PAGE TWO FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1928 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor in Chief Editor - Milton Pignan Editor in Chief Editor - Richard Hartness Sunday Editor Richard Hartness Commissoir Editor Lucie Ruppert Summer Edition Lucie Ruppert Summer Bayline Editor Lautrey Latine Editor in Chief Editor Lautrey Latine Editor in Chief Editor Lautrey Latine Marlon Laugher Editor in Chief Editor Laton Marlon Laugher Film Plans Kevin Yongbang Plans Kevin Yongbang Portent Calvin Lee Burkhardt Poppy Meyer Alice Gaskill Swaral Vawal Allan Munger Jack Niskinberg John Steinbeck Emily Shepard Business Start Advertising Manuerv. Robert Hirving Ant. Advertising Mar. R. M. Dale Ant. Advertising Mar. Wayne Ashley Foreign Advertising Mar. Earl Stirling Business Office K. U, 68 News Room K. U, 25 Night Connection 2701K3 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Illinois at Chicago from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1897. FRIDAY, MARCH 23.1928 YELLOW HEADS "The flowers that bloom in the spring, tra la," are again thrusting their gorgeously bold, yellow, blonde heads, through the winter-locked earth. Less posteriorly, the dendrites are up and about, all about, and now is the time for a controlling hand to be applied. Although the first are sort of jolly, companionable little pests, half-way welcome because they are harbingers of spring, the next few million are less lovely, and it becomes a little and to see the blue grass (well, green, if you like) giving up with a gasp, and the ground becoming covered with a mass of harsh, coarse leaves, relieved by fuzzy grey puff balls. Before you break down and wee at the spectacle, help us ease around to the department of building and grounds and leave a big sharp pointed knife on the front step. There is nothing that makes the campus look more rugged and unkempt than a sturdy crop of dandelions. A little eradication now would go a long way. "Stab When Jury Frees"-Headline. PARALLEL ACTION Well, that's one way of coping with the present jury system. The treasurer of the Republican National Committee, in a statement a few days ago, said that those who insist upon some definite action of the G. O. P. party in regard to the Teepot Dome scandal are wrong. He intimates that if they will point some failure on the part of the present national committee he will answer. But, as to responsibility for the old committee, he clears himself with a gesture. Such an attitude $k^2$ against the policy of good government. That is one of the technical reasons why the United States has not recognized the Soviet government of Russia. The soviet regime repudiated the debts contracted by the former Russian government, for which deed the United States government has repeatedly refused to recognize them. Now a man, high in the Republic esteem else he would not hold his present position, adopts the self same tactics in disclaiming all responsibility, either moral or otherwise, for the action of the previous committee. THE PRODIGAL RETURNS PRODIGAL RETURNS As has been said that water always seeks its own level—and now the great libeler of that gracious creature, the American peasant, is returning to the fold. Like the prodigal son returning from his feast of corn husk, Silinchau Lewis admits that he was wrong. His great feast of debunking has turned to more fodder in his mouth, and the simple heart sends out a longing cry for "Main Street." He wants to come home. There may he be more to this than the eye beholds. Perhaps Mr. Lewis has an eye for business. The public his rather rattier sit at his last two novels. We may now expect a series depleting the great wrong that has been done to thugs whom he has debunked in the past. BAD CHECKS, BAD DEBTs In a Kansas editorial printed Sunday, it was pointed out that many firms were operating gambling devices, chiefly of the punch board variety, in Lawrence without any regard or the fact that it is in violation of be Kansas state laws. Monday several owners were wondering who wrote the editorial and comments ran somewhat as follows: "Some guy just spent fifteen or twenty cents without getting anything, got peeved, and raised a big row." This was not the case. Aside from the question of violating the law, it would not be so if the students could punch, a time or two and forget about the board. But the truth of the matter is that it becomes an obsession with some of them. They grit their teeth and fight it out on the board if it were same living thing. And some owners aren't satisfied unless the person punching is persecuted to keep punishment until he goes away broke. Very often this person is a student having a small allowance who punches his way into bad checks, then to bad debts. That may be a good thing, but we don't think so. And after all, it is against the law. Which doesn't seem to matter with And after all, it is against the law Which doesn't seem to matter with many local business men and officers. "Disorder Irk Mexico."