P PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 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 WEDNESDAY JANUARY 20, 1927 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas* Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Duncity Tucker News Editor Lujas Rivera Player Manager Night Editor Ernest W. Johnson Night Editor Jesse Tucker Sunday Editor Jesse Tucker Mary Reagan Filin Telegraph Editor Sadie Miller Sport Editor Joe McMullen Alumni Editor George Allen T Charles Lee Fiphak P. Tiffany Grace Beauvais George Reeves Gilbert Fawcett Gladys Finch Lance McFarrell G. Hareman G. Harvey Robert Silkman G. Cutter Advertising Manager Aust. Advertising Mgr. Johnson, Greg Foreign Ad. Mgr. Cirlonization Mgr. James T. Nevin Morgan Gunan Karl E. Strimple Johnson, Greg R. M. Dale James T. Nevin Business Office . K. U. 6 News Room . K. U. 2 Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Virginia, in The Press of the Department of Journalism. Entered an second-class mail matter September 17, 1918, at the post office at Lawrence Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1927. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1927 Loyalty is a virtue, and perhaps it is the joy of being virtuous that leads us into a loyalty to our college which is blind in its very intenseness. We live so close to it that we are dazzled by its good points and overlook all its weaknesses. But it is seriously detrimental, no only to ourselves but to others. BLIND LOYALTY Bound loyalty to our college, lik everything, has two sides. It has been pointed out to us how this afects ourselves, dulling our sense of perspective until it kills all growth. But what we wish especially to sore is that the corollary of this blim school spirit in which we praise our students and need to adopt its inability to see good in other institutions about us, and the consequent natural desire to discredit them at every step. A familiar form of this contention of other schools is evidenced at man athletic contests. A minor dispute arises which is misinterpreted by hot parties concerned, each seeing some ulterior motive in the other, and the molehole grows into a mountain. How easily we believe what we hear the one college in Ohio employs men in its athletic teams, and that this is what happens. There seems to be no good proof that this continues to be the case, but we like to think that there is, and s harbor our prejudice. Those who snow college student well seldom take much notice of them and their utterances when they are worked up to a frenzy of school gossip. You can get your students nor safe. It is in those who do tak them seriously that cause the trouble We recently heard the Harvard side of the Princeton-Harvard athletic rupture. It was reported to us that, in recent years at their annual football struggles, "To Hell with Harvard," they were forced to admit epileptias were frequent. This was only a slight over-exuberance of college loyalty, but it was a fair expression of the students of one college toward those of the other, continually growing more and more biased. Our informant, a student at Princeton, told me of the break, and we have no doubt but that a Princeton supporter would put forward a like argument. This leads us back to where we started. Blind loyalty sometimes gives the other fellow a black name when he little deserves it. Consideration of him should be enough for us to be a little more careful in what we say, but what may perhaps be more important is that such unwinder slashes are not often harmed ourselves in our desire to do the opposite. "Rah! Rah! stuff!" very excellent in its place, but let us keep it there. Colonel Smith must have been shocked to discover at Washington that such antique furniture as the senatorial seats is not for sale. OUR GROWING SKEPTICS That people are becoming more and more skeptical of a college education as fitting young men and women for it, but that fact two more of the world's great men have voiced sentiments that show they to the good degree required education. W. R. Morris, head of the Morris Motor company of England, denounces even the century-old prestige of Cambridge and Oxford in a recent interview with The New York Times, opinion of the captains of industry in Great Britain. *Clarence Darrow*, world famous criminal lawyer denounces the college education, saying that "the average college student goes to work at the University he doesn't know what else to do." In explaining his remarks, Mr. Morris stated that he had no high opinion of the value of universities for education for such essentially practical purposes as industry or commerce. "A college education, from a business point of view," he said, "is absolutely useless." He and he knew there were exceptions, but that he had never found a university man in his employ who was not interested in thinking university training is absolutely a waste of time. Mr. Morris said he received his education in a practical school, and because one who receives his education this year is not a college graduate believes that it is host to a captain of industry as a working man rather than a college graduate. "Neither Oxford, Cambridge, Yale, nor Harvard," Mr. Morris said, "must understand their workness." he declared. What these two men think and say—one a leading lawyer and the their "Henry Pond of England"—should promote thought in the fields of college students. In a college education, he for four years worked in jobs that paid him four-year vacation preceding the actual work of business and life? Clarence Diprow, Chicago attorney, and that 590 out of 100 college students got a good time out of their education and maybe the other one gets a real education. Concerning high school education Mr. Dwarf stressed that a time good thing for those who appear is value while they are in high school. If the man who thinks, that the automobile is here to star would try urking his car on the campus some day, he might change his mind. Examinations have accomplished in je student a hebetore unknown reation. He rose in time for break- est. DOES OPPORTUNITY KNOCK TWICE? *Campus College, University of Tabula* With the idea that opportunity would only come from our own continually grasping for it and hunting it. Every tap we look at the door we think is "the opportunity" and and out to meet it. From all appearances it is the Good we seek and that allows us to