PAGE TWO WWW.SHAREDOPERM.DATE.NAME.NAM PAGE FIVE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7. 7026 University Daily Kansai Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff Editor in Chief Edgar P. Schwarzman Ruby Editor Rachel Edgar Ruby Editor Chester Gibson Ruby Editor News Editor Russell Wintershall Spirit Editor Filip Filippov Spirit Editor Samuel Roussel Spirit Editor Virginia C. Johnson Virginia C. Johnson John Quarts Virginia C. Johnson Harvey Burrus Alumni Editor Harvey Burrus Business Staff Other Board Members Advertising Manager — Currence E, Mendel Aust. Advertising Mgr. — W. Morgan Corp. Banking Mgr. — J. Herschel Corp. Foreign Acv. Mgr. — Wm. Ellen Reynolds Circulation Mgr. — Alice Van Mansel George Alben Directions Typhoon Hawaii Geraldine Fisher Directions Gwennie Beardy Geraldine Beardy Mary Eleanor Elmore Directions Katrina Katrina Gail Erickson Directions Gail Erickson Ellen W. Johnson Directions Jae McMullen Business Office. K. U, 66 News Room. K. U, 27 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 Press of the Department Entered an second-class mail matter September 12, 1978, at the post office at Lawrence Kanaan, under the act of March 3, 1977. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1926 DAILY EXERCISE If the annual health week being conducted under the auspices of the Women's Athletic Association abolishes the "dearine exchange" it will not have been promoted in vain. The passing of one of the greatest ierients to the men of the Hull will be sure for that organization eterna commendation. One of the points on the health chart to be bent by all women this week is thirty minutes of exercise daily. If only five minutes of this exercise were exercise of the brain the University would be having health week continually instead of a short period in which complicated rules are carried. Using common sense the year around would work for efficiency more than concentration on the subject for one week in the student. Even to consider oneself a high-powered mechanism would arise more thoughtfulness in relation to healthy habitats than many women students expend on themselves at the present time. W. A. A., in placing before the students the idea of good health is undertaking a worthy project which would be even more effective if carried out during the entire year instead of being condensed into one short week. A second point on the health care days, "no odees." Sights of despair went up from organized houses Monday morning at the innumerable weather, but few ventured to do the ungainly gloomy, and perhaps, even those few sat through heated classes without removing their coats. Of course, the cold is going to win in that game of tag. THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT The sale of Christmas candles was started a few years ago when the students of the war-diddled countries of Europe were struggling against great odds to obtain an education. The proceeds from the sale of the candles were sent across the sea to aid the students there and to alleviate their suffering. It was a Christmas gift carrying with it friendship and understanding as well as aid and comfort, not only a gift of money but an offering as true in beauty and spirit as were the gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh of the Wise men in Bethlehem. This year the same spirit is to be the motive of the gift. The Christmas candle fund is to be an expression of joy at the approach of the holiday season, a sharing of some small part of our opportunities with those who are less fortunate. In giving all of the fund for foreign relief, either to students on the campus or to those abroad, selfish desires have been overcome and the real Christmas spirit shines in the offering. NEED IT BE SO? Those who have been observing the childish scrump Harvard and Princeton are staging may be interested in the following editorial from the Harvard Lampoon, which did much to bring to a head the ill will already breeding between the two Big Three schools; It is customary, at times of athletic inviol failures such as, to extend the editorial form of "the friend," and to conceive a "friendship" bond, "spart for the future" and "to fail" and the small catch phrases that are used in the former two contexts, to obstruct, to discuss the fact that one cannot return, to describe the fact that one cannot return between Invital and Prisoner are purely coincidental, and to describe an arbitrary committee to its affectionate conclusion. it is cute. This baby felt harbor of feeling; it has been on easily throughout the years and the parents wanted to teach their son to drain Princeton from the Harvard aquarium to drain Princeton from the Harvard aquarium to drain Princeton from the part of the aquarium that does no change of heart on the part of his father. The kids did like to see Princeton droppet, but they didn't want to do anything else. So doubt Princeton's feelings are the same. And they would protect that today's content will be something to tell the children about. Larry would have been very excited when the aquarium it will be a photoshop frostier. Once more the old操作系统, battling-hatchery made the most of them. The more mention there is of the certain animals spirit, the more mention of all of us which break out periodically of mind Such seems to have been the climactic feelings that resulted in the severing of athletic relations of the two noted schools; a split which alumni committees of the two institutions are valiantly struggling to bridge in the face of conflicting opinions held by the two alumni groups. That such feelings are absurd and unnecessary when carried to extremes is shown by the conditions existing at other institutions. Though the Jaushwaker and the Tiger tangle annually in a struggle to the finish, the normal contacts between the two state schools are those of rivalry and not of ill will, as shown in the following letter from the athletic director at Missouri, Mr. C. L. Brewer; I want to express to you my congratulations