- 1. (A) $C_2^3$ has three points on a circle. (B) $C_2^3$ is the equator of a circle. (C) $C_2^3$ is the perpendicular bisector of a circle. (D) $C_2^3$ is the diameter of a circle. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE TWO SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1926 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Sunday Editor Short Editor Joseph Klebenson Alice Van Meech Elinah Sebastian Russell Waterbladder Sunday Night Robert Mine Gertrude Sues Floyd Russell Salary Labyrinth Ronald Perry Frank Tiffany Hal Crane Frank Tiffany Jenise Teacher Frank Tiffany Wendy Teacher Wendy Teacher Business Manager K. U. 25 K. U. 46 Editorial Department Business Department SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1920 Retired as predecessor, main master Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Education, Kuwait, under the act of March 8, 1977, and on Sunday morning by his students in the Kuwait University. He was formerly on Sundays morning by his students in the Kuwait University. From the Press of the Department of Education, Kuwait. Ms. Frances Heenan Brownning, 15 is to attend school again. so her 51 year old husband has decided, for "Pencaches" must complete her education to take her proper place as his wife. What a blow this must have been! After an orgy of shopping where salespeople treated her like a young princess, a honeymoney spent on Fifth avenue, her own Rolls-Royce and chauffer; then to find that she may return again to those hateful book that had been abandoned in the hop that, as the wife of Browning, she would be removed from the ordinar run of schoolgirls. One can imagine the appeal this must have had to a child thus reared. And again, there was the prospect of a chance to dazzle her school friends. To go back among them arrayed in the very latest style, decked in jewels, must have been a vision that was hard to resist, especially to a 15-year old girl. For Frances, reports say, had "cut" classes for months in the belief that after she become a staid, young matron, she could enjoy herself as the wife of a millionaire. So "Ponchens" got married to a man 36 years her senior because of what his wealth could offer and because of a desire to escape the horror of school and such bosteous things as studies. One wonders just what she thinks now—whether the life she pictured is as rosy as her imagination has painted it. At any rate, Frances must go back to school, for little girls of 15 are too old to play with dolls and too young to be turned loose among the playhouses of the world. To the uninitiated of the University of Kansas is the personification of democracy this week. Everywhere, everyone is speaking to everyone else. Seemingly every student knows nearly every member of the student body of 4,000. One newspaper asks whether it is "had teeth or hexlexescorni" that troubles General Smedley S. Butler. Flashlight says he is more interested in learning how to pronounce that last word. SPRING DEMOCRACY To the initiated the new spirit on M. Ortea is not startling. It appears about this time of the year, the week before Hill elections. Students do nothing else or yellow tags and rush maddly into the classroom, hardly everywhere, and every time they meet Strangers on the Hill may wonder at this, and rightly. Kansas is famous for her democratic spirit, but the spirit on the campus at present is not the true democracy. It is spring democracy. For one short week fraternal and group alignments tend to break, race consciousness disappears and enemies become friends. The Hill approaches a Utopia. "IT'S COLLEGIATE But the student body is not itself now. The spirit reflected is only an artificial one. The true one will reappear after the spring elections next Tuesday. At present political democracy must prevail. It is a question whether the public takes the gaiting of higher education seriously. At a theater in Kansas City recently two youth appeared on the program. Both looked decidedly under college age. Their featured act was to appear in highly exaggerated costume and supposedly representing college students. The trousers were baggy, the skull caps (which are by the way never seen on this campus and it is doubtful if on many others) were worn very rakishly, and the rest of the costume was in keeping. During a slow dance, which had been seen before at this particular theater, the boys sang 'Collegiate' to give, supposedly, additional atmosphere to their act. It is amazing how the net got over, and that the majority of those laughing at it were older people. To the college students there it was absurd. Is it the fault of the students that the popular opinion is such that take advantage of college life prove so humorous? Or could it be that this same public lesson gives really serious thought to college work? SHEEP·THINKING What better portrays the idiosyncracies of human nature, and sheep nature, than the actions of hundreds of sheep that duly rush to their death behind a trusted leader from the sheep herd of a slaughter house? In the pen they are just a weaving woody mass that shifts this way and that about the incision. One beats and they all bleat. Like so many mortals awaiting a leader. Then a man leans over to a wise looking old sheep wearing a bell. The old sheep laces understandingly and starts walking toward the killing room—oblivion for his fellows. His sheep looks like the sheep follow the sound. The mass moves swiftly up to the very door of the slaughter room. Then the man calls to the leader again, and the old bell heeps leap to one side. He stands watching his fellows pass to their doom. Every day the same process is repeted. The Judas sheep leads thousands of his fellows to their betrayal. And they always follow willingly, blasting timely, rashing blindly. Among we mortals how many are like that? And sheep thinking is the thinking of the mass, the mob that runs blindly, guided by a straw of instinct. The sheep do not stop to investigate. They hear the tinkle of the bell and follow. LET US PLAY Play deserves a place in everyone's life. It is not entirely a childish thing, by any means. The value of the recess play of the grade school is apparent to everyone. Similar recreation is necessary all through life for those who desire to