PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1027 University Daily Kansar Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, Kansas Invoice Editor-in-Chief Dorothy Taylor Associate Editor Gertude N. Saves Cannon Editor George Rosen Cannon Editor Kenneth M. Saves Telegraph Editor G. Haldane Crowd Plain Tales Editor Guy Gray Sunday Editor Jessica Trecker Bunday Editor Jessica Trecker Mary Elswarro Editor Super Editor McIlhenny McIlhenny Alumni Editor Mary Elswarro Helen Tatton Josh Stainbow Jack O'Neill William Griffith Alice Gleidin Robbie Hutch Glenedale Col Curtis Jackson Kenneth F. Tillery Marjorie Jones Frank K. Tillery Advertising Manager* . W. Morgan Co. Aust. Advertising Mer., Mir. J. R. Monet, Corporate Marketing, Mir. J. R. Monet, Creation Manager . James T. I. Foreign Ad. Mer., Mir. R. M. India Published in the afternoon, two times a week and on Sunday morning by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Arizona Press 2 Times of the Departement of Journalism. Business Office K. U. 66 News Room K. U. 23 Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1897 A NEW BIRD FLIES TODAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1927 M. Orund has become the nesting place of many a species of "bird". Now that the Dove and the Owl have firmly established their habitat have a new bird appears. The Hawk, which made its debs here this morning, is welcome heartily. It can fill a need here. The frequency of its publication, once a week, is one point in its favor. Free distribution of two thousand copies is another, if the downtown merchants will continue to support it by purchasing advertising space. Furthermore, it will probably be more representative of student opinion. Since the articles are not signed, and since every one is invited to contribute, there is no reason why it should not become popular a vehicle for the expression of campus opinion. As a counter-irritant, antidote or "what you will" to the Dove, it has possibilities of functioning well. It will force the "pink sheet" to appear more frequently on the comm. The first issue of the Hawk belts the name chosen by its staff, however, like the Dave, the label is not true to the nature of the material carried within its news columns. If the names of the two publications could be exchanged, they would more nearly be correctly labeled. If initiative and freedom of thought are developed by the new bird, it will have a place on our campus beside the other two who nest here. If it prefer merely to refute arguments of other publications and discuss old questions previously editorialized, its success is doubtful. One would expect the first issue to be conservative and unillustrant, and the authors have not disappointed us. They have refuted some Dove arguments and have printed some articles similar to editorials previously run in the Daily Kansas. We welcome the new bird, hoping that it will truly become the "liberal journal of campus opinion" that some students have been waiting for so long. "Food 'Em But Don't Pet 'Em" Readlines a Kansas City paper. There's one reporter, at least, who knows news when he sees it. Will the state movie慈 tell us what is done with the portions of films deleted by the board of review? WHY MUST THEY DIE? WHY MUST THEY DIE? Suicides are always grievous when brought near our own doorsteps, but the suicides of youth who should normally be reverting to the beauty and glory and enthusiasm of life, is made doubly so. It is not merely pathetic, it is horrible and ghastly, a condition from which even the sterner ones recoil. Nearly every day brings a new account of some disillusioned lad who found that all joy had gone and that life was an empty thing that gave back nothing but morkery. And, the result? Well, the means matters but little. That they are the victims of the terrific speed of twentieth century life cannot be denied. The trend of the century has discredited the spiritual teachings of the past. Materialism has replaced them. Youth, naturally inalectic and sensitive, finds these idemis shattered by the newer teachings and, if he is an unusual type, the few men pleaserless he can find are to him but a pitiful excuse for living—when death is quick and easy. We must sozilize our youth, then, if we are to save them. Teach them to cat, drink and be merry, otherwise they may die. And if not this we must find spiritual truth. Sinclair Lewis has been challenged to look at himself in a mirror and then try to deny that there is a God. For most of us that would be the one thing which could absolutely make our belief. LIMPING ALONG Practically every college, junior college and high school remodeled within the past ten years has something which the University of Kansas lacks. And more—even