PAGE TWO PALE BLANC THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1926 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Assoc. Prof. of Engg. & Sci. Editorial Staff John Bibby In- Chief Eugene Wilson Bradley Editor Charles Egerton Monday Editor Stephen Meyer New Editor Darcy Taylor Tucker Taylor Tucker Friedland Editor Stiff Editor Vanishman Editor Stirring Editor G. Clark Strumpf Alfred Editor Glenn D. Hancock John Skeets Business Stam Olber Board Members Advertising Manager ... Mw. Nilphen Nipperson Auditing Advisor Mgr. — Carineve B. Mendel Assst. Advertising Mgr. — W. Morgan C. Foreign Adv. Mgr. — Meade C. Monroe George Alben Nathan Miller John Gibbs Gene Flahey Edward Kliman Filink Robert Hightman Robert Slightman Russell Wintzborn Gertude Marcy George Wetmore Goy Gripes Margaret Neumann Robert Slightman telephones Telephones Business Offices 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 of Georgia, from the Press of the Imperial This is your day, Dads. Yours is the position of honor guest. Your children, your whims and your desires are as commands to us, the sons and daughters who have kept you busy digging down into the old family stock that we might enjoy the privilege we share our students here. in accordance with the address of mennonah mail master Sep- tember 15, 2009 at the post office at law law office, Mahanau, under the set of March 3, 1987 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1926 DAD RULES TODAY You're young today. That mischievous gray hair and that generous wand housemite untruths; they belong to older people than you. We are all the same age; we are all foolish kids; we are all a million miles from business and study today. The mill, the shop, the office, the store, the farm—all can look to their own interests this day, and the classroom, the trade instructor, the quizzes and thems can go to amma. When Dads are here it is time for good fellows to get together and forget the deadening routines of school or of work. We're all happy today. Dads. You make us feel pretty good when you send the little pink skirt with the doted line all signed which comes rolloing in about the first of each month, so when you send the news of the family in a friendly letter) but today you make us feel like shouting aloud. You're here! we're here; we're all happy. We'll have a good time and we want you to know that you are the kind of boss we like. The University bows down to you today, admitting the superior rank of Dad. Command us; Dads; we will do your bidding, for this is your day. Grant in the pleasure of serving you, for serving a master who is the pal you are to be. ARMISTICE DAY This is your day It seems impossible that eight years have passed since that memorable day when bells and whistles in every city and village announced that peace was declared. It seems impossible for the ninth time we dedicate November 11 to the war heroes who are with us now, as well as those who did not return when the clouds of battle-smoke railed away. Arnette day at the University will be celebrated by Dad's day, a big football game, and several nationally known visitors. The Armistice day of eight years ago who saw fathers waiting anxiously for word from their sons on the far-off battleground, has given place to one which sees happy, gentle fathers sucking to the University to be with their sons and daughters on the one day of the year that is set aside for the pleasure of Father alone. Perhaps among them are some of the father who nine years ago waited in vain, whose sons never returned. But there are those who contend that the war was based on no such high-sounding motive. They insist that it was entirely an economic war. Whatever the cause and the outcome of the war, it is not well for us to let our present comfortable, well-fed exploice permit us to forget the horrors of it. There was little that was Why did these other sons not return? Was it, an the phrase which has barely survived ten years of hard image tells us, because they gave their lives to "make the world safe for democracy?" If that is true, they gave their lives for a noble cause. glamorous, heroic, or romantic to the dhoughboys who lived in dirty treaches and faced cannon and poison gas day after day, day after year. It was the grimest sort of toil. There are some who predict another war. For it is known that underneath our calm exterior, there is a seething turmoil, which both nationally and internationally. As long as we remember the horrors of the recent World War, another war will not come to pass. Political and economic differences can be, and will be, settled by tolerance, and a broad understanding of the other nation's point of view, as well as our own. So let us pause on this Armistice Day, while we are celebrating the anniversary of the day peace was declared, "test we forget." A DEDICATION Today shall witness a fitting dedication of the Memorial Stadium For several years the stadium has been serving its purpose athletically while standing a mute remembrance of those who left halls of the University in their nation's service during the Great War. Its meaning has never been totally forgotten, though it may have been temporarily obscured by the interest of the passing moment. Today, however, on the very day set aside as a memorial to the new hopes that grew out of the close of the war and to the men who helped make those hopes possible, we are to rededicate the stadium. It is fitting that the war making hatred should be commemorating by a memorial used in the competition of which good will is the chief component. FORECASTING Forcasting of weather has developed into a fairly accurate profession, but those who attempt to predict the outcome of presidential elections two years in advance often meet with a downfall. During the past week many forecasts have been made. Cold weather was prophesied for Kansas—we have it! The 1928 presidential nominees have been chosen—in theory—but nominating conventions are not so reliable as the weather. Al Smith and Jim Reed are the homes of the wet weather crowd when it comes to Democratic nominees. Both are courageous politicians, but they have their disadvantages. In the first place, certain sections of the country are too dry to support a flood. Religion is another obstacle to Smith, while Reed has the hostility of the old Wilson group. The dryes are searching for a dark horse, but have been rather unsuccessful up to date. The first presentation of the Kansas Players, "In the Next Room," a stirring melodrama, met with the constantly growing approval of the audience and the expectations of those who enjoyed the work of these Players last summer. The Republicans are