PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1827 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Sunday Editor Summer Edition Sunday Editor Commission Editor Hawker Furniture Commission Editor Larry Filler Larry Filler Telephone Editor Telephone Editor Sunny Magazine Editor Sunny Magazine Editor Friday Magazine Editor Frank Tuttle Frank Tuttle Gorttlese Traum Helen Tatum Judson Bradley Cheryl Peterson Jack Stokes William Griffith Allan Munger Robbie Mite Peter Porter Jack Stokes Ladue Carine Business STAFF Advertising Manager. Rajeev Reporter Asst. Advertising Mer. William Clark Asst. Advertising Mer. R. W. Herrn Telephones Business Office K. U. 68 News Room K. U. 25 Night Connection 2701K2 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism, university of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered an second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1917 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1927 THE BROADER VIEW A recent Campus Opinion made the point that the Kansan was not presenting enough campus questions in its editorial column and asked that more space be given to such topics. The Kansan, said the writer, is a college paper and therefore should appeal to the college person, whose interest is in constructive movements on the campus. It has always been the policy of the Kansan, in so far as a paper managed by such a changing staff can have a policy, to sponsor worthy campus projects. Many times movements started by the Kansan have become campus-wide and have been the means of bringing about constructive reforms. The Kanaan does, however, recognize the need for discussion of broad problems in a college newspaper. The editor of a college daily must keep in mind at all times the discouraging provincial-mindedness of the average American student. This spirit of complacency satisfaction with a narrow view of life is a challenge to the editorial columns to carry articles of international breadth, articles that will wake students up and tend to make them citizens of the world. The columns of the Kanan will continue to carry a large percentage of campus topics. The are undoubted problems on the Hill that are of more immediate interest to students than national or international events. This paper will not, however, consider only campus topics, to the exclusion of events that are probably of much more lasting import. Postal Clerks Mait Smile—headline. But Washington officials do not try to dictate what the clerks are to think behind the smile. THE JAYHAWKER For the third consecutive year, our year book has won high honors in a national contest with annuals of almost every university in the country. The Jahewkha staff of last year is to be congratulated on its success while the present staff is admonished to carry on the fine work of their predecessors. There is nothing that will aid the graduate in living over his school days as much as the Jayhawker. A set of four should be given a prominent place in everyone's library to be re-read and en-rejoyed. Like anything else, the Jaywalker can be no better than the students make it. The staff of the year book itself comprises a great number of if students. Each individual, however, can aid the staff by complying to all dates set for material, turning in any piece of "copy" that the staff does not have, and by supporting the book financially. The county clubs use the Jayhawker as an advertisement of the University of Kansas to the high school student. The Jayhawker is a true picture of life at the University. It shows every side of what the public calls "collegiate." Scholastic, honorary, fraternal, social, athletic, humorous, artistic, truthful—that is the Jayhawker of past years and is the prime purpose of the Jayhawker of this year. WHY THE EMPHASIS ON Another issue of the Sour Owl is due to appear, soon and it is safe to predict that it will carry as much sex appeal as its predecessors. To take out all references, veiled and otherwise, to this gold mine of the joke writer would leave only a grays and pathetic skeleton of a humorous magazine, and even it would probably small faintly of sailed lingers. The Sour Owl is not alone in its dependence on the sex poke, it is lily white beside its contemporary, the king of the Manhattan cow for. Each publication, however, should stand on its own feet and take action. It should not follow a policy simply because everyone else does. Is it necessary to appeal to say in some way, in order to get a laugh? One of our Kansas contemporary says that the fact that you have eyes and women have legs is the one thing that the joke writer cannot overlook, because upon this is founded all real humor. Of course, the mind does not stop at the artificial limitation on the eyes in the illustration given above. Neither does the mind stop where the sex job ends. It is a human trait to carry good ideas into action. It would be a worthy experiment for the Sour Owl to print one issue founded on something other than acryl Such an experiment would not be a impossible as it sounds at first because most persons would buy the insurance to see if such a thing would be done. Until some brave publicist tries it, he will be those who say that it can be. Editorial of the Day --and tried to win. The American Babbitt who is such a longy example of all that woes in American 1910, is an immoral man fighting in the American schools and colleges. Until this day, he has been known from our American institutions and The esteemed Lawrence Journal in the midst of an able editorial or the football situation declares: "Football is not a cloaked pur suit." Which is the Alphabet Omega of the whole row over, about, and against geocball. Football has an business in a college, an football is now player which sports professionally. Precautions from their work. It corrupts morals by making them want to wipe their faces with the blood of others makes sports instead of students out of many young people sent to our universities. Our colleges and colleges minority we are giving a nation of load-mounted businesses who get nothing out of their training. We get nothing out of go into life a mob of rotters who will trip, gift, beat, snatch, the treat. Christmas Cards Dale Print Shop 1027 Mass. Phone 228 Today—Margarine De Lannicot in "Rag Time," Comedy, "Batting Up" Tomorrow—Henry B. Wohlhau in "A The Datee Light in the Window." News. "The Country Doctor" BOWERSOCK Tonight Thursday - Friday Hours - Friday Olive Borden in "Pajamas" Shows—3-7-9 Mat. 10-40; Eve. 10-50 VARSITY Tonight Jetta Gould in "The Forbidden Woman" Thursday - Friday Gene Stratton Porter's "The Harvester" OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX, Wednesday, 7 December , 1972 . No. 71 Gull Club will meet this evening at 8 o'clock in the rest room of central Administration building. BERNARD BLOCH, Chancellor. