PAGE TWO MONDAY, OCT. 4, 1921 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editorial Staff Editor-In-Chief Alice Van Beaufort Associate Editor John Bibb Associate Editor John Bibb News Editor Mary Elizabeth Cullen News Editor Larissa G. Cullen Plain Tale Editor Larissa G. Cullen Foxinghills Editor Charles Edgarton Smart Editor Gerald E. Caldwell Smart Editor Advertising Manager. Wm. Ethan Reynman Antl. Advertising Marr. — Carrie E. Monde Antl. Advertising Marr. — Ransel Hoya Foreign Aiv. Marr. — Maude C. Hayro Vaughn Klein Karl Nierimple Jipper Schowalter Jeske Tucker Marco Stuffucci Johns books Dougley Tabler Gary Sternberg Gregory Saunders Jim Guve Marcus Strutta Steven Books Business Office K. 17.64 Name: Henry K. 17.63 Published in the afternoon, law time, week and on Sunday morning, by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Houston, the Trent of the Department of Journalism. Entered as redeemer and mail noe. November 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kannan, under the act of March 3, 1897. MONDAY, OCT. 4, 1926 WORTH PLAY IT FOR ALL ITS WORTH All is in readiness. The ball is placed and at the shrill whistle of the referee, twenty-two spirited, energetic young men clash together to battle for their school's colors, while crowds in the grandstands rise to cheer them on. The football season has opened. Football will be the paramount extra-curricular interest for the coming weeks. But why do schools devote so much time to such an interest as this? Not merely to have their team energetic victories so that the name of the school may be flaunted over the country as a sectional victory, but to give the youth of the land the spirit of good, clean competition; to harm win and accept success modestly; to take a defeat cheerfully with the determination to go back and fight harder the next time and to play the game hard and play it square. Each year the sport collects its toll from the participants, a price very dear to pay. No one person nor any single school can justify mass judgment on the relative exchange values. Such can come only through the expression of aggregate mass of colleges and universities. Football is the fashion of the son son. Play the game hard, and play it for its full and true value. OUR PERIODIC PADDLING Why couldn't the Kansas of admitted that the father might of stood by the fountain in Brick's, where he couldn't of jumped? How could the young man world of some in his usual morning coke. Yes, yes, we know it hurts. Mr White more than it does us, and all that, but anyway here's what he do to us in last Friday's Emporia Gazette: The University Kannan is talking about a father who arrived in Lawrence without knowing his son's address. Says the Kannan: He came to us and if we haven't heard of him, we probably wouldn't have even heard of him. Somehow we feel wed hate to o been his son Bill at the spanking up if the young man ever split na in finitive. SCHOOLS OF EXPERIENCE No amount of study in school or college can substitute for experience, says Henry Ford in his announcement that industry bears a distinct responsibility toward youth in supplying it with gainful occupation and thereby reducing crime. And with lack of experience goes lack of judgment—the mature judgment that is required of workers. That is why young men find it so difficult to obtain work in the hard practical world of business. Whether college men realize it or not, upon leaving school they will discover the truth in Mr. Ford's state that industry is making it hard for the young man to obtain work. That this comes at a period in life when a person is in greatest need of self-support accounts for the socially serious results if no remedy is found. Mr. Ford's offer to open his vast organization to admit young men from the ages of 14 to 20, and to give them gainful occupation, is a trial in alleviation worthy of commendation. It is no secret that upperclassmen at colleges and universities are on the average quite uncertain as to their Corn-Grinding Song Siaging, 'Hitherward, hitherword' 'Hitherward, hitherword' sander, sander are the fair window, ve the rainbow brightly decked and waited! Now the small hexaget glad never to your core. Wither name? Singing, "Hikineerd, hikineerd hikineerd, white stand." Hither Come! we hear the corn plants mur- mer. "We are growing everywhere!" Hi, sir, the woman here —From "American Indian Love Lyrics," Selected by Nellie Barnes. future field of work. That may be natural enough in an age of increased the danger Mr. Food seeks to eliminate, manely, the increasing army of idle young men. The time has come when education and programs must pay more attention to the practical training of youth. We present it is only too true the all experience