PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, MARCH 29. 1926 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Invoice-Inch Editor Associate Editor Newer Editor News Editor Teddys Editorial Teddy's Editorial Teddy's Editorial Sunday Editor Sunday Editor Exchange Editor Robert Sligman Raymond Nichols Rockford, MN T. C.伯尔 Raymond Nichols Rockford, MN Alice Vernacchio George Chevy Carson City Russell Wittmann Clyton Finch Phoenix Frederick McNeil Rustell Hagley Bruce McNeil Business Manager ... H. Richard McFarland Enter an non-senior classmate mat degree (or a foreign equiv. degree) from a university, under the set of March 18, 1932, and on Sunday morning by students in the foreign equiv. class at Fresno State, on and on Sunday morning by students in the foreign equiv. class at Kansai, from the Fresno of the Department of Foreign Languages. MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1928 FOURTEEN CENTS, PLEASE The agreement of the women of the University to ride the street cars to and from varsity dances is the most sensible economic step taken this year by the women. Working in co-operation with the Men's Student Council, they have pledged themselves to use trolley service to and from all social engagements, with the exception of formal parties. The student council, working with the sororites, has arranged to have street cars waiting after variety dances, and the entire loop will be made to accommodate those living at the far end of the line. This action by the women will make it easier for students to have the greatest amount of entertainment at the least possible cost. The men could do little until the women had voluntarily consented to ride the street cars. The result will be a saving of almost half of the former cost. It will go back into extra parties and dates. WHAT OF A STUDENT'S HONOR? Although the men deserve the credit for prevailing on the company to furnish service after the dances, the women should receive a great deal of commendation for their co-operation. The School of Business is seriously considering the adoption of the honor system. Many people within the next few weeks may ask, "But does a student have any honor?" That, however, is not the question involved. What is honorable to one man may not be so to a man of another group. Ocs can hardly study of students as a group so demoralized that they have no respect for themselves or for others—a group without honor. Students can hardly be condemned as honorless when they play college as a game. The difference between two grades may mean so much to a student right now that he forgets the future; instructors may seem to be trying to give quizzes that will catch students rather than quizzes which are an indication of the student's scholarship; instructors in many courses too often give quizzes of two or three questions each of which is answered in less than a page of text matter, when several hundred pages have been covered, making it largely a matter of luck whether the student knows the right things to make a good grade. This should not be taken particularly as an allié for students, but as an indication of how serious the situation really is. People are coming to college for an education and many are only partially getting it—they are losing something they should have, and they are falling to get any idea of scholarship except incidentally as they play the game of college. The problem, then, is one of getting students as a group to change their standards of honor and to strive for true scholarship. Human nature is too complex for one to philosopher correctly on what would be best to do. The hopes of the future lie in a moderate amount of theorizing followed by a trial of the principle involved; for we learn best by trial and error. Inasmuch as adoption of an honor system is a trial and inasmuch as all concerned will be able to profit by the successes and fallings which result, the School of Business is to becommended if it tries the plan. A WORTHY PURPOSE "Wango Pango," the musical comedy being presented tonight and tomorrow night by the W. S. G. A., has a worthy purpose, and for this reason, if for no other, it deserves the support of the student body. The receipts will be used to benefit the scholarship fund of the W. S. G. A., and thus help worthy students obtain a University education. But in addition to the fact that the funds derived will go to a worth cause, those who attend will see probably the best musical comedy show presented in Lawrence this year. A treasure hunt, the thrill of adventure and the romance of the south sea islands will be combined in an entertainment which, as in the past, should turn out to be one of the best theatrical attractions of the academic year. The students of the University have few enough chances, as it is, to see their fellow students behind the foot lights. When such an opportunity as this presents itself, they should turn out full force and fill the auditorium, insuring the production of success. It is true that law students at K. U save a late time. One was one, in difficulties only a few days ago, attempting to carry his cane, a stack of books and a woman's laundry box, and at the same time appear graceful. LOOKING NORTH! Something about a landscape viewed from a promontory makes most anyone admire it whether or not he has cultivated any considerable appreciation for art. Perhaps it is the sense of superiority inspired by looking down upon the landscapes, a little aesthetical thrill that makes one like to stop for a moment and imagine himself master of all he sees. Many students in years past have passed by Dyche Museum for a moment's view of the valley to the northwest. A long bluegrass covered slope terminates in large white blocks of concrete which set on each side of a narrow strip of blue. To the north a mild mass of trees lines high enough above the house; o make one large splotch of green a summer and one of somber gray a winter, broken only here and there y a roof which pushes up through he foliage. In the distance, grayish-green slopes fade into little hills, whose outline varies in distinctness as the Kansas air is hazy or clear. A strip of gray blends the color of the hills with the soft blue of the sky above. perfect scene! The student tools and sighs—sighs perhaps because he realizes that Mr Oread is losing another and nearly the last of its views—for every day a little more is being added to the new Union Building. Hail to the Union, farewell to the view. Slowly passing, but ever to be remembered. NEWTON'S BIG CHANCE The Newton basketball team, 1920 Kansas champion, has left for the national tournament at Chicago. The members of this team carry the name of Kansas into their games, and not that of Newton alone. They have the record of past performance to uphold: Kansas teams won two of the last three national championships. Games will have to be fought hard, much harder than they were at the state contests recently. Newton will meet teams which were winners in their state contests, teams which have earned their right to represent the best their states have. A defeat will not mean that the man have not done their best, but a victory will show that