—Headline Now, now, Mexico. THE POT AND THE KETTLE THE GETTY AND THE RETURN Ever since the war this country has adopted a more or less right-leaning attitude toward the question of the settlement of the debts of its allies. It has talked of the "moral obligation" of the debtor to pay his honestly incurred liabilities. Many high sounding phrases have been used in usurping American sentiment on the question of validity. In all probability they should be paid. America to, indeed, and has been since about 1837, in a position which makes it rather difficult to maintain such a position without embarrassment. Strange as it may seem, there are eight states in the union which have repudiated their debts, most of which were legally, if not ethically, incurred, and which have been of benefit to those states. The eight states which have repaid debts and which have not paid them up to date are Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North and South Carolina. These debts are not, an has been popularly opposed, Confederate war debt. The war debts were payable in Confederate money and are of no value. But two states, Florida and Alabama, have reintroduced bonds which were issued during the early expansion program, and which were outlawed during the panic of 1837; and the bonds of the other states were issued during reconstruction. The ethical justification of incurring these debts is one thing, the clear duty of the country on their payment is another. They were issued in good faith, and it is more than passing strange to hear a nation which repudiated bonds on their books to adopt a "batter than than" attitude when other nations try to do the same thing. Read the Kansan want ads. The Kansas Outing Club will have a bicycle bike on Saturday, March 24 at 4:00. Call 149 for information about bicycles. Please sign up by the next Monday. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX Friday, March 28, 1928 N. KANSAS OUTING CLUB Your Letter Paper Conveys your personality to your friends. We have an assortment of Cranè, Eaton and Pike styles in both box and pound papers. Rankin's Drug Store JENNIVIEVE HERMAN. President. The present plan of financing the rest of the Union building seems to include a driver among the students in the building, and the committee is making a mistake. Campus Opinion 11th Mass. Phone 678 Editor, Daily Fargo Handy for Students That time is past. The fact that a subscriber may wear a hat or tag is not going to obfuscate a bit more money. It is easy to visualize the days of the old Memorial Union drive. Can't you just use the architect's design of the proposed Union building, looking like a palace, be displayed at vantage points on the campus? Can't you hear the workmen's chatter and sighing "There is what your money will buy?" Editor Daily Kansan: Our shop is a wonderland of gifts. We invite you to see our recent arrivals. Now come back to the present time. When the workers ask for money, what can they point to? Cory has a job at the oil company, but rather the opposite, with its periphery brisk and its copper capita. I agree with the committee, the Union building should be completed. The workers say it will be dowled to failure—T. N. "The Play" the Thing", coming to the Shubert next week, is representative of Ferrence Moñar at his wittiest and is further enhanced with Holbrook Illum and his excellent company. The story is all about a tangled love affair between a young composer and a prima donna, adaired and abetted at times nearly ended by the effects of the composer's collaborators, the composer's music, and the composer's music for their new openeria everybody's fortune, bring him along to a house party at which the prima donna is also a guest. They are much upset to burn that actor who has been the prima donna's first lover is also of the party. The faculty member of the committee remember the original campaign and its success. They believe than since the campaign back in 1920 was a success this one will be also. But they must take into consideration many things. It was just after the war, when it was comparatively easy to arouse feeling and sentiment to a high pitch. It was common to have "tug tug" and those without tugs elit like shakers. --unkind to anyone who wears so loudly. The encouraging interminating silence rings from the composer the resolution to tear up all his music and kill himself, but his friends contrive to cheer him up. At the Shubert Dr. Iveld Stokkehare The pleasure at finding that the lady has the suite next to their breast deposition when, just as they bear her ear her bouncer, they also bear an illuminating conversation between them. Their walls are thin, the cach-admirer is loudly in his reappears, and the lady grows more tender-hearted --unkind to anyone who wears so loudly. The encouraging interminating silence rings from the composer the resolution to tear up all his music and kill himself, but his friends contrive to cheer him up. because it is impossible for her to be unlikely to anyone who uses a laptop One of the playwrights site up all night to write a playlet for the house party, which continue the discipline and excitement that ensue the culprits in the early down and makes them promise to assist him. The last scene shows the dress rehearsal, during which the young composer, recognizing theScene he might be the night before, keeps his friends to tell the story of his late ambition. In addition to Hobschuk Blian the cast includes Herbert Drusen, Marti Schorler, Gauin Mairu, Harry Meinstayer and Ralph Nairn. Our Contemporaries Lossided Professionalism There is a great battle raging between those who want the schools to confine their teaching to merely press, and those who defend the theoretical. We wish to call the attention of the forancer group to the great number of "bopped" and "simply track" professionals man who now infiltrate the country. These people consider a profession as merely so much data from a particular subject that they do not preductent the biaterior or philosophical fondation upon which the data rest, nor do they contemplate its