--- PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1920 Editor in Chief W. William Griffith Associate editor N. Helen Tatum Associate editor L. Jeffrey Dunne Sunday editor Larry Punnett Editor in Chief A. Bruce Frost Sunday magazine editor J. Andy Schoen Comms Manager J. Alton Miles Night Editor V. Gene Powers Night Editor V. Gene Powers Almanac Editor Marissa Feldin Almanac Editor Larry Wernitt Editin Title Editor Elisabeth Klein Lee Busting **I** Emmy Sheppard **II** Benjamin Brandeis **III** Richard Harman **IV** Alice Hardie **V** Bob Mulhous **VI** Leslie Trout **VII** Wendy Werecki **VIII** Ruraliae UtaW Advertising Manager B. W. Ickl Ast. Advertising Marr. Hammond Preamble Advertising Marr. Howard V. Rous Foreign Advertising Marr. Bolk. W. Boren Business Office K. U. 64 News Room K. U. 23 Night Connection 700KW sale of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kannas, under the act of March 5, 1872. Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Chicago, with the Price of the Department of Journalism. ber 17, 1916, at the next office at Lawrence Kamma, under the act of March 5, 1879. MONDAY, APRIL, 16. 1928 LIBRARY PESTS' ASSOCIATION The meetings of Lamba Pi Alpha honorary library pests' association are getting closer and closer together. If the members would fix a certain time when they could meet, then perhaps they could get their business transacted and adjourn. So far, their meetings are as orderly as a political convention. The library pests are less active on a warm spring night, since at such times a goodly number of them meet on the library steps. Doubts they get just as much business attended to, but they bother few people. Have you ever been hard at work about an hour before closing time with two hours of reading to finish and a quiz or report due at 8:30 the next morning? If you have, then you know how one feels when a charter member of Lambda 15 Alpha sits down beside you and starts in on the ritual. S seemingly the members study only at rare intervals, and never at the library. The library is their social gathering place. The only cure for its members is to flunk out of school. AN EYESORE The place detracts from the beauty of the rest of the campus around Spooner-Thayer, and if there is no further repair work to be done on the building, a little landscaping would be in order. An ugly spot of the campus that needs to be done away with is in the mud hole south of Spencer Thayer. This hole was probably caused by the unfolding of building materials when the building was being repaired. It is a hole of considerable size, and just now is filled with water which seems to drain from the lower ground. The ground around the depressions is packed hard and devoid of grass. Deep wagon wheels run further near the appearance of the place, and the brick walk is badly cracked where the heavy wagons drive over it. COURT HOGS Tennis playing on Sunday after noon is now permissible, as a result of the action of the Men's Student Council last fall. Now that we have the chance to play, now that are abusing their privilege. Since the number who can play at one time is limited, it is poor sportsmanship to get on a court and stay there all afternoon. The athletic department, which controls the use of the tennis courts, has appealed to the sportmanship of the students. They ask that only two sets be played if anyone is waiting, and that doubles be played when there is another couple waiting. Common courtesy alone demands that much consideration for the other fellow. Although the University has more tennis courts than the majority of Valley schools, there is still a demand for a greater number. This is excised by the number who await their turn to play. If the students do not handle the situation themselves, either the athletic association or the council will have to make some rules. By displaying a little sportmanship and courtesy the need for such rules will disappear. "WHAT'S THE MATTER, KANSAS?" What is the matter with Kansan? Why can't the proposed basketball games with California he scheduled or the next two years? For six years Kansas ruled the Missouri Valley in this particular sport. For four years California held the championship of the Pacific coast league. Wouldn't it be a great game if teams from these two schools would battle? It should become a reality. Ever since the great indoor game was started Kansas has been a leader in its promotion and development. The inventor of the game lives in Lawsrence, and is a member of the University faculty. Kansas is known as the center of the basketball world. Kansas high schools have always made good showings in the national meet in Chicago, Kansas players have always been in the great national tournaments of the amateur athletic union, and this year three K. U. players, including the captain, are members of the world championship team The games with California would make a closer tie with the alumni of that section and the University. The games with California would see two great teams facing each other. The three contests, there next year, and three here the following year, would draw enormous crowds, because of the calibre of the two teams. The players would miss little school work, for it is proposed to schedule the games during the Christmas holidays. If these games can be carried on without too much disruption of school work they would unobtutely be one of the best athletic accomplishments of recent years, should Kansas with a love. STRIKE TWO Strike One Strike One Students of the University of Kanan an the other day were asked to collect a list of their