PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1927 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Paul Patrone Sunday Editor Hannon Parnes Associate Sunday Editor Bernie Palmer Snorts Editor Richard Burkhardt Levon - stop Gordon - cleaner Joshua - cleaner Wash - technician Liam Vincent Isabel Sanders Luke Sanders Dexe Anura Beverly Veeron Herbert Schurz Cary Murray Kelly Shipperman Rebeah Thompson Bekiah Thompson Kelly Shipperman Rebeah Thompson Business Staff Business Staff Advertising Manager...Lee Binningh Afore Advertising Mgr...Louise Reporter Foreign Advertising Mgr...William Clark is held in the afternoon, five times and on Sunday morning, by student "Fred" A. Tuckett, a member of the faculty of Kansas, from the Press of the Department of Journalism. Telephones Business Office K. U! 61 Recre K. U! 62 Entered an email, mail matter Sep tenber 17, 1910, at the post office at Law- rence, Kansas, under the net of March 3, 1927 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6,1927 BE GOOD, LITTLE GIRLS Caution outweighed trust in the action of the Acting Dean of Women requiring all women attending the Nebraska game yesterday to register their names, methods of transportation, and times of departure and return at the dean's office, even when accompanied by chaparrots. It is regrettable that a double standard must be projected into the official acts of the University. The dean is quoted as saying that possibility of accidents was one reason for such detailed registration. If this was a legitimate reason, then certainly men should be subject to the same regulation, for the men, too, might conceivably strain a hayrush by yelling, or tumble out of an upper birth, or experience almost any other accident to which women are susceptible. But registration for either men or women, and even official chaperones, snacks too much of kindergarten method. There is no reason why women on the faculty should not accompany the students on the same special train if they wish to, although not in the capacity of designated chaperones. They could give any advice asked of them by the younger women, which would probably be more but to require the presence of chaperones and then registration is a reflection on the intelligence and integrity of the women students of the University. Mayan tradition supports such practices; and possibly some people might be irrorified if young women are permitted to think and act for themselves. But we can conceive of better traditions—entrancing women from eighteen to twenty-four years of age to their own self-reliance, for instance. one of the most needed essentials of life, is ignored. Let's be honest and call the University an institution for children too big to clutter up the home nursery. But if students must be shepherded like children, let's quit pretending that "college is a preparation for life" when it is quite plain that resourceful. Washburn stages are to be barred from varsity dances as an experiment. Still less confusion might exist if the Washburn women were barred also. Something unusual has happened on Mt. Oread. A campaign promise has been fulfilled. Sunday tennis has been officially authorized by the administration after a long struggle by various political organizations and sections of student opinion. The chief difficulty in bringing about the consent of the administration was that of determining responsibility for the restraining rule. It seemed that several years ago groups of students were in the habit of congregating on the athletic fields and staging rostous baseball games. Naturally, such conduct incurred much criticism, and the result was the closing of all the courts and fields." For several years the students have felt the discrimination of not being allowed to use the tennis courts on Sunday. Since Sunday was their day of rest, why should they be required to confine their activities to their houses, or seek more expansive diversion elsewhere? But unorganized opinion failed to overcome the barrier of the fact that a University rule prohibited Sunday tennis. a rule was the most difficult part of the campaign. The departments of the University concerned referred their part in the matter to other departments and the affair was wont to take the course of a circle in so far as responsibility was concerned. A special committee was appointed by the Men's Student Council to investigate the matter. Only by bringing continued pressure upon the Board of Regents, and by explaining the conditions resulting from such a rule, was the committee able to make the administration take action upon Sunday tennis. Although several factors played in recalling the ban, the most persistent other than student opinion, was the dogged efforts of the council committee in bringing together the proper authorities to act in the manner reported in last night's Kaanan. A woman at the University of Washington recently won a $5 prize offered in the subscription campaign of the Washington "Columns." An hour's search in Emily Post leaves one still in doubt as to which boyfriend should buy the tobacco, but father's supply will be low in the meantime. JOURNALISM-A PROFESSION In these days when the loudest of trades are making penetration to professional status, it is not surprising that the professional bee is stirring in the bonnets of newspapermen. In truth, on whole social fabric is blooming a thing of specialized groups intertwined on the warp