future possibilities. This group of professional men can get results in the regular vary. If a phleician, he can cure a cold; if a preacher, he can elicit about the sin of unbelief; or it a sukker, he can make loaths. But when any of these actions are done soon, what has been accomplished? Compared nothing. To be a successful professional or business man, one must understand life and its problems. The must have conception of the vittness of it all, and of the possibility which he docu- ment, waiting to be discovered. A doctor who knows nothing but medical-formulae does not become a Mayo; a lawyer who knows nothing but rules of his law does not become a Holmes; a posterator who knows nothing but the theory now does not become a Podrick; and a banker who knows nothing but money does become a Dawo. The Washburn Review Freedom of the College Press? Freedom of the college press is in the public interest. It supports the campuses of the American institutes of higher learning. More free Freedom of the College Press? dom must be granted the college press before it is to become a forceful and responsible factor in student opinion papers. Norman Stanley, editor of the New Student Intercollege News service, in an address before the meeting of the National Association of Poems of Women at Boston. The...event for the granting to college Bora's more freedom in exposing their views and opinions and more freedom in the news column is being felt on all campuses of the each university. It is openly for this cause this new spirit of criticism appearing in college journalism since the war. "The relation of the college education to student opinion is, I would say, no different from the relation of the Boston Transcript to the people of Boston to their communities, both ought to have the right to their own opinions. The student opinion which the college editor should mind and in not is not yet fully articulated. Only the opinions of students are beginning to have an air and articulated opinions on what ought to be their most direct interest." Absolute freedom, as advocated by Mr. Stacey, would probably be carrying it a step too far. Most College editors are aware of the situations that arise when they feel that they own it to their institutions to keep out of print such stories that would be detrimental. They realize that much harm can be done by indirect new stories and that more effort is needed to the administration with such stories that are duliful in their own olditude and will keep out of print such things shown clearly to be of the detrimental nature. If this was the situation, there is little doubt that edification over the country would be killer. In speaking of the new spirit of criticism that has appeared on American companies since the war, Mr. Obama said he had "been brought on conflicts between editors and editors authorities," "storing the past five months, for instance," he said, "there have been five major cases of defiance of our supervision editorials." Something Tempting for Hot Days Cold Plate Luncheon Try it. The New Cafeteria (Memorial Building) "Nothing is good enough but the Best" PRINTS - CREPES - GEORGETTES For Street, Sports, Afternoon Tailored Styles — Dressy Styles Bullene's "Exclusive but not Expensive' that is the way they are taught. It is the college editors who are being this opinion to light and crystallize it. In this task I believe they ought to be added and encouraged even if their opinions are sometimes bitter and adverse. The college can lend itself with a wide range of opinion, and I do not doubt that it will be no unreasoning to try so" Mr. Stuthrie concluded. The Idaho Argonaut Plain Tales From the Hill Two sorcery girls and their house mother had ordered chicken chow mein in a well known Lawrence restroom, inviting and one of the girls asked the waitress if she could bring it up. The waitress answered, "Your cook such is just coming up," and the house mother started and asked anxiously, "Coming up from where?" geology lecture room last week. When the geologists leaned the chairs back against the wall as it is the time of the class, the floor half of the class piled up on the floor. Psychology reveals everything. For instance, in the department of psychology recently gave a quite to his elites in elementary school how that one client had misapplied the title of the course four times. Several comforts and advantages in the department of prebery are looking for the practical jobker who reassured the chair lead in an advanced After having answered "I don't know" in class at least forty times and being wrong every time in college, Goodman got a lucky break the other day when he saw a girl with "No no" mounted and he hosed it. "I don't know" and was right! JAPANESE PRINTS 450 subjects KEELER'S BOOK STORE 939 Massachusetts "Show me the man," memeously marched the campus glover after a trip to Kansas City, "who told Josephine Rosele that she could dance." student shoe hop Where Serviced and Quality Meet 1131 Mass. St. "Aceres from the Court House" Have Your Tennis Racket Restrung The distinction that is the result of tasteful design and expert craftsmanship is characteristic of the new Dobbs Hats for Easter. You're certain to find a becoming shape and color in our comprehensive stock at $8. Other hats, $3.45 to $10. wares Society Brand Clothes are sold Special for Saturday and Sunday REINDEER STEAKS & CHOPS also and in addition, our usual Friday and Saturday Special CHINESE CHOP SUEY and CHINESE CROW MEIN The Virginia Inn 9th and Massachusetts St. Phone 932