1. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE TWO MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1928 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Editor-in-Responsibility Pad Porter General Editor G尔德兰 Editor Google Editor Jock Stankwarek Opsnet Editor Hannon Pilman Almieri Editor Almieri Editor Garcia-Soto Editor Plain Tail Editor Ekater Editor Sport Editor Richard Hickman Fresh Taffy Williams Robin Wilson Robert M. Klein John Squirer Ladius Culver Ludwig Jaeper William Griffith Paul Hamilton Jonathan Miller Jordan Sterling Hugh Hoffman James Levin Business Manager Advertising Manager Ast. Advertising Mgr. Foreign Advertising Mgr. Lee Broudering Laelie Reporter William Clark Burberry Office. K. U. 68 News Room. K. U. 22 Published in the afternoon, five times a week, and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the Front of the University. Entered as second-class mail matter June tenber 17, 1910, at the post office at Law- rence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1892 MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1928 POOR MANAGEMENT Dad's Day has passed with its foot ball game and banquet. The dinner was unusually successful from the standpoint of the majority and a great disappointment to a very large minority. An entertaining program was enjoyed by all those who were fortunate enough to get seats in the new cateria. However, almost one hundred were turned away with refund money because there were no plates for the tickets they held. Almost one hundred fathers and sons were disappointed because of inefficiency on the part of some members of the banquet committee. The committee in charge of the banquet may have been in total ignorance as to the capacity of the new cafeteria or perhaps they were just over-zealous in their attempts to have a record-breaking crowd. No one seemed responsible for the ticket sales. It is interesting to note, that the completed stadium easily held the football crowd. The athletic department anticipated its needs. The Dad's Day banquet committee did not. The new Memorial Cafeteria was designed and built to fill a need in the life of the University. It was planned to fully accommodate the crowds on Dad's Day, Homecoming, and other gatherings like that of last Saturday night. At its first real test, it proved to be insufficient. Some students went to Kansas City Saturday to see "An American Tragedy." Others stayed in Lawrence. For seventeen successive years the Aggie Wildcat bowed to the Jayhawk. Now— Oh well, only thirteen more years to go. TO ALL MANKIND The physician goes to a medical dictionary to learn the meaning of an unfamiliar medical term. He goes to a medical journal for reports of advances in his profession. So it is with lawyers, and engineers, and school teachers, and every other professional type. Each has its own professional press. But— A doctor is also a human being. So is a lawyer, an engineer, a school teacher, and a ditch digger. As human beings, they wish to know developments in other professions which will affect humanity. This must come from the popular press; books, magazines, and particularly newspapers. Here is the key to the function of the newspaper; it confines itself to those things which appeal to man as man, not as a member of a group. To jest what type of man each newspaper appeals will depend upon the editor's judgment of the average of humanity; but, with rare exceptions, all newspapers endeavor to appeal to that which is human within us all. We should investigate Lindbergh's flight. It may turn out to be such a hoax as the latest Channel swimmer put across. Wouldn't it be disappointing to discover that the famous Colonel had ridden in a row bent until within a few miles of the French coast? THE BARBARIC TERRORISM At last, Alabama has found in the Crenkshaw county grand jury a group of men with courage and grit enough to stand up and tell to the citizen of Alabama that the rule of the mask and lash must abol. It has long been known that several of the southern states have been terrorized by members of the Ku Khux Klun, but it was only recently that Charlie C. McCall, attorney general of Alabama, was able to collect enough information from individuals to have a grand jury called. The grand jury has completed its investigation and has found that, with the exception of one person, the matched habbits were committed by members of the kik, wearing boots and takes of the outer. The grand jury has also returned 102 indictments, scored the Ku Klux Klan, blamed its high officials for the lawbreakers in the state, and flayed the Rev. I., A. Nails for showing more real inwhispings than in religion. The condition amounts to nothing more than a test of the supremacy of law and order. But it is a question of whether the state is to be ruled by mobs, raiding at night, or by its daily elected authorities. The law in some states, at least, has used understood methods in its procedure. It has used the constitution of the United States as a shield for its very existence. Climbing to protect and enforce the constitution, the law has in reality violated its fundamental principle by its barbaric rerearing and lashing of defenseless men and women. In view of the public awakening on a condition of this type, not only in Alabama, but in Georgia, Indiana, and a few other states, there is growing a demand for the enforcement of law and order as laid down by the general mont. Athabasca has made a good start toward cleaning up the state of its habsbe elements. May she continue to follow on the grand jary's good work with punishment that will tell in the world that Athabasca will be ruled, not by coercively nor hands; of awaked men, but by law made by civilized people. AND NGW AROUT MEXICO A revolution is put down in Mexico. Two opposition candidates are eliminated from the list by a firing squad as "traitor to the country." And the third candidate, a leader of the major party and commander of the national forces, begins his campaign for allies in spite of the fact he has nothing but spiritual opposition. Mexican units in a shout of recitation for her political hero. The American press stresses upon the situation with glue. Articles written about one "southern neighbor who settles elections by bullet, not ballot." Cartoons are drawn depicting the country in an uprare, with armed force bringling in the vote or be singing large cities in order to swine popular approval to the conqueror. And on the other side of the border the press views our own political antics with equal scorn, and treats them with equal derision. The average Mexican, it is said, would rather land on a cannibal island on Meant day than get off a train in Chicago during election day. Right now plants are being executed in the valley of the Rio Lema which will give Mexico one of the largest and most modern hydroelectric plants in the world. The plans also include facilities for catering for all overflow and for distributing it over miles each land for irrigation purposes. But regular life goes on just the same, whether in our country or in Mexico. The best of engineering talent from the Americas and from Europe has Exquisite designs and artificially blended colors characterize our new selection of Haitian and Cayenne of Haitian material. potteries. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. IX Monday, October 17, 1927 No. 32 There will be a meeting of the College faculty Tuesday at 4:30 in the auditorium of central Administration building. COLLEGE FACULTY. HOUSE PRESIDENT'S COUNCIL: House President's council will meet in the rest room of central Administration building Tuesday at 4:30 a.m. House presidentals of all officers and running banners with four or more girls are required to attend the meeting. Anne Patterson, first vice-president W. S. G. A. E. H. Lindley. HRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY: Application for rehorship may be made to Miss Gallo, chairman of the committee, on Tuesday and Thursday from 11:30 a.m. in room 210 Ft. Ivy Building. SCHOLARSHIPS: The Christian Schools registry at the University of Kansas will hold its popular weekly meeting Tuesday, at 7:50 p.m. in Myers Hall. University SOCIOLOGY CLUB; been selected for this work. Italian and American methods will be combined in a larger method, more efficient than any now extant. And all this is being carried out solely by Mexican capital. There will be a meeting of the Sociology club on Tuesday at the Thimble Tea Room at 6:20 to hear Walter Whiten, director of the Provident Association of Kansas City, Mo., on "Sense Phases of Social Work." Tickets for the dinner are $50. Reservations may be made by calling 1818 Red before Tuesday noon. Interested students who are unable to attend the dinner are welcome to come in later for the address. Mexican education is receiving more and more attention. An extensive system of psychological examinations has been in operation for a considerable time. The juvenile court program now under way indicates an increased interest in the study of juvenile delinquency; Mexican experts are being sent to the United States to study the various state systems of juvenile courts for suppression, to be improved upon and put into practice. And still the excavations American public thinks of Mexico as a nation made up of the party in power and the party that is preparing to be in power, of administrative forces, and of rulers. Camrose Opinion Construction at the University of Minnesota of a new university clinic and hospital for crippled and diseased patients. In January. The necessary funds for the construction have been provided in the gift of $2,000,000 to the University. There is an often told anecdote, which approaches the realm of provable that whenever one of the female characters attacks her torture, the arguments she clicks on her torture. The disinterested observer is apt to believe that something similar happens when participants who participated in the Potter like baitfish party convinced that there were no arguments in favor of the reason they reported to force. Campus Opinion W. E. G The writer believes that paddling of the members of the verdant class is the right action to grasp the point at any time, or any place. But in his cannot but depress the mind, he does not oppose the opponents to paddling each a beautiful argument for its abolition. The writer has heard the invictus proclaim that he was guilty of port paddling. They know it is wrong to they support it by more evidentiality; they do not hide their disliked and less law mishap. Editor Daily Kansas: Helen Churchill, secretary. Rock Lying in Front of Green Asks for Mercy I'm a rock, and I've been lying on in front of Green nail for three days. I'm getting pretty tired of it, too. I don't like being like a body, thinking that maybe someone would tome me over on the ground, but nobody did, and believe me, I'm getting pretty索地. Today I'm walking up the stairs over the walk whenever one gave me a show and if I stay here much longer, I'm going to come Here comes someone walking slowly, maybe he will get me off this walk. The big cheese, he went right next to me. I didn't come. Then I'll be known to the next time he puts his foot down. That was a dirty whiff he gave me anyway. I'm all turned around. I've been very in love with him ever there so many times that my coworkers are semi-circles now. It isn't very far to a little tuff of crust. Next time you come along, just give kick in the right direction, won't you? Special honor privileges are being given to 135 juniorats at the University of Oregon who did exceptionally well in studies under the chief purpose is to give the students greater freedom to pursue lines and techniques by realization of creative ambitions. A new ruling at Oklahoma A, and M. College allows 16 cuts from classes before taking action to curb the unabsence abuse. 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We have a fine selection of this new Haddon fabric for Fall, Greys, browns and blues, all in exclusive weaves. $50 Others $23.50 to $60 Let Us Decorate Your Slicker SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES The little things AWAY back in the year 1757, in his maxims prefaced to Poor Richard's Almanac, Benjamin Franklin said: "For want of a nail, the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe, the horse was lost; and for want of a horse, the rider was lost." So you see the importance of a little thing like a horse-shoe nail! The big stores of today were little stores years ago. They used advertising space judiciously and became larger. At first, their announcements were smaller than they are today. But those small advertisements told about real values, real savings for their customers. In other words, the size of an advertisement is no indication of its importance to you. The message is the thing. Some of the most important merchandise news is often printed in tiny type. Even in the largest advertisements you will find small type. Read the small type as well as the big black type. Read the little advertisements as well as the large ones. It pays. If you are disposed to neglect the smaller advertisements in this paper, you are making a mistake. You are missing money-saving opportunities. You are missing important information about something that some day you are going to buy. You are throwing away your road-map and following your nose. Advertisements come in all sizes—but the smallest one may carry the biggest news for you. Read them all 图