THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN mssual student paper of the University of EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Editor News Editor Newsphere Editor Sport Editor Alumni Editor Alumni Editor Rowe Dowling BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ___ Lloyd Ruppenthal Aaw't. Bus. Mgr. ___ John Montgomery, J. Aaw't. Bus. Mgr. ___ C. O. Burnsite BOARD MEMBERS BAMMER & MANN Llewellyn Dan Jones Dan Jones Lagerer Joe Lagerer Joe Ruth Cutter Ruth Cutter Chloe Johnson Chloe Johnson DeVaughn Tancelle DeVaughn Tancelle Frynn Ramski Frynn Ramski Michael Wiley Subscription price, $8.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester. Interested in second-class mail matter referred to the Department of Justice, Kansas, on the account of March 2, 1987. Offered by students in the Department of Journal matter of the University of Kansas, from the Department of Justice. Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones. K. U. 25 and 64 The Daily Korean aims to picture the Undergraduate life of a file at University of Korea. To make sure the news by standing for the ideas is accurate, the students have to be clean; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be serious problems to wiser hands; in order to have the ability to the students of the University. MQNDAY, APRIL 9, 1923 A RESTRICTED VOTE Dear me! Here's something else that needs regulation. Radio fans in Boston listen to grand opera were disturbed for fifteen minutes while a burning ship sent out an "O.S." Is there any sound, logical reason for restricting the Jayhawk vote to the junior and 'sohmore classes?' The annual has certainly become an all-school activity, one in which everyone is more or less interested; the only fair thing to do is to allow every regularly enrolled student to cast a vote for the editors of the year-book. That is only consistent with the principle of representative government. The idea that the Jayhawker is a class activity dates back to the time when the book was, in reality, the publication of the senior class and the rest of the school had little interest in it. Recently the viewpoint has been extended to include the junior class, thus allowing the sophomore and junior classes to vote for the editors of the next year's Jayhawker. That in itself is a recognition of the fact that the publication is no longer a class organ. But the most thoughtful voting element of the University, the seniors and graduate students, are still denied a voice in the selection of the editors. Of course, it is true that the seniors will not be in school the following year and so theoretically have no interest and no voice in the next Jayhawk; but if that line of reasoning were carried out undeniably, the seniors would not vote for any of the school officers. That principle applies to the president of the Men's Student Council as well as to the editor of the Jayhawk. No one would wish to eliminate the entire senior vote. The senior is a careful voter, and he usually knows the candidates; he does not follow a hit and misuse method in selecting his men. His vote is needed, and particularly is it needed in the Jayhawker election. The Jayhawker editor must have a special kind of ability; he should be elected by a group competent to judge concerning that ability. In accordance with democratic government, it seems that franchise in the election of annual editors should be extended to the whole school. But, at least, the vote should be given to all upper-classmen. That much, wisdom dictates. A lot of stunning hats leave dad stunned when he pays the bill. THE CURSE OF THE PHARAOHS down the centuries for thirty-four hundred years, the bodies of old dead Pharaohs have slept in the Valley of the Kings, safe from the marauding, sacriblious hands of foreign archaeologists. For thirty-four centuries, the old scarab signets of the once-mighty potentates have gleamed through the still dead dusk of Egyptian tombs. Then came the ruthless hand of the foreigner. The quiet toms were opened, the air rent with the sound of pick axes and iron chains. Sunlight entered the grave, revealing wealth that rivalled the maddest dreams of the romanticist. And then out of the deaths to thirty-five hundred years stole the potent force of the old Egyptian curse, dealing death to the ravisher of the tomb of a king. Wednesday Lord Carnarvon died from an insect bite, following a train of tragic incidents which have occurred since he discovered the tomb of Tut-Ankh-Amen. True? The Egyptians say so. We can only shrug our shoulders, we sophisticated, practical Americans, and say we don't know. But we can think, in passing, of the graves of our descendants a thousand years hence, destroyed by the calioued hand of the explorer. remaps there may be an atom of comfort in the thought of a trap lying in wait for them within the shadows of those tombs. Communists at M. U. It isn't even an authenticated rumor, yet officials are already busy to determine the members of the Liberal club, a reputed anti-constitution society at Columbia. Dire threats have been made. If any faculty members are found, it is indicated they will be asked to resign. THE QUESTION OF COMMUNISTS Our sister state, along with the rest of the country, is slow in learning the lesson that England has mastered in the last few years. The age has passed when it was safe to suppress thought. If the lid is clamped down in one place, the force it is trying to limit will break out in another, and, perhaps, in a more dangerous place. Vicious ideas die in the sunlight. They thrive in an atmosphere of secrecy and clandestine meetings. It is that lesson which Missouri and Kanah and all of our country has to learn If an organization for the furtherance of free thought exists at Columbia, and if