SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1863 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Rifle Range Busy as Squads Shoot for Place on Team Thirty-three Women Fire in Competition During Week to Select Fifteen The past week has been a huge one on the R, G, T, O, C rules where and when team have been competing in the league. The teams are due to fire in the finals which are subject to be fired during the coming season. Lions Lionc Lions R, M, Mg were on the R, G, T, O, C rules. Thirty-three women each have four three-week courses across the past week to establish their relative ability to care for the sickest and the highest needs will count for one week and all the other every week to deal with them. In Society Kagawa Signa feastuary entertained with a tuxedo dinner parties. Fanny Johnson's garden was turned into a Japanese garden. Fanny Johnson's orchestra performed. The clapermakers were Mrs. Stover, Mrs. Roach, Mrs. Thompson, and Mrs. Chambers. Out-of-town guests were: Rajah Blake, Whitcher; Charles Dolan, Leavinecourt; Robert Johnston, Topokhie; Charles Smith, Meyer; Jill Duncan, City, Mo.; Emanuel Dial, Topokhie; James Campbell, Wichita Falls, Texas; Marguerite Saindock, herdingtown; Virginia Stuckard, margarretown; and Margaret Grimes, Kennesaw City. Delta Tau Delta fraternity gave an informal party Friday night, Feb. 10 to it in 12. Ewalds' ordeal The 15 women who will wi- ll the team which will tie an age- University of South Dakota in a terribary Colleges will be sove- rated on the next week. The 16 m- sleuths should watch the ue will ovide on the team. At of every week the 15 msidehots will be watcled on the next week will take the score this will be in losing match. The German club will meet at 4:30 p.m., Monday, Feb. 13, for a business meeting and organization for the semester. All students interested. The collection women who bring the most warmth. L. R. P. Davis A. Ruble F. Durant, J. M. Echeverry K. Fowler, wrote. R. Baildell R. Coyne Duncan, A. Tucker S. Nixon, B. H. Shapiro L. Warebrook, M. G. McDougall D. Gibbons, T. M. MacDonald D. Levine H. Durnford, D. Davenport, A. Comby J. Johnson, U. James H. Hudson, U. Hawkins The University chapter of the League of Women Voters will meet monthly afternoon, Feb. 13, at 4:00 in the university administration committee will present its report and a vote will be taken upon officers and vice officers will be elected and the program for the rest of the semester will be assessed—Rath Van Riper, chirman. State Convention at the University for 3-Day Session the team will win a competition. "The team must stay young, as the number of weeks and the tie with the team consists the team will for the following week." It is important to keep the team in real chance to make a team that they always earn some great success in a brief time or to maintain a position team." Skipjack's Team Selected Last week the skipjack's which is entered in the second week and which is entered in the third week are the skipjack. The members will commence the skipjack on the first day of the season. Hill, D., Dr. Porter, T., Roper, R., W. T., Toompson, R., Blandford, Quinnan, E., Klok, J., Matuszek, R., Martin, J., Macdonald, Powell. WANTED: Dietwawker to work for board; must room in house. Hugh Club. 1333 Term. 10^9 Bacteriology, Iowa State College. The meeting will close with an inspection trip to the Lawrence water station plant and now even involves The third annual) meeting of the Kansas Water Works Association and the sixth three day school of the School of Engineering and Architecture will be held at the University, Rocky Mountain College, G. C. Shulman. The association is convening under the auspices of the Kansas Water Works Association, the School of Engineering and Architecture and the Kansas State Board of LOST: Kappa Akiba Theta pile, nam on back. Renewed. Jennifer Bow grushk, 1424 Ohio. Phone 1386, 19 LOST=Small white fax, terrier, Black tail and brown eye. Call Knotta et. 2423. 108 The Kansas Water Works Association to Start Annual Meeting Tuesday LOST—Barrel of lady's green Sheaf, for lifetime pen. Call Glenn Shaw. phone 214. Beward. 108 LOST—A small pocketbook (yellow) with $32 in it. Please call Jose- phine Maxwell, 1405M, Rowan. LOST: A lady's white gold. Bolda sport watch on leather strap near Alba Cali Groupe home. Reward. Call 1155-1. 