THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Virginia EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief Herbert Little Associsate Editor Joe Bowie Campus Editor Lucille Cleveland Telegram Editor Ivan Rommons Telegraph Editor Pauline Newman Plain Takes Editor Pauline Newman Alumni Editor James R Austin BUSINESS STAFF BOARD MEMBERS Henry B. McCurdy___Business Mgr. Lloyd Ruppetall, Ann's ___Business Mgr. Dosne W. Malott___Circulation Mgr Meda Smith Burt Armstrong 1980 Burt Cochran 1981 Arthur B. Clarke 1982 Arthur E. Garrin 1983 Ferd Gottlieb 1984 Catherine Odeon 1985 Submission price $1.50 in advance for the first one month of the academic year; $2.90 for one semester; $6.95 a month; 10 cents a week. Entered as second-class mail matter September 17, 1810, at the post office la 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 Illinois at Chicago and in the Department of Journalism. Address all communication to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phones, K. U. 25 and 66 The Daily Kannam aims to, for pleasure and practicality, increase the University of Kannan; to go farther than ordinary standing for the ideals that have been so criticized to be clean; to be cheerful in addressing serious problems; to leave more serious problems to leave more serious problems; to serve the host of its ability the students; to serve the host of its ability the students. TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1921. HAIL, DR, LINDLEY In sarcific the pump and glory of an inaugural ceremony, Dr. Ernest H. Lindley has again endowed himself to the students of the University. Filled with the realization that the University of Kansas needs every dollar it can obtain toward the successful completion of a huge building program, the chancellor in his retrospect showed how whole-heartedly he has absorbed the Jayhawk spirit in its most loyal mood. Self-abnegation is, undoubtedly, a pretty thing. Coming from a public man like Doctor Lindley, it is especially noteworthy. The state is proud of Doctor Lindley; it is glad he is a resident; it is glad he is a booster. He would have liked to pay him homage, and acclaim its already great admiration for him. But he stopped any ceremony with a single negation. "No," he said, "The University and not myself should be glorified." So the state is much more proud of Doctor Lindley, much more proud. "GIVE 'IM AIR" After all that has been said about ventilation and fresh air, very little has been done. We continue to sit in class rooms where the temperature often goes as high as eighty degrees, and where there is no sign of fresh air. During the winter following the "flu" quarantine we had reasonably heated, well-ventilated class rooms; but these days are pust. With us now are the hot, stuffy class rooms. With us, also, are the usual winter colds and persistent coughs. And while the man next to us sis and coug,吹ing his cold gums free of charge to his innocent and unsuspecting class-mas, we must need remain quiet, listening to a long recture in the stifling hat, even though we are wishing in real agony. With such conditions on our campus and the same situation is present in almost every building on the Hill, we must necessarily have many colds and illnesses. HONOR TO WHOM- The need of athletic material in Kansas received another little emphasis Monday night with the publication of an "honor list" of the great football players of the country, compiled by the Outing Magazine, a sport publication, from the choices of coaches and sport authorities all over the country. In the sixteen players classed as "above their class" in the Middle West, four Kansas players were more tioned. Yes, you guessed right. Mister, Mandeele, Lonborg, Nettels and Reid. Jones should probably also be listed as the equal of any others of the great quintet which brought Kansas through a fighting season, but he was overlooked. No other team in the Missouri Valley conference was given the distinction of placing so many players. And Kanas, mind you, did not win the valley honors. She finished tied with Ames for third and fourth places. And so, let us give all due praises to those five great players—real football men—to the others who fought so hard—and bend every possible energy toward obtaining some more real material, which can combine with the spirit present in all Kansas teams some real ability to fight and win games. "TO THE DOGS" Miss Kate Stephens, formerly of the University faculty, does not approve of the modern University life. The K. U. author, who lives now in New York, spends most of her time writing. In her new book, "Life at Laurel Town in Angio-Saxon