THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief. Addison R. Massey Associate Editor. Pauline Newman Campus Editor. Marion F. Collina Sport Editor. Joe Turner Ruth Editor. Judi Burke Flat Tales Editor. George McVey Alumni Editor. George Wingers Phial Wings BUSINESS STAFF Lloyd H. Rupenthal...Business Mgr James Connelly...Business Mgr Connell Carlson...Ass't. Business Mgr BOARD MEMBERS Eualiais Dougherty Elmer Seifert George Gage Subscription price' $3.50 in advance for the first nine months of the aca deciam year; $2.00 for one semester; 60 cents a month; 15 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail mast September 17, 1910, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1873. Published in the afternoon five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism of the University of Kassas. Published in the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phoenix 11.25 and 66 Phones, K. U, 25 and 66 The Daily Kansas amis to pique their interest in the University of Kansas, to go for a walk around campus and to stand for the ideals that the author, to be clean, to be cheerful, to have more serious probes, to have more serious prose serve to the best of its ability the university is able to do. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1992 ENTHUSIASM WILL HELLI SCRIMMAGE Now that old McCook Field is so torn up, students seem to forget that there is such a thing as football practice. Night after night there is barely a score of spectators on the sidelines. Nothing makes for a fast, pepy scrimmage as does an enthusiastic audience and it takes numbers to get across the impression of enthusiasm to the players. Last year considerable crowds were at almost every scrimage. This year with the proper student spirit back of it, the team will work faster. Do not let interest lag at the critical time! The unaccustomed place in which practice is being held has something to do with this fact no doubt. A field has been leased just south of the campus and one of the stipulations of the lease was that football players and coaches only were to be allowed on the field. There is plenty of room on the outside however, and nothing prevents those interested from watching the scrimmage on the sidelines at the edge of the field. MOVIES NOT ALL BAD The whole country is being treated to the soridid details of another movie scandal. The "Oh's" and "Ah's" of a scandalized public are being drawn out in profusion as the sensational newspapers of the country sit upon the most recent and vivid episode in the unnatural life of one of the most unusual classes of people in the world, and after carefully hunting down each detail of the affair, they dig up for the reader the whole past life and family history of the movie people concerned. In the story of the life of the principal in the latest affair there is a great deal that can be read between the lines. Rearned in extreme poverty, abused, at times half starved, denied the opportunity or the incentive for an education, the man reaches a mature age and suddenly funds himself possessed of a talent the exercising of which brings him millions. With the possession of this sudden wealth, there comes a most natural result. The unnatural childhood, the lack of education, both extract their pound of flesh. And the newly arisen star goes bad. JAYHAWKER VETERANS The formation of Jayhawk Post Number 3 of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, makes us realize that there are men at the University who have had experiences and adventures remote and unconnected with any phase of the normal existence which makes up the life span of the average student. Most of the American boys who wore the uniform during the World War were eager to get across to France and then to the front. Although the men who remained on this side in the army cannons had the same end in view, it fell to the lot of only a small percent of the armed forces of the United States to share in the Great Adventure and return with scars and memories which place them apart from the rest. The men on Mount Oread who wear the silver button are here to fit themselves as better citizens. The formation of Jayhawker Post Number 3 is but an expression of the distinct bond which already existed between them. The University of Kansas is proud to have these men enrolled as students. LONG YEARS OF SERVICE City Journal Sept. 95 The announcement was made in Lawrence the other day of the resignation of Prof. C, P. Dunlap as head of the department of English at the University of Kansas after thirty years. He will be succeeded by Prof. R. D. O'Leary, who himself has been professor of English at the university for twenty-five years. Prof. Dunlap will not, however, sever his connection There should be some way of measuring the immense amount