PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY. NGV. 17. 1920 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editorial Staff Editor-in-Chief Autobiographer Campaign Editor Composer Night Editor Night Editor Treasurer Traditional Editor Editorial Editor Anthony Editor Journal Editor Robert P. Schawbaugh Robert Sighman Roman Taurose Rossadee Traube Frank Whitey Francesco Wong Jaeil Stirring Joseph Stirling Jon Sparks Joshua Business Staff Advertising Manager .. C. Chavez E. Mundel Advertisement Mer., M. W. Morgan Assist, Advertisement Mer., H. N. Moncourt Winners Mer., W. Winners Mer. Correlation Mer., Ali Van Marr George Ahlers Marylin Minter David Pineau Gilbert Filsen Filip Filsen Lawrence Kintail G. Haldane Crouse G. Haldane Kintail G. Haldane Crouse Telephone Business Office K. U. 66 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. Published in the Free of the Journalism of Journalism. Entered as second-degree mail matter Sep. ten 17, 1910, at the post office at Law town, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1997 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 17, 1926 THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION With the organization of the Missouri Valley section of the National Association of Alumnae Organizations we are reminded of the really large part the alumnae play in the life of our institutions of higher learning. The University of Kansas has benefited in many ways through its efficient alumni organization. The memorial building projects, though outstanding, are not the only instances of the good faith of the Jayhawkers who spent their undergraduate days on the BILL in years past. Student aids in the form of loan funds and scholarships, support of University programs, teachers' reunions, county club aid, organization of alumni emptys, and the publication of one of the finest graduate magnitudes are a few of the innumerable good things the alumni association is doing. Work of this type performed under the stimulus of the Valley and national organizations will show its increased value. One very important phase in which the alumn organisation could become proficient and thereby endure itself more genuinely to the undergraduate in a vocational bureau. Far too many students graduate without possessing definite means or knowledge of their next step into life. That period in the student's life could be bridged by an alumn employment or placement bureau. With successful Jayhawkher alumn established throughout the states information concerning possible modes of gainful employment could be turned into the alumni office and there made of use to students. This service need not be graft. Its success would be its own reward in an appreciative and grateful alumn. FAMILY VS. STATE 10. Securities could have heard Mr. Too Yan Wang, Chinese educator, discuss Confucianism in Myers hall last night, it is possible that we might have an effective league of nations now. Off hard, Confucianism seems to be a far call from the league of nation; yet when we stop to consider the effect such a philosophy would have had upon Europe and ourselves had Confucius been an early Greek it does not seem an improbable. A little over two thousand years ago the two ends of the world were politically a great deal alike. China was made up of a large number of small kingdoms. Greece, who ruled the European world, was made up of similar kingdoms or states. At this same time, about twenty-four hundred years ago in China and some five hundred years later in Greece, both nations produced two great schools of philosophy. The men who formulated these two philosophies were teachers. In character they had much in common; similarly, their teachings were essentially the same. Both attempted to define the perfect man and the perfect state. Both stressed truth, knowledge, and justice. The point of divergence was that the Chinese placed the individual before the state with the family as the perfect unit; the Greeks, the state before the individual with the city state the perfect unit; as Sorceres so aptly demonstrated by refusing an opportunity to escape the State's sentence of death. Today, the United States is some- No highway leads to Beauty. It must fail JOURNEY'S END Who travels posted road or quiet love Cartographers toil at their tasks with nine And offer thin, heart-colored maps for sale; But when we hasten over kill and date, Using this plotted guidance for our view. The ageless journey never finds the tane— There are more paths to tread, more seas to sail. For each little altar, and a way An strong sense of pride, and a song An struggle, as common on a village street To each argugy, to each u shore; Biotity is not more new than night and day. More magic than the daily bread we eat, More distant than the grass before our door. —Alice Martin for The Christian Science Magazine. names called the modern Greece. It is a certainty that the philosophy of Greece has been incorporated in our religion and our own philosophies. Our creed is still the same; the individual is to be sacrificed for the good of the state—sometimes we call it culture. China on the other hand has produced a race of philosophers. Her philosophy is her religion. And if she be crucified upon the cross of international greed she may justly blame it in part upon Confucius. So, with all respect to the glorious dead, we might give two great men their just ones by saying, Sorceres made the map, Confucius the man. What a shame they could not have gotten together 10,600 years ago. Thirty-one shopping days left be fore Christmas, or do you plan on staging a spot with your best girl? HARVARD AND PRINCETON DISAGREE As the culmination of a long series of real and imagined mutual injuries two of the oldest and most highly respected universities in the country have swerved athletic relations, on tensibly for all time. Whether Princeton was justified in taking such a radical step against its old friend is a question difficult to answer by those not intimately connected with either institution. To the casual observer, however, it appears that both schools are behaving like spoiled children in dealing with the affair. Prospects of defeat at the hands of old rivals and a few ill-considered jibes in a humorous magazine may well be conducive to ill-feeling upon the part of the two student bodies, but to use them as reasons for terminating a