PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2. 1927 University Daily Kansa Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAE Lawrence, Kanada Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor News Editor Sunday Editor Summer Editor Night Editor Alumni Editor Paper Editor Plain Titles Editor Exchange Editor Editorial Editor Paul Ports Paul Stetsman David Stems Helen Tatum Johnson Pope Hannan Pigman Heather Hammers Richard Hammers Paul Huffman Paul Huffman Garratt薛峰 Garratt薛峰 Exchange Storm business manager Advertising Manager Lee Bubring Aetn. Advertising Mgr. Lieuile Report Foreign Advertising Mgr. William Clark Anthony Wright Frank Tiffany Joe McMullen Jak Suttenberg Lawrence Piner William Griffith Paul Anselm Robert Miles Pamela Parkinson Gordon Kneese Business Office. K. U. 6 News Room. K. U. 8 Public in the afternoon, five times in and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the U.S. Faculty of Arts, Tram of the Department of Journalism. debutment of 2010th. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1987. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1927 CANDIDATES IN THE LIMELIGHT In conducting and publishing an in dependent investigation in which it was found that Herbert However was not responsible for fixing the wartime price of wheat at $2.26 a bushel the Kansas City Star has rendered a service that makes for a more intelligent voting public. Another myth is that Herbert However is not a publie, in this case the farmers in particular, has passed on to the home of derecip fictions and misunderstandings. The investigation is a suggestion of something badly needed in the realm of politics, i.e., a public understanding of candidates, their attitudes, and their policies. Governor Smith in answering an open letter in the Atlantic Monthly effectively demonstrated his political independence from the Catholic church; he has yet to state definitely his attitude on prohibition and explain his connections with Tannamy. President Coolidge has made his attitudes toward a third term fairly evident; he has been far less specific on other issues. During the past decade too few candidates have had the courage to speak forcefully and decisively on issues of public importance. President Nicholas Murran Butler of Columbia University hit the vital weakness of American politics when he recently said: "The office holding and office-seeking class dislikes thinking and pretty uniformly discredits both it and the thinker. To hold reasoned convictions, and to give public expression to them, is to incur criticism, possibly enmities, and to the office-holding and office-seeking class that is well-nigh fatal." Doctor Butler demands that the nation face the problems of its day, and calls attention to prohibition, the tariff, farm relief, disarmament, lame-due' sessions of congress, international co-operation for the establishment of peace, and freezing the government from the control of big business. If the public is to have any voice in the direction of its government then his demands are certainly justified. Such investigations as the Star has recently made will serve to smoke candidates for high office from their hair of infiniteness, and elections can be decided less on political chicery and more on specific issues. CONTROL—BUT HOW? That there must be control of the press is clean, but just how it is to be gained without endangering the necessary freedom of the press is a problem. One method of control has already been suggested; the intelligent criticism of newspapers by the public. But criticism by itself will not await, for there money to be made by illegitimate means in the newspaper business, and so long as this condition continues there will be men mean enough to take advantage of it. These men who are in the newspaper business solely for personal ends give the socially minded publishers competition which is sometimes too keen to meet. There is a sort of Greham's law in operation. To meet this condition, publishers have drawn up codes of ethics similar to those which govern the medical and legal professions; but codes alone are powerless. The problem now facing the budding profession of journalism is enforcement of its code of ethics enforcement which will not interfere with the freedom of the press necessary in a democratic government. Campus Opinion Kathleen Duke, Kensington Editor Daily Kansan: With the increase in enrollment of colored students the problem of race discrimination is more forestally preoccupied with. Mrs. Haldeman, a trade by Mrs. Haldeman, has done much to arrest student interest in the Negroes and their treatment on the campus. In some of them she has sympathetic curiosity, in others, sympathetic curiosity. Considering the proportion of nugget students to white students they are more than fairly treated. In the class with nuggets, you have given nugget room in the cafeteria; their privilege of the library is noticeable. True that they are seated in a nugget room, but these are denoted free use of the swimming pool. Why not? Why should they not be willing to enjoy recreational advantages with those of their own class? When they do does not object to