THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN the University of Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-chief Cavalier Harvackian News Editor Hemaw Hydev Telegraph Editor Clifford Hewitt Telegraph Editor Rabert Gilbert Editor, Hamilton Alumni Editor Lloyd Hamilton Alumni Editor Business Manager Aust. Bus. Mgr. Lloyd Rumpenthal John Montgomery, Jr. Lieuwley White Rahib Johnston Helen Jakka Rahib Johnston Helen Jakka Perry Jacky Myri Harger DeVaughn France Harger DeVaughn France Lauren Scott Laraun Cowdery Lauren Scott Laraun Cowdery Subscription price: $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kamaa aims to picture the history of Kamau as it progressed, and Kamau is no further than merely printing the books by standing for the Idia family. It is also intended to be clean; to be cheerful; to be friendly; to be humble; to have more serious problems than wakes habit; all to serve to the best of its ability the Kamau community. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1923 The fossil remains of human beings that were eleven feet tall have been unearthied in the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. They will have us believing in Giant the Jack-Killer yet, VINDICATION Last fall a meeting of women was called to discuss campus problems. Special invitation letters were sent out to 160 women who were generally conceded by the officials of W, S, G, A. to have at least some element of leadership, and to be qualified to sit in on an intelligent discussion of local questions. Condemination was severe. Miss Blitz and the officials of W, S, G, A were called "undemocratic." Questions were hurled right and left. Why call in only the leaders? Why show favoritism in the discussion of hill problems? Why not throw the meeting open to all hill women? It is the old question of whether the public is ready for democracy. When the public at large fails to take its responsibility in the administration of community affairs, then the leaders must do it. Last night the plan proposed by the most violent critics was tried. A junior-senior meeting for hill women was called for 7:50 in Green ball. No invitation letters were sent out. The meeting was given while publicity. Just twenty six women responded. The occurrence last night is only another manifestation of the laissez-faire system prevalent in civic affairs, the policy of allowing a few leaders to assume responsibility for the group, and then indulging in criticism of the action taken by these leaders. The millennium is coming. Mexico and the United States are talking peace without demanding any apologies. SYSTEMATIZE YOUR WORK History tells us that loss of sleep cost Napoleon his empire, that, exhausted from wakefulness, he gave contradictory orders on the afternoon of his Waterloo. How many students are going to meet their Waterloo, May 24-June 1 for the same reason? Everyone has the problem of a great deal of work to be finished within the allotted time. Perhaps it has accumulated all the semester. Perhaps it is just now being assigned. At any rafy every one is trying to figure out how it is all going to get done. Staying up late nights may help to solve the problem but to do this consistently before finals will indeed not provide for a clear brain. For this reason it is very imperative at this time that every one plan his work, systematize it, set a time for everything and get it done in that time. You cannot expect to be successful in finals if you do not have a clear mind. Neither can you expect to be successful if you have not prepared for them. Do things at the right time and reserve your energy. When son comes home at the end of his sophomore year in college, dad can hardly believe that he was once called a "proud parent." LOOK UP. NOT DOWN There's the fellow who is continually looking up at the man ahead. And there's the fellow who is continually looking down at the man behind. The first is fired with an ambition to become as good and better than the man who tops him on the ladder. The second is slovenly contented with being above the man on the rung below. The fellow who looks forward, who not only wishes but st brings to better his position, in the one who does things in the big game of life. He is the man you read about in the newspapers on the financial page as having received the appointment of sound-so in such-and-such a business. It is he who is not content until he breaks a university record in the hundred-yard dash and immediately starts out to lessen the time in the two-twenty. The other man, the one who gets a high degree of satisfaction in looking back to see how far he has come, makes up the nation's vast army of more 'dependable'. He does good work, but only average work. In business he credits himself with drawing more钱 than the poor goof who is always doing more than he is required to do. On the college track he glances over his shoulder to see how many are tagging along behind. The forward-looking sets a mark and reaching that, sets another farther ahead. His ambitions and therefore his