and judgment must be emphasized in the School of Hard Knocks. with the understanding that the period of training comes after the college stage. With education taking up more of one's early life is it not time for our educational programs in some fashion to provide a simultaneous practical training like this? Surely it is its duty to supply the lack that Mr. Food has seen in it so that graduates may leave their Alma Mater with more jouse their Alma Mater with more than a mere degree with which to recruit the cruel, naked practical world. THESE GOLDEN, GLGOMY DAYS Clouds, dill gray clouds, hanging close above Mt. Orean, Krain drizzling and pouring by turns, and sopping down the back of one's neck. A once green gridiron rapidly being charmed into mud—Kansas mud. Three years ago it would have been a gloomy afternoon. But this year? Why, this year the more rain, the more gale the occasion. A professional decorator's supreme effort would have been impid beside the spontaneous achievement of this football crowd. Coming from over the Hill, where everything was glacier and murky, the spectator gapped on rounding the corner of Memorial stadium. Rais, greens, violets, purple, blues—and yellow enough to satisfy any exotic Oriental taste. Sky and earth lost their murky, muddy appearance. Jupiter Pluvius' attack was forged at sight of this auroral display. Aurora? More than that! A sunrise behind fierce clouds, a sunset after a storm, and the aurora berries, all three in one—these ducks. Campus Opinion --us take as our example the last one. One hundred and one stage pass admission, and three hundred and three hundred and sixty-two dollars. If one dollar were the price charged at the dates the $25, for a total of $417, or $55 more than was actually taken in person, it is not reminiscent that there be surplus of the former at the tenderer's disposal; a desirable number of "eligible" girls of the University stayed home Saturday night for want of a date. We have a democratic social system such as prevails upon this Hill and upon the world, they are inevitable at all social functions. And since this is the case, let's remove this misery failed in its purpose, and give all a fair deal. Limitation of the number we should and should be dealt with separately, but legislating against the star should not be tolerated. Dances were many many years before the present plan was adopted, and some of them were unable failures at that!—K. C. Editor Daily Kansan: Saturday evening the University of Kansas had its usual variety dance on the Hill. The music was hot, the room was hot, the girls—well, not too hot, probably the hottest of all were the hundred or so stages, or rather would have been the evening. They fretted and fumed, fumed and planned, two-bag parlor, perspired, and conceived all to secure admission, all of which convinces the writer that Kansas still has that problem is as far away from a solution now as it ever was. But the unjust discrimination against the stag prevailing under our present regulations of stags at this time, but rather My first contention is amply supported in the first start of this article. The second is proven by the concrete example of any variability dance, but let The Book Exchange will be open Tuesday, Oct. 5, from 2 to 11 o'clock (Will students who let) books please call and see if they have been sold? --us take as our example the last one. One hundred and one stage pass admission, and three hundred and three hundred and sixty-two dollars. If one dollar were the price charged at the dates the $25, for a total of $417, or $55 more than was actually taken in person, it is not reminiscent that there be surplus of the former at the tenderer's disposal; a desirable number of "eligible" girls of the University stayed home Saturday night for want of a date. We have a democratic social system such as prevails upon this Hill and upon the world, they are inevitable at all social functions. And since this is the case, let's remove this misery failed in its purpose, and give all a fair deal. Limitation of the number we should and should be dealt with separately, but legislating against the star should not be tolerated. Dances were many many years before the present plan was adopted, and some of them were unable failures at that!