THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN . NIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN v-social student paper of the University of Kannas EDITORIAL STAFF **Editor-in-Chief** Chaline Power Kennett Consultant Kenneth Consant News Editor Jeremy Hale Sport Editor Adrian Reynolds Alumni Editor Adrian Reynolds Alumni Editor Dorothy Downes Alumni Editor BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Lloyd Ruppenthal As't. Bus.Mgr... John Montgomery, Jr. As't. Bus.Mgr... C. O. Burressa Llewellyn White White Perry John Perry John Ruth Carter Ruth Carter Richard Johnson Richard Johnson DeVaughn Francis Francis Frank Rintz Saylor Saylor Subscription price. $18.00 in advance for the one semester of the academic year, $24.00 for one semester. External record. second-chance master teacher certification. Kansas, under the act of March 6, 1977, Kansas under the act of March 1, 1977, week by week in the department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the fall through spring. Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and K. The Daily Kuman alms are to picture the new Kansas; to go further than merely printing the news by handing it by plaster or paper; to be cleaned; to be cheerful to be noisy; to be more serious to water hands; in more serious to its ability the students of the University. TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1923 The presidential election campaign will burst into bloom shortly. And all the hand-set type shops will start to run out of capital "I's." BIG DAYS Kansas University has had a number of big days during the past few years. One of these is the memorable Stadium day when the old bleachers came down and the site of our present memorial was marked out. The following fall came our victory over Missouri, our second game in the Stadium. Then a year or so later came its dedication on Armistice day which will never be forgotten by any loyal Jayhawker. And now comes the Relys which will rank well up among those days to be remembered. No University man or woman must be urged to attend this event—he will just naturally want to see and be a part of this thing which means so much to K. U. To back up the track team in this venture is no duty—it is a privilege. To have seen the first Kansas Relays will be something to boast about in later years when you come back an alumnus and remark about the wide growth of this—now new athletic achievement. Of course every K. U. man and woman will be there but it is not enough merely to come yourself. Spread the good news, let the other follow back home on in the ground floor. Write to your K. U. friends and other friends, too, and urge them to take advantage of this opportunity. Tell them to come up to Lawrence and the athletes of the East meet the athletes of the West on their own ground on this big day of the Kansas Relays. Bike races of the six day variety have it all over the marvelous non-stop dancers. They manage to exist three times as long, on account of not having to listen to a jazz orchestra. WHAT IS ITS FUTURE? The radio has been a bona in the American people. It has unconsciously been a temporary means to solve one of this country's greatest problems—entertainment for the masses. Now where will the radio advance, what will be its outcome? Statistics have been prolifically flourished by every speaker on social topics for the last five to ten years to prove that Americans and especially city folk have less respect and less use for the home than in any period previous to this; and even though this may be true the radio has filled the evening hours with entertainment. The interesting part of a radio diagnosis is that it has entrapped all classes and ages. Children have learned not only how to make radio sets themselves, but how to install and operate them. Fathers and mothers have helped to buy them and set them up, and persons of all ages have been eager to listen to radio programs. It has been a great thing for young America. The novelty is already beginning to wear off the little radio set, but possibly a greater field is opening up to replace it. Lord Robert Ceil of England who is in this country lecturing on the League of Nations, recently gave a noon-hour address on his favorite subject from Philadelphia to Official Daily University Bulletin A meeting of the Cabinet will be held Wednesday afternoon, beginni at 2 o'clock, in the Chancellor's Office. CHANCELLOR'S CABINET; Vol. II Tuesday, April 17, 1923 No. 135 . Copy received at the 'Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. E. H. LINDLEY. The April pay roll will be closed on Thursday, April 19. All who have not signed should do so tomorrow. KARL KLOOZ, Chief Clerk. CONVOCATION: University convocation, Wednesday, April 18, at 10 o'clock in Robinson Gymnasium. Henry Hugge from the University of London School of Coma class in history at Haverford. It has been called the hearing of history in the making. What greater stride could there be than the adoption of the radio to educational purposes in our schools and colleges? Professor Higgs will lecture at 4:30 also, in Fraser chapel, on "Defecta SENIORS: R. A. KENT, Chairman Convocation Committee. The modern coed has a difficult time distinguishing between the toddle and the R-mantic Movement. One more day for Cap and Gown measurements—Wednesday, April 18, 9 to 11 a.m., and 2 to 4 p.m. Arrangements have been made permitting the committee to accept checks for class dues dated May 1, when desired. IVO PARROTT, Chairman Cap and Gown Committee. PI LAMBDA THETA: The regular meeting of Pi Lambd Theta will be held Wednesday evening at 7:15 in room 210 Fraser hall. HELEN WELCH, President. EUGENIE GALLOO, Faculty Adviser. CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE LECTURE FOR FRESHMEN: "John Gawlsworthy," by Misa Hopes, at 4:30 PM afternoon. Room 112. Shoe workers in Massachusetts have gone on a strike. Buy your fall shoes now and avoid the raise. The modern definition of a flagpole is a place to