preferences for the University lecture course. Here it is: H. L. Monckon, Charles Eynhaus Hughes, Senator William E. Bornham, Emil Ludwig, Will Durant, John Erkinke, Edward Kowal, Bertrand Maeille, Michael Maeille, Macefield, and Richard J. Halliburton. Grand mom! It is a modern list of men thinking and talking in modern times. But having spoken at the University various and sunny times, we just a wiseful eye down the list for Emporia Gazette. Also, the blacklist! As man to man, we want to square things right now, even though we've been a long time getting around to it. So, howy, you know. But when that list of preferences for the University lecture course was compiled, the students chose people who would not otherwise have received any glory, who had it not been for the University of Kansas, would have gone to their grenues with unfulfilled lives. That, Mr. White, could never happen to you, regardless of what the student might do, think, or say. You should know us well enough, Mr. White, to know that if the blacklist had been out when we chose the lecturers, we should have insisted on your presence there as well as on the other five of six occasions on which you visit Mr. Oread. FATE Again fate makes the pass and we stand horribile at a terrible tragedy. In a little dance hall in West Plains, Mo., thirty-nine lives end, only fate can tell why. But, as usual, fate is closely linked with a human agency. Carelessness is nearly always the fate that unhintingly we blame when a tragedy occurs. For fate and accident are only blind agencies that must Name Cards for Graduation Bullock Printing Co. Bowersock Theater Bldg. New Desk Blotters Free OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX Monday, April 16, 1928 No. 137 ! ************************************************************************** COLLEGE FACULTY: The faculty of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will meet on Tuesday, April 17, at 4:30p in the millennium on the Dird floor of central University. E. H. LINDLEY Mr. J, O, Gill, manager of the Kansas City branch of the Missouri Insurance Bureau, will be in room 112 west Administration building Tuesday afternoon to interview senators who are interested in obtaining employment in statistical and office work in his fire insurance rating office. SENIORS: HRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY The regular meeting of the Christian Science Society will be held Tuesday evening at 1:30 in room B, Myers hall. PEN AND SCROLL SAM D. PARKER, President There will be a regular meeting of Pax and Seral in central Administration rest room Tuesday evening, April 17, at 7:30. All members are expected to be present. J. KENNETH SELTSAM. HARVARD UNIVERSITY Mr. Maboe P. M. McNally, assistant professor of marketing at the Harvard School of Business, will be in room 112 west Administration building all day Wednesday. April 14 for the purpose of intervening seniors from all parts of the University who are interested in attending Harvard Uni MEN'S GLEE CLUB: J. G. BLUCKER, Secretary University Placement Bureau There will be no rehearsals of the M. A. Glee Club this week. T. A. LAREMORE. It only Lily could hear the adjectives that are used and invented to describe him. It seems that Mr. Webb failed to take into account the COLOMPOLITAN CLUB: act when we humans transgress some of the laws of nature. there will be a regular meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club on Tuesday, wedsay, April 17, at 2:15. PHILIP C. VELLI, Secretary. Ignited gas must explode. Explosion gas must eject its force. These laws are told Friday night and thirty-one persons lost their lives. Fate is not to thunder. Some man is. The hand that lighted the match which set off that inferno guided the fate that killed those men. When the reader had finished the article, the one who had answered, "What does it say?" morphed, "Oh, how darlin'" The article was read which told of how Lloyd flew his plane into the woods in Arizona and left a ship of junk in the window saying "Gone to cheer." He was found a few hundred yards away eating lunch at a knack house whose owner had not yet recovered from the shock of being called upon by the famous flyer. "No!" said one, "What does it me?" There is a way to control the seemingly uncontrollable. Constant vigilance against cardiovascular will make in the matters of even fate. IF LINDY SHOULD HEAR "Say, did you read this article or Lindy?" The question was asked yesterday seeking by a young woman student who was reading the Sunday edition of the paper. Around her were some of the sisters, each reading some section of the upper. possibility of a young unmarried man flying across the son. His vocabulary is altogether inadequate with which to describe Mr. Lindbergh in the manner and style with which the young woman wants to discuss him. But on the other hand, perhaps it is all very well that Lindy can't be the pissing, soft soqued term. Imagine his disgust at being called "darling," or "isn't he too sweet for words." To a man who would dwarf the Atlantic such descriptions would be anything but alluring. One cannot blame Lindy for flying far far away from the muddling crowds to enjoy a meal in the quietude of nature. The continual jamboree would become ticteome to anyone, much less to one who has until recently displayed a decided lack of interest in the fairer sex. Our Contemporaries The Cheat Three students cheat for every student that refuses to cheat if statistics made public in the University of Michigan figures, compiled by a student questionnaire taken last spring, show that 307 students