UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN official student paper of the University of Kansas EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief ... James Austin Associate Editor ... Addison Massy Campus Editor ... George Gage Sport Editor ... Adam Horn Phyllia Wingwort Plain Takes Editor ... Eddie Wilsonworth Ford Editors ... Fred Doughtery August Editors ... Dougherty RUSINESS STAFF BOARD MEMBERS Henry R. McCurdy...Business Mgr Leo Lippenthal...Aust't Business Mgr LeRoy Hughes...Aust't Business Mgr Joe Bogle Marion Collins Rust Armstrong Cowell Carlson Elmer Day Runner Elmer Suertf Joephine Nekaban Cannile Noelle Kath Miller Pawlain Newman George McVeigh Paul White Submission price $2.50 in advance for the first nine months of the academic year; $2.00 for one semester; $6.00 a month; 18 cents a week. Entered as, second-class mail marten September 17, 1910. at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act o March 5, 1879. Published in, the afternoon, five times a week by students in the Department of Journalism from Kansas, from the press or the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kaanai amass to picnic at the University of Kansas; to go for a field trip to the United States by standing for *the ideas* the leaders of our country proposed; to be clean, to be cheerful; to have more active proms; to leave more airy premises; to serve the best of its ability the university. WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1921 A SOLEMN WARNING Stalium Day, in spite of its bottomless mud and slush, passed off without a single hitch. Enger workers were on the scene long before time. Everybody was there to work and worked with a will, with the result that the rate of accomplishment surpassed all expectations. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The spirit of helpfulness and recreation, coupled with the absence of grumbling, proves conclusively that the student body of the University has its best interests at heart. A great many good things could be said about Stadium Day, but no time is more appropriate to sound a warning which may prove valuable in fostering and continuing this state of mind. The student body is giving its best to the University. In return it must have the best that the university can offer. Indeed, the University must outdo itself, or it will discover that the students will lose their arder and refuse to deliver 100 percent sacrifice as they have done this year. Even the calmest students of the University are beginning to chafe under interference in purely student affairs. The students are self-governing. Why should they be bound by almost martial faculty supervision and rule This practice is breeding distrust and indifference to the best interests of the school even today. Again, the whole student body is beginning to tire of the poor quality of officials that have been secured to manage athletic contests by the Athletic Department. Let us see each member of the coaching staff the master of his sport and not a cog in the scheme of things. Then the responsibility can be placed and ascertained. The student body is behind the Administration at the present and has confidence in it, but the above disaffactions are very general and must be considered. Let the administration look well to itself and the student body probe into its own shortcomings, and both work together to preserve the fine spirit of the present. Then Stadium Day will not have been in vain. FROM THE NEWBERRY DECISION Although the immediate effect of the decision of the United States Supreme Court regarding the Senator Newberry election controversy was to vindicate the Senator's sight to his office, the report and opinion of the court handed back with the decision were of far more permanent importance. The point brought out by the opinion of the court was that with our present system, we have no national control of Congress of primary elections, which, it is pointed out have in many cases, as in Michigan and many in southern states, almost come to surpass the actual election in importance. The Court decided that under the present laws, Congress had nothing to say about the amount of money which a candidate can spend in the primaries. In making this decision, the court also expressed the opinion that more legislation, either statutes or constitutional amendment, providing for the control of primary elections proceedings, by Congress, instead of by the states alone, was necessary. The Newbury case would probably have received a different handling and result, if such laws had been in effect. As it did turn out, however, it showed very clearly the need of legislation giving Congress the right to regulate primary as well as regular election requirements from a national standpoint. Congress would then have the right to limit the amount of money which a candidate can spend in the primaries, and future Senator Newbury cases will get a different decision from the United States Supreme Court WHY DID "POTSY" RESIGN? WHY DID TOTSY RESIGN? The air about the campus is loaded with conjecture concerning the reasons for the resignation of "Potty Clark." All are trying to make out that it is money that is drawing him to Kansas. Still others are blaming the department of athletics for something—they know not what because they think not every possible effort was made on its part to retain the football coach. These people of the campus who are looking for someone on whom to attach the burden of the blame need