Kansas," she speaks ideologically of what we of today term "the good old days," and less favorably of the present. "...in this institution of greatest aspirations of the human spirit, numbers increased of those spending little time in furblishing college polities, getting out student publications, setting on foot dances and theatricals," she says, "in fact, engaging so continuously in 'business' and 'society' that the onlooker sometimes wondered if they really went to the university to study. "These absurdities of theirs may have been youngsters' attempts to act the role of 'livewires', imitate someone they admired in their pre-academic life. But the pity of the waste! —pity that commercialism should negate a university's spiritual authority! —pity that overseeing wisdom should not prevent division of attention and demand effort to the limit of the students' abilities! Even among boys and girls with the soundness of an agricultural democracy behind them such excesses must bring lower scholarship and inferior standards in their train." SHINZABURO GOTO A sad sequel to the inspiring story of achievement by foreign students at the University was written Friday when a Japanese student ended his life. It is significant that incidents of his death point to his reversion to native beliefs. Shinzaburo Goto grew forgetful of the fact that he had received most valuable training. His course in the medical school was advanced and he had a successful record as Y. M. secretary in his land. Aside from the consideration of the greater relative advantage of a good education to one of other than the English tongue the loss of such a life is inestable. The need for educated men in foreign lands is ever growing more obvious. It cannot be true that a self-supporting foreign student has an out-of-book of absolute hopelessness and is denied by circumstances even that courage of despair which leads on to success some of those who battle here in the face of almost superhuman obstacles. What proof against the vision d premature victory of the grave can the school hold for the discouraging moments of its many students? JAZZ—JAG—JOB It began with the craze for dancing, about a year before the war opened. Dancing had always had devotion—it had enjoy popularity for four years, this was a new kind of dance and a new type of popularity. Suddenly, divisions of society went crazy at the heels. People danced at breakfast, between the oatmeal and bacon and eggs; danced at luncheon while the soup was going down and the roast beef was coming in. They danced at afternoon tuesdays, dinner between the oatmeal and the close of the theatre and the opening of the bedroom door; danced on Sunday to celebrate the victory at golf, or to lumber up after a long automobile ride. They danced at the high class hotels, and they also danced in the less popular places where the people were warmed. Some of the music was bang, clang, heller-kelter JAZZ. Boys and girls, old men and women, high, low Jack and the game all danced, all caught the craze. Included, an caught the scene and the wild. Then the scene changed and the wild. JAZZ was succeeded by a wilder JAG. y Permisson of Brentano's, New York Oh, it's easy come, and it's easy go With most of the little girls I know— Haut away, my bullies, And when you come, and when you They never take it deep to heart,— Haul away, my bullies. Oh, there was Martha, at Liverpool. She never heard of Golden Rule. —Hear me out, sir! Haul away, my bullies; And ther was Guffin, the Temple Girl, And Minnie, and Marie, and Pearl;— Haul away, my bullies. in Rotterdam, Marseille, Orleans. And each of them taught me what love means; Haul away, my bullies. But there is a girl that scans apart, I never can get her out of my heart. Haul away, my bullies; Everybody tried to outbid, to outspare everybody else. The dollar shirt of the "dollar-a-day" man graduated into the 818 silk shift of the worker who had his dollar an hour pay to get rid of. The homely and healthy potato was advanced on the hotel bill of fare to the old price tag of suave tea when he was no longer thrown in as a gift, but charged for. The "service" charge made its appearance; the "tip" outgrew all old time limits. Everybody was buying everything, chiefly what they did not want and what they had never thought of buying before the Jaga era dawned. We had patriotic Jags and overworked and oversubserviced workers overtraded and overgambled. Good excesses and bad excesses, but always and everything in the picture was overdrawn. Oh, I try to forget, but I never can, The girl that married another man— Haul away, my bullies! What was the "JAG" era. Alcohol