and appreciation for your editorial “Wife of the South,” which she wrote in provisions of momentum and bleak for our intermediate abstraction that keeps the game to present my experience together with the alphabets that we at Missouri had toward the war. We have three complete copies of the annuaries and one conjunction. I have ever seen it. It was Fortunate as the Tiger and the Jay-bunner are, friction occasionally does arise between rival institutions to a degree that is dangerous. And when that foe point is reached as at Harvard and Princeton, then the time has arrived to break off; but need that point be reached? Unless the student directories come forth soon the ancient history professors will be assigning them to their classes for readings. COLLEGE PERVERSION The way that the students of Cornell College dissipated last week was something terrible. They met in a mass meeting and deliberately decided to do it—the vote was 248 to 48—and even against the wishes and warnings of the dean of men and several members of the faculty, they went ahead and held a student dance. Of course it wouldn't have been so bad, but it was the first student dance to be held in the history of the college. Just think of the college traditions that have now been broken down—think of the hovering ghosts of dead alumni—of the displaced souls of those who attended. Oh, how dreadful! A Chicago educator reports that school children do very badly in arithmetic when the skies are overcast. Most KodaEvidly evident make out their Christmas budgets on gloomy days. In the pioneer days of the Roentgen ray, more commonly known as the X-Ray, its scientific value was more generally surmised than definitely known by medical men. Here and there a doctor experimented with the new discovery. These trail blazers spared no effort in finding the profitable uses to which this boon to science could be put. HEROES OF SCIENCE Working as did these pioneers without specific knowledge of the great power of the X-Ray, they did not take precautions they should have exercised. For hours some of them were wont to experiment with the invisible mysterious light rays. A long time afterward these same men began to discover about their persons, chiefly their hands which had most often been exposed to the X-Ray, the appearance of burns. Nothing would heal the burns; they became more aggravating and finally developed into cancerous wounds. Too late, for a half-dozen or so of There will be a special meeting of the Companional Club Wednesday evening at 7, at the club house. CLIFFORD JONES, Secretary. "ENGLISH AS IT MICHT HAVE BEEN:" COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN VOL. VIII Tuesday, 7 December, 1926 No. 74 --these brave pioneers, it was learned that the X-Ray can destroy tissue as well as heal it; that protection must be used in handling the powerful ray. But in their suffering the world of science learned how to use the new discovery for the benefit of the race, and today the X-Ray is indispensable to human life. Prof. Josephine Burham will speak to English majors and others interested Wednesday afternoon, December 6, at 1:30 in room 269, Fennell hall, on the second floor of the Merrill Building. PI LAMBDA THETA: Initiation will be held Wednesday, Dec. 8, at 7:50 p.m., at Henley house TWILA STORMER, Secretary. SNOW ZOOLOGY CLUB: There will be a meeting of Snow Zoology club in the lecture room of Snow hall, at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 8, Dr. H, H, L. Hurt will speak. This is the club's open house meeting, and all students interested in zoology are cordially invited. W, H, HURT, President. FRESHMEN: --these brave pioneers, it was learned that the X-Ray can destroy tissue as well as heal it; that protection must be used in handling the powerful ray. But in their suffering the world of science learned how to use the new discovery for the benefit of the race, and today the X-Ray is indispensable to human life. Filmv Froth The next lecture in the course of lectures on contemporary literature will be given by Miss Hopson, at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 18, in room 269. Pearson Hall (A) will be closed for this lecture. W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman Department of English. with the perfection of X-Ray technique it is hoped Doctor Sengel will be the last to suffer for its advancement. One by one, these pioneer martyr to science have been dropping by the wayside, their lives given that others might live. One or two still live, their living a constant pain, in their hearts the knowledge of the immortality of their service. Only last week at Wichita an arm was amputated in another one of numerous attempts to stop the cancerous condition that has been endangered Dr George H. Siegel's life ever since the days when he became a benefactor to humanity through his X-Ray experimentation. "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" with Rudolph Valentine and Alice Terry, a Rex Ingram produce show, showing at the Bowersuckee戏院. --were all done with a fine feeling and understanding. Without the aid of a particularly sympathetic or even interested orchestra, Rudolph Valentine's first well-known starring vehicle, a realistic presentation of the World War, was a character recognized by the recognized, or rather admitted success of the star's performance as Julio Deamayers, and the adequate portrayal by Alice Terry of Marguerite Laurier, the characters of the Centaur, the dancer, of the French father and of the prophet of the Four Hornsman. Rex Ingram, and June Mathis, the scenario writer, undertook a big subject with a fine appreciation of its small moments as well as the well-selected dramatic moments of its big scene. A, J. S. Joef Swickard, as the father, was a puffish and valiant figure, struggling with the love for his son and a haunting desire to pay a debt to his country long due. The death of his beloved Marine caused the Navy to seize a scene of terrifying interest. The German and his home life with his