110 DST: Light metal framed 2ghz in brown case on campus. Return to 0920 Ollis, 3225 W. Reward, 108. University, compiled in 1824 as the University Daily Kanan. Alcance or acts 1824-5." Four years old but the act for prior years are just as valuable an ever. 10 cents per copy at he Kanan Business office. if Announcements The Rexall Special The Seventh carry area of schools in the middle Westmore The records of the various school districts and there winner is and there winner is retired. The result of the music not be known for some times. --everyone has suggested that a university is no place for lazy people. This is double true of the institution built on a hill. Anyone who has the ambition to ascend to the heights every morning for four years has in him the makings of success, especially when he finds that his journey is only half completed when he reaches the top, and no rest awaits at the journey's end. "Buy her a box c --everyone has suggested that a university is no place for lazy people. This is double true of the institution built on a hill. Anyone who has the ambition to ascend to the heights every morning for four years has in him the makings of success, especially when he finds that his journey is only half completed when he reaches the top, and no rest awaits at the journey's end. FOR SALE—Book of facts about the Send the Daily Kansan hom 25th Anniversary Jubilee Sale is now on at the "Spun o Ephemeral wonderful proof silk plate satist F. B. McColloch Drug Store (The Rexall Store) Ninth and Massachusetts Lost work the mom's team is march with the following of University of Saskatoon, Calgary Dakota Connection, agricultural here, Texas A. and M., and M., Military School. The course and examinations and the entrance of the show to be known in a short time. A select team will meet a team the University of Missouri in a way to shoulder match on the road. The team will not yet be selected. Those who compared the team J. Boyer, W. Wallace, L. Mehri Wason, J. Tolmiman, L. Mehri Wason, K. Cerrado, R. Burdick K. Cerrado, R. Burdick Woonfell, W. Powell, and J. M. parin. PAGE TWO LOST GOLD Among Our Poets By Members of Radamanthi THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for February 12, 1928 As I was walking softly, My gold braids round my ears, Holding tight my fairy books, And tighter yet my tears— They stopped me by the utter-oway, They laughed my brains to shame, They tossed away my fairy-books, My Prince marched down the lance. I saw him gravely smiling, A wistful smile and sad, (Oh, I wish I had not listened!) Gold braids were all I had. You now are very pleasing They say, and not so odd, You look just like your sister, dear, And I am sorry, God. --everyone has suggested that a university is no place for lazy people. This is double true of the institution built on a hill. Anyone who has the ambition to ascend to the heights every morning for four years has in him the makings of success, especially when he finds that his journey is only half completed when he reaches the top, and no rest awaits at the journey's end. RAIN Rain doesn't patter on our roof, It stamps with angry feet. It doesn't like the cold hard stone Or brick-paved city street. It doesn't like a building Or a sunny smooth green lawn. It doesn't like the man made things The city am shines on. The hard bruise brushes its tender toes, Mnown-grass blades | knives are keen. It dearly loves to dance on leaves, Or balance on the green Of soft cool rushes, growing wild Of violets hidden deep, Or kiss the cheeks of crocus buds To wake them from their sleen. It likes to rustle in dead leaves Beneath calm autumn trees, Or pat-pat in the thick brown dust Of country roads, and leaves The light mark of its dainty foot— A little damped place, And pets the daisy, too, and helps The cow-sliw wash her face. And so when it is sent to town It sulks and stamps its feet, It slaps the trim grown city plants, And falls in flower-beds neat With vicious little prods and jabs— It isn't cool and sweet. Rain doesn't patter on our roof, It stamps with angry feet. T HAVE GROWN WEARY OF LAUGHTER I have grown weary of laughing, of the idiot laughter of men, and I have fled to a far place where the people are simple and strange. Now I sit in the shade of the mountain, lonely with thought by the green swift stream. How the wind in the spruce tree goes sighing, all along the sad morning; yet glad is the voice of the singer I hear a woman singing of love. O sweet is the song that the mountain takes to itself and repeats singing it again to the cypress with lingering murmur and whisper; But I have fallen a weeping, who have watched at the death of desire, who have learned how song shall coase and the singer, but ever first the song. Zena is forgiven and the vaults of Troy A dust