is not the only intoxicant, we made use of all the others. Now the war is over. Our Pleasure love, which ran mad in the Jazz era; gambling that ran mad in the Jae era, gambling that ran mad in the Jae era, gambling with new proof of the old truth. "They who dance must pay the piper." What next? Why, after Jazz and Jag we come back to the JOB, back to the good old American plan expressed in the phrase, "In the sweat of his face man shall earn his bread." earn his bread first from work (and often apprentices); but earn his bread, and can eat or buy powers for somebody else. It's back on the JOB, back on the job with brain and brawn, with mind and soul. It is up to each one of us to play the grand old game of the Fathers of the Republic, according to the grand old gules embodied in the Ten Commandments and the multiplication table. We've jazzed and jagged long enough; let's get back on the Job and stay there. It's back to the job, everybody, everywhere—Corn Exchange National Bank. THE COLLEGIATE BUGABOO With a look of feighful terror students go about beowailing the fact that examinations are fast approaching and spend half their time worrying, all their time "feeling sure they are going to flunk." Examinations are the collegiate bogueboy the country over, a fact that can be attributed *no* other reasons than that the students are unable to答案 to secure a college education. It is possible for a student to spend four years in college and carry off a degree without an idea once entering his head. This point is at once illustrated. "Take the student who, when asked by his snow storm, a snow storm, immediately applied to the librarian for a book containing descriptions of snow storms. Mr. Dollay says that nowadays, when a lad goes to college, the president takes him into his Turkish room, gives him a cigarette and demands he would be the unchance of having ye like to have studied for ye by our compilant professors." The analogy is not complete unless we say that the dread of examinations comes from the acknowledgment by the student of the fact that the professor has denied it. We may assimilate enough of it to enable him to slip over. attempts to look pleasant, emits a forced smile in the face of his approaching difficulties and then sends up a soft prayer to cuid that she will impart the needed information. One up, none down; two up, none down; et cetera. The student takes the shred of information he has collected during the course and spreads it over the book, hands it in while sending us the information with Tormene McSwyne that the thing is all over with. When grades are turned in he finds that he has barely passed with a D and congratulates himself upon the fact that he has saved from 10 to 20. He continues time and time that one is the wiser. "If I can just get by by I will be satisfied," says the student. Such is the general attitude. The posting of the examination" schedules and then the bugaboo lugs up before the students like a horrible, choking nightmare and it seems as though the efforts of an entire quartet would be lost. The system used by the student is something like this: he keeps one ear cooked in class and fails to study the daily assignment; fuses the prof and takes an occasional sleep. He then goes to more examinations and drinks coffee rather heavily and frequently; during the last few excavations he spills what little information he has acquired. The night before the examinations he becomes almost convulsive in his excitement, eats very little, drinks a few quarts more of coffee, retires, early. does a little more cramming in the morning and marches to a classroom with chambers, flunks card in one hand and combs stone under the once. Once seated he begins to examine the subjects around him and to fix in his mind the probable location of the proof. Having oriented himself he makes two Temporarily the Collegiate Bagaboo disappears, soon to return. We have failed to see in it a misapplication of time and energy. Cramping, when it is used as a local source of information upon which the student relies to pass his examination, is not justifiable and is to be condemned as dangerous to the future welfare of students. It is important that the habit of doing things well, as they need to be done and then no one would need fear examinations. There would be fewer fumks and more satisfaction; less misinformation and a greater amount of helpful knowledge. -Arkansas University Weekly. At the Ohio State University plans are underway for a co-operative book store on the campus by next semester. Many problems confront the Men's Student Council, but committee meetings planned for