possibilities stretch forward to infinity. The backward-looking contentedly marks time until, by chance, he is moved up a step. His possibilities—more, his probabilities—are limited by his attitude of mind. Look up, not down! How fortunate it is that the young men who get married always hold "responsible positions." "Responsible positions" seldom have munificent salaries attach:d. HOME. SWEET HOME The hundredth anniversary of the writing of the old song, "Home, Sweet Home," was celebrated last week. The piece, after a century, still has a queer psychological effect on those who hear it. Stolden man may sit unnerved through a concert of the world's greatest artists, but if an encore is sung and that encore happens to be "Home, Sweet Home," their faces lose their cold expressions; they warm to the sentiment of the piece. It is not distinguished by any great technique, by any special form of harmony. But it is inspirational, and men's hearts will always vibrate to inspiration. Therein lies the secret of the song. The more masterful compositions of great authors may leave us awef with the wonder of their technique; the scope of standard works may thrill the heart of every music-lover; but the humbleest ploughman will respond to the homely chords of "Home, Sweet Home." Job may have been the man with the big ears when it came to taking punishment without a comeback, but it says nothing in the good book about him having to take finals. Howard Frank, 'fs21, motored from Kansas City Monday night and had an interesting time with the various people in which such were encountered on the way. Dwight M. Smith, A. B. '18, has taken over the agency for the Standard and Accident Insurance Company in Wichita. The agency was formerly under the control of G. W. Smith, Dwight's father. Jayhawks Flown Dorothy Cochran, fs'21, is now school editor on the Wichita Eagle. Charles Wierenga, 193, motor car driver, 1013-15 Kansas avenue. Office: 287-465-5340, agency. Mr. Wierenga now handles the Nash, Durant, and Franklin cars. Charles I. Corp, e03, professor of hydraulic and sanitary engineering at the University of Wisconsin, is president for this year in the Club of Madison, an organization of 275 teachers, architects, and other technical men of the city of Madison. W. C. Jamieson, '01, is teaching agriculture at the Central State Teachers College, Edmond, Okla. Official Daily University Bulletin The May payroll will be closed Saturday, May 19th. It would be of great assistance to the Business Office to have all signatures attached by Friday morning. UNIVERSITY PAYROLL: No.156 Copy received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. Wednesday. May 16, 1923 KARL KLOOZ, Chief Clerk. QUILL CLUB; Initiation and plodging services will be held Thursday evening, May 17, at 7:30 o'clock sharp at Westminster Hall. Members and English faculty are invited to attend. All indebtedness to the Club must be settled at this time or member will be drowned from roll. MELBA R, PARKER. Chancellor. VICTOR SOLBERG. Faculty Adviser. STUDENT AFFAIRS: There will be a meeting of the Joint Committee on Student Affairs Saturday morning, May 19th, at 10:30 in Room 116, Fraser Hall. ANNE DUDLEY BLITZ, Chairman WOMEN'S FORUM: Women's Forum will hold its last meeting of the year Thursday at 4:30 in room 210. All women of the University are urged to be present. ROOMING HOUSE ASSOCIATION; JOSSEPHINE BURNIAM. Faculty Advisor. The regular spring meeting of the ROOMING HOUSE ASSOCIATION will be held in Fraser, south qnd, second floor. Thursday p. m. at 3:30. MRS, C. M. STERLING, President. MRS, D. R. BRYANT, Secretary. On Other Hills Pifering has almost reached the limit on the campus. An arid barnyard golfer took the University horse-shoe pegs horns the other night. Just a warning that some fan is liable to run off with the Varsity baseball diamond. We move they seclude it in the pole vault, some one might steal the bases too. The freshmen at the University of Missouri will not appear so gay next year. The new student council has voted to change the freshman caps. Heretorefice the freshmen in each school have worn different colored caps. The engineers wore green, the freshmen red, the pre-medies black, the journalists yellow, and the agrarians blue. This summer provides for a uniform cap of black and gold with only a colored button. Miss Frances Johnstone of Manhattan was elected May Queen by the students of the Kansas State Agricultural College. She will have the honor to receive the May Prize to be held on the Manhattan campus at sunset on May 19. At the University of Michigan, one Sunday each year is set aside as "Cane Day." On this day the members of the senior class carry currying walking sticks. The accepted sticks are coated with a crooked handle, a silver band with a block "M" engraved upon it, and a horn ferrite. Boston Tech radio station has transmitted messages with an amateur radio station in France. In response to the invitation from Oxford and Cambridge, Yale and Harvard are planning to send their students to college in duly for an international