spectacled sons, the lipped-capped boud, and the plague of the Kaiser on the wall, was almost too Germen to be German. But the climax, in the night on a rainy day, was that the German man cousin, if not original in itself, was unforgible in the rendering. Editorials From Other Hills Signs of Yesteryear (The Minnesota Daily) A short time ago we took occasion to depress the over-prevalence of HIV among young people in buildings. Having recognized the existence of the infinity, we now humbly thank them. --have outlived their unfitness would be merely a posture. In the enbustures of *Saturn*, they are enough set out, but in the unenthusiastic aftermath—'Aw, let the signs Without doubt, signs up to a certain limit—which we will winly not attempt to define—are bourgeois and inefficient. The signs made, directions given, and how, if not by signs, the evil will not in the setting up of signs so much as in their use. If signs are used for usefulness is pact, signs definitely out of data are a common sight. Look, for example, in the window windows of a post office. You will, as a general rule, find the sills covered with a layer or two of posters and announcements of all Ramones are held, but their signs remain after them. Concerts and plays leave their ghosts in the form of prints in the caves-of-the-time method of keeping fresh their memories by the more mineral and lasting method of leaving the printed announcements on the bulletin boards about the concert. CHOP SUEY To ask those persons responsible for the signs to remove them when they That delicious Chinese dish made by Chim's best cook can be eaten in the restful atmosphere at the VIRGINIA INN 846 Mass. OPEN AT NIGHTS SHIRTS--have outlived their unfitness would be merely a posture. In the enbustures of *Saturn*, they are enough set out, but in the unenthusiastic aftermath—'Aw, let the signs Carl's Neckwear Carrys Quality— Reefers $1.50 to $5 What every man needs and always an acceptable gift—A large selection of "Mimhattans" here for your choosing—Collar attached and neckband, white and fancy patterns— Interwoven Socks Gloves Perhaps the only remedy is for the powers to instruct the jammers to remove the announcements of events that are broadcast ground-grounds to do the same upon the cannons. It is not a stringent recall, but it would prove effective. On Other Hills --it is not worth the money you pay for it. --it is not worth the money you pay for it. The Military Arts department at the University of Arkansas has offered two prizes, $10 each, to be given to the best dacet cadet in each of the freshman and sophomore chasses. Offering of this prize is intended to further interest in military work. Stadium fund drives would not make alumni secretaries gray-knipped so quickly if every school has alumel like one University of North Carolina or the alma mater $275,000 for the construction of a new group of bleachers. The department of music at the Brigham Young University will present an oratorio and a grand opera during the winter quarter. The cast of *Metapollo* will be -competitive- and the cost for the grand opera will be selected. We have sold - 89 - Decorative Maps of the Campus at $1 Each "a novel Christmas Present" The Book Nook WE CLEAN SUITS, DRESSES AND OVERCOATS FOR $1 KIRBY Phone 420 THE CLEANER 1107 Mass. --it is not worth the money you pay for it. --it is not worth the money you pay for it. A Gift for Everybody The Remington Portable Typewriter M e n t of personal writing. The world's lightest writing machine with standard键盘 - tips the scales accurately$^8$pounds net. The most compact of all types machines - its in a very tiny only four inches high. A Remonton Portable makes the most practical, the most useful of all Christmas presents the girl in which it is set Come in and let us show it to you Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 737 Mass, St. —Gift Sets— Richard Hudnut, Three Flower and Du Barry Gift Sets for Christmas Come in early and have us hay away one before they are all gone. Rankin's Drug Store Handy for Students Stop in on your way home. 1101 Mass. You will enjoy your "Christmas Vacation" by using The Kansas City, Kaw Valley and Western Ry. Co. One way fare between Lawrence and Kansas City (City, Park) Kansas 79c Round trip fare between Lawrence and Kansas City (City Park) Kansas, $125 Return good for 30 days Baggage checked free Special cars for $5 or over any time. Our station at Kansas City is located to leading hotels; cars from in front of our station or on Uber. E. J. O'BRIEN, Traffic Manager THERE is no "half-way" in purchasing a clock. The one you select must be accurate—or A Clock is Either Reliable or Worthless These are advantages you receive when you select your clock from our complete display. Behind each Seth Thomas clock in our stock is the century-old reputation of its makers—and our own guarantee of service. TAMBOUR5 Both Thai students in the school have a master's degree. The school owns two private colleges. Dhilang, a busy business and ballet and harlem ballet school, is also owned by Klay Movement. Heights The greatest benefit of the beautifully tailored manikin show will add all art to any room. The manikin movement, hour and half hour show is three times as tall with 20" inch hats in light with 20". mid body bag. Nick each quarter of the hour on double tandem twin- sight goggles. Hold up your phone. Will a walkway move? No. They will not move. VERNON An attractress boudoule deck skiff, Gold Dial Two-footed, muggainy care. A day time movement, 0.5, indoor surface. The Christmas Jeweler Dependable Service means much to a person who is too busy to spend a lot of time with his wardrobe and yet wants to look his best on all occasions. We have specialized for several years on this particular idea—get it back on time. Remember you can send us the whole "works," dry cleaning and all. It will all come back together, and save you time and inconvenience. Lawrence Steam Laundry 10th & New Hampshire We clean everything you wear but your shoes . Phone 383