look well to themselves before they make final decision. It is the truth that usually hurts, but it is also the truth that rights matters in the end. Now is the time for us students to face the truth and recognize the truth. It is definitely known that Potsy is ot leaving because of money. Here re the real reasons; Last summer, buss were sent to the football men to come back for early training season. The men came dragging in a few at a time, some of them late. As a result, kalamazoo came down here with her team in midseason form and trimmed us. Then during the entire football season Pony lost more games than he had ever lost before while playing and coaching, both the thing that would take the heart out of nearly every man. But this is not the direct reason, for he is a sticker and a fighter clear through. Last winter he sat on the bleachers in the gymnasium at the DePawn basketball game and when the score ran to big odds for the opposing team in the middle of the last half, a man sitting back of him was heard to say, "Oh b—— we’re host." When he called for football men to turn out for spring football training some of the best men in the school refused to come out at all and there was not spirit enough among the students to make these men go out for athletics or get out for the institution. During the entire football and basketball, and during the baseball season, just now well under way, variety men were prone to be late to practice because the attractions of some fair coed hold more lure for them than the chances for cooperation in what might have been a strong Aggie machine to go out and win. We, the students, have got to revive and meet the situation as it really is. It is not so much the fact that we are losing a coach that hurts the institution; it is the fact that there still exists that spirit of self-f pleasure on this campus which prevents 100 per cent unity in athletics. Athletics above all other school activities are what puts the team on the map. school coaches before he could develop a team that could go out and win from the big institutions. He is justifiably ambitious and no one can blame him for taking a position at a school which is already at the top of its conference list in one of the strong conferences of the country. Pasy says the material is here. Within the next four years M. A. C. will have teams that will go out and meet the host in the country on even terms. But there is this to consider for a young coach who is very justifiably ambitious; the standing of a coach among coaches is definitely set during the first few years of his coaching career. To wait and develop the possibilities here would undoubtedly mean that he would be relegated to the background among the small The thing to do is to start now with a 100 per cent he-man drive for unity in athletics. See that every athlete is out all the time and make him feel uncomfortable if he shirks his duty. He is no good to the school unless he is willing to work in his athletics for the school. There is too much individual independence here. What we need is a bunch of men who are willing to give up a few pleasures in order to put across some winners.- The Holcd, Michigan Agricultural College. Campus Opinion It is with a feeling of disappointment rather than of criticism will which the writer views the first Missouri baseball game played last week. After admiring your efforts to keep the spirit of sportsmanship so clean, building better teams and seasons it is with a distinct shock that he witnessed the actions of the student body during yesterday's game. Just before the start of the game it was announced to the crowd that they were to give Missouri the "tazz" and they certainly obeyed instructions to the letter. Cat calls, personal and insulting remarks, a concession team, in fact a general attitude that one does no as a rule associate with student bodies who聚ent from the first. It is a tradition that most colleges of the better class that there is to be no cheering at errors made by the opposing side but yesterday this season the coaches have judged it. In fact the student body behaves just as a crowd of bleacherites at a league game in one of the big cities is expected to be haunt. It may seem at times that the careful courtesy at college games is carried an extreme but it forms a pleasing contrast to the actions of undisciplined spectators at professional contests. Knowing how careful you have been in the past in insisting on perfect sportmanship the writer takes the liberty of writing this letter in order to give you the impression made on one who, though he graduated from another college, admires the spirit and sportmanship prevalent at K. U. during the past year when the school's chapel was cheapened. It is hoped that this letter will be accepted in the spirit in which it is written. An annex covers a multitude of sins, Very sincerely yours, L. H. Houston Plain Tales From the Holl Lucile Cleveland and Helen Buck were planning a family dietary for Food and Nutrition class. Lucie: "Are you going to have your old grandpa of 85 have any teeth, Helen?" Helen: "Well, I guess not. It'll be a lot easier not to. We can just give him a cup of milk every evening." Counting Noses. Counting Noses Cosmetically Speaking A student (male) stood near the door at West Ad one day and watched ten young women, one after the other, come out and start for some distant part of the campus. "Six of them," the man declares, "powdered their noses as they emerged from the building." "Your essay on 'The Old Bleachers is rotten,' said the English prof. "After this be more concrete in your writing." Upon hearing such admonition, the freshman happily chose for her new paper "the next paper." "The New Stadium." The other four were paralysed in the arms, surely. Will the old fashioned bleachers Be someday perhaps. How dear to my heart "The Greenhorn" When I think of the past.