13 PAGE TWO 10 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, MAY 14, 1928 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Loretta Reppert Loretta Reppert Sunday Editor Larry Flummy Sunday Editor Marriage Magazine Editor Dapper Hulman New Editor Dapper Hulman New Editor New Editor New Editor Packtchick Editor Warren Flesher Packtchick Editor Warren Flesher Toward Editors Mitchell Erhde Toward Editors Mitchell Erhde Lee Budinck Jonnie Bradley Warren William Griffith Helen Tatum John Narka Marcia Cole V. Gane Boweres --tracks before the senate campaign fund committee. Now, it is probable—if not inevitable—that Mr. Hoover has succeeded in climbing on the hand wagon, and has secured a good hold on the standards that will support him in getting a nice share of the coveted 79 delegates from Pennsylvania as well as the ultimate nomination, as a result of Mr. Mellon's gesture of approval. He has at present 467 delegates, according to his manager. He is slated for 31 from New Jersey and 13 from Oregon this week. He needs 550 for the nomination. Now if Mr. Mellona throws his Pennsylvania group to the secretary; or at least a part of them; and this he will surely do, for one man usually speaks for Pennsylvania—what more can Mr. Hoover desire? Advertising Manager R. M. Dale Ast. Advertising Marr. Huward蒲恩 Ast. Advertising Harward V. Rose Foreign Advertising Marr. W. Hertwig Telephone Business Office K, U. 68 News Room K, U. 22 Night Connection 2901K Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Athens, from the Press of the University of Athens. Entered as second-class mail matter September ber 17, 1918, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1979. MONDAY, MAY 14, 1928 DRAMA TO THE FRONT With the compulsion of plans for a little theater in Fraser chapel, drama is at last guining its rightful place in the town at Kansas. The history of drama at Kansas has been full of twistings and turning, but with each twisting and turning, making a little headway each time. With the coming of Allan Crafton from Carleton College, to take charge of the department of drama, the first unified, organized and successful off fort was made toward the advancement of the drama. Handicapped by the lack of both money and facilities Craftton worked unintentionally with the help of a few loyal students to give the University a class of drama that they had long desired. Then came Robert Calderwood, an associate of Crafton at Carlton College, and the work went forward with renewed vigor. The Crafton Players, now known as the Kansas Players, were organized and gave popular dramatic productions. Most of the scenery was painted by Crafton and the players, who also made their own costumes. Even the lack of a theater was not allowed to halt them. In the meantime the enrollment of the department of speech and dramatic arts increased, and the students began to watch for the announcements of the next play by the Kansas Players. Next year should be a gain year for student drama. Fraser chapel is the logical place for the Little Theater. The removal of the organ to the auditorium leaves it free for this new use, And, too, 'h' accoutances are good. With the addition of the planned orchestra pit and dressing rooms, it will be a Little Theater of which Kansas may well be proud. When the plans were first announced for the new Auditorium, it was thought the long desired theater had been provided. But it was later shown that nothing short of a spectacle of ancient Rome could be given on the immense stage. FISHING TRIPS "We hear much talk of the various candidates and of their policies, Among them all Mr. Hoover seems to come closest to the standard set for this high office." With this vague, but significant endorsement of his cabinet colleague's candidacy, Andrew Mellon has given the secretary of commerce the boost that will send him to the Kansas City convention for the ratification of his nomination. This apparently is the sentiment of the Hooverites. The anti-Hooverites have nothing to say about the recent development in the plot of the G. O. P. political chapter 1928. The most that any of them has said consists of exclamations of surprise and denial of the probability of such a move. This rather sudden shift of fortunes in the Hoover camp must certainly make Mr. Hoover more at ease. He suffered two distance set-backs last week. Things looked rather dark after the Indiana primaries, where Mr. Hoover scarcely registered on the ballot returns. Then, too, he was burned up on many sides by the bitter at- The only other thing that Mr. Hoover really desires, it seems, is a little rest, and he is taking a little rest this week. Press dispatches yesterday told of his fishing trip to a lodge in Pennsylvania. Presidential candidates with great worries about catching the necessary ten delegates to obtain the nomination do not usually go on fishing trips to Pennsylvania. Perhaps Mr. Hoover is merely showing the boys that he is a good sport about it all and that he does not trust Mr. Mellon implicitly and is trying to book something in Pennsylvania. "Al Smith And Other Sachem," says a headline. Must be a rushing talk used by the local