of good these two men have accomplished in their long periods of service. It would be interesting to know how many hundreds of young lives they have influenced by their teachings—to how many young men and women they have set examples of sincerity and industry. The state knows exactly how much good its agencies of government are doing, but what of the college professors, who, year in and year out, enshrined the love of womenhood of the state to reach higher planes of learner? Professor Dunlap and Professor Mleary, during the years spent on the faculty of the university, have seen the nation engaged in two wars. seen the nation engaged in two wars. They have seen six presidents elected, and they have seen party issues flare up and die down. They have seen men go from their class rooms out into the world, some of them to achieve success and some to fail. They read in the papers of the governor Smith, and amole as they remember the time these two gentlemen "flunked" a course in rhetoric. It would be interesting to be a college professor if for no other reason than to study human nature. There are those who frown upon the erudition of the college professor and say he is not practical. But eliminate the professor from the order of things and civilization is set back a century. Now the state of Kansas hopes Professor Dunnilp and Professor O'Leary will enjoy many more years of accomplishment on the faculty of the university. Plain Tales from the Hill The farmer boy who dismounted his horse and mounted the steps to Green Hall Monday morning, illustrated to the laws how to make a statement of fact and back it up with some convincing argument. "Phog" Allen was well nigh enraged when he read the Kansan Friday day evening, and perhaps just too. That morning he had told a reporter, as the two looked over the stadium grounds; "It is here that many stars will twinkle." Witness "Phog" chagrin when he read the quotation in the story, "it is here that my stars will twinkle." The athlete director of the show said he would watch the moon evidently. The reporter who handled the story declared that the error was made in the composing room. Professor Rice, of the Department of Physics, started his class from their peaceful reverie during one of his lectures by suddenly asking this question; "Can anyone in the class enter a chair which will hold waser?" Shades of ignorance. Some of the fresh think that "Potsy" Clark is a new kind of lament. Nothing new has been sprung about the senior law canes and those harmonious discords emitting from the Fine Arts sedition 1 in Administration. But wait, somebody will notice them and have a remark or two to make. ALUMNI NOTES The work of popularizing science seems to be especially attractive to the great scientists who have graduated from K. U. What Vernon Kellogg has done in the biological field toward the popularization of scientific knowledge, Edwin E. Slosson, B. S. "90, M. S. '92" is in doing the field of physical science. Mr. Slosson was a graduate from University after which he became Associate Professor of Chemistry at the University of Wyoming. But Mr. Slosson was a writer before he became a scientist. For several years preceding his entrance to the University, he responded for the Kansas City Journal. There it was no surprise to the English department of his Alma Mater when he was summoned by the editorial editor of the Independent in 1893. Since that time Mr. Sibson has been engaged constantly in journalistic work. In 1912 he became associated with the Pulitzer School of Journalism at Columbia University. In recent years he has published a number of authoritative books and magazine articles on widely varying subjects. Doubless his greatest work is Creative Chemistry, a book which he published a year or two ago and which is considered by many prominent scientists of the field to be a type of popularizing science that has ever been produced. The purpose of the book was to arouse interest in the need for the development of chemical science along industrial lines. Mr. Slosson is now in Washington, D.C. as secretary of the Scripp News Agency where he prepares syndicate reports on recent scientific developments. On Other Hills The Ohio State Lantern of Ohio State University, states that the registration at the time the paper went to press, had an increase of 849 over last year. The total registration had reached 6478. Henrietta Allen, Louise Robison, Einda Chain, and Loote Nuttle returned from Wichita early this morning. All three all took part in the Wheat Show. Figures made public by the registrar's office at the University of Colorado show that the football men, as a whole, average higher in scholarship than men who do not go out for football. The total for the entire school average 74.87, while the average of the letter man was 77.31 for the year 20-21. The Kansas State Agricultural College has an enrollment of 3,422 for $^{\circ}$ fall, semester. For tired feet use Nyals Foot Easem gives perfect rest—Rankin Drug Company. WANT ADS LOST—Small blue purse containing money. Finder please call 1408. PHI DELTA THETA has an F. A. U. Hall date on Oct. 7 which it wishes to dispose of. Call 248.10.3-18 FOR RENT—Canoe. Call 1075 Blue. 10-5-15 STOLEN - From 2nd floor clock rack Chemistry Bldg. A. Marx-Madegardine. Reward. Leroy Goodman, 1126 Ihc. Phone 454. 