--- THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas Subscription price $3.00 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; 50 cents a month; 16 weeks a day. Entered as second-class 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, the piece of the Department of Journalism Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone: K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kannan area, to provide training for the University of Kannan to go for further standing for the ideals that he felt to be clean, to be cheerful to be clean, to be cheerful to leave more serious problems EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor Diana Fleese Diana Fleese Campus Editor Chester Shaw Desktop Editor Desktop Editor Telegraph Editor Phyllas Winger. Plain Tales Editor Wilfred Winger. Black Skis Exchange Editor Marion Shiples BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager...Lloya Ruppensha Aasst. Business Mgr...James Connolly Aasst. Business Mgr...Conwell Carlson BOARD MEMBERS George McVey Margaret Larkin Clare Fursegrion Armeni Rumbergeria Berry Fletcher Ted Hudson Jacqueline Glimore Lotte Leah Stella Dutton Hill FRED CLARKE—SPORTSMAN MONDAY, APRIL 10, 1922 It is a very fortunate thing that Kansas was able to secure for a weel the services of Fred Clarke, veteran of the diamond, to help in shaping up a baseball team that is again to hang a Valley championship beneath the Crimson and the Blue. But it is much more fortunate that Fred Clark is that best of all things in athletics, anateur or professional, a true sirteman. the same time, play honorably." Clarke, in the week that he spent with the 1922 Jayhawker nine, drilled into their minds and bodies many of the major and minor points of diamond strategy that make for a smooth-running baseball team, but he did more than this. In a little talk after the first practice which he supervised he said: "If you have any ambition to make baseball your vocation after you get out of school, well and good. Professional baseball has become a very definite and very credible business. But remember that there is a difference between collegiate and professional ball. You are playing to different classes of audiences, and you are representing different things. Never forget when, you play for Kansas, that you are gentleman. Play-play hard; make it a contest, not an exhibition, but at For his very valuable assistance and for his invaluable expression of a sense of ethics that Jayhawk may well lay clai mto, Kansas offers its unbound thanks to Fred Clark—sportman. According to Miss Wooster of anticigarette fame, there is a hair-couring day coming for the bobbed-haired ones. But they already comb their hair many times every day. Everybody sees them do it. THE FARMER'S SMILE The farmers of this state can go about their early morning chores with a smile on their face now. Weather conditions have been very favorable during the past two months; the price of farm products, which had fallen so much farther than manufactured goods is showing definite signs of recovery; and the farmers are steadily gaining some prestige through legislative channels. The farmer's smile has always been more or less cynical. His work has many angles. His wheat may be good and his corn poor; the best animal he has is apt to lie down and die with the slightest warning; the late freezes are always a menace; and as has been true since the war, farm products are below price levels while the articles he must buy jump from fifty to one hundred percent above the level. Now since a balance, or something that approaches a balance, has been restored, the farmers' smile will undoubtedly be more whole-hearted. He can always kick about the weather the grasshoppers, the hail storms, or hired men's wages, and so keep a healthy equilibrium; but he can also smile with out concealed pain With Oklahoma in the bandit-inflicted condition that it has suffered from them for the past year, there is need for more of the kind of "ofers like the McAlester sheriff, who fired one shot at a fleeing bandit, and wounded him twice. The bullet divided on its way to the mark through the back end of an automobile. ACADEMIC FREEDOM OF SPEECH A recent occurrence at Clark University, Worcester, Massachusetts, academic freedom in American colleges. At least it proves almost conclusively that a university is a proper place for freedom of thought because views set forth there are more apt to be approached from every possible angle. "The president of that University, Wallace W. Atwood, demanded that an address being given by Scott Nearing before the "Liberal Club" should cause. The occasion for his intervention was a statement made by the speaker 'that greater material rewards go to those who engage in business pursuits than to those who devote themselves to reform in either action or thought." "Vested interests pick off the best brains and enlist them in their service," declared Nearing. The student body at Clark University, where freedom of speech is a cherished tradition, is in open revolt against the president. A week