organization. PERSONALITY PLUS Have you personality? If not, then you positively do not have a chance to succeed. The迫 of time, "Everybody's Doing It. Doing Now," might well be changed to "Personality's All of It, All of It Now." If one finds that he is not getting by as well as he might expect to go by, something is wrong with his personality. It is difficult to understand how anyone got along before this handy word was added to the vocabulary. Primitive peoples could only make mysterious signs, which could not give one a chance to express his personality, even if he were fortunate enough to possess any. These poor, ignorant ancestors of ours wore blindly, not knowing that by developing their personality they could become modern and popular overnight. You can't get a job without it. You can't win the girl of your dreams. You can't do much of the girl except sit at home and think wisely of friends who are succeeding financially and socially because of their personality, But you do not need to be encumbered all your life. There are remedies. Learn to play a saxophone, take lessons in ballroom dancing, lose your hallisota, learn to talk brilliantly in any kind of company, watch that danegar line, know your saxilords. There are other methods, but these are sufficient to bring you that wonderful quality "personality." You can't afford to be without it. THE AIR MAIL EXPANDS News dispatches Friday told how the army blimp TC-5, landed on a 20-by-20-foot platform of the steamer, American Trader, gave mail to the boat and took a passenger from it. This proves that an airship can land and take off from an ordinary steamer with practically no special equipment, thus making possible the speeding up of ocean mail and removing passengers to shore in cases of emergencies. This successful experiment should go a long way toward proving that lighter-than-air ships can be landed on a boat without the use of special equipment. The big development in this field lies in the devising of means to land fast airplanes on boats, however. Blimps are too slow and hard to handle to be used for commercial communication between shore and boats at sea. When inventors can devise some method of landing airplanes on a very small deck of a boat, they will have made a vast contribution to the airplane industry. Airplanes could meet liners a few hundred miles from shore, bring and receive mail, remove OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. I, Monday, May 14, 1928 No. 181 The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts will meet on Tuesday, May 1 at 4:30 in the auditorium on the third floor of central Administration building. E. H. LINDLEY COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: CLASSICAL CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Classical Club on Tuesday evening at 7:30 in room 110 Fraser. A short program will be given. MEN'S GLEE CLUB Men's Glee Club rehearsal Tuesday night in the University auditorium at 8 p. m. to try out songs in the auditorium. Please attend this rehearsal promptly as our time is limited in the auditorium. LUCY CURTIS, Secretary passengers if necessary, and thus speed up communication by many hours or possibly days. At present it is possible to lay fast airplanes on boats, but it is necessary to have a very long runway and other extra equipment. When an ordinary deck can be used for a landing place, shore and ocean communication by airplane will become a practical reality. THOSE WHO MARK TIME Pasteur has sure that to become successful in one's endowments, one must not merely be the breaks, but that one must be prepared to take advantage of those breaks when the opportunity presents itself. To those who come to the University seeking preparation in a vast array of new fields so that they may better be able to take advantage of the opportunities that are likely to come to them from time to time, a difficult problem presents itself. It is the problem of choosing between acquiring reasonably good understanding in a few well selected subjects, or a superficial knowledge of several subjects. Of course, the decision, as to which plan to follow lies with the student, and rightly should be with him. The At any University, as well as in the home town, there are plenty of very dear people who know exactly what course one should follow. They know this because this particular course of study or course of activities appealed so strongly, when we resemble very closely, or because in their estimation, we fall in type one (life should be dedicated to research); or in type two (chemistry is our salivation); and so on down until one is despairing at the futility of work. entangled equipment should be in Dunn and Bradstreet if ever one should be fortunate enough to be entangled in Dunn and Bradstreet. T. A. LARREMORE, Director and rightly should lie with him. The danger of is becoming too much involved in a maze of curricular and extra-curricular subjects. Suppose a student had such ambitions. He enrolled as a freshman and did very well, perhaps, in his academic endeavors. He ephaps he continues to do even better during his schmore course. He studied diligently and was not distracted