— The loose boards, the splinters. And all of the features, That made them so cheery. Right up to the last. Also A MERMAID COMEDY WANT ADS Scene from Allen Holubar's Production "Man-Woman-Marriage" Starring Dorothy Phillips WHO WANTS IT? A new $12 volume of the Overseas Issues of the Stars and Stripes for only $7. Every extraterritory should have one. Also oblige it to book for $4.50. Call Blink at 2450. Blue or 900 Alabama S: 150-3-491 VARSITY BOWERSOCK Wednesday & Thursday Wednesday Only Three Shows-2:30----7 and 9 P.M. LOST- gold-wrist watch between Varsity Theater and Kappa House. Initials "M.C." on back, Reward, Call 240. 150-2-49 LOST—Phi Beta Kappa Key. Name o back. Reward for return to its owne or Kausan Office. 150-24 39 Typewriting—Work called for and delivered. 50c per 1000—Glenmaddg- phone, 2579. 138-154-655 PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Exclusive Optometrists) Eyes examined; glasses made. Office 1025 Mass. CHRIOPRACTORS CERTIFICATORS DRS. WELCH AND WELCH—PALMER GRADUATES. Office 297 Mass. St. Phone. 115, Residence 115K. DALE PRINT SHOP, 1027 Mass. St. Phone 228. DR. H. B. CHAMBERS, Suite 2-14 Building, based on practical practice, Special attention to nose, throat and ear Telephone 217. C. T. ORELELP, M. D.-Specialist. Eye ear, nose, and throat. Glass work guaranteed.-Dick Bros. Blind DR. G. W. JONES, A. M. M. D. D. Discuss of obstetrics and gynecology Suite J. I. P. A. B. Ugl. Phonex Residence 25, Residence 36LK Hospital 1744. DR. J. H. BENHUEL. Rooms 3 and 4 over McCullough's Drug Store. Office Phone 342 Res. Phone 1342. VANITY SHOP—Marcelling, manleur SPUR-A NEW NARROW ARROW COLLAR Cluett,Peabody & Co.Inc.Troy,N.Y. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF COMMERCE ANNOUNCEMENT The registration in the Day Division of the School of Commerce will be limited to three hundred students, for the year 1921-1922. This limitation is set in order to maintain a high standard of personal hygiene and to order to make possible a close coordination between the work of the engineering, industrial, manufacturing, financial and merchandising establishments of the company. Applications for Admission will be considered in the order of their availability. Students completed two courses of college work. For application blanks and bulletin The Recorder, School of Commerce Harris Hall, Northwestern University EVANSTON, ILLINOIS ing, shampooing . . . Mrs. Anna Johnson. Phone 1372, Stubs Bldg DR. H. REHING—F. A. U. Building Ear, eye, nose and throat Special attention to fitting glasses and tosh phone Phone 613. RECREATION TRAINING SCHOOL OF CHICAGO Guy Vernon Longstreth, A. B.'20, is a telephone operator at Topeka. (Successor to Recreation Dept. Chicago, School of Civics and Philanthropy. One year course in Recreation and New School of Dramatics and Pageantry. Winter班。) *All Work and No Play Makes* *Jack a Dull Boy* to *A Show* Varsity - Bowersock Today and Thursday Today Only First National Attraction Also "Man, Woman. Marriage" Also A Mermaid Comedy THE GREEN HORN Three Shows: 2:30, 7:00, and 9:00 P.M. Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration Open to college graduates. A two-year course in business leading to the degree of Master of Business Administration. Courses offered in the following fields: Accounting, Business Law, Banking and Finance, Marketing, Advertising, Retail Store Problems, Sales Management, Industrial Management, Labor Problems, Business Statistics, Foreign Trade, Transportation, Lumbering, Office Organization. Enrolment since the establishment of the School in 1908. 126 colleges are now represented. 05-09 09-10 10-11 11-12 12-13 13-14 14-15 15-16 16-17 17-18 18-19 19-20 20-21 Twelve graduates of the University of Kansas have attended the School, eight during the present year. The registration for 1921'22 is limited to three hundred in the first-year courses. Applications after May 1st should be accompanied by a certified transcript of the college record. Dean W. B. Donham, University 431 For information write to Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration Cambridge, Massachusetts These shirts look as well on you as they do now in our store WE say this unhesitatingly, because these are Emery Shirts—and we know from experience how thoroughly we can depend on any shirt that bears the Emery Label. You'll know, too, after you've put Emery Shirts to the rest of hard service and the laundries. About that time you'll be congratulating yourself on finding a shirt that really fits—and keeps on fitting. Never the least suspicion of binding across chest or shoulders—under arms. Style, too! Style that bears out the Emery tradition: —“Equal to custom-made.” You can get any color or pattern—if it is smart and correct. Now you know why we offer Emery Shirts to our most particular patrons. And all our furnishings are of correspondingly high quality and value. Some Emery Niceties Pattern perfectly balanced in cuffs, fronts, etc. Different sleeve lengths. Pre-shrunk neck-bands. Nak-bands for inserting closures. Closely stitched seams. Unbreakable button holes. And so on! Peckhams