after the incident President Atwood, upon request of the student body for an expansion, made a statement of his policy on academic freedom of speech in which he said: "I closed the meeting because I was unwilling to have the university in any way, directly or indirectly, actually, we can reasonably forfeit." tually or apparently, responsible for our students' listening any longer to the sentiments which were being expressed by the speaker." He went on to say that he disapproved of the un scientific method of presentation and the intemperate manner in which the address was being conducted, and he stated that even though the speaker's theories and beliefs had been right he would have closed the meeting. "I believe in free speech," he declared. In President Atwood's effort to shelter the minds of his students from stubborn and dangerous doctrines, he has overlooked the fact that a mind which must be sheltered is not worth saving. The students at Clark University have demonstrated the fact that their minds need not be sheltered by their revolt against the president of the University. Have you ever noticed when passin' an undertaking establishment how the owner looks out and smiles at you He really says. "Go on down to street, old fellow, but I'll get, voet!" THE SOUTHERN WOMAN RISES For many years lynching and mob violence have been common practice in the South. It has arisen mostly from the race problem. Good citizens account themselves as the prosecutors, jurors, judges, and executors of suspected criminals. Judgments are made up by dehumanized mobs who seem are skeptical about the strength of the law and of public officials. And furthermore they think mob violence is necessary for protection. These women for whom most of this brutality has been going on, have struck deep at the roots of its cause. It is truly weakness of public sentiment on moral issues. They should have every encouragement because mob rule and lynchings have too long hold away for the good of future national life. In the face of these facts groups of women in six of the Southern states who wish to bring about a different state of public opinion in promoting race cooperation have passed a courageous set of resolutions regarding the lynching. For a balance to the weakness and failure of public officials in the execution of the law they offer a weakness of public sentiment on moral issues. They believe that the practice of lynching and burning human beings for the protection of Southern womanhood is a false expression of chivalry. Official Daily University Bulletin EASTER RECESS: The Easter creep begins Friday morning, April 14, at 8:20, and continues through Monday, April 17. Rigular class work will be resumed Tuesday, April 21. Copy received by Florence E. Ellis Editor, Chancellor's Office, I kill babies, children, grownups, impartially. Hundreds of hospitals are filled with those I do not succeed in slaying. I play a safe game. I scatter dis ease germs in halls, in the street ears, where ever there is a crowd. Thousands of gravyards are filled with those with whom I have more success. I am ruthless and cruel. Yet I could be restrained if people really understood how much harm there is in me. Instead of that they think I am funny and laugh at me. Some of them even cry the German word for "health" when they hear me. For I am a sneeze. APRIL. 10. 1922 Seventeen students of the University of Oklahoma have been suspended for a period of two weeks as the result of a liquor and gambling investigation. For some time, Ray Gittinger, dean of undergraduate, announced yesterday. ADPH 10, 1922 Vo'ume 1 Plans are being formulated for a new hotel to be built on the Stanford campus. It will be constructed by the University and leased out. The hotel planned to accommodate the visitors at Stanford who have been hither to seek accommodations in San Francisco. Who is the ideal girl? Few people suspect me. I am never detected. A Confession 2. Be at ease in company. The ideal id is the same in public as at home. 3. Do not call all your secrets to your girl chum. BUDGET COMMITTEE CONFERENCES: Notice is hereby given of meetings of the budget committee on salaries. The committee consists of the dean of administration, the head of the department concerned, and the deans of the schools which allow credit for the given salaries. The meeting will be held at 10 a.m. Deen Brandt, 104 Fraser Hall, and the schedule for Tuesday is as follows: E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor 4. Do not offend a girl friend because jealousy. 1. Do not flirt. It is useless8 and has no definite aim. Not long ago the University of Denver Y. W. C. A. conducted a series of meetings in which standards were reviewed, a student was interviewed, a student, a sister, a chum, a sweetheart and in other relationships. In the light of the many qualifications with which the ideal girl was endowed at these meetings, the four prescents lauded by mere man and published by mere woman are from New York are very simple. It seems inconvenient, according to some Denver University women, that "more man" should have so few to suggest. They are as follows: Arizona. Health Bulletin. 