with much on the outside that took a great deal of his time. His courses were mostly five-hour courses that required sediment more than four hours a day on the Hill. The rest of the time he could study, play, or do what Lewis K. Browne said would be an admirable thing for students to have the opportunity to do, which would be smoking very foul tobacco and drinking beer. Let us substitute playing hide and seek or plucking dandelions for those diversions which Mr. Browne suggests, since the activities of his choice are more or less taboo in this state. By the time a student becomes a junior or senior, and if he has very much initiative or desire to find out what it is all about, he will dabble here and there in little fire-pots of activities which are certain to burn out his best for cool dissatisfaction of pursuit of knowledge as Linen Suits Straw Hats New Ties Houk-Green Clo. Co. such, and before he or anyone else knows it, he is in a mulecrow of work and play that he lives but cannot do very well, or cannot drop without being a miss-out. So our very model student marries time and does not seem to care much about the precursions about this jazz age, the irresponsibility of youth, gain, sex and this and that, until he gets mighty nearly disgusted with the whole affair and feels like telling a good many people to go straight to the Kaw and jump in or going straight to the Kaw and jumping in himself. Sometimes the process of marking time is only momentary, and is just a chance to get one's bearings and start in again with a crack with which even the instructors are greatly impressed. Other times, it becomes chronic, and one literally burst out futility of work. Marking time is a pleasant diversion until the order to go is given, and then one is likely to find that one's soles are worn very thin and the cobblestones of learning cut into unenloued feet only to result in painful stone bruises. "A King Abo A Mochinui," reads a headline. Page Horatio Alger so he can give us the real dope on this. A walnut gavel has been presented to William M. Butler, Republican national chairmen, to be used at the national Republican convention next month. Judging from the amount of noise made at our mock convention, Mr. Butler will need a much more sturder piece of furniture than a more gavel to maintain peace and quiet. A German prisoner who appealed his case because he thought that he should serve ten years, instead of the five the judge gave him, may succeed in changing his sentence. But we'll wager that in about five years he'll think the judge was a wired old man. "She Flies in Peril's Face," says a headline in commenting on the flight of Lady Bailey. Just another example of the wonders bravery of our modern society queens. "How child good!" shipped C. O. D. from Germany on a liner the other day proved to be an ingenious young German seeking admittance to the United States. Girls with the leap year complex, here's your chance for some choice furnishings! One-fourth to one-half off on our entire stock. 24th Anniversary Sale now going on "The College Jeweler" Engrossing Resolutions, memorials, certificates, diplomas, etc. executed in script or any other language submitted of penwork submitted. Our Contemporaries LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. --is constantly increasing Why Go to College? Now that the great post-war rush to colleges and universities has subsided, and the hysteria for the war is waning, you can embark on it -- possible for the safer mind of the educational world to make somewhat of an impression when they get home. It is detached campainet. It is this kind of detached viewpoint, apparently, which Dean Wilbur Humphreys of Princeton University taught day night when he spoke to the birth school editors, saying, "Don't go to college if you don't want to. Go to college if you want to get a college degree, then we will be to give you." The statement, in itself, is an unqualified indictment of the type of preopgraded who harbors high school education and fails to value of education, and the social advantages. Continuing along the same line, Dean Humphries approves the type of technical education system when he optimized the type of technical education that exists purely for its technical side. "The broad cultural education which Dean Humphries emphasizes as our professional" as outlined by Dean Humphrys, is a thing far too valuable to be glossed over in our overcrowded attempts to gain technical training. The literary college's assistant dean, in a single speech, has apparently been unable to confront problems confronting American education at the present time. In regard to the first of these—the grand problem of being unable to be subsiding somewhat by itself, with the imigration of continually more stringent entrance requirements, the need for teaching in learning. The second problem, however, the problem of over-emphasis on the technical side of college courses, is not particularly interrelated; certainly interlocks very definitely with the entire cause of education. To specialize in a field of technical training for professional purposes, it is necessary to have a graduate student's