THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Official student paper of the University or Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-chief Harry Robinson News Editor Gilson Kirkpatrick News Editor Kenisha Connolly Sport Editor Stewart Editor Alan Editor Annual Editor Charlie Saylor Journal Editor BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ___ Lloyd Ruppenthal Aask' Bus, Mgr. ___ John Montgomery, Jr. Aask' Bus, Mgr. ___ C. O. Burnside REIMMEN Lievely White WHITE Carrine Hartkruger Randy Petty RATY Heather Scott Dian Boggs BOGG Perry Jouy Chaplin CHA Loretta Lowery Hoban Jaen JAEN Ruth Carter Subscription price, $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 onwards. Served as second-deck mallmaster September 11, 1976, at the post office at Lawrence Park, published in the afternoon, five times a week. Known for his political nationalism of the University of Kansas, from the time he was a law school student. Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 28 and 66 The Daily Kaanam aims to picture the idea of a human being to go further than merely printing the news by standing for the ideals of humanity; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be kind; to be generous; to more serious questions to whear heads; in all to serve to the best of its ability the needs of mankind. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7. 1923 WOMEN NOT FORGOTTEN A window cleaner in London has discovered he can sing bass and tenor at the same time without apparent difficulty. Why raise such a fuss about this? Any boy of thirteen can too! Co-education in some schools extends no farther than the class room; when big far-reaching activities are planned, the woman student must quite often take a back seat. This tendency has been well illustrated in the recent erection of Student-Union buildings throughout the country. At a large university where one of the finest and most elaborate student buildings of the West was built, the women have only one small room allotted to them in the Union; they must enter through a side door. Another university is to have a new Union Building for the use of the men, and the old student building is to be turned over to the women. But at Kansas co-education does not end in the classroom. Women will not have to enter the K. U. Student Union by the side door, and neither will they be presented with an old building discarded by the men. The plans call for equal consideration of both men and women. The Kansas Student Union project tolerates no favoritism. They cannot keep the wolf from the door at Columbia. One attacked a girl near there as she was leaving a store. A MONUMENTAL MISTAKE A MONUMENTAL MISTAKE A memorial costing $10,000,000 is to be erected in Washington, D. C. in memory of George Washington. It will be an imposing monument, a magnificent example of what engineering genius can do. Foreigners, ignorant of our language, our customs, our history, will stand agile at it in awe. Visiting unassassants will make surprised exclamations when they see it. The hurrying Washington crowds will, in time, become entirely oblivious to its presence. Money, work, and human energy can be turned to better ends. The world needs good works more than it needs monuments to the great of the past. The U. S. can use $10,000,000 for worthy charitable purposes and the result will be a monument not in granite, but in better homes, improved working conditions, healthier children, and happier people. "The Father of His Country" would have wished it so. DEATH AS A SHOW When he fell eight stories in attempting to scale the walls of a New York hotel, a "human fly" paid the inevitable penalty of one who counts death. Twenty thousand people saw him crush to the street. Movie cameras ground out yardage as he hurtled to his doom. Why did those 20,000 people gather there to watch the dare-devil risk his life? They thought he might fall. If he had not, they would have gone away slightly disappointed. Human nature is sometimes hard to understand. Official Daily University Bulletin Wednesday, March 7. 1923 No.109 Vol. II. Copy received by Florence K. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office APPLICATIONS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS: The Committee on Scholarships will receive applications for 1923-24 scholarships on Wednesday and Thursday of this week from 3 to 5 in Room 314 Fraser Hall. Students unable to present themselves at this time are requested to notify the chairman who will arrange another appointment. GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE: There will be a meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Grade ate School at 4:30 Thursday afternoon in the Graduate Office, 101 East Ad ress Street. ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL Orchestra rehearsal will be held at 7:30 Thursday evening in Fraser Chanel. E. F. KURTZ. Director GRADUATE CLUB: There will be a social meeting of the Graduate Club at 7:30 Thursday evening in the Astronomy Observatory. New students of the Graduate Club will join us on Friday. We are not interested in the boast of a Chicago woman that she has had thirty-eight proposals of marriage in the last year, but we would like to know how many she accepted. PARDON THE SMILE Another congress has ended, and, as some notable once remarked, "it is to laugh." Don't misunderstand; we shouldn't think of being light about a heavy thing like Congress. But let us repeat, "it is to laugh." SHERWIN F. KELLY, President. E. B. STOUFFER, Acting Dean. And why shouldn't we laugh? All our lives, we have been pleaded with and ridiculed for precrastination. Always it is so with students; invariably they are accused of this thing—putting off all work until the eleventh hour. And when a survey of congress and state legislatures shows us that we share our procrastinating propensities with some of the most celebrated parliamentary bodies on earth, then there is nothing for it but to laugh. "A Nebraska Capitol Row"—headline. There may be more of a row up there next fall after a certain football game. But, after all, it is not so strange. It is said that many a staff and even austere man hariks back to his boyish tendencies when he leaves home for a time. And so it is with the congressmen; they must have their fun. After their first sense of importance has worn off, they become sportive, and engage in all sorts of little parker parties, filibusters, and other delightful functions. Why should they work before the last week of the term? Time is plentiful. it is the student psychology all over again; we have always known that it was useless to work until the week before finals; and the class fillbuster has long been an effectual method of ending a tiresome lecture. Now when we discover that our olders find merit in our system, we must laugh a bit—overtly and up our sleeves, to be sure, but nevertheless a laugh. An explorer from Denmark has now been entered to compete with Columbus and Erickson in the "first to discover America" race. Don't be bashful—let's have a claimant from every European country! We should not worry about $1.00 gasoline. A man in California has invented a way to burn water. Sweden is to levy a tax on din- people for every pound they weigh over the two hundred mark. Foreign sales will probably cause a shortage of fat-reducing phonograph records in the U. S. William B. Wells, B. S.'22, who has been on an engineering project at Ellsworth, is now engineer of Quinter, on a new water works project in the midst of Delta Uplosion and Sachen while a teaching the University. Jayhawks Flown John. Lyle Harrington, B. S, A. B, A. M, 95 of Kansas City, president of the A. S. M. E., was the principal author of the banquet of the Minnesota federation of architectural and engineering societies, on February 22, in St. Paul. W. W. Woodbury, A. B. "03, press conference of H. & E. S., was toastmaster Addison R. Massey, A. B. 22, fiercely on the repolitical staff of the amas City Star, is now with the Greew Brokers, of amas City. Fred Rigby, '65-16-19, who has had charge of the advertising for the Stubbaker Corporation at South Bend, In, for some time, went to Mexico and to study market concoctions here for the Stubbaker Automobile Company. W. S. Cady, A. B. '16, advertising manager for the Hutchinson News for the last three years, left March 1 to take over the advertising management of the Oklahoma Publishing Company, of Oklahoma City, John W. Cady, Jr., of Daily Oklaoman, the evening publication of this company. Lindley Young, A. B. 22, is now doing advertising copy and news writing for the Junction City Republican. Young has been with the Burlington Daily Republican since his graduation. On Other Hills A publicity bureau was recently installed at the University of California purposing to control the collection and distribution of all news activities of students in campus affairs. Street cars on the Stanford University line have added an extra conductor to prevent the wayward roughs from riding about the campus and the town free of charge. This will also prevent rolly-pulling" and the train is usually written on top of Tonderville, according to the railway company. According to Dr. George F. Zook of the United States Bureau of Education, who has recently made a study of college students, 36 percent are university