hitch an aerial. Government control and perhaps federal licensing of broadcasting stations may prove an effective regulative for programs and limiting of wave length, but too, it will tend to stabilize radio so that it will become a well founded American institution. It is already such in home life. There can be no limit to radio progress, and doubled there will be no limit to its usefulness when it is finally perfected. It is fairly safe to prophecy that new houses of the more modern type to be built in the future will have compartments for built-in radio sets, and inside wiring for aerials. If builders take care of the consumer end of it the government will realize the benefits of control and provide means of transmitting educational programs. A Canadian minister has a parrot who can repeat the Lord's Speaker accurately. If the parrot could sing one stanza of the Star Spangled Banner in addition, his knowledge would far exceed that of many of the students in convocation. CHEER UP, CHEER UP! Whenever you get the blues and your imagination leads you to believe that the University administration is composed solely of slave drivers who ask too much work in exchange for a handsomely embossed degree, just dig in American history out of the attic. By turning to the proper place you will find something that will convince you that you are not so bad off after all. When Harvard college was organized back in the seventeenth century, the candidate for a Bachelor of Arts degree had to be able to do this; he had to be able to read both the Old and the New Testaments in the original Greek, and then had to translate them into Latin. Students of the University who are trying to raise moustaches might well get in touch with the Chicago man who insured his whiskers. They should take out some accident insurance in addition. Modern girls may be more audacious than their grandmothers, but no one has ever accused a flapped of taking muff or cutting cut. Cheer up now, will you? That 120-hour requirement doesn't seem so bad after all, does it? ALICE WINSTON, Chairman. Jayhawks Flown Frank Edson, fs, and Dr. Samsu. T. Millard, affiliated medical graduate students from Kansas City Medi- cation Center and the board of education of Topika. Paul S. F鸦, B. S. 20, who has been state bacteriologist, has accepted a position in Santa Fe, N. M. Mr. F鸦 will leave for New Mexico soon. Amye Applegate, A. B. '21, who has been working for the Monte Vista Journal, Monte Vista, Colo., has accepted a position with the Pueblo Chiefship. Lindley C. Young, A. B. Chiefship, working on the Pueblo Chiefship. George Strube, A. B. '22, will leave in May for the Philippine Islands, where he has accepted a position as professor of English. On Other Hills More than 500,000 persons will hear the songs and some lines from the 1923 "Black Friar" show of the University of Chicago, May 4, when at midnight after the performance a musician broadcast from radio station KYW over a 400 meter wave length. The chorus and cast will sing before the microphone. A campus jazz ornette, one or two feature musicalian groups, a saxophone octet, and a string trio will be additional novelties. A smokeless smoker has been planned by the men of the University of Oregon. Men are requested to do laundry before coming to the gathering. A "Red Hair" Club has been organized at Colorado State College. The organization is open to members of the athletic team in the essential qualification is red hair. Five to ten hours hard work on the college pile is the punishment given freshmen who violate the traditions of the Rhode Island State University offense, they are required to wear baseball masks for two days. Ohio State University is holding a drive on delinquent stadium plques. With $162,000 yet to be paid on stadium subscriptions, a concerted effort is under way to make the Ohio stadium campaign, begin two and a half years ago "100 per cent successful." Approximately $800,000 has been paid on stadium subscriptions. This amount together with $123,000, the net profits from football last fall, and $407,000 borrowed by the athlete has been paid on the cost of the stadium. Within a short time a final payment of $100,000 must be made to the stadium contractor. It is to meet this obligation that the campaign to "mop up" outstanding payments is aimed. The University of Chicago will raise its tuition fees beginning the summer quarter of 1923. It is stated by university authorities that the present income derived from tuitions does not provide one-third the run-up costs. The university advances in tuition charges will be accomplished by an increase in scholarships and fellowships, which will largely offset the increase in fees, as far as promising students of limited means are concerned. Thomas Grogger, fs, and Bransford fcrenshaw, e23, were guests at the Pi Kappa Alpha house over the week-end. This is Sports Suit Week Our part in the Kansas Relays is Delivering the New Swagger Sweaters for women These are not merely a passing fad but trim mannish looking sweaters that will give you much pleasure and comfort now and later in the summer. $6.50 to $12 TODAY ONLY Shows: 2:30,4:00,7:30 & 9:00. Prices 10c & 28c VARSITY — BOWERSOCK VIOLA DANA Invitations for Seniors may be ordered by sending order to Bill Reilly, 1340 Kentucky. "JUNE MADNESS" Stan Laurell in "THE PEST" A BLACK EYE Few girls get one before marriage, but Clyde Whitmore did not. The picture is a rapid-moving comely full of Jazz and Joy. JOHN GILBERT "A CALIFORNIA ROMANCE A tale of 1848—when California was Ceded to the United States. In this land of sunshine a man wins a battle and a girls love risking untold dangers. A Good Sunshine Comedy To Europe at Your Own Price Travel costs to Europe have been lowered by our cabin fleet of 14 delightful steamers to such an extent that you can cross for what you would spend at an American summer resort. Write today for our booklet—"Your Trip to Europe"—and detailed information. 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