PAGE TWO THURSDAY JANUARY 10 105 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor-in-Chief Accounts Editor Sunday Editor Sunday Editor Judge Editor Judge Editor Mastertenance Editor Mastertenance Editor Journal Editor Journal Editor Judge Editor Lau Brethman Lailah Muirfield Judith Muirfield Bernard Payne- Payne Larry Primm Larry Primm Matthew Schmidt Lulu Culver Hugh Harden Judson Brandon Judson Brandon Business Staff Advertising Manager . Loulle Reppert Anti. Advertising Mer . William Clark Anti. Advertising Mer . W. R. Worthington George Middleton Robert Meyer Helen Tatum Paul Porter Paul Charnier Clintland Cole Dick Hewlett William Golffish Paul Hoffman Tripidons Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 270113 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University from the Press of the Department of Journalism. THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the of March 3, 1897. In spite of the fact that final examinations are staring in the in face every good and loyal Jayhawker, who can in fairness to his studies, will be in the auditorium tonight to do his bit toward sending the Ames aggregation back home in defeat. This game is important. Long rows of empty seats tonight would prove doubly discouraging to the players and we cannot afford to allow that. In most cases it will not mean choosing an alternative. After days of concentrated study a little excitement will stand us in stand and we will go back to our studies with renewed vim and energy. With an apparently bad start, the Kansas basketball team seems to have come back in characteristic fashion, by retaliating on the Oklahoma invasion last week it did much to regain the faith and confidence of its supporters. The win which made an end breakable win a remarkable defeat, for both rivals were setting a merry pace in the valley. Tonight we shall go at it again It behooves us to imbibe something of the spirit of the occasion. Regardless of any undercurrent which may possibly be felt among the merchants downward and certain alumni in regard to our basketball prospect, we must keep fighting. Students and instructors combined can do more for the team than any organized group. Recalling our invisible record of the past six years, let us keep on roaring and cheering, tonight as never before; always, winning or losing. Remember what happened at the K. U-M. U- football game? We helped to make the break there. Why not do it again? A newspaper story discloses the fact that Professor Stevens is a brand maker. And all the while the average man has always thought highly of himself for merely providing it! PLENTY OF ENTRTAINMENT The coming of examinations seems to have no influence upon the coming of good entertainments for this week and next. In fact entertainment will be so pleniful that students will have little cause for going home. If one becomes tired of studying and wishes a little relaxation, he may find it in any direction he turns. Monday night there was a student musical recital in the University Auditorium. Wednesday evening, the students of the department of speech gave a series of lectures on historical figures on the American platform. And for tonight a basketball game is scheduled. Next Wednesday evening, Jan. 25, "The King's Henchman" will be presented. Not mentioning any good shows which may possibly come to the theaters, there is proof that entertainment committees have exerted themselves in furnishing the students with plenty of good entertainment for one of the most strenuous weeks of the semester. Andrew Jackson plus Cuban champagne would have settled the South American question without even a delegation or an army. COFFEE BLACK "To be, or not to be," students are wearily thinking as they struggle Hillward. Pinched, pale faces, dark enveloped eyes, and a general air of depression characterize the majority of students nowadays. A deady stillness reigns in the library in the day, and at night the mournful procession winds in early and stays late. Dates lack flavor, and leafers are a thing of the moment. Textbooks which haven't been opened all semester are now eagerly devoured. Reference books are getting the biggest rush of the reason. Time is more precious than radium. Examination start Friday, and then the six days following will be a living horror of trying to remember those elusive things that will be forbidden. And then—"when the student's last exam has been taken and his pen is twisted and dried" he may sleep for a whole week before he begins all over on a new semester. Judge Carlin P. Smith of the North Side court of Kansas City has ruled that a wife may awaken her husband by bending back one of his toes or by throwing water on him. Score one for the Emporia bachelor's club. SHALL WE HAVE FINALS? Another semester is ending and final examination time will soon be here. This again brings forth the often debated subject of whether finals should or should not be abolished. Work is piled up on the student near the end in order to cover the required amount of work for the semester. To top this off there are the hectic period of studying for quizzes, and then the hours spent in writing them. Most of the resolution classes are small and the instructors surely know fairly well what each student knows of the course. Then he usually has the results of several quizzes on which to further have his judgement. In such courses it appears a waste of time to give a long final to decide whether to pass the student, or what grade to give him. Perhaps the finals must be given in the technical courses and the large lecture classes where the instructor has very little daily work on which to fairly grade his pupils, but in the smaller recitation groups the long written examinations seem to be unnecessary and a waste of time to both the instructors and the pupils. If a final must be given it secures that a short oral quik would be sufficient and in most cases far better. Let us hope that the Democratic convention will not leave Houston in he same condition in which Dempsey left Shelby, Montana. Joe College, species K. U., has bopen of remunerative job if the good roads and paving advocates of certain Kansas City institutions are carried out in good old Kansas City manner. You've guessed it? Yes, Road test监察员. The second semester senior who says that his idea of a Utopian 15-hour course is one with eight two-hour courses. Initiations will soon be here. For initiation gifts visit DR. H. H. LEWIS Optometrist The Globe deeply reppets that the promising young reporter, Charles McChasney, is no longer with this newspaper. What the Kansas Editors Say ing, and fitting of glasses. 