THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas of Kansas Subscription price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.50 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kannas, 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 Texas at Austin, three times on the Department of Journalism Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K.-U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kansan press, topping up the national University of Kansas to go farther by standing for the idea that the written notice to be clean, to be cheerful and to leave more serious problems to leave more serious problems to leave more serious problems to the heat of its ability the university to raise the temperature EDITORIAL STAFF Editor in Chief Eulaia Dougherty Composer Ben Brennan Musician Shawn Cameron Composer Tommy Kane Telephonist Richard Tephonist Editor Charles Greason Lewesman Llewis Editorial Editor Meryl Hart Editorial Director Sara A. Sweeney BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager — Lloyd Ruppenthal Ast. Business Mgr. — James Connelly Ast. Business Mgr. — Conwell Carlson BOARD MEMBERS Joe Turrent Doris Fleuco Pierre Aylott Philip Husband Hugh Hubbard George McVey Ted Vuldon Tim Hudson Margaret Larkin mar. gael Larkin THE KANSAS TRACK TEAM TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1922 Armenia Rumberger Joseph Givens Jequeline Gilmore Stella Dutton Hill Martin Collins Johnson L. Mackay Saroline Hankerden Larry Lang Very Johns Four school records lowered in one afternoon against a team which did not press the Kansas squat to the limit is some achievement for any man's track team. The day was ideal and the track was in perfect condition yet the fact that the records all fell by a good margin gives a hint of the exceptional ability of the Kansas track squad. Kansas is now one of the leaders in Valley track. The Jayhawk track and field men demonstrated their possibilities in the Missouri Valley Indoor Meet held in Convention Hall in March. Now comes the first outdoor meet for the Kansas and four school records, fall by the wayside. Such a team is worthy to represent the Missouri Valley in any part of the country. Where praise is due let praise be given, so here a bouquet to Coach Karl Schlademan, variety track mentor. In the years that Coach Schlademan has been here he has built a well rounded, record-breaking team from one of minor importance in the Valley. While he has had exceptionally good material to work with this year much credit is due to his ability in developing it. Hurrah for Kansas! PERSHING FOR SENATOR The boom, recently started, pushing General Pershing for a senatorial position from the state of Missouri illustrates a fallacy that many people hold. Because a man has been very successful in one particular line of work his friends consider that it necessarily follows that he will be equally successful in any other field he may desire or be persuaded to enter. No one will ask to deny that General Pershing as a director of armies and military expert is a man of whom it would be hard to find the equal. But Pershing as a legislator, which position should require talents of an entirely different order, is another matter. A statesman, in the true sense of the word, should have a comprehensive background of political knowledge and training. A regular army officer usually has very little time for the gaining of such training. Granting that Perching may have the native talent to acquire political acumen through experience it hardly seems fitting to look upon the United States Senate as political training ground. The experiences of Grant as president presents a warning which might well be heeded. It is conceded that Grant himself was a thoroughly upright man and never of his own knowledge countenanced anything that savoured of graft in his administration. But he was surrounded by men who had long played the political game and Grant was beadwinked time and again. The present situation, while it is not exactly comparable to that or Grant nor a seat in the senate as responsible as the presidential chair, it yet holds a chance for fortunate results that should be avoided. Why take a good soldier to make a mediocre statesman. APPRECIATION OF ART The only way to appreciate beautiful things is to live with them. The best way to learn the value of art is to see good examples from which to form your estimates; you may recognize their value but you do not learn to care for them until you know them better. Students do not always make the best of their opportunity to enjoy the beauty around them. Given a critical attitude as a by product from his technical training, the college student does not always exercise this ability. Someone has said that the value of a college training lies not in the axioms of business learned in the training of how to spend your leisure time. When business demands are satisfied the resources for pleasure are not only as great as the interests of the individual. If he can derive enjoyment from congenial friends, good books, interesting plays, or beautiful pictures how much wider is his choice. On the third floor of East AD, the art department of the School of Fine Arts has some fine examples of painting and drawing. Occasionally they bring exhibits of recognized nerithe here especially for the students Last week the Smallley collection was hung, while earlier in the semester a Robert Henry was displayed. Perhaps you would not care for all of the pictures. But if there is one that catches your interest, study it. Go back and look at it often. Sooner than you expect you will find your sense of appreciation growing. Your interest will be transferred to other pictures, and still others. From small beginnings great things come. By these small efforts of yours you may develop a source of enjoyment that will be a joy to you throughout your life. At least it's worth trying. "TEAPOT DOME" The disposition of "Teapot Dome" by Secretary Fall of the Interior Department and Secretary Denby of the Navy Department has been the subject of no little discussion in political circles. The "Dome" is considered to be one of the richest oil reserves in the world and has been leased to the Sinchair oil