besiege Scamander's voll stream; the villain's The hands of time relentlessly destroy Strong man that labor and weak man that dream, that run, that die, that run, that跑. With firm, hard purpose through a span of years; Tomorrow death, today the spring and sun; Eternally men pass from song to tears. SONNET Edgar Wolfe. Pour out the wine that hasten's men's desire, Oblivion claims us when the flames depart. Rob the calm years before we join the clay; The gods do not remain in place. Leslie Wallace. --everyone has suggested that a university is no place for lazy people. This is double true of the institution built on a hill. Anyone who has the ambition to ascend to the heights every morning for four years has in him the makings of success, especially when he finds that his journey is only half completed when he reaches the top, and no rest awaits at the journey's end. Warm to the glory of gay youth's brightest Drink from the chalice with a thrilling heart, THE HUNTRESS A green nymph riding a silver home with a fire-eyed cound before, Through the black wood and pall lit dale, In the dark moon world's ancient spell, Till the hold cock crowns the long night's knail, Once more, There they stand in grief down's light, Pallid, emerging from the sight. A marble nymph and a marble horse, with a marble bound before. RAIN Pive loved gray days and slow, down-sweeping rain, and dull clouds moving endward, dusk, dark; The water trickling down the window-pane, And sodden grass, and birches standing stark. I've heard the muted singing of the rain, it sings, too, all that Pd sing, low or loud; It knows my melancholy old as pain; Interprets out my soul as clouds of cloud, Nina Rina Winters. Ive heard the feet of geni of the rain In swift dance on the shingles in the night; Ive smelled the damp wind, heard its soft refrain, Its dreary o'er dead leaves rushed in its flight. THREE THINGS Three things of beauty have I seen; I've seen the morning star flash out alone, A diamond couched on faded velvet blue; I've seen the sun turn pink. The willows on the farther shore Until they glowed again Upon the surface of the sluggish tide; And, I have seen your eyes light up and Glow like watch-fires on the distant hills When misfy bangs the night. These three I've seen, and seeing loved, What more then can I ask of life? James S. Welch Universities' Hill Homes By Ernest Stanley WHY is it that when a man or a state conceive the idea for a great university, they almost inevitably and instinctively choose the highest point on the landscape for the site? In the old days a philosophical significance was attached to high growth in an implied metaphor of education through difficulties, but there must be another motive today when philosophy often gives way before hard-headed business. One might be prone to become cynical about the application of the metaphor when climbing one of the avenues to Mount Orcad in the cold gray of a winter morning, or when closing down on his heels after a gravity-added sheet storm; however, when the spring and football is in the spring when foliage and fancy return, the Hill is not so bad when it serves as an eye-appeer before 8:30. Since Mount Oread is the basal fact underlying K. U., there must be some consolation for the fact that it does exist. Did you ever stand between the geology building and the new auditorium and look out over the valley? Down below are the tennis courts, the baseball diamonds, the hockey fields and football practice fields of the University swarming with athletes striving in pinyin contests in the distance. Flowered fields and parturition grounds out in rectangular rectangle bases behind patchwork quilt. In the distance surrounding the horizon, the ribbon in which swathes the course of the Wakarua, loading the eye to the left past the smokestack of Haskell Institute, and bringing it to rest on the lazy slopes of Blue Mountain. Toward the north there is the great bend of the Kaw with a column of railroad piers resembling the teeth of a comb. There is a glimpse of the upper section of the hill. There is a slope in the location of the lowest *cohesion* Hill, lie the stadium. It thus appears that a disadvantage is turned into an advantage, and the scenic and physical development possibilities of the Hill more than the urban development of the hill is the home of the American University! “Make each day a critic on the last.”