801 Mass. St. Phone 912 (Over Round Corner Drug Store) JUSTIFIABLE "We "free" him next evening. His offenses was the use of the phrase "convulsed with laughter" if it on him he wrote about an amateur play. Fifty years ago, E. W. Howe made rule in the expression, "convulseus witch it was never true," that it was never true, and that any reporter using it would be discharged. The Stage We have them here and we have them everywhere. In fact, you can move to no chine in where you will get away from them. We refer, of course, to the nuts in human form. We have the rule or rule follow. To him no oath or obligation is binding unless any proposition and it is common talk that his family carries a heavy load in the shape of a cross—meaning he owes the worst messes in the community manquering under the nut bumper. But we have others, while not so much as they are parading. There is the nut driver, who tears past you in the traffic only to park fifty feet ahead. There is also the nut social climber, who will climb on your head and chance to talk three seconds in the lightness with some big bag or bugges. The social climber is rather unhappy than the social climber of their own sphere and walk in for a chance to fly about the candle of one in the lightness. The lightness songs their wings and wings, and the lightness hour of trial. We have the religious nut, the social nut, the lodge nut, the baseball nut, the radio nut, beween all of them...At-Arden-Citizen-Patriot. The management of The Globe is sorry to lose Mr. McChney's career, but he will be proclaimed obedience to rules and laws, it diaries not make Mr. McChney's role in the company. That role has been kept inviolate by the present management, and Mr McChesney had to go. --the University that each an engagement is made, and each with each individual will take advantage of it. It appears for only the one night, Wednesday, Janu --the University that each an engagement is made, and each with each individual will take advantage of it. It appears for only the one night, Wednesday, Janu Students of the University as well as the people of Lawrence have the opportunity of seeing next week the greatest spectacle in the way of art and music that has ever appeared on stage. The successful American opera, "The King's Heredon," appears at the University auditorium. It was only by a lucky accident fo "The King's Herochman" is now accrised the greatest of the really successful American operas. It is pre-eminent in the form of a concert from the foremost operatic and convert artists of this country and England. The company includes a large cast, which has several from Convent Garden, and personalities of the world-famous opera house and concert stages of the Metropolitan Opera, rooftop in one of the New York dullies, says "A opera has been written by two Americanists which leaves on chauvinism to leap upon, but which can be appreciated in the light of international music." The opera is by Desean Taylor and is said to be his greatest. It is an lyrical drama in English from the book by Edin St. Vincent Millay. The performance is given under the direction of Jacques Samasoud, and besides the chorus of fifty, the producer carries an orchestral of the number. Although the Metropolitan Opera Company makes a point of bringing new opera, "The King's Honeymoon" is the first since "The Girl of He golden West" to create a demand for tour of opera on legitimate plans. The opportunity of seeing and hearing such an opera is great, and is made more so by the fact that only two of them - Detroit, Cleveland, Toronto, and Pittsburgh have been able to claim the presentation of it. It is an unusual opportunity for a city to have a rare opportunity to hear such stars of the Metropolitan such as Marci Sandoholz, Frances Peralta, Giovanni Martino, Rafael Dico, and Hemi Nicole. They all have concert personalities such as Arthur Hickett, Richard Hale, Constance Holey, Ory Hyte, Barton Leedle, Duncan Watson, and Alfredo Valentti. Drama hits the highest mark of the season next week with the appearance of Shakespeare's "The Merry Wives of Windsor" with a brilliant costume featuring Mike Fisk, Otis Skiney, and Helenia Crosman. Suiting you— That's my Business In this entrancing comedy of Shak SCHULZ the TAILOR Cash Paid for Used Textbooks or you may leave them and we will try to sell them at your own price. 2. The following statements are true for the function `f(x) = \sin(x)^3 + 1`. - Statement 1: The derivative of `f(x)` at any point is equal to the value of the function at that point. - Statement 2: The graph of `f(x)` passes through the origin. To prove these statements, we can use calculus and trigonometry. **Statement 1:** The derivative of `f(x)` at any point is equal to the value of the function at that point. Let's compute the derivative of `f(x) = \sin(x)^3 + 1`: $$\frac{d}{dx}(\sin(x)^3 + 1) = 3 \cos(x)^2 \cdot \sin(x)$$ This is true for all $x$ in the domain of $\sin(x)$. **Statement 2:** The graph of `f(x)` passes through the origin. To verify this, let's plot the graph of `f(x) = \sin(x)^3 + 1`. The graph passes through the origin, so it is correct. Therefore, both statements are true. GIOVANNI MARTINO Bass-Baritone in "The King's Henchman" coming, Jan. 25, to University Auditorium opper's Mrs. Fische will incurrate the mischievous and jokelike Mistress Pigeon. Oki Sisimura who so well fits the part, will play the fat and funny parts of his role, and part of Misset Ford, staffed by Hirschman Craven. The entire production is under the personal stage direction of Harrison Grey Fike and is acted in its original i. i. i. i., according to reports, but wit out injury to the refined taste. For Your Convenience During the finals we shall serve___ Drinks Sandwiches Milbed Milks Deserts from 10 to 4:30 (Memorial Building) Nothing is Good Enough but the Best. Famous Santa Fe trains every day, away from wintry weather to lands of snowflakes. To California—the sunny playground of the Pacific, where you can see snow and sea, as well as in a museum that is perfect. Like trees in new formation in this lairing scene, these buildings are to Southern Arizona—with its colorful, fertile and desert-like terrain, each country has its own ideal for farming or most modern horticulture. Another lush vineyard lies out of doors. 162-A After California Credit counselor Credit manager New international. New international. Would you please watch your video on us. The hosts will we take these lessons in the travel of诀典 of de Orion,oucourd Indiana-detour W. W. Bennett, Agr. Lawrence, Kan. Phone 32 Harvey Fred Harvey all the way New Spring Suits, Topcoats, Hats and Footwear Get your feet off your mind during "quiz week" by having them comfortably, stylishly shod in a pair of new spring Bostonians 87.50 and 810 PAY CASH PAY LESS NO BILLS TO DISTRESS Lawrence "where savings are greatest" 807 Mass. A HELPFUL STORE, PAY LESS, GET MORE! 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