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: There will be a meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club this evening at 7:15. HARRY C. ROBINETTE, Secretary. QUILL CLUB PATERNITY COUNCIL: The Professional Inter-Fraternity Council meets tonight at 7:30 at the Delta Chk house. FORRFST E. KIMEL, President. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++1 ... All cabinet members of Krupn Phil will meet Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Pace, 1223 Ohio Street FRSKE FRSKE Publick Chairman KAPPA PHI: LECTURE ON CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE: The third lecture in a series of lectures on Contemporary Literature for students will be given Thursdays at 4:30, in room 265 Fossil Hall, Mr. Renfrew. ALICE WINSTON, Chairman of Committee. 1. ATENEO: Le condon regular del Ateneo tendra lugar juan juce, el 8 de diciembre. La lista de la tarde, un cuatro 105 EF. Administración. Habu an programa de la muestra que se lleva en la pantalla del PC. Two illustrated lectures by Prof. Henry Laurens of the Department of Physiology of Tulane University will be given Thursday, Dec. 8, "The Biological Properties of Light" at 4:30 in Blake hall; "The Importance of light to life," at 8 in the Chemistry lecture room. SIGMA XIr Professor Wilcox will be in the Classical Museum, 288 Fraser hall, Thursday, Dec. 8 from 3:30 to 4:20 p. m. and lecture on the objects on exhibition there. All are invited who are not occupied at that hour. A. M. WILCOX GUY W. SMITH, Secretary. LECTURE, CLASSICAL MUSEUM: PHI BETA KAPPA: The Kansas Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa will meet in room 202 central Administration building on Friday afternoon, December 6, at 9:30 a.m. A half hour will be allowed by this invitation of the candidates recently recruited for the "Some Impressions" class, Dean E. J. b. Stouffer. VEFTA LEAR, Secretary. MENTAL HYGIENE LECTURE: Dr. G. Leonard Harrison will continue his lectures on Mental Hygiene during summer, Dec. 6; 10:30 in room 320 central administration building. professionalized as it should be outside education, America will be more or less the laughing stock of the civic class. The Journal is dead right when it says; "Football is not a cloistered pur unit!" 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. Going Home for the Week-End? —Emporia Gazetti If so, remember that the cheapest way is via the Kansas City, Kaw Valley & Western Rwy. Co. One way fare, Lawrence to Kansas City (City Park, Kansas) . $ .72 Round trip fare, Lawrence to Kansas City (City Park, Kansas) $1.25 Tickets and Waiting Room 638 Mass. E. J. O'Brien, Traffic Manager. INNES' FOR sophisticated temperaments — supreme achievement of matchless perfume—creating the atmosphere of delicate illustriousness. Perfum L'Origan is internationally favored above all French perfumes Crystal Baltic Energy 2-Book two-normals $7.00 'Quarter' $1.00, 'Half' $2.00 and one $5.00 Wed. Store News Dec. 7 OPEN a jar of Dcorothy Gray's Cleaning Cream. Its delicate fragrance will first delight you. Spread the dainish, translucent cream lightly over your face and throat. At once it becomes liquid, penetrating every pore, gently licking me and immeiately commensals the daily need of every skin for a thorough but gentle cleansing. A Beauty Case A welcome gift is this Beauty Case of Dorothy Gray's. Compact, convenient, filled with all necessary preparations for daily use. Made of black walrus grained leather, and lined with rubberized rose silk. Price At Our Toilet Goods Dept. Dorothy Gray's Bath Salts Dorothy Gray's bath salts would be a most appreciated addition to the bath. Delightful and refreshing. An exhilarating stimulating Leaves the bath sufficiently informed, Price $17.5 the jar. At Our Toilet Goods Dept. A Week End Case Dorothy Gray's week-end beauty case makes the ideal small gift. A compact black lacquered case containing a variety of fashionificant quantities for several days' treatment. Price 84. 50 At Our Toilet Goods Dept. Refresh Your Skin Orange Flower Skin Tonic refreshes and stimulates the skin and helps normalize the pores. Use of this clear, cooling liquid makes it the perfect refreshing treatment for your complexion in the morning, or night after your cleansing cream. $85, $17.5 and $2.5. At our toilet goods dept. . WHIPPET If you want a car that will meet your demand for economy and comfort, we have it in a roadster, Sport Roadster, Cabriolet Coupe, Coupe, Coach, Sedan, or Cabood. Special bargains in used cars. Lawrence Overland 617-19 Mass. Phone 959 Color is the newest note in nightwear and our stock presents a brilliant array. They're the smartest styles Wilson Brothers have ever shown, and we've picked the ones you'll like. We know some prefer plain shades, and we're just as well prepared to supply them, too. $2.50 to $5 "Naught Can Compare With Gifts to Wear!" "Come on in and spread!" COMES day when your family亲 themselves loose and send you a box of eats . . . cake four stories high, turkey, candied orange peel, fudge, and other good things. The cry goes round. Your friends gather. Wash down the eats with "Canada Dry." This ginger ale has a delightful flavor . . . tang to it . . . dryness . . . sparkle. It has a subtle gingery flavor because it is made from Punaica ginger. It contains no capsicum (red pepper). It blends well with other beverages. CANADA DRY "The Champagne of Ginger Ale" Fernst inherited from Canada and installed in the F. P., A. by Canada River Gift, Glycerin, 35 West Wall Street, N. P., B. F. by Canada River Gift, Glycerin, 35 West Wall Street, N. P. 1927 hey is dark and cage! hey is named "Canada Day" a the hostile city means a bad place on you -