that organization is a misconse to the community, then a fair-minded, open treatment of the question will reveal its fallacies and its dangers. If it is not dangerous, then the students are not violating the constitution, and are within their rights in banding together. Whether or not the seed of dissension or of something worse is growing in the darkness in the Liberal club of Missouri, the romance does not life in arbitrary suppression. Put their principles in the light, and the pitiless glare of publicity will betray their weaknesses. But suppress them, and they will grow in the glimmer of persecution and mystery. The fellow who paints "Ask the man who owns one" on the back end of his Ford has a real sense of humor. CENSORSHIP OF MAGAZINES Stricter censorship of movies is the cry of parents who are afraid the minds of their children will become contaminated by unwholesome thoughts gleaned from the screen. Meanwhile, the parents themselves purchase magazines for their own diversion, and unfortunately, some of those with the most pleasing covers and the best illustrations contain material of a questionable nature. Naturally the children read the literature lying loose about the house. Pictures and literary expression enjoy a freedom which soon would be barred from the movies. On the paper, they are classified as art; on the screen, they would rightfully fall into the sensorial waste-basket as unfit for public distribution, because they corruit the morals of children attending the theater. Censorship is an indispensible public reform and at least until the silent drama becomes an art, censorship shall be continued, and unless some action is taken toward the restraint of suggestiveness and vulgarity in popular magazines, movie restrictions are useless. Persons whose names have become well known on the screen are quoted as authorities on anything, while the work of real scholars is given a less conscious place, because it does not offer any big headlines. Continued stories with an unwholesome grip on the reader causes him to buy the paper month after month, and the editor imagines he is giving the public what it wants. Plain Tales From The Hill When the Princess married Kaiser Bill Spring is getting into the scribes. Here's an effort: Bun, She thought she married "Me und Gott," Come on, who's next with a contribution? ut now she's left the partnership. For Bill was all she got. Shades of St. Vitus—One of the young fellows of the University was seen with a Tau Sigma pin upon his bosom. They're here - five new "Crimson Peril" on the wonderful scenic railway operated in the city of Law- nondominium to support company to the power company. Another sign of spring—the storm doors have been removed. And the pollutants are raging around. **Shock proof!** Two of those journalists were returning from Kayeuse in a fluv during Easter time and a bolt of lightning about this big around ... ) hit a pole about this far (...) from them. Nothing was accepted, except the one that you don't believe this ask Cap; he told it. Dumb Dora: "Have a good vacation?" Jayhawks Flown Dumb Danny: "Oh, about eleven dollars worth." One of the K. U. graduates who is having a notable career is Millard K. Shaler, A. B. '01, B. S. '04, who is at present in Brussels, Belgium. During the war Mr. Shaler was connected with the movement for Belgian relief and is now taking an important part in education in that country. Adela Pepper Shea says she will park the children with the neighbors when she comes to the dinner Friday for a long, modern mother is inventive, say we. With the income from a considerable sum of money left over from the relief funds, thirty-six Belgian students are taking work in American universities. In addition to this, Mr Shaler is helping the University of Amsterdam with schools in Belgium. For his war service he was decorated by the king. After he obtained his degree here, Mr. Shailer accepted a position as mining engineer with the U. S. Geological Survey. In 1060 he went to France to work at the Fermiine Company of Brussels. The Kasai diamond fields and the oil fields in Angola, West Africa, are some of the important enterprises he helped develop. Mr. Shailer is now a Vice President of the Fermiine Company in Brussels. John S. Worley, the only Kansas in captivity who has turned down a $25 000 business job for a $5,000 professorship, is receiver of Habibahw Cable Company at Yorkens until he to be the University of Michigan. E. Wayne Wingert, more familiarly, affectionately, and appropriately known as "Finky," is publicity manager at Players-Lady stud on Long Island. Twenty per cent of the men of Northwestern University are earning all their expenses through school, and thirty per cent are earning part of their expenses, according to Paul L. Palmer, assistant dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences. The university offers scholarships both to freshmen and upperclassmen. The department is interested in addition the university offers considerable clerical work for students outside of school hours. Included in the list of work done are: clerking and accounting, caring for furnaces, housework, playing for orchestra, playing church organs, reporting for newspapers, elevated train guards, cashier in catering, caring for children, and caretaker for golf club. The fifty per cent who do not pay any tuition are in the problem of the school, in the opinion of Mr. Palmer, and some guidance should be given to their activities during the summer vacations. On Other Hills The Purdue Exponent gives the following comment on the honor system: "Objections to honor systems in large universities are numerous. The greatest of these is the hesitancy or refusal of students to tell on one another. As the saying goes, 'there will be no desire to consider it a greater breach of honor to play the part of a snatcher than to crib. It is necessary to build up tradition before an honor system can be successfully carried out. B" Vol. II. MIDDLETON CONCERT TONIGHT: Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence K. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office until 11:50 a.m. The sixth concert of the University Course will be given tonight at 8:20 in Robinson Gymnasium, by Arthur Middleton, Bartone. H. L. BUTLER. Monday, April 9, 1923 $ ^{\mathrm{u}} \mathrm {D U G E T C O M M I T T E E C O N F E R E N C E N S :} $ Notice is hereby given cf meetings of the Budget Committee on salaries and maintenance in the office of the Dean of Administration, 112 Fraser hall. Tumulus Building, 149 S. Broadway. 10:30 Civil Engineering 9:00 Architecture 10.30 Civil Engineering 2.00 Electrical Engineering 3:30 Engineering Drawing. The Committee consists of the Chancellor, the head of the department and the deans of the schools which allow credit from the given department to count toward a degree. Other deans interested in the work of the department are urged to participate in the conferences. BASKETBALL VICTORY CONVOCATION: There will be a basketball victory concession on Tuesday, April 10th, at 10:00 o'clock at Robinson Gymnasium. Dr. John Outland, all American R. A. KENT, Chairman, Convocation Committee. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL: Regular orchestra rehearsal Tuesday, April 10th at 3:30 in Fraser chapel E. F KURTZ Director FRENCH LECTURE: M. Firmin Roz will speak Tuesday, April 10th, at 4:30 in the Little Theater, green hall, Subject—La Vie intellectuelle en France. M. Rox is Director for the United States of the Office 'National' des Universités and the University of Paris, between France and the United States of professorships and fellowships. is probable that the system itself will die out before the tradition can be started. Out of twenty-six colleges and universities represented at a student confluent at Northwestern recently, only four had successful honor systems and two of these were smaller schools where it may be easier to find one, so the counsel opinion was that the system were impractical. At the University of West Virginia, all freshmen under 21 years of age should have one year in residence and should stay any fraternity or any such society. Students at the University of Oklahoma are editing the Oklahoma Daily newspaper, campus publication, The Oklahoma Gazette, salaries to all of its staff members. E. GALLOO. The Oregon Agricultural Cottage natatorium is one of the finest west of the Mississippi, and has a gallery capable of seating 1500 spectators. Rear Admiral Sims, U. S. N., retired, delivered the address in the Oread Shining Parlor We also do repairing Laces and Shoe Cleaners CHARLIE'S Best Shines in Town "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. Learn to dance in five to ten lessons celebration of the fifty-fifth Charter Day at the University of California, March 22. The exercises were held in the Greek Theater. MRS. WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St Modern Social Dancing Alterations of all kinds; Reline ladies coats; Plent skirts; Remodel coats of every kind. Thomas Shoe Electric Shop Modern Social Dancing Phone 2392 Blue for appointment Engraving. Printing. Binding. Rubber Stamps, Supply Supplies, Printing by any process 738 Mass. St. A. G. ALRICH ny process 736 Mass. St Stationery 1021 Mass. St. PROTCH The College TAILOR "GIFTS THAT LAST" Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DLK LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING We pleat and make skirts CLARK LEANS LOTHES 730 Mass. Phone 355 CAPITAL $100,000.00 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President G. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashier, L. V. Müller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bibbon J. C. Moore. S. O. Rishop "It Pays to Swim With the Current" This is about two spark plugs. At the moment they are lying on the sales manager's desk in the establishment of a large middle-western hardware jobber. More and more jobbers in every line of business are learning every day that "But," he adds, "we are discontinuing this fine"—and he holds up the plug of unfamiliar name. "Yes, and our discount on it is larger, too." One spark plug bears a name known wherever automobiles are used, the other a name seldom heard. f "What's wrong with it? Not a thing. It's a good plug—mighty good plug but —no one knows about it. It isn't advertised—the other one is. The demand is for the advertised make. And we've learned it pays to swim with the current, not against it." Both, says the sales manager, are good plugs. On the score of quality they run neck and neck. it pays to swim with the current of popular demand. "Our job," said one jobber, "is to supply markets, not create them. Let the manufacturer make a market for his goods, and we will handle it." "Said another—"Our salesmen carry a catalog with thousands of items in it. They haven't the time to push unadvertised goods. Their work is principally taking orders." If you go among these wholesalers today to introduce a new product in competition with merchandise nationally advertised, unless the article is exceptional, you will be met everywhere by the injunction: "First go out and get a reputation for your goods through advertising." The wholesaler knows by actual contact with dealers how they value speed of turnover, goods which move with a minimum of effort, goods people know about and ask for. DAILY KANSAN The text is a single block of code written in Java. It consists of multiple lines of text, each enclosed within `{}` and separated by spaces or commas. 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