interests for the purpose of development. It was placed on reserve to supply fuel for the navy and was to have been developed by the government as soon as possible. The charge is made against the two heads of departments that the lease was made without the competitive bidding customary in such cases. It has been turned over to the Mammouth Oil Company organized in Delaware by the Sinclair interests for the express purpose of handling the deal. In explaining their action Secretaries Fall and Denby have said that the oil is being taken from the reserve by wells adjoining the Dome and that when the government wants the oil it will be exhausted. The people in the vicinity point out that the oil is locked in solid rock and the pool could not possibly be tapped by adjoining wells Telegrams from the residents of Wyoming against the project have deluged Washington and the fight for an investigation of the matter is being led by Senator Kendrick of Wyoming. Under the terms of the lease the government is to receive royalties from the field on a sliding scale ranging from 12% to 50 percent of the production. The oil is to be stored by the Sinclair interests at convenient places for consumption of the navy. Members of the senate do not consider that the disposition of the lance will be to the best advantage of the government and are insulating on an investigation of it. It is the belief of many that the oil should be left in the ground until such time as it is needed as fuel for the navy. It should then be taken by the marine should then be taken out by the gov- erment. Objections are being raised Official Daily University Bulletin Copy received by Florence E. Bliss, Editor, Chancellor's Office Vo lume 1. --to the opening of the tract for exploitation by big interests. POSTPONED MEETING OF COLLEGE ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE Number 20. The postponed meeting of the College Administrative Committee will be held at 3:20 Wednesday in the office of the Dean, 104 Fraser Hall. ENGINEERS' DAY PROGRAM: The thirdirty-first anniversary of the forming of the School of Engineering will be celebrated on April 26 and 27. On Wednesday, students are to as a male for all classes as usual unless previously notified by the instructor to do otherwise. The 8:20 and 9:30 classes will be undisturbed. The professional session, which is open to the public, will begin at 10:30 o'clock. In addition, the School of Engineering conferences which will be held throughout the day in Marvin Hall ask room staff J. G. Brandt, Dsnn. The spokes are the prominent men in their lines of engineering. Mr. W. O. Penault, Chief Engineer of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, will give a address for the company. Dr. L, E. Young, formerly Director of the School of Mines at Rolla, Mo, now with the United Light & Power Co. of St. Louis, is to give a paper on the general question of fuel and fuel economies in relation to power production and general industrial development. Mr. F, R. Shodden comes as representative of the C. M. & St. P. Railway to give an illustrated lecture on the work of electrification of railways. This lecture will be given at the Central Railway Building, 205 East 43rd Street, New York, N.Y. Mr. Roy Cross of Kansas City is a well known chemist and expert in the industrial life of this region. He will speak on some phases of petroleum The all-engineer banquet will be held Wednesday evening at the University Commens. Thursday will be given over to the parade and field sports. P. F. Walker, Dean. Prof. C, C. Williams who has become a national figure in railway transportation matters, is to give an address on the transportation program of the University of Illinois. PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLUB TO BE FORMED; All men and women of the University, regardless of their present classification, who are interested in Physical Education and the formation of a Physical Education Club, are requested to meet at 7:30 Wednesday, in Robinson Gymnasium, upper floor. James Naismith, Director of Physical Education. MEETING SCHOOL OF MEDICINE ADMINISTRATIVE COMMITTEE AT ROSDDALE; A meeting of the Administrative Committee of the School of Medicine will be held at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning in the Dr. Ossau office at Rosdale. It would seem that the feed between Secretary Fall of the interior and Secretary Wallace of Agriculture will again be carried into the open as the policy of conservation of national resources is involved in the transaction. It is known that Secretary Wallace favors a policy of strict resources opened for development. Other oil reserves in California have been leased to the Pan-American Oil Company off development. Oil Company for development. gram of Secretary Wallace and it is expected that some rather interesting developments will precede the settlement of the difficulty. You can talk about your psychology of advertising but when it comes to extracting the long green from the gullible public, the motion picture magnates are all to the merry. The chances are the first lesson they make the embryonic producer learn is P. T. Barnum's crack about human fish and the birth rate. WE BIT TOO Plain Tales from the Hill When they get out on location in some lonely spot in Lower California, they can put on anything from a Sahara scene to cavalry skirmish in the Swiss Alps, and get away with it! And after they've roped in a bunch of circus elephants and a tame lion or two so that the hero can pull something like a cross between Wally Reed and Larry Semon, they let the innocent bystander in on some inside facts. The play cost over a million to produce. Yes sure! Why we had to go clear to Africa for one of the scenes and another one cast in the South Seas. There you have it in a nut shell. All there is left to do is for the local picture show owner to stick an extra jitney on the fare and away we go. It makes no difference whether the plot makes sense or not or whether the hero has cut flowers on The Fable of the Gold-Digger There was a Fond Ponna out in the Short Grass section of Kansas who had an Offspring called Clarice. Aside from being a Maiden of Talent, she had an Offspring called Clint Clement with