10-5-17 ROOM for two boys. Dandy room and location. 1414 Tenn. 10-2-19 FOR SALE - New silver-plated Boehm system flute. Call at 17 West Fourteenth. Phone 1414. Detectives are on the trail of the party who took the tan garabande coat from Spooner library between 8:15 and 9:30 Tuesday evening. Immediate return of the coat by mail to the office. Office will save exposure. 8-5-10 WANTED—To rent a cello. Phone 2297 Red, 1023 Miss. 8-5-1 10-5-16 LOST—U. S. Aviatlon rug pin. Find er please phone 1202. Miss Carey, Reward. 9-5-12 LOST—Fountain pen near crossing east of Chemistry building. Call 1056B. Reward. LOST—New brown Woolf Bros. hat. Finder please call 285 and leave address. 9-5-13 Dancing School will be hold on Sat- day morning, October 1, at Eagles Hall. Class 9-10 a.m. *S.*社会舞课 10:12 a.m. M. dr. 3 15:34-2 WANTED - Student to deliver groceries. Fords furnished from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. Call Jamison at 2521 Red. 12-5-20 Lucile Orear and Hazel Cawy c25 *pent the weekend at their homes in Kansas City, Mo. Johnston's Chocolate, soft or hard centers—a large variety and fresh every week—Rankin Drug Store. Across the street from the Court House is the STUDENTS HOE HOP TODAY ONLY R. O. Burgert, Prop. 1113 Mass. Headquarters for Fine Findings. Phone 141 Bowersock Also a Good Comedy A Cosmopolitan Special "The Wild Goose" TODAY ONLY SIDNEY CHAPLIN in "King. Queen and Joker" Students' Made-to-Measure A Good Comedy TO RENT—To reliable parties furni- mished home on Ohio street near Ui- niversity. Address L., Care the Kans- san. 12-5-21 Suits & Overcoats Look over our samples, compare our prices with others, and you will buy from us. Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded Schaplowsky and Co. phone 1844 White 940 Ky. St. FOR SALE—Home made cakes, Jetty, preserves and other canned fruits. 1312 Ohio. 12-5-22 THE BEST family board for boys, Cooking just like mother's own. Call at 1345 Vermont. Phone 2520, Mrs. Bleyer. 13-5-2 TO RENT—House, completely modern, newly papered and finished. 1789 Black. FOR RENT—First class room for girls. Call 587, 932 Ala. 13-5-25 PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrist) Eyes exam- glasses made, office 1025 Mass. DALE PRINTING COMPANY. First class work. Prices reasonable. Phone 225. 1037 Mass. Street. THOMAS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP. Rubber heels in 10 minutes any time. 1017½ MARR. 1. H, FRINK, DENTIST. Located over People State Bank Bldg. Phones: Office 671. Res. 1715. DR. IBRETTES, DENTIST. Office at 927 Mass. Phone 183. DRS, WELCH AND WELCH, CHIRO- PRACTORS, graduates of Palmer school. Phone 115. Office over HouK's. BULLOCK PRINTING COMPANY Stationery-printing of all kinds Bowersock Bldg. Ramer's assortments of fine candies always good.—Rankin Drug Store. . B. McCOLLOCH, Druggist Eastman Kodaks E. Waterman and Conklin Fountain Pens THE REXALL STORE 847 Mass, St. "Suiting You" THAT'S MY BUSINESS* WM. SCHULTZ 917 Mass. St. Bluff King Hal A Veritable Cave Man Lover In Paramount Picture "Deception" Emil Jamings as King Henry VII and One of His Favorite in the *Paramount Picture*, 'Deception.' A veritable cave man lover is Henry VIII, King of England, in the superb Paramount picture, "Deception," which will be shown at the Varsity Theatre Wednesday and Thursday and at the lowersock Wednesday only. Bluff King Hal, the Falstaff of British royalty, found nothing more delightful than the pastime of carrying girls about in his sturdy arms. The story of "Deception" deals with Henry's espousal and subsequent repudiation of Anne Boleyn, his second wife. It is a tremendous story of love behind a throne, but above the sordidness of Henry's conduct, the majesty of the Queen stands forth as a beacon light in Cimmaran gloom. It is a peculiarly appealing theme the乔装于 which holds the attention of picture lovers by a see me! Henry Porter and Emil Jannings, two of the most famous screen artists of Europe have the principal roles.] See what $37.50 does You get a Hart Schaffner & Marx blue serge suit; made to sell for $10 or $15 more From Our Special 8 Store Purchase Your satisfaction is guaranteed This event can't last long; you'd better do something now PECKHAMS The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes