PAGE TWO P THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FEIDAY, MAY 18 1928 University Daily Kansan Official Student Prayer of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Louise Rippers Summit Editor Jerry Plumley Sunday Editor Jeremy Flintney Sunrise Magazine Editor Poppy Huffman Magazine Editor New Editor Neville Worsner New Editor Warner Films Fashion Editor Warren Fife Telegraph Editor Mildred Eldridge Telegraph Editor Forrest Calvin Lloyd Robbins Jonathan Hudson Hilton Tatum Hilton Tatum Martina Carta Vince Gwynne Alice Gleason Bob Moe William Schmidt John Sparks V. Gwynne Gwynne Advertising Manager... R. M. Dahl. Aest. Advertising Mgr. ... Hannon Pigman Ast. Advertising Mgr. ... Howard V. Rus Foreign Advertising Mgr. ... Roht. W. Herron Telephone Business Office K. 17. 66 Telephone K. 17. 66 Night Collection 2701 K Published in the afternoon, Five times in the department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin, and in the monthly mail matter September 17, 1926, at the post office, Lawrence. FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1928 A LITTLE SUPPORT. FOLKS Coach John Bunn's baseball aggregation yesterday into camp the baseball players from Washington, making a clean sweep of the at home series and moving the team into a tie for second place. With the Kansas Aggies in first having played only six games, the Jayhawks stand a good chance of running a close race for the Valley championship. Captain Kelly Swenson pitched a great game, his team-mates supported him well, and the game was close and interesting throughout. But only a hundred or so students witnessed the game. With the team playing such good ball, it is a shame that the student body does not give them better support. Of course it is close to the end of the year, and many must study, but it is safe to say that if even a portion of these reeling on front porches had been at the game the crowd would have been doubled. Step right up folks, and give the team a hand. AN AERIAL FACTORY One of the sure signs of the nec- pitation of an education in the in- reased signs of studying these nic- pring days. The news that factory to manufacture the new Dimmore Alter radioerial will soon be in operation in Lawrence is doubly welcome when the announcement comes along with it that the factory will employ mostly students. The plan is to run three fourth-grade, fifth-grade and sixth grade to work and still not allow such work to interfere with their studies. With the opening of the aerial factory this situation will be somewhat relieved. It is to be hoped that this will be only the beginning and that other factories of a similar nature will follow. Lawrence is not an industrial town, and, being so close to Kansas City, never will be. Yet there could be factories here of such a nature that they could employ students. Students who have been wishing for such a condition seem about to see their dream realized. This is a definite move in a direction that will mean a new day in the field of student employment in Lawrence. The charge is made, and rightly made, that students work for wages that a person with a family cannot accept, and then injure the status of labor in the city. The reason is that students need work so desperately that they will often accept a pittance in order to stay in school. JOB WANTED When we read about the father who was so worried because his son wanted to work his way through college and was too frail to play football and too dumb to play basketball, we look around us and see several who are taking a good rest cure. "Women are learning to Think," says a W. Y. C. A. worker. We wonder when men will start learning, if ever. THE GEESE OF THE GOLDEN EGGS An another object lesson in the study of the ethics of Big Business was given the public day before yesterday when the stockholders of the Stincoln Consolidated Oil Company relied collectively to membership on the corporation's board of directors, endorsing the policies which have carried him into and through the most spectacular moral debacle which ever centered about an American business man, the Teapot Dome oil cannail. Not long ago, Col. Robert W. Stewart, also grown notorious as a result of the Teapot Dome investigations, received a similar "vote of confidence" from his oil company, the Standard Oil of Indiana. That, in the Sinchair case, the reelected man was also the donor of some 800 thousand dollars in cash and securities once used to finance the Mammoth Oil Company which became valueless when the government cancelled the Teapot Dome lease, was entirely incidental, the corporation would have the public believe. The entire affair which culminated in such startling disclosures by the senate investigating committee and which almost resulted in a penitentiary sentence for a millionaire was lightly characterized by an attorney for the Consolidated company as "unfortunate situation." The same spokesman for the organization regarded Mr. Sinchair's return of the defunct Mammoth's securities into the coffin of the Consolidated as "highly honorable and satisfactory." Big Business, it seems, has never matters involving the relationship between money and morals differing from those commonly held by the individual. While the public believes Mr. Sinchair has been guilty of a crime against his nation and his countrymen, Big Business apparently believes that he was nothing more than the victim of "an unfortunate situation." Whatater difficulties Mr. Sinchair may have fallen into with the government of the United States did not disqualify him as a business man. In fact they served, rather sensationally perhaps, as proofs of an unusual business ability. Big Business wants men of business ability. A man who very nearly was able