SUNDAY, JANUARY 22, 1923 PAGE THREE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Religion Teachers in State Schools Attend Conference Kansas. Dies Pioneer Work in Flip. According to Dean Briden The programs of the schools of religion was dissimilar in the recent conference of the religious women held in Chicago recently. The conference was small up of 19 designates. The Lawrence wore: Dr. Frank Arnold, Dr. John F. Priest, and D.S. B. Bondell of the University School of Religion. The main theme of the寒暑假 was the religious instruction in and universities, and three important phases of the program was brought out and diagnosed. There had been a progres in late years, that is, when we now get credit for religious work, but a time given enough elapse ends with a minor can be obtained in a lection. "The Kansas School of Religion he been a pioneer in this movement, no its growth in the last seven years has not unavoidable." Dean Bruden and "While we now have no large comprehensive courses at our students who have no desire to enter the ministry or go into mission work, the chief aim of the work is to give them an intensive bencative course of the fundamental religion and of the Bible. Although only three hours credit is allowed each semester they have recognized 10 values of the Bible more than the allowed number hours without receiving any credits." Utility Charges Vary Some insurance companies reverse by municipal state board. Great vigor in electric lights and power outlets. And the cars, in Kuwait, is shown for the Fujifilm Ullibert High Speed II, the second incorporated version of Kuwait's G-Star line. John G. Stark, executive secretary of the League of Kuwait Municipality. The trains for petroleum show how the greatest variation, amounting to five miles per hour, can be a single unit of investment. For the first time, you can ride feet. The prices for water services are namely uniform. All plugs with id exception of seven are municipally owned. The rate荷包 disclosure, for example instances in which citizen farmers feel the need to pay lower amounts for street lights that are other cities resolving similar issues. "The electric light and music lionesses" in cities of the third class average proportionally better for both com- pany-owned and municipal-counsellor the report states. "It is in Rotha, with a population of 190, is called in Marion county, which 1 surveyed a private郊野点, but it is too small to be considered a state of Kanzu, with a charge of 3 per k, w. hour, while the larger city in the state, Kansas City, Kk, has the lowest citylight and snow It has been five years since the Langus published its first Public Utility Rate Book. The new edition probably the most comprehensive book issued in my state. This book describes how to use a for uniform system of rate schedules and for more uniform rates if public utility service. The Lawrence Business College teaches Gruffster and Walsh Accounting. New classes will be granted Feb. 1-Adv. --the breeze, which stirred, the bread leafed palms. Complete P S Decem THE KING This Great America nesday evening in t. First make a study attend the great peri standing not possible We have a b $5 p Faculty Members Serve Societies --the breeze, which stirred, the bread leafed palms. *(Continued from page 1)* Dewhousing and Architecture, in an early century, was the group of academics who versely professed a brief lobe in unison. descriptive geometry trained from an entirely new academic school, and a branch of college and high schools. Associate, editor of the Balletbook of the National Tax Association, Jena P. Roe, of the department of economics at the University of California, entitled "The Influence in Bank Taxation," which appeared in the Decennial Bulletin, while Prof. W. J. Beutner, a professor of zoopology with a paper on "Double Moose Dog" in the *Jazattis* (1942) journal, which is published by the Wizard Record, which is published by the Washington Institute of Philadelphia. American Association of Spanish Teachers. Armenian other professors on the Hill who have and part in the operation of national organizations, are Prof. B. M. Akramyan at the American Payments Association at Cedarville, Ohio; Dr. P. A. Decker at the Department of psychology, who attended the annual meeting of the American Payments Association at Cedarville, Ohio; Prof. D. M. Akramyan at the Department of psychology, who read papers before the Minicultural Society of America and Prof. C. J. Powell of the American Geographers conference and Dr. N. P. Shewoold, Prof. Cara Doevan and Prof. C. Lina Clark ROOMS FOR RENT to boys. Simple or double in modern houses. Parsons heat—uitel—close to University. 1847 LOUISVILLE. Phone 10270, 08 Reasonable rates. Phone 2563M, 80 TYPING WANTED—Prices reasonable. Call 1127J. 224 West North FOE. RENT - two good rooms for two- double or single. 1308 King turkey. Telephone 11513. FOR RENT—On the top of the hill, simple and double roses for boys; 1251 Louisiana, phone 1879. I could just close my eyes and visualize Hawaii, a beautiful island, with cool white buildings and green grass, floating serenely around in the Pacific ocean. I could see a glowing sun set in a dark-ruined sky, like we have in Kauai during our Indian summer. FOR RENT - Excellent room, bright fast and dinner if desired, also light housekeeping rooms. 1501 Rhode Island, Phone 2541. I imagined that a fattening fragrance of of black muscatine, jasmine, and white rose par- fruit would be on the floor. Musically speaking, the band of Hawaii, he has always represented "My Blue Heaven" to me. FOR RENT- Two rooms for boy Miss. Porch Privalges. 