grow. And if it it did not the new we could. We were overcome by a temporary dampage which looked so very large and then found into that it was no dampness at all and we were just fried. Someone advised a younger man to rappy every opportunity he met. In trying to follow this advice he found himself too much dependent on not heip his ideal or end in view, and aimlessly grasped for what seemed to be a good proposition. It is wise to know how opportunity when we meet it face to face, but it is n't so easy if we are to force temporary advantage for the ultimate larger good. At the rate Mexican affairs are now progressing, American section omenes may find themselves at a loss for help this summer. The cold wave in Florida has caused big loss in citrus fruits. Lime reeze? YES, BEAUTIFUL, BEAUTIFU SNOW in the porchness of the诗, it is litting that, at this time of the year, e glories of Mother Nature and the undwirk of her regent, Jack Frost, receives a fine acclamation. Our praise would include a flowery landmark of he "Becky white mantel of snow, cast over the earth, and trimmed by the rafty hand of Frost." And as we continue we form rhythmic phrases, like the history of sheer crystal flakes, the hunt for foxes broken, the hunt for the faint tinkling of sleigh bells across the frosty ir. It all sounds so romantic that we are just on the verge of a thrill from her gloriousness of it all, when something comes up as it invariably does, and then everything is apaled. We notice that he "pure white mantel" has been hanged by blotches of coal smoke, and that the "sharer crystal flakes" in his eyes gleam with light, min, while underfoot rages a sea of flush. We trudge along through the Buy a give best service and longest wear. **d dozen** Paint enls. per doz. $1.00 per doz. American Paint $2.00 **Maker of UNOQUEST II** Colored Paint in 12. colors $2.00 per doz. MEN'S GLEE CLUB OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. VII Wednesday, 26 June 1977 Nr. Vol. VIII Wednesday, January 26, 1927 No. 97 The schedule for the remainder of the semester is as follows: Thursday, Jan. 27, Rehearsal at 2 aclock instead of 1430 in the Engineering Building. friday, Jan. 28. No rehearsal because of Kansas state content at Emporia. Saturday, Jan. 29. Full club rehearsal, 11:32 a.m. Entire club songs at 3:03 p. m. over radio. Report at 9:16 p. m. at studio in engineering laboratories (building back of the building in which we usually rehearse). Business dress Sunday, Jan. 30. Regular rehearsal for full club at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 1. Concert at Leavenworth for whole club. Meeting place announced later. Will leave about 3:30 p.m. Tuxedo. Monday, Jan. 31. Concert for whole club at Leptonom. Report at Green Hall by 7:15 p.m. m. Business dress., Wednesday, Feb. 2. Concert at Kansas City, Kan., for whole club. Meet in place announced later. Will leave about 3:30 p.m. Tuxedo. Thursday, Feb. 3 and Friday, Feb. 4. Final content squared to St. Louis. Tuxedo, T. A. LARRENE, Director. Judge Florence Allen, of the Ohio supreme court, will speak at convocation on Friday, Jan. 28, at 10:30 p.m. in Flower chapel. CONVOCATION: treams of half-melted snow, throwing intakes of water from our galaxies. Water drips from the disappearing icicles, and melting snow ships laughed in blasts of booms down in buckets of our necks. What a beautiful thing is snow. E. H. LINDLEY. Surely to be a post one must have a great imagination or else complete the pieces before the snow mists. Esse man serves as a guide. The man serves a menu of frozen slush after a day of thawing snow and ice and the city officials and townpeople dems the slush so beautiful that they see it having the wails, and streets cleaned. A BRAZILIAN NUT FOR BRITAIN TO CRACK British traders who are thinking of planning new year campaigns in South America may like to have a firsthand description of the rift which their representatives will have to face in those parts. Here is his portrait, given in English by a Brazilian writer in a magazine published in that country. try: "The American sellman is typically an energy which is to admire in the warmth of the tropics. Of a youthfulness generally he breathes lively and walks springly, searching for the sun's rays. He greets smiles, and is one to admirable his frank. He is fresh of the cold northerly. Yet under the breast of the American sellman beats the heart's warmness, thereby let us give him joy, with two hands open to him, crying. Welcome to Brand mist!" MASS MINDS The Nation Still they grow! incomplete figures of this year's registration shows the great universities breaking all records for enrollment. California's two universities, Columbia and Dartmouth; Columbia, Illinois, and Minnesota also top the 10,000 mark. Including part-time and summer colleges, Columbia has 30,526; California, 24,756; New York University, 29,564; Texas, 28,031; Pennsylvania, Michigan. AMARKS The Sift Shop JEWELRY We hope you got through finals. After a few days rest Start the new semester with a Sheaffer Fountain Pen We can also show you Conklin, Parker or Waterman pens Rankin's Drug Store Don't Be Bored! 1101 Massachusetts Phone 678 Read some interesting books between semesters. The Book Aook 1001 MOTORS. PHONE 656 FICTION POETRY DRAMA NON-FICTION CHILDREN'S BOOKS AND RENTAL LIBRARY Illinois, Chicago, Ohio State, Harvard, Boston and Northwestern all more than 10,000. Colloidal figures! Never before in history has the nation shown such a passion for education; never before have such multitudes had the opportunity for education. But are we ever going to see this happen? Do the news universities oust men who think, or just mules them? THE LEADING STUDENT TOURS TO EUROPE be christian Tuxedo Class of 1942 All expenses, sea and land, $255 up College on board for up to a year. May be upgraded to larger ship. STUDENTS TRAVEL CLUB 1640 Broadway - New York unend JAYHAWK CAFE VICTORY GARAGE Phone 88 622-624 Mass. Day and Night Service Towing a Specialty Storage General Repair Work An Award for Merit We are proud to have merited this award. . .mq in for a meal and see for yourself. The Red Seal Award is issued only to those hotels and restaurants that are operated above sanitary or any other standard required by the state law or the rules of the State Hotel Commission, as determined from the Inspector's Report. 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