to defraud the government of millions of dollars naturally such ability. Therefore Big Business is going to hang on to Harry Sinchair. Perhaps next time he will not be caught. At any rate the stakes are sufficiently high to justify the ricks. It is fully to suppose that Big Business will allow men like Harry Sinclair and Robert W. Stewart to escape its service. "Frank," "perjury," "dichometry," "conspiracy" are idrences not and in any theatrus with which Big Business is acquainted, Big Business thinks in terms of dollars, millions of them, and whatever devices may be used to garner them in are legitimate ones. Men who can create and use such devices are peninses, regardless of the objectives and invectives an thical public may employ to describe the Big Business knows the kind of talent it wants and is not slow to recognize it. Neither is apt to let it go once it has possession of it. Harry Sinclair and Robert Stewart have such talent and so long as they are able to keep it and make use of it, just so long will they keep their jobs with Big Business. A certain prince of India provides large tips for a waiter who is the only one able to peel grapes as fast as the prince can eat them. Many and varied are the ways to success. 24th Anniversary Sale One-fourth to one-half off on our entire stock. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX, Friday, 16 May, 1928, No. 182 K. U. AERO CLUB: All members to meet in front of Divine museum at 12:30 noon Monday, May 21, for trip to Fort Leavenworth. Attend to be held there at 8:30, all expenses included. "The College Jeweler" Fourteen million Turks are scratching their heads nervously or thumbing through the five telephone directories available in search of a name. Reports from Angola state that an net requiring the adoption of family names is nearing passage. Your attention is again called to the request of April 24 for the names of any students from your department who have been awarded honors or prizes or appointed to fellowships in other institutions for the coming year. This notice will be sent by mail to the printing company mtt will be greatly assisted by your prompt co-operation. The precept of the Koran which said "Don't be proud of family, make your own name," is responsible for the lack of family names. While this new law does not indicate that the Koran is being described by the people of Turkey, it does show that they are ready to do away with precepts and traditions when they are a bifurcation, and have proven to be of doubtful value. This may seem a minor affair to people far away, but in Turkey it is undoubtedly a question of prime importance. HEADS OF ALL DEPARTMENTS; At the Concert Wednesday night the Men's Gloe Club gave its spring concert in which the group sang well balanced. The program was well balanced, but seemed too long for a concert of this nature. Perhaps the best number was in the number 10, New Let Every Tentacle To The Ocean. Tenure. There was strength and depth of the display tables as well as excellent presentation. E. H. LINDLEY The three numbers in the sixth group showed striking contrasts: they were the first number, and harmony contrasted well with the second number "Crudie Song" by Mac Dowell, where the other numbers were more dramatic, "The Way of the World" by Hachet was a light, bold humour where the other numbers were more serious. The whole program was the third selection of the first group "Laughing," whose words of this song were innertigible, the laughter was quite well understood "Prayer of Thinkinggiving," whose number of this group, showd strong contrasts in the two stanzas, the first group was the last holder with a climax at the end. The "Seraphic Song" by Rabinim- omes, one of their most beautiful songs, is a work of art. It was draggy, and the men sequenced not to be care of themselves. The re- source for this song is. club was off tune before the song was really begun. Mr. Simmons sang a tribute solo, "Quiet of the Dark" and an encore, "All My Favorite Songs," in an excellent accommodation added moles to these songs. Clinton Mott played Because the program started fifteen minutes late, and there was a general unrecentness before each number, the program cut out long to be fully enjoyable. --the lawn he is confronted by Keep Off the Grain sign or may find himself bumping into the twirling cane of an unrespectable son of Duddy Green or a couple of night ows with a headache. At least he can be rescued if the day after the night before, Campus Opinion + + + + + Editor Daily Kansan: Despite my femininity which is supposed to leave me devoid of any sense of humor, it certainly did stir what little bummer I may be given credit for, to have the "great" criticism my mother was giving me. My mother women smoking, an typical of female logic, and then absolutely misinterpret the tex. of the complaint. Evidently on first reading "he" was assumed to be a man's argument. As this seems the case I feel it my duty to point out to this "graud" that nary a word was mentioned about the "temptation" in the form of little cigarettes. I just can't recall saying that a woman needed to yield to temptation or that girls necessarily had to accept cigarettes offered by men. What was the point in this? Was this the point in plain English? The man have no right to criticize the women behind their backs. That was the essence of the whole thing. Sorry I did the point so obstructely that you didn't see anything entirely dit'r "out of it." Speaking of "feminine logic" we was the "grad" if he will please train us to be a woman, to avoid criticism. We can not change our point of view or easily as the grade can choose it. But she will choose in this context—men's wit or woman's logic. We cling to that. Editor