evidently sleeping through the winter with an eye wide open above ground. The election stirred them considerably when David I. Walsh was elected senator in Massachusetts over President Coidge's personally endorsed friend, and the loss of a working majority in the senate may also something of a shock. Prophecies have it, however, that Calvin Coidge will be reenominated with the cry that fair weather and prosperity have marked his past administration. With the morning comes rationalization but as long as night lasted so did the quilvery shivers. "In The Next Room" thrilled its spectators until the really short intermissions seemed intermineable with their hundreds of speculated solutions buzzing about. Who will be the next president? Not even the prophets know. In the meantime the storm is approaching and the public is gaining valuable information from the forecasts. --get any letters from any parents, "I've a much better ambition," ex At The Theater By Dorothy Taylor Every person in the well filled house uncomplicated counted the shiwers which race down his spine. The actors held their audience completely. The play itself is a well written melodrama by Eleanor Robson and Although the action was slightly slow at first, it gradually worked up in the first scene to the proper pitch which it maintained throughout the remaining acts without a drop. Thrill followed thrill as the mysteries of the buil cabin were revealed and the preceding accepted every action, idea or theory. Every well timed action left no time for speculation until the intermissions which added to the emotional suspense. Harriet Ford which was first produced in New York about two winters ago. But it was the able direction shown in the quick rhythm, tense prunes, and emphasis, which gave the pliny its power. Professor Allen Crafton gave a characteristically excellent interpretation of the role of Felix Armand alas Colonel Piggott,巨马 Cross. He kept one's nerves on edge and one's eyes ever seeking out his movements. Parks, the butter, played by Harold Adamson, was acceptingly convincing while Professor Robert Caldwell as well as his co-director before a Lawrence audience, wrote. Laura Ballou and George Calhoun played with restraint the two sympathetic roles assigned them. The various smembers of the police force were typical with their air of importance while accomplishing nothing and Leand Barrows, as the footman and best excellent acting Marian Keck, who inspired the part of the lovely Madame Charrier, who 2004 stole presence. Jenna Crafton, as the male in lived as a suspect, took full advantage of her part. But until Mrs. Crabbe makes an incorrect character loved as the Candidate, she will always be Candidate to the disguest, not matter what the disguise On the whole the acting was most adequate; the direction excellent, and the result was a convincing and thorny performance of the "thrill getting" mebodrum. Editorials From Other Hills The Pestiferous Alumni (McGill Daily) Under this suggestive title *Perez Marks, notoriac for his contribution to the literature that denies college education in the relation between the alumna and the college in an article which appears a recent issue of Harper's Magazine. He tells the story that several college presidents were discussing what they would do after they retired, when they got fired. One question, Well, said one of them, "I don't know that I'd be fit for anything but I know what I'd like to do." Did he have any experience with orphanage so that I would never get any letters from my parents?" Mr. Murke is concerned with the problem in it exists in the American colleges where the continued intercourse of students with administrators of University affairs has rendered the lives of many college students unlivable, and an annual manifest an insidious desire to control the athletic policies of UF. The UF administration has brouse a bundle to their institution. There cannot be enough ralloring and brittle exhibitions of organized elems. This tendency in American education is to be deferred. While measures of academic achievement should emphasize the ambivalent nature in this affair of their alum maters, university needs should not preempt themselves to accept a definite answer. The graduates who have passed out of the active arena of undergraduate education may not be admitted to the administration of the college; they may not dictate the policies of the universities and they no longer form an integral part. claimed another, "I want to be a warden of a penitentiary. The alums would never come back to visit." On Other Hills All students registered at Stanford University are being required to sign an honor system pledge this quarter. After this quarter every new student must sign the pledge when making application for admission. We Specialize in Fraternity Financing The pledge reads as follows: "I agree to live up to the letter and article of the student honor system by honesty in all my personal conduct and by neither giving nor receiving unpermitted aid in examination, class exercises or any other work that it be goodring. If I witness this act, I agree to withdraw from the University." Watkins National Bank More than five hundred delegates representing 69,000 women in the state of Michigan are in Ann Arbor attending the convention of women's states at the University of Michigan. The Women's Club, the American Association of University Women and the Women's League. During this snappy weather let us serve you a nice steak. I'm sure that you will enjoy it. --at Woolf Brothers." On Other Hills Of the $62,541 of state funds released by the Gov. Sam A. Baker at Jefferson City, $114,908 will go to the University of Missouri. The university's share will be used for the company's scientific laboratories, agricultural extension work, and soil and crop experiments. A party of a dozen or more members of Sigma Gamma Raise, graduate students in geology, and members of the faculty of the geology department of the University of Michigan, will visit the Ozark region this week on a field trip. They will travel by truck and camp out. --at Woolf Brothers." De Luxe Cafe 711 Mass. When Planning Week-ends Round Trips Kansas City, $1.80 Topeka, $1.15 Enjoy the satisfaction of traveling economically and conveniently. Luxurious, modern coaches every forty-five minutes for Topeka Kaasas City Leavenworth Student special Leaves Leavenworth for Lawrence 7 p. m. every Sunday THE INTER STATE STAGES Phone 363 Have you tried Reese's Lifer hair Oil? It will keep your hair smooth, place and not too greasy. It's very veniable for a large bottle. REESE, DRUGGIST 929 Mass. Hey Boy! 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