3:00 a. m.—Education. 9:30 a. m — Education 10:20 a. m — Philosophy and Psychology. I am a murderer. 2:00 p. m.—Design. On Other Hills 3:30 p. m. —Drawing and Painting. Journalism students study the psychology of advertising. They know that that new sign across their old beaten path that says "PLEASE" is just a good stall to keep them from reverting to their easy way. Or the same, it is too wrong. Or it is just on account of the rainy weather? F. J. KELLY, Dean of Administration. BACH CANTATAS: plain Tales from the Hill Music Students of the School of Fine Arts, under the direction of Professor Skilton, will give two Bach cantatas Tuesday evening at 8:15, in Fraser They were discussing the cost of Charlie Chaplin's film "The Kid" in Prof. Flint's editorial problems class. The picture is said to have cost a million, "released one member of the chauvet broken window pane a size item." Prof. Dill and his son had just left the journalism building on their way home, when the PLEASE sign was encountered. Mr. Dill, Jr., thoughtfully regarded the entreating, imploring word a moment and then asked: "Say, Dad, what's that men? Please walk across the grass?" History Professor to sleepy class: "I grieve me to say that last night as I came by a downtown restaurant I saw a number of you, my friends, seated around a table at a time when all respectable people were in bed." "Well, whatever it did cost," received Mr. Flint. "I've paid for part of it. My boy saw the picture and sent me $20 worth of windows to date." H. L. BUTLER, Dean. WANT ADS All Want advertisements are cash. I need two insertions and one second insertion. Five insertions, two first insertion and not more than 25 one insertion 28. What ad insertions for less than 25 cents? What ad insertions for less than 25 cents? LOST—Gaberdine raincoat. Reward. Leave st Kansan Business Office. 128.2.370 RATERNITIES AND SORORITIES —Why not buy a home on terms and save high rent. From $2,000 to $5,000 will make this possible. The first two weeks of reactive terms and prices right. Holiday. Phone 97. 737 Mass. First door north of Weaver's. 128-5.372 FOR RENT- Furnished rooms, 2nd floor. Furnace heat at 1417 Kentucky. 126-5-387 PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. H. PANNE. (Exon-kiot) Pra- tice in the surgical lesion of the mouth. Gas-Oxygen and Conduction Anesthesia. 361-598 Perkins Bldg. SIMMONS BROTHERS PLUMBING Heating and electric work. Phone 161. Bowersock Theatre Bldg. CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTORS DRS. WELCH AND WELCH, CHIRO- PRACTORS, graduates of Palmier school. Phone 115. Office over Houk's DR. A. J. YANWINKLE, Your osteo path. 1239 Ohio. Phone 1031 DR. FLORECE BARROWE Osteopath Phone 2357 909/944 Mars, St. THOMAS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP Rubber heels in 10 minutes any time 1017% Mass. BULLOCK PRINTING COMPANY Stationery-printing of all kinds Rowersock Bldg DALE PRINTING COMPANY. Fir- mary work. Prices reasonable. Phone 228. 1027 Mass. Street LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist) Eye examined; glasses made Office 1025 Mass Johnston's chocolates are fresh every week at the Rankin Drug Store. adv. Cutex sets for that manicure.—Rankin Drug Store.—adv. Try a Johnston's choice Box of Candy-22 kinds.-Rankin Drug Store.-adv. Gillette safety razor blades at the Rankin Drug Store.—adv. Dr. Oreulen, Specialist, Eye, Ear. Nose and Threat. All Glass work guaranteed. Phone 445. Dick Building --adv. THE REXALL STORE "Suiting You' PHAT'S MY BUSINESS WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. THE REXALL STORE F. B. McCOLLOCH. Druggis Eastman Kodaks L. E. Waterman and Conkh Fountain Pens 847 Mass. St. Dress Up for Easter If you're not buying new clothes, have your old ones cleaned; if you are, have your old ones cleaned anyway. They'll look new 75 New York Cleaners CALL WATKINS NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL $100,000.00 C. H. Tucker, President SURPLUS $100,000.00 --- C. H. Tucker, President C. A. Hill, Vice-President and Chairman of the Board. DIRECTORS D. C. Asher, Cashier Dick Williams, Assistant Cashier W E. Hazen, Assistant Cashier C. H. Tucker, C. A. Hill, D. C. Ashar, L. V. Miller, T. C. Gzeen J. C. Moore, S. O. Bishop 11. Easter--Week from Sunday! San Tan Stetsons Young Men keep right on asking for San Tan Stetons; they like the stylish new idea; the tan colors, the deeper tan bands, Stetson quality will hold the style; it can't get away. $7 Other San Tan Hats $5 Up What it costs You Every time your laundry makes the week-end trip and is returned with a collar edge sheared or a shirt ruined—what it means to you in the cost of your laundry for a year. We have spared no expense in purchasing our modern equipment that had revolutionized the business of laundrying. There are three steps to insure good laundrying. The first is to step to the phone- The second is to call three-eight-three. The third step is to leave your name with us—we do the rest. Lawrence Steam Laundry