the Sacks Crowd that came to Looks and she had Edited the High School Annual. She had so many Admirers of the Egyptian Diet variety that the Governor decided she ought to go to College. So he went to John Henry on another Note at the Halls while the girl's mother packed the new Wardrobe trunk on the center table in the middle of the Sahara Desert—that's a mere detail anyway. Everything went according to Schedule at the Institution of Learning. All the Greek Letter Sisters gave her a Big Rush and the Tea Toppers didn't give her a Chance to see what the House Cook could do for a couple of weeks. Her date book began to look like a Hotel Register and she had all the Lesser Lights sort of Worried. But it didn't Last. Some of the Fellows who had taken her to the Big Village decided that they got about as much Kick out of their Fifths as they would out of a Strawberry pie and it Noised about that aside from knowing the proper Goods with which to drape her Frame and where all the Most Expensive hash houses were, she was as Shy on Grey Matter as the average Policeman. She stuck it out for Four Seasons but she never figured out where it was she got her Signals Mixed. It is the custom for the Y. W. C. A. at Ohio State University to send "gospel teams" to nearby towns to speak during the Easter recess. The teams are made up of four men students. This year groups spoke at Waverly, Groweport, and Jomersey, all Ohio towns. (Moral) - A good, reliable Hoopie will go Further than a Cad when there's Nothing in the Gas Tank.) Student Opinion Editor Kansan: From time to time I hear students 'crabbing' because they had to pay a six dollar hospital fee when they enrolled last fall, and claim that they've never been inside the hospital, or maybe went once and got a little bottle of pills, or some gargle. They feel that they have been "held up" and cheated; or at least they talk as if they feel that way. The University of Nebraska is trying a new method this year of binging the non-fraternity men into closer touch with each other and to get them interested in sebol life and activities, by means of a big smoker. I wonder if these same people carry a life insurance, and then at the end of the year feel that they have been cheated because they didn't die, and thus allow their relatives to reap the benefits of their policy; or if they have a sick and accident insurance, and then feel bad because they haven't been sick several weeks, or haven't lost an arm? WANT ADS All want advertisements are cash, each $5. Five invites 48 counts. 60 over. We send five invites 48 counts. Over. We send three invites 28 counts. No To me, it seems that the $6.00 hospital fee is in reality a sick and accident insurance for the nine months we are in school, for through it we are insured medical and hospital care any sickness or accident, and anyone that this protection is worth at least the small amount of the fee. ICST-Fountain pen can with ribbon. Call Faye Gooper at 2639 White or K. U. 46. 155-2-382 LOST—Leather notebook No. 6 size. Full of class notes. Return to Phil McNees, Tel. 448. Reward. 15-2-3-84 WANTED - To rent for summer a small furnished house or apartmnt by a young married couple. Reserva HOME, Address HGB % Kansas 153-68-39 While every student has not received direct benefit from the hospital, reports show that 10,005 calls were made at the dispensary up to April 1, that 1145 were vaccinated with the polio vaccine, and received typhoid inoculations. Results of operations were performed, and 227 bed patients were cared for. AUTOMOBILE BARGAINS—Light five passenger car that has never changed hands and has had best of care. In excellent mechanical condition, 75 per cent of driving has been on paved streets. See Mr. Stont, at Were these cases to be treated else- where, and commercial charges made, the cost would be much greater as a s- tretch of the entire hospital fee has amounted to. So, fellow students, when we consider the protection we get, and the aid we are to the more fortunate students, in helping provide a place for their care, do you not feel that the little $6.00 fee is well spent? Consider these things before you kick next time. Reduced Prices on Memory Books A. G. ALRICH $1.75 Pens for 98c HURD'S STATIONERY 36 Mass. Printing, Engraving THE REXALL STORE HEMSTITCHING, PLEATING Peining of Ladies Coats and Alterations Between Tire Stitches THE REXALL STORE F. B. McCOLLOCH. Druggis' Eastman Kodaks L. E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens 817 Mass. St. SCHULZ 917 Mass. St. A Student. Chemistry Building, Room 107, or call city phone 20. 138-5. "Suiting You" BAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. PROFESSIONAL CARDS PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. HAYNE (Bypass) Oral Practitioner Dr. Hayne provides oral and surgical lessons on the mouth, teeth, and tongue. Anatomy 307-209 Perkins Bldg 402-568 Pediatrics CHIROPRACTOR® DR. A. J. VANNINKLE, Four osteon- pati 1329 Ohio Phone 1031 II. FLORENCE BARROW, Gateoathi Phone 2347, 969 %, Mars, Sd. DISC. WELCH AND WELCH, CHIRO- TO MASTER DISC. PHONE 1-800-253-6450 or HOOKS. PHONE 1-800-253-6450 or HOOKS. ELECTRIC SHOP SHOP batteries for 10 minutes any time 10% Max. BULLLOCK PRINTING COMPANY Nationality-printing of all kinds bowtie hldg DALE PRINTING COMPANY, Pho- nix world. Price reasonable. Phone: 228 1027 Mass. Street. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (EX- clusive optometrist) eyes examined. glasse made Office of 1955 Mama D, Dr. Creuput, Specialist, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. All Glass work warranted. Phone 445. Dick Building adv. "GIFTS THAT LAST" We Like to Do Little Jobs of Repairing CAPITAL $100,000.00 WATKINS NATIONAL BANK C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashen, L. V. Miller, T. C. Green J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. SURPLUS $100,000.00 DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cashier W E. Hazen, Assistant Cashier STYLE has to be "sewed in" Good designing gives you "the style" in clothes; expert needlework and fine woolens make it last Get it all here in Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes They cost less than other clothes because they last longer PECKHAM'S