally, though not without provocation). The great Tunney seems to have suddenly forgotten that the publicity that he feigns to despise so thoroughly now has been the principal cause of his rise to fortune. Whence came the tremendous "gates for his two fights with Dempsey if not from the vast attention the newspapers paid to him, but because he cannot be the wealthy man of leisure he now is if the "pestiferous newspaper men" had not camped on his trail a couple of years ago. —Kansas City Kansan Mr.McMurray Waxes Poetic over Tobacco Carrollton, Texas May 15, 1928 Larus & Bro. Co. Richmond, Va. Gentlemen: Having been a user of Edgeworth for over eight years, I can trustfulness enclosing a little city that I believe could hold the old man Trounblair and Old Man Troblair. Old Man Joy and Old Man Trouble West out for a walk one day. I happened to pass when they met on the street Said Old Man Trouble, "She's as wrong as she can be. wrong as she can be, There ain't no fun in anything to I was just talking to Old Man Sorrow. And he says the world will end Then Old Man Joe he started to And I saw him bring out gin, OLD BLUE TIN, Then Old JOYNIN BRIAR was next on the score, and he joined him in Old BLUE TIN, And I heard him say he is away, "You have to have a smoke screen every day. When a man gets the burgers needed a friend. He can find consolation in the OLD And I just don't believe on all this earth. There's a thing that'll match good old EDGEWORTH." More nearby. ars very truly, F. H. McMurray Edgeworth Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco Suits Cleened and Pressed $1.00 Phone 498 Rent Your Car from Rent-A-Ford 916 Mass. Phone 653 --all this week Phone 4 Tire & Battery Service Goodyear Tires "Gasoline Corner" Fritz Co. Red Crown Gasoline Iso-Vis Oil Silk Frock Sale $16.75 Values to $22.50 A wonderful showing of beautiful silk frocks suitable for all dress affairs. Newest models and materials. Cayot and Durst . = 30 The Fair 743 Mass. Street