THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Campus Editor New York Times Sport Expert Plain Tale Editor Roman Reuel Reese DeWalt Exchange Editor Clare Ferguson Associate Editor Ralph Johnston Ragnard Dyner New York Times Gley Schults Perry Johnson DeWalt Devaughn Francis BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ... Lloyd Ruppenthal Aa't. Bus. Mgr. ... John Montgomery, Jr. ROARD MEMBERS Ben Hilbs Doris Flewner Bull Ruter Laura Cowden Chester Shaw Carlton Powers Mylr Hart Caroline Harikin Myrick Harl Subscription price, $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year, $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as seconddelegate mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1879. Published in the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansaan aims to picture the kind of students who can go to further and more clearly print the news by standing for the demands of the Kansas; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be helpful; to be serious; to be wiser hands; in all aspects of best of ability students of the Kansas. FRIDAY, NOV. 3. 1922. Beauty is almost entirely a matter of will power, so a modern Venus maintains. If this is true then it is doubly hard on some girls. SPORTSMANSHIP After the Aggie game, disappointed K. U. fans criticised the team and bitterly censured the conduct of the game. Various causes for the defeat were assigned. There began to circulate ugly suggestions that fraternity ties and personal ambitions were to blame. Others hints at poor garenishment. Still others, more charitably inclined, said that the team was still suffering from the long trip back east. Some ascribed the Jayhawk failure to the fighting spirit of the Aggies with their back against their own goal line. Some of these are the excuses of good sports and some are not. The rumors could not, of course, be definitely run down, but it is worth noting that some of them that were traced came from men who were backing the team not with the real spirit of the Hill but with money, the curse of amateur athletics. A good loser does two things. He honestly seeks the true cause of defeat and seeks to correct it; and he puts every ounce of effort into winning next time, whether he is the man at the front or his help must come in loyal support from the sidelines. If the uglier of the charges had any foundation the thing should be rooted out. But that has been honestly looked into. And changes have been made in the team which should correct the fault and give the requisite patch to deliver the yardage when it is needed, if the fault has been there. A recognized sport writer has said of the Coach in his own student days, "Potsy Clark as great a football general as ever planted . . . clenched shoe upon an opponent's five-yard line." Posty Clark has not lost none of its generalship. We have a team that will give its all, and has proven that not only on the gridiron but in the study after gruelling practice has fatigued the body and made sleep the one thing to be desired, when study calls for effort of which no flabby character is capable. The team will be good sports in Saturday's game. The question is, how many good sports will there be in the bleachers and on the sidelines? No grumblers are needed, and you doesn't bring your check book. Back up the team with something that lies nearer manhood. Be there, and be a good sport. The team will bring us credit; let's see that the rest of us do the same thing. Quote from the K. C. Journal: "Two lieutenants, flying a naval plane, narrowly escaped death when their machine fell, landing near the Golden Gate." We wonder if St. Peter was there to greet them. FEMINIST CRIME WAVE What would our hoop-skirted grandmothers have done if their respected better halves had read to them in scandalized tones, as they sat under the lamp light's glow, "all about the latest sensational murder case—woman kills minister who rejects love" And probably she would have retired in proper shame if her husband had even mentioned such a thing as a "triangle tragedy." So it is useless to conjecture what might have occurred if she had accidentally learned of the first woman bandit and her prison sentence of 20 years, and the trend of modern feminism. To what is the feminist movement coming? It was startling enough to have the women on a footing of equal franchise with the men—even though the men secretly felt that the dear women could never take advantage of their degrading new preoperative. But to have women usurp