ward schools in the larger towns rank above the University in one educationally adding factor. True, this University has several high ranking schools and departments, it has numerous facilities for activities, it has well constructed proportionately adequate buildings, it has a stadium. But it has no theater. Not even an abode little theater; no satisfactory place for plays to be given, for the dramatic club to function, or for the Kansas Players to present their efforts to the student public. The make-shift gymnastics stage and audience space is too agonizing to attempt productions there; the little theater in Sponser-Theray has insufficient seating capacity and not always available; and the new multicultural offers no relief; the stage will be several times too large for a drama of any sort to be given on it. Even dominant students needing pentual application of their studies would be compelled to go to other towns if they wished to put their knowledge into practice. That University productions are welcome in other places is shown by the fact that the Kansas Players have been invited to perform by management as close as Topeka and as far as a summer resort in the Caucasus. Without a theater this University goes limping behind nearly every high school in the state. And we aren't Pollyanna cough to say we like their backs. Newspaper reports say that Russian thieves are causing the farmers of western Kansas considerable trouble and worry. Some one should communicate with Secretary Kellogg and have them deported. WISCONSIN SETS THE PACE Dr. Alexander Meilekjohn, once "fired" from the presidency of Amherst College, is finding at the University of Wisconsin a chance to test his theories of education. Beginning next fall, Doctor Meilekjohn will conduct an experimental college with an enrollment of 250 freshmen and sophomores. Wisconsin, always known for its advanced practices, not the least of which was the selection of a publicist rather than an educator to be its Only those who attended hand rehearsal Wednesday evening will be audited to the basketball game Friday evening. Balance of gift card. K. U. BAND: The Blue Mill for BAPTIST STUDENT GROUPS: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. VIII Friday, February 18, 1937 The Baptist student groups will meet in joint session Sunday, Feb. 20, at 9:45 a.m., at the First Baptist church, to hear an address on "Genesis and Evolution," by Prof. Dinsmore Alter. All interested students are invited. RUTH LaDEUX. Phone 409 1009 Mass. Good things to eat for over fifty years Its been WIEDIE'S On the other hand, however, he may be looking to the president for a pardon for his sins, and he may very possibly achieve the desired liberation. The perpetrator of one of the world's greatest hoaxes is again attempting to put over an elaborate scheme to achieve his aims. Beta Cipi Sigma will meet Monday, Feb 21, at 4:30 p. m., in room 3, room Administration building. Dr. A. A. Schaeffer will sneak. Mme. Maria Kurenko may be a lawyer, but she doesn't sing like one BETA CHI SIGMA RUTH LaDEUX. HAROLD HILKEY. The address to be given at the University Club this evening by Professor Jenner will start at 9 o'clock on account of the basketball game. UNIVERSITY CLUB ADDRESS: C. R. GARVEY, President It rests with the court of original jurisdiction to determine the rights in the case. The probation pudding is cooled, but it has not been served as president, is again setting the pace. Whether or not the particular theories of Doctor Meiklejohn are successful in imparting knowledge to underclassmen, the theory of putting educational hypotheses to the test of practice cannot go astray. Only actual trial can reveal the benefits and drawbacks of any plan. Wisconsin seeks to know, and is taking the nearest path to knowledge. Doctor Cook's plan is nothing; it isn't original. He state that he is past 65 years old and that he will die in the penitentiary if forced to serve the entire sentence. He has failed to take several things into account in his plan or he is expecting a great amount of lechmey. He may live beyond the five years' probation, return to the penitentiary to complete his sentence and die there, in spite of his years of freedom. ANOTHER SCHEME COOKED UP Texans acquitted a minister who shot down an unarmed man, letting him continue his "Gospel of Christ" preaching. Texas then sentenced two young men to 99 years in the penitentiary for robbing a drugstore with firearms and suggested that they were lucky to get off without the death penalty. Isn't justice wonderful? Dr. Frederick A. Coon, chief chef of several spicy advertising dishes, is busy at the stove again and the utt is beginning to boil. Convicted on twelve counts for using the mails to defraud and sentenced