give or receive help occasionally and 147 do not. This proportion is in line with the high rate of American university, and the University of Nebraska can lay no claim to being an exception if conversations overheard in any classroom were not prompted by students' standards of honesty. It is apparently of no avail to appeal to the student's sense of fairness and objectivity in his hand the idea that it is only himself, and not his instructors, whom he looks up to. CASH Paid for BOOKS A representative of the TEXAS BOOK STORE Austin, Texas, will buy all text-books used here again or not, through the Book Exchange at Watson Library Today and Tomorrow THE TEXAS BOOK STORE is a wholesale college textbook dealer, disposing of books to other schools where posi- sible. Quotations Gladly Made Here is an opportunity to dispose of all your old books before they go out of date. Telephone V. C. Ensign, 1275, for further particulars. methods to pass an examination. This assertion is obvious when one reflects upon the fact that cheating, or "cribbling" as it is professionally known, is considered as ultra-smart among such students as the co-counsel coat. The use of cheating has caused the causes or cause of cheating. Hensely cannot be expected of college students until more specific honors are given in grades, according to the College Board of the State University, who recently concluded some tests concerning the amount of cheating done by students, and who made this statement in disbelief. But the underlying issue is even deeper than this. Spoonfeed, instructing uninstitutional crime committed daily by students in the classroom, instructors, is, without a doubt, one of the main issues responsible for the failure to explain everything in detail to the students in the classroom and not all of them. To try to rely more upon independent research and correct constructive reasoning during the hours outside the classroom, it can be difficult. Professor Mary E. Johnson of the department of sociology at the University of Syracuse contends that students must master a matter of moral teempt, but more a sign of unadjusted habit patterns. It is Professor Johnson's theory that he is constantly asking questions and often unconditionally accepts the answers given, and that if he has misunderstood a question he learns of learning, there follows the leading on his followers for what he learns, this resulting in cheating. "Creating does entable a moral issue because students are not instantly recognizes. But that same person could find logic in Professor Johnson's theory. Instructors are prone to poor knowledge down a road that is not easily recognizable as a sick person is fed by a glass feeding-tube. The student's remaining powers, and currentary are weakened," she writes. "Naturally follows that the average student resents to cribbing when his memory fails to respond with that type of information, to him, and which has made only a pressing impression on his brain. Whether the result of unadjusted Whether the result of unadjusted habit patterns or wrong methods of instruction, the problem of cheating in a serious one, especially when the SAMSUNG SPECIALS for Tuesday Roast Spring Lamb Parsleyed Potatoes Fresh Vegetables Salads The New Cafeteria (Memorial Building) "Nothing is good enough but the Best!" percentage of those who crib is as great as indicated at Kansas. To allow such a condition to exist is a violation of the law and the university—Daily Nebraska. To Be or Not to Be? Countless times the college engagement has been assailed by discouraged young men to whom the attempt has been unsuccessful. But very few time have those who have felt the existent pangs of arriving at their class or broken into print exploring the trippier side of these relationships. The fact of the matter is just that there is no right or wrong about education, even if you cannot be, any set rules to go by concerning the inviability of becoming engendered while one or both particular states arise in terms of human tendencies and human emotions. There is not a reason for such a state of all which is about as accurate as an unusual bushland man trying to get around of power plant distribution. Whether it will be unbalance the ambulatory care as to work very much better, or not, is not concerned is what it all eventually turns up to. In some cases it not to burden patients with the expense worse state of affairs than to have followed the alternative, and vice versa. It is then foolish to invite every man who thinks he has found the one and only girl on whom to hung his fragrant emblem. It is equally as foolish to advise them to shun all such influence, which would be influenced by anyone writing on the subject, no matter whether the slant of the article he pro or con. It all depends upon the tempera- ture, tendencies, characteristics and traits of the individuals in each separate case. Plain Tales From the Hill $15 Complete lines of equipment for all sports. Retail and Wholesale. Truits are truths and lies like lies, but it take a mirror to tell the truth. A woman looking into the Crown Drug company's mirror this morning was heard to say: "Greechog, I feel terrific." First lovely one: "The Lord did make us beautiful and dumb, didn't be." Spalding Top-Flite Of course you'll attend the Relays— the things you'll wear should be refreshed now! Sport Good Shop First Floor Another Gil Omega “How’s that?” F. L. O. “Beautiful to the me” I am, I dumb so that we could love them, but you don’t have it; you don’t have a nate that night). 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