—Pope. The Last of the Condor By Lawrence Greiner THE world's largest feathered bird, equipped with a wing expander to carry it to heights beyond the reach of man, with a bone crushing beak and a telescope eye, as starring to death and will soon become extinct, according to a report issued by the California Game and Fish Commission. Not only is this bird important because of his extraordinary physical characteristics, but also because of the death of the California conder comes about, 100,000 years of direct lineage will arise with him. The conditions of his survival are most essential. According to Doctor H. H, Lane, well known professor in the zoological department of the University, the giant conder is the only vertebrate animal in North America, that preserves to this age the exact appearance in which it lived during the Pleistocene era. tourist destination. The California condor belongs to the catculture, which is the New World division of the vulture family. Its preysters are native birds of South America and there they ruled the lofty heights of the Andes. The American tern buzzard is the conder's smaller and more remote cousin. The bird as it swears through the air amuses one with its size and its beauty. From the point of the beak to the extreme point of the tail the unusual bird measures nearly four feet, and between tips of the wings from nine to eleven feet giving the bird the greatest wing spread of any bird in existence. The head is flat excepting that the mule is crowned with a comb, giving it a somewhat distinguished and more dignified appearance. They are easily distinguishable by a flrill of soft, white feathers which form a circle about the base of the head, and a few scattered white feathers in the wings. The foot of the peculiar bird which is slowly disappearing resembles that of our common chicken, although the dimensions of the foot are much larger. The middle toe is said to be elongated and the third is only slightly developed, while the tibia of the condera's toes is well developed it vibrates in the air with the bird to prey upon smaller animals and seize them as do the American eagle and other birds' of that species. No other creature can move at so little exertion and with the smoothness and breathe so easily under low barometric pressure as this bird. From the highest peaks of the Sierra Nevada to the salty coast of Southern California the company has seen sailing along as well as were airplanes flying overhead in an elevation of thousands of feet. The favorite hand of this bird is said to be above 10,000 feet. In walking the condor trails its wings on the ground in a very awkward manner, but on wing the movements of the bird as it wheels in circles are remarkably graceful and dignified. Just a little run, the flapping of its giant wings and it is off into the air. Having once extended its wings they are left in the one position and the bird sails for several minutes without a single movement. The bird's natural food was the flesh of large wild animals that roamed the wilds of the west. It is said by the California authorities that the sub-toothed tiger ruler in strength in the early periods, and that he would kill the carnivorous animals for the condor, sharing the prey. Because the condor was the object of the hunters in the western states the most of them have been killed, until today it is estimated that only about 100 of these birds can be found in North America. Because of the appetite of the condor the bird easily falls prey to the hunter, who has set a trap for him by killing wild game and leaving it where the bird can alight and obtain food. Then they are easily shot or captured while feeding from the dead carcass. They go sometimes forty days without taking on additional food. They are heavy sleepers and many are caught alive by hunters. "None man are beaten than fall. It is not wisdom they need or money or brilliance, or 'pull' but just prickle arm and bone. This rude, simple primitive power which we call 'tie-tik-to-itiveness' is the uncrowned king of the world of endurance."—Henry Ford in "My Life and Work." Though man a thinking being is defined, Few use the grand prerogative of mind. How few think justly of the thinking I do! How many never think who the thinking I am? —Jane Taylor. "Our doubts are traitors and make us lose the good we might win by fearing to attempt." "To be angry with a weak man is proof that you are not very strong yourself."—Goethe, S - O - C K stnesday loviedom is Here! IN EVENT IN LM ANNALS! re is the crowning triumph of he made "The Four Horsemen" of his acclaimed book, *Mage hit*. In hire now as a film masterpiece, ever such a story of love and death is written. 2. TERRY and IVAN PETROVICH CTURE 0. 50 Torres and His Bowersock Band