maintain their highest possible efficiency. Recreation facilities on the Hill are inadequate. Only a small expenditure. ture would be necessary to correct the situation. The two baseball diamonds south of Robinson gymnasium should be the first to receive attention. The base other than rocks have been provided other than rocks have been provided. Out of the dozen or so tennis courts are that open to the use of students, only five are of the clay soil which makes the best base. The rest are of soft loamy sand unsuitable for play. The three unventilated handball courts in the gymnasium complete the list of play space provided for University students. Gymnastism facilities are probably as good as can be expected until we have a new building, with the coming of spring, the outdoor play grounds should be developed and repaired. Some of the money taken in on athletic contests might well be spent for the benefit of the thousands who can not make the team but still like to play. At The Theater By Agnes Smith The Cosmopolitan students presented their annual entertainment Friday night in the high school auditorium to a small but appreciative audience. Probably this was the most interesting program which the club offered, followed each other promptly and were so arranged as to permit variety. The opening sketch, an American Indian dancer by Standing Bear, had color and atmosphere. The dancer's eyes were fixed on a fact more so than the Charlestonist who came in for part of the glory. That the younger generation of braves is learning to dance the Charleston is hard but not necessarily an improvement. If no nationality had succeeded in "putting over" their joke to the audience better than the Americans, we were really not the only group that were very few who could have caught the point. But it was the two German and American their joke and comedy with a bang. Mr. Chevroanoff demonstrated his versatility by his piano numbers. It is difficult to present a country by music alone but, we failed to discover any typically Russian composition. We also wish that we could have had a glimpse of Russian dress. He was the Panditia Club gave "Louder Please" rather successfully. But the prize line, "He's found his peace at last—he's with the angels now," failed to get over the footlights. We realized during the Chinese melodies that our musical education has been too limited to judge them from the standpoint of composition or bar- 1035 Mass. "As You Like It," a second American aktetk, was a new stunt. The audienceapproved excepting when one nash seemed to have all the "say," as to how the show should finish. They murmured about having been fooled, so they disrupted it. They came back and gave them a second ending, which satisfied them as to the possibility of having had two shows all along. Squires Better - Kodak - Finishing A Cure for Spring Fever— IKE'S VIRGINIA INN 846 Massachusetts Fresh Limcades, Orangecades, Strawberries 1031 Mass. St. at Phone 517 Delicious Freezes The second half of the program opened with the ever-favorite Hawaiian quartet. They got a most compelling album, but came back strong with a good encore. Nine Kinds of Ice Cream and Sherbet mony. Perhaps it was the most original number of the entire program. The strangeness of their instruments caused much comments; the man, who was a master of dissectioning. What a difference between the Occident and the Orient Eat Sunday Dinner for Attention to the program intrigued because it was an entirely different type of entertainment from that that the student depends upon for his "bread and butter" of fun. And it is important to note that students give credit to the fact that the other fellow can have something good to offer. Music While you Eat Quality Service Sundays noons and every night Comfort Cleanliness Charlie Haines - Professor Guild is the first magge. Delaware, sent students to the 1921 clan we have seen who claimed he University of Wisconsin summer set used only the American brand, and sion. The final number, "A Night in Old Mexico," was a combination of music and dance. The audience approved it. But the cost was high. The customers were interesting, but those who know say that it would have been even more picturequeen had the dances and clothes been clean and less attempted Samhai. BUSINESS MANAGER 1927 JAYHAWKER Qualified A Non-Partisan Candidate we noted that it worked quite as well as any imported kind. "America first!" Murray Danglade for QUALIFICATIONS EDITOR, 1927 JAYHAWKER 1. Assistant to the Editor of the 1926 Jayhawker 2. Administration Board 1926 Jayhawker 3. Four years experience on the Webb City, Mo., "King-Jack," the annual that took three first state prizes and second national prize, during his editorship. a. Photographic editor, 1920-21 b. Circulation manager, 1921-22 c. Assistant editor, 1922-23 d. Editor-in-chief, 1923-24 "ON MERIT ALONE" — K O D A K S — The Box Brownie from $2.00 up The folding kind at any price you may wish S P E C I A L No. 2 Hawkeye and 1 Roll Films $1.69 F. B. M C O L L O C H Druggist Clifford Anderson For Editor OF THE 1927 JAYHAWKER QUALIFIED BY EXPERIENCE 2. OVITA Associst导师, 1920 Jaymayer, 3. Assistant Frequently Edition 1005 Iwashuki 1. First Assistant Editor, 1926 Jayhawker, 2. ONLY Assistant Editor, 1926 4. Higher recommendation or Jaynawer Advisory Board. (See statement below.) 4. Highest recommendation of Jayhawker Advisory board. (See statement below.) 3. Assistant Fraternity Editor, 1925 Jayhawker. 5. Assistant Business Manager Abilene H. S. paper, second in state contest. 6. ONLY candidate with two years' experience on dashvault staff. 7. Two years on editorial staff prize-winning Abi- lene B, S. annual. 8. Major in journalism, trained and equipped for the job. 9. Only candidate having taken work in department of journalism. 10. A "B" student. NON-POLITICAL CANDIDATE alar "The committee * * * facts, of course, that all of the candidates endured are capable of editing and managing the 1927 Jaghawker, though recognizing that Anderson how the decided advantage of greater experience."—A statement by the Jaghawker Advisory Board in the Daily Kununurra, April 12. Of Course anything you give her will be appreciated— but if it comes from Ye Stop of Quality it leaves nothing to be desired! The College Jeweler .