meet. Alaska's first college, the Agricultural College and School of Mines, established with an enrollment of 100 students. As a part of the required physical education at the University of Iowa, freshman women are instructed in managing canoes under all conditions which might arise. More than 500 women are taught the art every year. Great preparations are being made for the opening of the stadium drive Williams' VII —the softest course in college WILLIAMS' VII is a course for every man in the institution. It's seven times a week but the sessions are only four hours each. And best of all, no man who elects Williams' ever fails—to get a better shave than he ever got before. The first thing you learn in shaving with Williams' is of the remarkably beneficial effect it has on your skin. You can fall to be impressed—even after the closest cut, but this affects the texture. It is a shaving cream which really does your face good. Get a tube of Williams' today. Use it for two months. See then if you ever could go back to any other shaving cream. pleased with the efficiency of Williams'. It softens the beard in so much less time. It does everything a shaving cream is supposed to do. Then, especially if you're of a practical, business- Williams Shaving Cream at the University of Minnesota which will be set off by a monster parade of the entire student body through the streets of Minneapolis. A noise committee has been appointed to liven up the celebration. Airplanes, tanks, and matching games will help to make it a long to be remembered event. The campus foreman at Ohio State scatters four bushels of walmuts each year to the little squirrels making their home on the campus. ROOMS for boys, for the summer. Best location on the hill. Large, sirry rooms, sleeping porch. 1416 Tenn. Call 1555. M-18 WANT ADS LOST—Phi Delta Phi pin with pear in each corner of Delta. Call 127; hnd receive reward. PROFESSIONAL CARD DALEES PRINT SHOP Job work of all kinds 1627 Mass. St. Phone 228. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exc- bide Optometrists). Eyes examined; glasse- made. Office 1025 Mass. Southwestern Teachers' Agency —Quick and Efficient Service— Free enrollment. Send for blanks. Enroll now. Let us get your credentials together for the first and best positions. W. L. BAKER, A. M. Mgr. 708 Schweiter Bldg., Wichita, Kansas "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DLO KIDS JOIR OF APAIRING CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, VicePresident and Chairman of the Board Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 DIRECTORS C. H. Tucker, C. A. H.0, D. C. Asher, L. V. Mifler, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash A two-year course in business, open to college graduates, to the degree of Master in Business Administration HARVARD Graduate School of Business Points of interest regarding the Harvard Business School: 2. The case method is used. Actual problems obtained from business construction. A staff of investigators is community at work gather information. 1. The above image shows the height of a student to be measured to a letter mark of students committing incitations other than homosexuality. How many 158 collegeages are represented? 3. Business is regarded and studied as a profession. For better information and enrolment blanks, write to 4. What the students in the School think of the training which they receive is indicated by the high 5. The training in the School materially shortens the apprentice period in business. A prominent businessman recently opened a furniture pierne with your graduates, I estimate that you are saving them five years net. Six months more will be saved if your men are as well fitted to assume responsibility and to make decisions as the typical occupant. percentage of eligible first year men who return to complete the course—84 per cent, the present year. The enrolment is limite $ u $ in first year courses. Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration University 23, Cambridge, Massachusetts Published in the interest of Electrical Development by an Institution that will have that advantage ever helps the Industry. He was called dude and dandy then, but you recognize the type. Cake Eater -model of 1900 He majored in haberdashery and took his degree with honors in soxology. As if that were not enough, he evolved some variations on the cake walk which made them stare. He even found time to develop a remarkable proficiency on the tandem bicycle, and on Saturday nights he was good enough to bring pleasure into Another's life by wheeling away to the "Ten-Twent-Thirt." To crowd all this into four short years would seem enough for any mortal. Yet in spite of his attainments there are times, in after life, when our hero wonders. The glory of his waistcoats has long since faded, while his books are still fresh and clean. Did he perchance put too much thought into the selection of his hats and too little in what went under them? Western Electric Company Since 1869 makers and distributors of electrical equipment Number 28 of a series