another of mom's domains and start a feminist crime wave is simply too much. A feminist crime wave! It sounds more like the title to a raique movie with Gloria Swanson and Rodolp Valentino as leads than a serious announcement of what is supposed to be the truth. But with every paper's headlines shouting of the infamous murder cases wherein the woman offends and is the one to practice cave-man methods; and of daring and blaze girl robbers, it is almost time for even the modern woman to become a bit shocked. It is time for her to wonder if the eminist movement hasn't moved just a little too far, and if it wouldn't be a good plan to sprinkle in some conservatism just to tone down her so radical emancipation from the o-called chains which bind. Understand, it is not that woman has loss right to commit crimes, murder and oblivion, but only that it seems like such a bad example for a mother to ut before her children. Great Britain's sea power may be great, but how about Marcel, who has ruled the waters for fifty years. clothes cleaned with NAPTHA HAVE YOUR Phone gasoline We use no 75 NEW YORK CLEANERS Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Elisabeth F. Ullman, Chancellor's Office No. 41. F. C. ALLEN, Director of Athletics. Vol. II. nth 11:00 h. m. Nov. 3, 1922. A FOOTBALL GAME: The Kansas-Oklahoma football game will be called promptly at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. KANSAS-OKLAHOMA FOOTBALL GAME; FOOTBALL USHERS: All ushers, and other helpers working at the Kansas-Oklahoma game will port at the gate at the end of McCook Avenue promptly at 1 o'clock Sunrise. J. J. WHEELER, University Marshal. DAD'S DAY DINNER: Dad's Day Dinner will be served in the University Commons, instead of the Gymnasium, promptly at 6:30 Saturday evening. Every one is urged to be on time in order that those who desire to attend the play "Easter," which begins at 8:30, may be on time for the performance. JOHN R. DYER, Chairman. SEMINAR IN EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION: THE SEMINAR in Educational Administration is held regularly at 3:45 M. W. SEMINAR IN EDUCATIONAL ADMINISTRATION: R. A.KENT, Dean. Alice Carnie, a former student at K. U., who is attending K. S. A. C. now, attended a dance given in Junction City Saturday night. "Pete" Reedy, A. B. '22, who played guard on the football team last year, is taking graduate work in the University. When frocks of blacks and browns are being worn, bright colored ornaments can give the finished touch that distinguishes the striking from the usual. Pins and pendant of imitation florentine and marcasite set with cut steel, earrings of immumberable variety, and jeweled combs are used in profusion. And when Miss Fashion must follow styles, she prefers the original to differentiate her from the ordinary, and Weaver's display of elegance is a classic navy novel ornaments which are now in stock. Yours in style. Jeanne Marie "Dad's Day" Won't Be Dad's Day Unless You Bring Dad— "Dad's Day" To "Brick's" The Oread Cafe Just a Step from the Campus A Dinner A Lunch Varsity-Bowersock A Cigar Or a Sundae Will Please "Dad" Friday and Saturday Shows—2:30 - 4:00 - 7:30 - 9:00 p. m. Mary Miles Minte and Tom Moore Two popular stars in one picture. Dorothy Phillips "THE COWBOY AND THE LADY" Also Buster Keaton in "THE GOAT" Adults 28c LADY" in "HURRICANE'S GAL" A greater sea drama than ever before. Pathe News and Fun From the Press Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Penn. St. Phone 335 Next week Children 10c Fresh Apple Cider for Sale. NORMA TALMADGE in “THE ETERNAL FLAME” "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. Vote for Thomas Shoe Electric Shop O. E. SHERWOOD Democratic Nominee for Clerk of the District Court of Douglas County 17 Years a Resident of Douglas County "GIFTS THAT LAST" Political Adv. THE COLLEGE JEWELER WE LIKE TO DL LITTLE JOBS OF AFRICANING WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 SURPLUS $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS SORPULOS $100,000.00 D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cash. W. E. Hazen, Assistant Cash. C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Asher, L. V. Mifter, T. G. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishon BELLS FLOWER SHOP Phone 139 Send Flowers to the HOME FOLKS The quality of our workmanship and the service rendered is of the very best. The only Barber Shop with a manicurist. PALACE BARBER SHOP Frank Vaughan, Prop. 730 Mass. 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