students, three of every four students attend colleges in their home states. The proportion of the students taken care of in their own homes is about one-third in the schools in the western states. THE ONLY SHOP WITH VIOLET RAY TREATMENTS Arizona women students rank higher in scholarship than the men. Out of the semester "bunk list," it is that 92% of those of these being a regular student. and ELECTRIC PRISMATIC WAVE FOR FACIAL AND SCALP DISEASES All Tonics 25c W. F. Weise K. U. BARBER SHOP Plain Tales From The Hill the wick. The index ran like this: "A look for no premiums in this package" stared shyly at the passer from a nook by the law steps. "They satisfy," a beautiful thing of flare, operation, flopped gently in the breeze. A stroller on the campus beautiful recently tried to classify to different kinds of flowers that met his eye, and he could not resist. In the grass, others growing close to One of the flowers to gladden the heart of the nature lover has nearly disappeared from the campus beautiful. We see it occasionally—the molt. A garden of "perfect blends" blooms here and there, reaching up to the warm sunlight. WANT ADS WANTED—For 10 weeks summer session, experienced steward and stewardess at Patterson Club, 1245 Louisiana. M-13 727 Mass. St. LOST—Dunnill pipe and leather cig- arette case. Reward. Call 1977. Miller. M-9 Truly, life is beautiful. WANTED—12 more young men and women to enroll in Show Card Writing class. Interesting and money making business. Class begins Tuesday. Small tuition. For information W, Strecker, 1212 Ohio or M-328. M-9 LOST—Two-skin mink fur neckpiece on or between campus and 1323 La. Call 1953. M-8 LOST—Ladies gold pencil inscribed with initials A. E. Reward call 1255. M-8 LOST—Wrist watch, Swiss movement. Please notify Elizabeth Walker. 1645 La. St. or call 1553. Reward. M-8 WANTED—Student to act as Club steward for next three months and Summer Session. Phone 1799. Md ROOM to rent. Fully modern. Large closet. 1227 Ohio St. M-13 ROOMS—For boys, double or slingle. 1042 Ohio. Phone 1658. M-12 LOST- wrist-watch, in Robinson at basketball game. Return to Grace Hyatt, 1200 Tennessee. Phone 2577. Reward. 14.7 LOST-Tortoise shell glassware tween 1111 and 1300 Kentucky Leave at Kansas office. Liberal reward. M-7 FOR RENT--In modern house, 3 single rooms, $10, $12, and $12, with privilege of renting rooms for next year's school. Board if desired at a 1026 Ohio Street. Phone 398. M-2 Boys Club at $5.50 for 3 meals or $7.50 for 2 meals. Also want a dishwasher, one who will room at house. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys, single or double, one suite for two or three. Prices reasonable. Modern womens. 1319 Tenn. St. M-0455. M-0 PROFESSIONAL CARD Dr. J. W. 'O'BRYAN, (Istanbul) Special attention to prevention and treatment of non-abdominal injuries. DAILY SHOP. Job work for all kinds. 1037 Mass St. Phone 2529. LAWENESE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Ornamentation) Eye exames; glaucoma screen. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Dr. Florence J. Barrows, Phone 2337. Office 909% Mass. St. Calls answered. "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. LOST-Gold fountain ene Finler LOST-Oryx ring, with Phi Gamma please call Miss Thompson at 1943 for enclosure in Sporcer and to rent Rewards. "GIFTS THAT LAST" THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DO LITTLE JOBS OF REPAIRING WATKINS NATIONAL BANK C. H. Tucker, President G. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 DIRECTORS SURPLUS 10,000. D. C. Aher, Cashier D. C. Aher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash C. H. Tucker, C. A. HILL, D. C. Ashner, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green, J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop. We do all kinds of REPAIRING CLARK CLEANS CLOTHES 730 Mass. Phone 355 We Guarantee and Advertise Quality To acquaint the public with the high standard workmanship and intrinsic value of clothes bearing our label we advertise nationally from coast to coast—north to south. Merchants of reputation feel the advantage of your knowing even without comment, the care and effort they make to give you the most satisfying clothes available to them at prices expressing full return to you for your money. the guaranteed wear and genuine satisfaction good clothes, such as these give, are certain to win your endorsement. As a product that will repeat in your estimation we can afford to advertise this proven standard in behalf of merchants handling our clothes. Campus Togs distributed by retail merchants everywhere CHAS.KAUFMAN & BROS. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON SAN FRANCISCO ---