to serve fourteen years and nine months in the federal penitentiary, the arctic explorer and oil promoter has filed application for probation for five years. He has served more than three years of his sentence. Paroled for the five years, he would have to return to serve the rest of the sentence, if not pardoned in the meantime. WHERE, HOW AND WHY? Where is your destination and how are you going to travel? Think well and long my friends before you choose or else the miles may drag and the journey's end be disappointing. If you travel fast, you may travel far, but are you happier than he who takes a slower train and ill dreams as the rails clich off the never ending miles? Then, too, while he drinks in the beauty of the passing aces, you fume and chaff because they linger in your eye. We must all be going some place out where and how and hastily why? If it is to build things and nations, then we must hurry, we must travel fast and furiously, for time is alive stuff that slips away so easily. But if it is to worship gods or live, just for the joys of living, then we may inger on the way, time matters not. Editor: Daily Karen; One of the chief aims of a University education is, and should be, to make an individual a better social living—to cause him to assume, as a part of his social obligations, a respect for sex rights of others. Campus Opinion the utter selfishness, on either through ignorance, or indifference, or deliberate design, as manifested every day in the library, would indicate that for the University is missing to mark. When an instructor assigns a short but important, reading to a class of fifty, and specifically informs them that there is only one copy of the book in the library, and requests that each student keep the book out no further than five minutes; he would be an extremely half-centered person who would not govern himself accordingly. Then when a student goes directly from that class to the library, obtains the book in question, and keeps it in his possession for two weeks, he would stretch of the imagination to classify that student as otherwise than selfish. It is a hard thing to believe—yet, that there is a considerable number of just such students in the University, many important veterans will testify. The instructor will hold accountable anyone who does not read it, even as he will those who spent an hour or two dreaming over, pondering and, taking verbatim notes on a fifteen-minute读物. Since we cannot考证 this post by appealing to his course of fair play, nor by mentioning his victorious history to cure some of his activities. This could be done by placing a time limit on books that are in great demand and imposing a stiff fee for overtime parking. Such a plan would make extra work for the university, something need to be done on D. L. Y. Let old Squire Pipe be the judge... HIS HONOR, old Squire Pipe is unquestionably the world's ablest judge of pipe tobaccos. Who else is by nature, training and experience so well-qualified to try a tobacco and hand down a decision on it? . So, in the case of Granger Rough Cut, the plea is that Judge Pipe's verdict be accepted as FINAL! To make a long brief brief: Character witnesses everywhere have sworn to Granger's sterling quality. Experts have vouched for the superiority of its rough cut. Chemists have testified that the new "glassine-sealed" foil-pouch keeps the tobacco in perfect condition. Finally, it has been shown that by using this foil-pouch (instead of a costly tin) it is possible to sell Granger at just ten cents. On these arguments Granger rests its case! A couple of pipefills will convince Squire Pipe that it is the world's greatest pipe tobacco... and any good judge of tobaccos will confirm the decision! GRANGER ROUGH CUT Made for pipes only! Granger Rough Cut is made by the Liggett Myers Tobacco Compa New Styles in Pajamas and Gowns $1.95 $2.95 $3.75 See these in our window Friday and Saturday. Pajamas made of guaranteed fast color percale, broadcloth and silk and cotton novelties. The prettiest patterns and the niffiest styles you can imagine. Eastern Isle Philippine hand made and hand embroidered gowns. They came in all the pastel shades and are fast to laundering. We are selling these very freely. $1.25 $1.50 $2.00 are revealed here in Spring's Secrets Boleros V Lines Plaids Pleats Tucks Tiers The Jacket Ensemble It is a very smart outfit, this nonchalant spring costume, which supplements its dress with an engagingly brief jacket. Oceans smarter than its predecessor the suit, the Jacket Ensemble is offered in a host of different fabric combinations which make it a suitable fashion for almost any hour of the day. If you are of a mind, 'tis whispered, you may even have a chiffon jacket to your dinner dress.