—K. C. BOOK EXCHANGE; OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN col. VIII Monday, December 4, 1929 No. 3 There will be a Y, M, C, A. meeting for all men of the University at 7:30, Tuesday evening, Oct. 5, at Myers hall, K. A. Blackman, "The Fighting Parson" of Kansas City, will speak. Y. M. C. A.1 HAROLD SMITH, President It is admirable that a few must always oversteer the limits and especially so on this occasion. Parades in them are often accompanied by trames" for their success. Neither were sure methods necessary in this case, but the more they did just as, well and it would have left only pleasurable thoughts instead of disappointment that was awaived—An obsession that was aroused. —An Opus Sixty men are reporting regularly for varsity football practice at Central College, Fayette, Mo., a school of only a few hundred. PHI DELTA KAPPA: Kappa Chapter of the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity will meet in room 119, France hall, at 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 6. All members are urged to be present as plans for the enboarding will be discussed. All members of other chapters of the Phi Delta Kappa are cordially invited to attend. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SMOKER: Jugging from the garb of certain students and Saturday night in the apartment, the cheerleader too literally in conversation Friday morning to forget a lot about having a lot in the University student, but there were many who were distracted by what they saw in which a few of the men thought it "cute" to appear. They were even proudly called attention to their scanty covering and made offensive comments. There will be a smoker for all students and faculty of the School of Business Wednesday evening, Oct. 6, at the home of Dean Frank T. Stockton, 1216 Louisiana St., at 7:30 o'clock. Mr. Charles D. Hayworth, an officer of the First National Bank of Kansas City, Mo, has been secured for speaker. Editor Daily Kansan. Book Notes BY EDGAR P. SCHOWALTER --wear brown or black, $7.75. Student's lunch, $7.50. Penil, $4.25. Wear white, $7.75. Lunch packs—fifteen cents. The Human Adventure, by James Henry Breasted and James Harvey Robinson. 2 volumes. New York: Harpers, 81. Combining all the knowledge of past civilizations with the most recent discoveries about man's history, these able historians present a new review of human progress. The first volume, The Congress of Civilization, by Professor Breasted, takes up much story from the pre-Columbian period while the second, The Ordeal of Civilization, by Professor Robinson, the history is continued to date. Three American Plays, by Laurence Stallings and Maxwell Anderson, New York; Harcourt, Brace & Co., $2.50. Those interveed in dreams, and others over the release of this book, for it presents in published form for the first time the war play, "What Price Glory." In addition it offers "The Warrior," a comedy with "The Bacchae," which also made its debut about a year ago. Why We Behave Like Human beings, by George A. Dorssey, New York; Harper's, Gift edition, 8. This book first appeared in 1934 and, later, is a special gift edition of attractive design. Doctor Dorssey offers offerings on the belief that human beings are the most important things in the world, so their short lives need to get along with them and with one another. An Ober Topcoat will keep you warm and dry. Among the Door Mats "What are you smiling about?" "Why, didn't you know? I've been bought by a man who wears Ober Shoes!" New Winter Oxfords $6 $8.50 $10 AFTER EVERY MEAL Comp. Campus News Sport News Official Chancellor's Bulletin Complete Campus News THE KANSAN GIVES YOU-wear brown or black, $7.75. Student's lunch, $7.50. Penil, $4.25. Wear white, $7.75. Lunch packs—fifteen cents. Full Science Service United Press Service State and National News Delivered to Your Door Six Days a Week Official Student Paper A Necessity for the up-to-the-minute Student. $4.00 for the year LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 9 School of Commerce, Commercial training, Banking, Accounting and Auditing. Need for entangling. Suiting You—That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 07 May 2016 . THE CLOTHES, HATS HABERDASHERY AND SHOES In Exhibition DEVELOPED BY FINCHLY FOR COLLEGEUS USAGE FOR FALL WILL BE EXHIBITED BY A REP RESENTATIVE FROM NEW YORK AT ELDRIDGE HOTEL Torrey and Tomorrow Jack Peters, Rep. PARTICULAR INTEREST IS INVITED TO THE EXTRAORDINARY FABRICS OF FOREIGN SELECTION. PATTERNS CONFINED SOLELY TO THIS ESTABLISHMENT, FORTY-FIVE DOLLARS AND MORE TALLORED TO MEASURE It's a constant attendant at all the schools of America The Lifetime* pen, with its identifying white dot on the cap, is greatly in evidence everywhere. Students like it best (1) because of its unfailing performance, (2) because of its beautiful green luster, (3) because of the fact that it is made of sturdy Radite, a practically indestructible material, (4) because of its guarantee, which completely insures it against all repair expenses. Spot it by the dot—at better stores everywhere. SHEAFFER'S PENS. PENCILS. SKRIP W. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY *Fig. 10.2: Part of it. For Sale by the College Jeweler