the near future will result in more results. The books are to be sold at absolute cost in order that the store may be co-operative in every sense of the word. The appointment of a manager from outside the University is advocated to avoid all friction. How to finance the book store at the start of the problem confronting those ichares. Send the Daily Kansan home. Kappa Alpha Theta was the fourth raternity to found a chapter here. I was granted a charter in March, and the Delta Dollas came in during the summer. History shows that hazing has been practically unknown at the University of Kansas. Carrie M. Watson, present librarian, was elected to office in 1887. WANT ADS TO RENT: One or two rooms for girls Strictly modern, one block from campus. Convenient to肝山. South and West exposure. Call 2569. 67-53-333 LOST: A gold aunt poured (Moores) Wednesday afternoon. Finder please return to Kansan office. Reward. 67-2-232 PIANO TUNING—For high class piano tuning, player work and repairing. Call A. Weser, practical instructor at Kansai Kanna, Phone 646. 68-23-00 FOR RENT—Room. Boys or girls. Room and Board for four girls. 116 Vermont, Call 1820. 68-5-235 BOOM AND BOARD-For four girls, Large southeast room, sleeping porch. Modern house. Hot water heat. Call 2232 1252. Kidney 85-52-38. HAS ANYONE a wells and Hart Second Course in Algebra? Will give double price for one. Paul Gould. Phone 1728 Black. 69-4-240. FOR RENT - Modern southeast room for two boys, 1216 Tenn.Call or phone 2313 White 69-2-241. FOR RENT-A room for girls. Supp- er if desired. Call 1218 Tenn. or az31 Black. 59-524. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DALE PRINT SHOP, 1027 Mass, ST. Phone: 228. LANWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY (Ex- clusive Optometrist) Examined; glasses made. Office 1925 MaaS. Residence Phone 1761. DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. Suite 2 Jack Drilling, baseal practice. Special attention to nose, throat and ear Telephone 217 DR. FLORENCE J. BARRONS—Or- teopathic Physician Office hours 8:30-12:00, 11:30-5:30, Phone 2337, 930 Masst Street. DR. H. BEDING—E. A. U. Building. Ear, eye, nose and throat. Special attention to fitting glasses and tonsil work. Phone 513. DR. G. W. JONES, A. N. M., D. D. disposes of surgery, attack and grune colony. Suite 1, F. A. U. Pldg. Phone 65. Residence II, KRIDSHAK, Hospital DR. J. R. BECHTEL. Rooms 3 and 4 over McCulloch's Drug Store. Office Phone 243. Res. Phone 1243. DB. ADRIGHTH. Chiropractor. Radio. BIS. WEIENH. CHIROPRACTOR -PALME DH. ADRIGHTH. Chiropractor. Radio. BIS. WEIENH. CHIROPRACTOR -PALME JB. ADRIGHTH. Chiropractor. Radio. BIS. WEIENH. CHIROPRACTOR -PALME M. ADRIGHTH. Chiropractor. Radio. BIS. WEIENH. CHIROPRACTOR -PALME MAE P. CRAGI, public atenographer, notary public, Lawrence National bank Bldg Phone No. 6. Depositions 75 "All Work and No Play Makes Jack a Dull Boy"—Go to a Show Varsity—Bowersock Last Time Tonight Alice Joyce IN "THE VICE OF FOOLS" Hobart Bosworth Star of "Seawolf" in "HIS OWN LAW" also Burton Holmes Travels "A plianting set in attac-tive surroundings with a well balanced east."—The Exhibitor's Herald. —a story of a great man's sacrifice, founded on a remarkable moral code. also Mutt and Jeff Comedy "Merry Cafe" Tomorrow and Thursday Tomorrow Only Anita Stewart in "THE YELLOW TYPHOON" See Other Ad Come away, away from your work-a-day lives, tor a sea trip with a thrill for every roll of the ship. In other words—Don't fail to see The Story of A Woman Who Lived for Excitement It is Harold MacGrath's Greatest Novel Swirl across continents in a mad pursuit of the most daring adventures in all fiction. "The Yellow Typhoon" with the brilliant ANITA STEWART AND ANITA STEWART as the adventures, known to the police of the world as "The Yellow Typhoon," because her tawny beauty and steely heart leave behind her the wrecked lives of her masculine satellites. as the keen minded secret service operative whose woman's wit succeeds in running down a desperate gang of international criminals after the male sleuths had failed utterly. AT BOTH THEATRES OF COURSE-SO ALL CAN GET IT Varsity and Bowersock Tomorrow And Again at Varsity Only on Thursday Miss Stewart Gives One of the Greatest Dual-Role Performances Ever Seen on Stage or Screen-A Positive Triumph A Work of Lavish Magnificence and Astounding Realism Even for These Days of Epoch-Making Productions Directed by Edward Jose (Leading Man in "A Fool There Was.") Screen version by Monte M. Katterjohn. Produced by First National Makers of the best pictures you have seen this year. Prices 11c and 33c war tax included Don't say—"I wish I Had Seen It"