life-long friendship is foolish, to say the least. In a matter of such importance, more must be taken into consideration than the personal feelings of the present undergraduate body. Today there are thousands of alumni of the rival schools in constant association in the social and business worlds, many of whom have already expressed their strong disapproval of the action. To disregard them so flagrantly is to offer a slight to the best friends of any university; a slight which seems particularly strong in a section of the country where appearances are highly valued as they are in the East. What both of these schools need is to apply the old formula of "Counting one hundred" before taking any further rash action. While they are counting that hundred, too, let them step aside for a moment and try to see the thing in the same perspective from which it is being regarded by the entire country. Come Princeton, come Harvard, no, no; mustn't get mad. Naughty, naughty. Now, listen. Marie, if you happen to run out and buy any of it over here, you'll better try it on one out of the dukes or generals in your party. Secretary Mellon antes President Coolidge's tax cut. Our team seems to have been a little confused this season. It did not start fighting until Armistice day. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN VOL. II, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2005 The regular meeting of the Men's Student Council will be held this evening, Wednesday, in Green hall at 7:30 o'clock. ALBERT PETERSEN, President. Vol. VIII Wednesday November 37, 1926 No. 58 +++++++++++++++++++++ MEN'S STUDENT COUNCIL: --is not synonymous with ability to reflect upon what is road. Edinburgh can follow a syllogism, without people then to detect a fallacy, but left them to detect a fallacy, so with its near relation, the half-trail. For, though it has been described as better than no bread, half a loaf is better than no bread, half a crust is not only not better than no bread, half a crust is ENGLISH LECTURE; The second number of lectures on Contemporary Literature will be given Thursday afternoon, Nov. 18, at 4:30 o'clock in room 205, Fraser hall, by Miss Rose Morrison, who will speak on "W. D. Howells." ALICE WINSTON, Chairman of Committee. The Sociology club will bear Dr. Elridge on "The Abolition of the Language Berry," Thursday evening, Nov. 18, at 7:00 o'clock in Westminster hall. All students who intend to do scientific work requiring the use of foreign languages will be invited to the club are invited. CLARENCE O. SENIOR SOCIOLOGY CLUR: "Lanchester Thursday evening, Nov. 18, at 5:30 o'clock in room 304, Snowville. Dr. Homer R. Lathier will speak on the "History of the Pearl Button Industry." FRANCES DUNMORE. Secretary. PHI SIGMA2 An important meeting of all members and pledges will be held Thursday evening, Nov. 18, at 7:15 o'clock, at Myers hall. A program has been planned and there are some important business matters to be discussed. RUTH SHAW. President BETHANY CIRCLE: Editorials From Other Hills (The Trojan) The Light of Truth Stanley Baldwin, Prime Minister of Great Britain, in his reporter address in Bingham University, said the follow-up regard to the salient point of an interview. --is not synonymous with ability to reflect upon what is road. Edinburgh can follow a syllogism, without people then to detect a fallacy, but left them to detect a fallacy, so with its near relation, the half-trail. For, though it has been described as better than no bread, half a loaf is better than no bread, half a crust is not only not better than no bread, half a crust is "Throughout all these interviews in which you are engaged in this Uni, you are exposed to our own confusing knowledge and learning to think crinkly. The later is the more difficult this or any university can render the diction which is laid upon it, and to send four years after your prosecution only a stick of ideas, but minds which understand them." Goethe once observed, in the most terrible force in nature, that it may destroy in its passage the accumulated and material capital of generations." 1 2 On Other Hills In preparation for a recent booster celebration at Leland Stanford, freshmen were required to put in at least fifteen hours of work on the pyre proper and eight hours in grading around the center of the celebration. The thousand houses were offered the university by local merchants for the affair. Ten hours were added to the graduation requirement of a student at the University of Washington, Seattle, for removing books from the library without them checked in his name. Students of Stanford University will have an opportunity to voice their opinion on the prohibition question at the meeting authorized by the executive committee. --conduct site on the map of the week, and then move to a different map. It is independent, and appeals to the attention of the investigators. Marion of the investigation is conceived with the aid of an idea for a case, and team-building, enshoring the tape and team-building, enabling the investigator to use his own skills and her character. Its been WIEDIE'S for over fifty years THE COCA-COLA COMPANY ATLANTA, GA A Cut-In Both Can Enjoy A Coca-Cola cut-in is always good taste. So shines a good drink in a thirsty world. IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS = 7 MILLION A DAY Real Hot Chili CITY DRUG STORE 715 Mass. Phone 17 R. R. Hickson The New Student Published every week from October to June with monthly magazine sections. $1.50 a year. THE NEW STUDENT 2929 Broadway, New York I'll try the poem for a year. (Distributed $1.50) (Promo) Name Address VALUES In Footwear While the Stock Lasts 4-Buckle Galoshes $4.95 Zippers----$4.25 Hiking Boots for Women—$5.00 Hiking Boots for Men—$5.50 to $7.50 "Help twist that tiger's tail "in Carl's Clothes —calling your attention to the "Varsity"—late fall model suit by Hart Schaffner & Marx, featuring the loose back, clover leaf lapel coat trousers loose-in fancy blues,and patterns- $42.50 - $45 - $50 For the Game—— New Manhattan Shirts New flip briat Hats New wool Hose New Neckwear New Mufflers New Gloves You want to look your "best" and you will, if your clothes carry the below label— Giad to show you "Enter Madame" But there are two ways of making it always a triumph. One is to wear a new gown on every appearance. 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