career; but it is not particularly necessary that he neglect his cultural foundation, since his purpose when one or two additional years invested in cultural subjects will bring him The Michigan Daily. The Worms Are Turning The students of the James Mifflin University at Decatur, IL, are going to grade the teachers who, for so long, have tagged everything from EVs to F's to the students names. This means that the teacher, the cataracter, the student weekly, issued voting slips to students to register their estimation of their teachers. The professors will be graded according to the students' attitude, sense of humor, breadth of culture, artistry in teaching, and ability to stimulate intellectual curiosity. Outside of the glorious opportunity we had in school, there were few grudges, this movement has a concrete course has been ruined for a student, not because the instructor is unfamiliar with it, but because of teaching it, but rather because the personality of that instructor is nativistic, or because he is so narrow-minded, or because he views point, or in some way, fails to get the sympathy of the student. Deposit With Watkins National Bank Lawrence, Kansas On Other Hills If this one instructor affects the morality of the students in the sam way—if the students give up their jobs then that member of the faculty should be amplified by one who will be better able to understand the need. On Other Hills --is constantly increasing Perhaps if some of the professors were grade, the answer to the question, "Wint makes one university more difficult than it should not be found" Columbia Missouri. A giant all-weather circus is which has over 1,000 men and women stu- dies active involved, served a host of visitors from Scotland's University recently. An annual penny dence will be established this year by the W. A. I. at the University of Nebraska. There is a reason Due to a lack of support, the inter- class班, one of the leading events of the school year at the University of Chicago, has been abolished. A deficit in funding for students, was one of the reasons for discontinuing the hop. OUR TRADE Over the millions dollars has been poured in the Harvard University system to support its occupants and to compensate for the occupants' indulgence. This is made from the smaller ten within the university system. Conveniently Located Excellent Food Quick Service Three variety football players and two other athletes at Louisiana State University played on the field when they shipped the note of 300 free base during a thundering anomaly. New Cafeteria (Memorial Building) "Nothing is good enough but the Best" We carry a complete line of luggage— Wardrobe trunks Gladstone bags Hazel cases Influences at the University of West Virginia has continued to increase for the last few weeks, until at the presen- tence, a group of the students have contiued it. Popularity of the artery course affirmed at the University of Oregon is proved by the fact that over two hundred have survived for it. The Arthur S. Wettig 732 Mass. The alumni office of the University of Kentucky reports that there are graduates of that school in every continent of the world. President Nicholas Murray, Butler of Columbia University announced recently that a new program of undergraduate study would go into effect in spring. The emphasis will be placed on the orientation of students. The junior and senior years will be devoted to genetics or professional study. A training clinic for delibrators has been established at Harvard college, and the staff will give the delibrators in greater opportunity to become more thoroughly trained. 717 Mass. Tel. 255 The time worn adage that oathbelt and scholarship do not mix has been the basis of the school of Iowa State Agricultural College at Ames, Iowa. Variety oathbelt competing during the winter compares to the alliance average of 82.4, and the average of $2.90 for aristocracy not competing during the winter. OMAHA HAT WORKS Shining Pardor Shoe Repairing MADE IN USA 425 We clean all kinds of hats, both Ladies' and Gent's. We reblink and rashpee any shape of hat; we change the inner or the outside bands. Only hard-sleeved hats are more than on other shops. In Balloon Tires Air Pressure Should Be Carefully Checked A variation of from three to five pounds from the proper air pressure in balloon tires will reduce their mileage and service one-fourth. Many motorists find it advisable to stop at our service station regularly once a week and have the air in their tires checked. This service is free. Firestone CARTER Tire & Battery Co. 1000 Mass. Phone 1300 Spalding and Jantzen Swimming Suits for Men and Women $6 "I'd Like a Recipe for Cool Dressing" She was thinking of salads, but we thought of clothes for men. Here's our recipe. To 1 warm man, add 1 suit Wilson Broos, athletic underwear; 1 pair Holopearl silk socks; 1 pair fresh garters; 1 Tyson shirt; 1 bow tie; 1 pair Bostonian oxford;s 1 Nurotex suit; 1 Dobbs straw hat. Season with fancy handkerchief to match tie. Garnish with Hickok belt, buckle and betogram. Stand for a moment to cool. Will keep so indefinitely. Note: All ingredients ready to serve at— --said a lady yesterday