Daily Kansan: At twelve o'clock, five days out of the week, the University of Kansai opens its doors and students come in early. They walk a mile soon rush. A healthy aspiring engineer puts the "double quick" to his stride and soon finds himself on the job with a friend O-Eo. He looks to see if he could step into the street to make an end run but finds that a couple of other young people carriage is proceeding down the Avenue with "me and my shadow" and the only safe place walk is on a man-made path. This manner of complementary climbing up the main thoroughfares of the campfire for the average K, U, D Peter is getting to be quite monotonous. For a few moments, it may not necessary that every student who wishes to walk off the campfire in a reasonable amount of time must carry some type of maze or obstacle course, but perhaps you can go right or get out of your way. WhileIDEA walks might be of some value but it would only provide room for a better course of travel on their way off the campfire. Some types of wrench antypical of the campfire might be suggested but not every one can use them and an alternative method would be to solve the problem would be the Potterville and PIS a more quick that would not be a safe or easy way to get around. You could do this at the hotel of the room neatly at your boarding club or fruit—M, R, W. --universal education has substituted reading in our modern life for the speech and the expression of the intangible, the organic plant the old sages, magnitudes and beasts the poet, who then rams, some advertising, has sprung up a dependent wholly upon the power of the people, whose direct contact with the object of the machine is, and has made a noticeable effect in the drawing power and influence of the spoken Our Contemporaries --universal education has substituted reading in our modern life for the speech and the expression of the intangible, the organic plant the old sages, magnitudes and beasts the poet, who then rams, some advertising, has sprung up a dependent wholly upon the power of the people, whose direct contact with the object of the machine is, and has made a noticeable effect in the drawing power and influence of the spoken The machine may be said to be largely responsible for the modern interest in reading. The great mass of people would be greatly handicapped if it were not that the highly developed reading machines could produce feasible models of a greater street. Reading Baseball, Tennis and Golf Equipment It would be made, here to point out any rules which should be observed by the teacher or an actress, or nonactually, everyone, know what he should do, and what he pleases with. He should show you something light, businessy, and with a cute friend. They prefer things which are simple. Reading, however, in the atticish sense is confined only to literature, which is one of the principal measures of a country's culture. Not only are national museums valuable, but any nation call itself established, and through its literature one can trace the chief historical movements of that country. Times of interest are presented in English, or the Second National period in American literature, are made evident by a great number of works which are of fundamental interest to all humans. ing marked originality, freedom and independence. A few, however, still elong to the past. A few love the poetry which has been written by the hearts of men since it was given to the poet to make truth manifold to man; a few still read the old plays and stories of life in the rarest atmosphere of those new writings and a few still find in the old history what thought. The Kentucky Kernel. where Society Brand Clothes are sold On Other Hills A general test for educational achievement will be given to June candidates for bachelor degrees in the College of Education and universities, in all state teacher's colleges and to 40,000 seniors in the Pennsylvania high school by the Commission on Teaching and Learning. A joint commission in co-operation with the joint commission of the Association of Pennsylvania College Presidents in state department of public instruction. The University of Washington will celebrate their last all-university format this year in the form of the annual "Taking Flight" exhibit. It will be dropped from an airplane which will fly over the campus. Along with the exhibition, a drop-ticket entitled the index and a friend to a free ride in an airplane any time when they arrive home. Students of the University of California, at Los Angeles, have introduced a new method for obtaining campus patrols. A cheerleader match has been started, the prize to be $100. The prize will be given to the man or woman who should win the final match between the group winners. The cap is sold to hold about their muses or an event. The prize can also be in chienes on the carton. Swim in the Jayhawk Plunge this week-end. Wear a Spalding or Jantzen Swimming Suit. Your size, your style, your color is here at— Hours of Service The We close Sat, most at 2:00 pm. Monday, morning at 7:30 for the week end. Breakfast Lunch Afternoon Service Dinner 2:00-4:30 5:00-6:20 New Cafeteria (Memorial Building) "Nothing to good enough but the food." 7:30-9:00 11:30-1:30 Our Need for Poetry Sermon Subject at nine UNITARIAN CHURCH Twelfth & Vermont Street Sunday at 11:00 Special Musical Service Fountain Pens Desk Sets Perfumes Compacts Leather goods and other appropriate gifts Graduation Gifts Eldridge Pharmacy 701 Mass. Phone 999 We Deliver Our Fountain Service Will Delight You Warm weather delicacies in pleasing combinations. also also Regular Dinners Special Short Orders Come In Bring Your Date Open till 2 on week-ends Join the Crowd at THE JAYHAWK CAFE "Ray" Just off of 14th on Ohio