12 Miss. Phone 2557. FOR GIRLS: Two double rooms with alessap porch, and kitchen for light housekeeping. Phone 17509, 969 India, 98 MARCELLING, finger washing, water-washing; five first 4 days of weekwishing; Friday and Saturday. Shannonpumping. water-washing, 10:06 Kentucky, phone 2775. Modern house. Rates reasonable. 1319 Tenn. Phone 1475. 97 Facts Blast Hawaiian Notions The Patee MONDAY—Alice Joyce in "Head" "..." TUESDAY-Jas, Kirkwood and Hope Hampton in "Lovers' Island." The drivers work on 12 hour shifts, but week-end they have to stay on until all of the Hill parties are over. The offices never close and are available at any time during the day or night. "We'd just as soon be out answering calls as waiting for them to come," the drivers say but admit that many days of constant driving for 12 hours would wear them out. VARSITY THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for January 22,1928 No more will the sisters all pile out of the taxi at their destination and search around for the seven cents which is the best they can do when eight peroni ride and the hill is 50 cents. The taxi companies have divided the city into zones and made out a new rate schedule with a 25 cent extra charge for each person after the first two. This new rate will probably affect the size of the load also. When the first light snow came this fall, 10 Kappa Kappa Gammas rode up on the Hill in the cane crab. This is the largest number that they have ever carried, a local taxi company says. The taxi companies are busiest on weekends and at vacation times. Calls will begin coming the night before for morning trains or buses, and then the same persons will call two or even three times the next morning to ask about the departure time. When asked if second or third calls from the same person irritated them, the drivers all said they didn't. During vacation rushes, routes are mapped out as the calls come in so that one cab can carry as many as possible, leaving no room for idea to call a second time. At these times you phone in the office ring ceaselessly for hours. Taxi Drivers Face Woes by Charlotte Thompson They always have to wait longer for women than for men, the drivers say. They plan on from a five to a 25 minute wait at a security house. The drivers complain that two or more calls will come from the same house, each person demanding a cab, but when the second cab comes, all of the passengers have gone on in the first one and the driver has a chance to respond. The common occurrence to dash in response to a prospective passengers step into another car and ride away. If passengers have gone the same excuse is always given by the one who answers the door, if it is answered, "they couldn't walk any longer so just had to go on." A lot of persons forget parcels and have to go back for them. Most of the students pay, that is, if they know what they are doing. One student aligued from the train and pushed some money into the driver's hand, so I know I wouldn't be able to get home when I got out, so I put this much aside." (Proper dialect omitted.) The driver gave him home. While cases like this come up, on the other hand, it is customary to meet a flat refusal to pay when people are in this condition. If they can, you should be the passenger, he can often collect the money later. A lot of calls are wasted. The other day a call came from the high school. The driver waited outside, since he had no way of knowing where the car was. Another taxi drove up and the first driver learned that the person had indigently called again declaring that the first call had not been answered. Between the two of them the passenger said the first call had to drive back after a profit trip. Johnize Says PAGE THREE It is very bad for any man who is teaching social sciences to have any new ideas on the subject. New ideas are always dangerous. Standardization—but! What would have happened to Shakespeare if he had had a few courses in rhetoric? Forgiveness have a low standard of living? Ursula. Why the people who came over in the Mayflower were forgiven? Cattle in the University of Kansas is not along the line of brains. I supposed the people sleep late and then that an attendant would pluck a pineapple off a tree or dig it out of the ground, (which everway they happen to grow, I was not sure) and they would have that for breakfast, lunch and dinner, with an occasional variation in the menu by substituting coconuts for the pineapple. I envied them their Hawaiian nights, because I thought that then the greatest seces of activity took place in the Hawaiian moonlight. I fancied a great pale moon whose silvery rays sifted down through the palm trees. All the people assembled in little groups to get their uklakes in tune for the secretes which I supposed were a nightly occurrence. In fancy I could hear the plaintive声 "On the Banks of Walkikil," and "Underneath the Honolulu Moon," blended with the voices of the players, and occasionally one forlorn and forsaken suitor would play "Alaaha." On other nights the people enjoyed "hula" dancing accompanied by the soft swish of grass skirts and the liveliest tunes of the ukelele. But also! How far from correct I was in many of my assumptions, I was to learn when I talked to a native Hawaiian who attends the University. I was right in assuming that the weather is delightful in Hawaii and just imagine, it rains only in the spring, according to Mr. life, but I was all wrong on most everything For instance, the natives of Hawaii dress as the people of the United States do, only for the fact that their clothes are lighter weight, because of the warm weather, and they wear grass skirts and dance the "hula"舞 only when they have festivals or ceremonies. The Native Americans