working alongside of a nugge if it is necessary, but he has a right to an objection to behave intricate into contact with him at all. The fact that negro students are not allowed to finish the last two years of medical school at K. U, is the only thing upon which they can be admitted. If it is possible for a negro to finish those years at a school where he is welcome, why doesn't he do it? Separate schools of equally high academic achievement from one another in the solution of a problem which present intolerable aspects—K. E, D. Inconsistency or Common Sense? Editor Daily Kansan: After everything is considered, students will choose that method of classes most likely to get them another five hours credit. Having paid good credit and having been tended an 8:30 class for eighteen weeks, the average student wants to graduate. Twelve written shot-gun quizzes of five or ten minutes each are not included in the oral shots-gun, for the oral question-answering. It was the alternative. Juniors and sen- Union Pacific R. R. Football Special Lincoln, Neb. and Return $670 Leave Lawrence 10:30 p. m., Nov, 4th Arrive Lincoln 7:30 a. m., Nov. 5th The Jayhawkers are just rounding into shape. Go along and help them beat the Cornhuskers. Everybody going on this train—Team—Frosh-Band Jay Jones—Ku Ku's. J. H. Robinson, Agent Arrive Lawrence 8 a. m., Nov. 6th OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. 11 Wednesday, November 2, 1927 No. 46 QUILT CLUB: Call 76 Quill Club will hold a special meeting this evening at 8 p., m., in the rest room of Central Administration building, the purpose of meeting new members and staff. Leave Lincoln 12 midnight, Nov. 5th KAPPA BETA: Regular rehearsal will be held Thursday at 4:30 o'clock. The old members will entertain the new members with a supper in the rest room of central Administration building after rehearsal. It is urged that every member plan to come **BERTHA LA PERKINS, Business Manager**. Kappa Batta will meet in Myers hall Thursday, Nov. 8, at 7:30 p.m. All members and padges are requested to attend. Doses must be paid on or before Monday. Men's Glee Club quartet rehearsals and voice classes will be held this week at usual. Owing to loss of the balloon board notices will be posted online. WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB: MEN'S GLEE CLUB: THOMAS A. LARREMORE, Director. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: There will be a special meeting of the Cosmopolitan Club Thursday evening at 7 o'clock. HARRY ROBINETTE, Secretary. Next rehearsal of the K. G. Symphony will be held Thursday evening at 7 e'clock. K. O. KUESTERHEIN, Director. K. U, SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Phi Sigma will meet Thursday at 5:30 p. m. at the cafeteria, Miss Charn Nigra of the Bacteriology department for Blood Grooming1. Register at **GAIABET SCHMANN** PHIL SIGMA: MENTAL HYGIENE LECTURE: Dr. G. Leonard Harrington will continue his lectures on Mental Hygiine in room 202 central administration building Thursday morning, 9, at 3, at 10 a.m. Tuesday morning, 8, at 10 a.m. And anyway, you always find in very chic a few of those good oral tips to make them better at making to make an impression. Far better to keep such from forming their bitterness and it doesn't happen often it is in good common sense and self-preservation to be incarnate. jers are not blind to reality. They were written for written shot-gun puzzer because they believed them the surest and easiest way of letting the professionals see. The worn wooden steps behind the Chemistry building seem to lead into another country. Descending them the noise and barry of the main theatre, the stairwell, the Walk, shadowed and tranquil, stretches before. The air is heavy with the pungent odor of the pine, the fine dust of the spruce, their brown carrot flocked with sunshine. Overhead, the dignified tree intertwine branches and lift their wind-twisted tegs high. Close up the view of the windows and the quiet is almost breathless. A specializing School in Shorthand, Typewriting Accounting, Banking Secretarial Training LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. The Hill in Its Beauty Garb --to your costume— a mash bag in one of many fall shades as shown in our selection. A Chic Touch— Read the Kansan want ads. Now in Session Ask for Catalog Read the Kansan want ads. And best of all, you may choose individual wordings for them without extra cost. The moves, original and most aping designs are represented in the display of this example sample on our display at our new Select Personal Christmas Cards Early Watkins National Bank Deposit with Lawrence, Kansas. Lawrence, Kansas Ask to see the "Made to Order" Store No. 1 Store No. 2 1401 Ohio 1237 Oyend PROTSCH Programs, Favors, Crepe Paper, Engraving, Printing, Stationery, Rubber Stamps, Office Supplies. The College Tailor 833 Mass. A. G. ALRICH Tel. 288 736 Mass, St. Just good food that you can eat day after day and never grow tired of. BRICK'S offers you a character of food that makes dining enjoyable. A kind of taste that you do not expect to get in a restaurant and, in fact, seldom find. 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