of human need, and, since special skills must be necessarily somewhat contorsa, a certain amount of anomynity according the enforcement of the group ethical standards is a necessity. Medicine and the new some decades ago made good their claim to freedom in controlling their own members, on the plan that they dealt in a specialized knowledge of not understandable to laymen. The need for professionalization of newspaper work is based on a slightly different necessity. Administration of legal control over the newspaper cannot be put in the hands of any existing government because of the power of self-perpetuation it would give to government. Hence the need for control which comes from within the profession, but has the backing of legal authority. "The profession of Journalism" is not so far fetched a term as may be imagined. Several codes of ethics are already in existence, notably those of the states of Oregon and Missouri, and of the American Newspaper Publishers' Association. A professional conscience is being developed in the schools and departments of journalism of which there are now 18 ranking as "Class A" and in the associations of newspaperp, of which there are several national and numerous state and local ones. Programs, Favors, Crepe Paper, Engraving, Printing, Stationery, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies. Allen's Drivurself System Phone 88 624 Mass. The criticisms of the press, and articulately the newspaper press, which are now occupying so much pace in magazines, are an excellent sign. They show that the public is ack of the conceivible newspaper- Rent-a-Hertz Pay by the mile A. G. ALRICH Tel. 288 736 Mass. St. A. G. ALRICH Leather Coats $15.00 to $20.00 HOUK AND GREEN PLAYHOUSES The Mathematics Club will hold a joint business and social meeting Monday, Nov. 7, at 6:30 p.m. in room 201 east Administration Building. Miss Penelope will give a short talk on *Pythagorean Numbers*. All members, now agreed to come as a team for this meeting, will be discussed. LESLEA KQKEKENB, President. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX Sunday, November 6, 1927 No. 49 The Council of Kuwait Alpha chapter of DPI Bio Kappa will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 6, at 4:50 p.m. in room 108 of administration building, 233 Al-Rafiq Drive, Kuwait City. PHI BETA KAPPA: MATHEMATICS CLUB It will be a renewed call for narrow and bigtied partitions to bring their special axes to the political grievances, and for xenal politicians to grind mercy away. The uphew will be repeated attempts in the near future at circumcision of public opinion. It might be wholly humorous were it not for the serious consequences it entails. Whether the books are actually burned or quickly removed by the mayor's benchmen newly appointed as library trustees, it will mean more than just a lot of smoke. It is an enforcement upon the privilege of citizens to thiek for themselves, just as was the Tennessee legislation, and it sets a dangerous precedent. It is true, of course, that the attempts at suppression of differing The Fencing Club will meet Wednesday, Nov. 9, at 4:30 in room 2018 Fencing gymnasium. AT interested in fencing are invited to present their ideas. FENCING CLUB: THE EFFECT OF LION HUNTS The spectacle of "Bite Bill" Thompson as an arbitrary literary critic for Chicago in indeluctably genocides, and borne laughable; but it is grotesque in the same manner as was the Dayton evolution trial—ugleheads, but dehumanable. W. S. G. A.: KAPPA PHI There will be no W. S. G. A. council dinner Tuesday evening, Nov. 9. ROSE COLLACH, President. A dancer will be given at the barn on June 16, Edinboro Piano, 1252 Ohio Avenue Monday evening, Nov. 7 for plosion, by members of Kupfer's dance group JEFFERIE FALLENGE. man. The missing link in the chain between criticism and action is a body empowered to consider and act on the criticisms. The chain can be completed by a legally sanctioned organization of journalists. Such action is now everybody's business, and consequently nobody is responsible. Factualization of the press will not bring the millionium. Doctors and hawkers are still open to criticism but it will benefit worth the cost. A physician's malpractice can at the worst take not more than a few hundred of lives; the journalist can take millions, if we are to believe the critics who lay the blame far away at the door of the press. But a professional organization of news papermen would be worthwhile if it did no more than eliminate the smear which has darkened the pages of some popular newspapers. defenders will serve as a nail for the defenders of intellectual freedom and public enlightenment to marshal their forces, and they shall probably win out; but it will just be an old, old battle, with an immense social waste of effort which could well be diverted into more important channels. For there are many things far more necessary to progress than making (care at King Georgs. The Hill in Its Beauty Garb A list of the widowed is found by those taken to a short down through the brambles夹外 Frasier. There a little path starts down with a rush and winds around tree trunks and blocks. Black burrs, black Burrs and burbles reach out to catch the clothing of possession, find a delicate granzy bank that is now turning brown. Even a barned wire fence runs through it and mokes the fruttious houses that hide it in. 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