also said that they kept them for bedrooms, just as the women here preserved hoop skirts, I was wrong in thinking that all the Hawaiians play ukeleles because Mr. Hastie said that "ukes" are heard there hardly as frequently as here, and many of the people can't sing at all, the same as with many people in the United States. They don't always sing "Underneath the Honolulu Moon" either. It seems as though they sing American songs on instruments such as guitars, heard as frequently as the Hawaiian language, in fact it is taught in most of the schools. The climate is so mild that the houses are built in one-story bungalow style, rarely requiring any heating. The weather is warm and humid, from being oppressive by the ocean breeze. Mr. Hastie ended my doubts about where pineapples grow, when he told me that they grow in the ground. The seed is planted early in the spring, and the fruit gets ripe in the fall. He and his chief cliff raiser in Hawaii, and they are capped there and imported to the United States. Mr. Hastie thinks that the sky in his native land of Hawaii is more like "blue sky" than the sky in Kauai, and he says that the sunsets are always beautiful. I was disappointed when I saw the clouds of the extreme blue sky, whether viewed day or night, at sunset or sunrise. Just a Dog "Yes, he has been poisoned," remarked the veterinarian, as he examined my dog. Sport. "Someone has given him some food with ground glass in it. Some lard, or milk, or even the white of an egg may help him some, but I don't believe he can live very long. You will have to get you another partner, sonny!" and as he spoke, the doctor placed his hand over her throat. "That makes having pets. They will die, and I sometimes wonder if the pleasure we gain from their company is worth the sorrow we must endure when they die." The doctor went away and left me with Sport in the barnyard. I moved the poor animal into the shelter of the haystack, tenderly wrapped an old houseblanket around him and fastened it around his throat with an old safety pin. At first I couldn't realize what the doctor meant when he said my dog had been poisoned, and would probably die. I had heard of people dying and had attended a funeral once, but I never realized what it meant to die. I was an eerie kid, with friends for years, and not to think that he was going away and would never return almost made me wish to go with him. I tried to feed him some lard from a teaspoon, but he seemed too sick to take it. I even took a bite to show him how good it was, and in my fancy I thought I saw him wag his tail a wee bit; and I was certain he cooked his ear just a little when I called his name. I tried to make him drink some milk and even got him a straw; but he moreley rolled his eyes a lot. I didn't let him touch. I couldn't leave him—someway, his eyes just kept looking at me, and I was sure I could see tears in them; or perhaps it was only the reflection of my own tears. I had given up trying to feed Sport, and was holding his front paws in my lap, when he gave a little move toward me and actually helped him get up. He helped him and joyfully cried out to the family that Sport was well again, when he fell on his side, looked at me rather queerly, and fell asleep. I called his name softly, and then he pressed his tail a bit and then even it stopped. How can I ever forget that dreary, rainy afternoon that I spent in the damp, old haystack, with Wrapped sport up in a ranged old horse-blanket, trying to understand the mysteries of death! I couldn't understand why I was so afraid to see the man in place of Sport. Jimmy's dog was nothing but an old cur, and besides, had the mange and some fleas. Near dusk, my mother came out to the haystack and offered to help me bury Sport. At first I was reluctant even to give up what required her. When I arrived with a persuasion, my mother helped me to place Sport in the orchard, next to the blue-jay that I had buried there some time before. As I mounded the dirt over his body, I could only imagine how much joy it felt at me and wondering why I didn't help him. The years have slipped by since Sport and I used to bring the cows up from pasture, but the memories of "just a dog" still come back to me. Can You Discuss. "Once I spoke of the sea to a break, and the truck thought me but an imaginative exagregation." And once I spoke of a brook to the sea and the sea thought me but a deprecative de- preciator. "Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control; these three alone lead life to sovereign power — Tennyson. "How narrow is the vision that exults the buoyness of the ant above the singing of the grasshopper"—Kabilh Gilren in "Sand and Foom." "The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest navigators." -Ed Gibbon. Religion and the Bible Intelligently? A Course in the ol of Religion Your Religious "IQ" schedule of Classes Tuesday, Thursday Teachings History and Literature of e the Bible (Braden) (Braden) New Texts- Evolution of Social Institutions and Academics of Bible New Trusts - Evolution of Social Institutions and Ideals of Bibles (Theodim) of the Vera- History and Literature of the Bible The Messages of the Prophets (Arnold) moon section of this course will be offered. lours University Credit Ask any Former Student. ert Course ICAL EVENT LAWRENCE DITORIUM January 25th LY use Sensation can Opera MAN St. Vincent Millay Orchestra of 35 ques Samossoud Razza, Rafael Diaz, Giannono & Company, Arthur Hackett, Lomie Leslie, Dudley Marwick, and Other Operative Ai ce if accompanied by check stamped envelope. low Good Seats at $1.00 Good Seats at $2.50 0 Good Seats at $3.00 Good Seats at $3.50 Good Seats at $4.00 ---