they have. Newton is not doped to win every game this week; neither were the two teams which won during the past three years. Newton was expected, however, to win the state tournament, and finished without a defeat. The University of Kansas, representing the sons and daughters of this state, knows that each member of the Newton basketball team is going to the national tournament with the spirit of true Kansans; to win if possible, in but any case to play the best game there is in it to play. Attention must then be called to the farther point. In this case, the column titles of the writer are identical to those in the main body; necessary is in order to make sense of the chapter below their names with the added point that they are the authors. Tuesday just before the 12:20 whistle, I sought a plate of chocolate ice cream at the Commons. The cast counter had none but there was a --one and take it back to you there. I crossed to the east counter. "Give me some chocolate ice cream." Editor Daily Kansan; Campus Opinion I asked the clerk at the west counter for a plate full. "Sorry, sir, but we can't serve you yet. We're not open." "But you have, your checker is here, you have the cream, the scoop, the strength, and, I trust, the will to serve." "Well, I want chocolate ice cream. There is none on the other side. How can I get it without waitin?" "Go to the east counter. Tell the clerk there to come here and get you some and take it back to you there." "But we're not open yet." "I've just been there. They told me to tell you to go over there and get me some and bring it back here for me." Obligingly he treated over to the west counter, leaving his own unmanned. A dozen other customers lined up at the east counter. "We have none here. Go to the other side." The obliquing clerk returned with my ice cream. The 12:20 whistle blew, "here you are. If you want another ice cream." They open when the whistle blows. "This is fine service. Why is that clerk running off?" Oh system, what absurdities are committed in thy name! Editorials From Other Hills The Wet Drive Is On Tomorrow will be a gray day for them. Everything will be done and there will be no more worlds to con- ture the end of another quarter. Selah! High Deeds Now with the quarter about to end end comes the joy of doing under high pressure all the things we should have done, sedulously, day by day during the quarter. The queer delight of the last minute rush is upon us. It is the satisfaction that comes with saving the red melancholy cherry pie and then devouring it in one delicious gulp. It is the same perversity that has brought about the custom of eating the melancholy meat. It is the same quirk that makes old men want to taste all the joies of wickedness they were afraid of. With some it would be painful to rush through the accumulated tasks. These are the persons naturally orderly, who must have a place for everything with everything in its place. We pity these poor people. They will get there and go home, which comes with the doing in one grand, mud furry, of all these little tasks that have been plung up for weeks. They have been cheated for they get their simple joys in little sips. The procrastinators, and many of us there are, quiff their huge cups of coffee and grow drunk with much doing. Not that they have any hope of such a consumption at the present time. Congress is too thoroughly in favor of prohibition to leave them unprotected, but they hope to elect wetters and representatives. Columbia Missourian They neglect to mention that voters were taken in cities where wet sentiment was well developed even at the time of the passage of the prohibition amendment. Among the country people and citizens of small towns, children and everybody lying in favor of prohibition enforcement, few votes are taken. Again the psychology of the situation is in favor of the wets. Those who are in favor of prohibition have no right to use them, such a poll, while all those who are The big wet drive is on at last. After several years of watchful observation, the driver's voice have begun to offensive which hope will ultimately result in a modification of the Volstead Act which will permit the sale of beers and light To this end they have instituted polls in many cities for the purpose of showing that apparently the entire population is not before prohibition. Fabulous results in such polls are reported. Ten-to-one results for leeons and light wires are reported. Pi Delta Kappa will meet this evening, Monday, March 29, at 7 echelon in room 119 Franx hall. Meeting is very important and will not last over an hour. in favor of a modification of the law assert themselves elamorously. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Copy received at the Chancellor's office until 11:00. A student commission of the University of Michigan reports that several students are boottegging their way through college in that school. The same report stated that campus drinking was on the decline there. PIH DELTA KAPPA: After all, there is no real harm in the poll. Even wet leaders admit that there is no possibility of modification in the present administration, and if the prohibition issue is made of paramount importance in the next election, we will get an unbiased vote, which will probably favor retention of prohibition. A university course for laundry workers is being considered at the University of Washington. Vol. VII Monday, March 29, 1926 The co-operative book store at the Ohio State University has declared a 13 percent dividend to be paid in $pril. The old enemy between the lawyers and engineers as the University of Oklahoma is on the decline due to the increasing number of the freshmen and the sophomores. Three women who refused to comply with the new regulation of the Adventist College at Walla Walla, Washington, which fixes the height of men's 12 inches from the floor, were sent, more and told to lengthen 'hair dresses' The women at the University of California are complaining about the shortage of male escortes, and five of them have made application to the university authorities, making hegiven be asked to supply the women with company. During 1925 the agricultural experiment station of the University of Missouri published 40 bulletins conducted by the experiment station. After such an election the 10-tit- figures of the vets will go down in history as another of the famous ex- amples of statistical gymnastics. All present the hue and cry of the multi- phibitionists is merely for the pur- pose of receiving interest in an issue seemed for a than to be dying out. "The Co-cd's Issue" of the Univer- On Other Hills 6149 city of Denver Clarion will be the first in four years to be edited by, and devoted exclusively to, the coeds of the University. St. Patrick's day at the University of Washington was celebrated by the appearance of all freshman men on the campus, wearing skull caps and gloves of a bright green hue. These students were worn the rest of the spring semester. Only 35 per cent of the men examined at Syracuse University are found to be physically fit, according to statistics given out by the school. That students who come from houses in Norman have an advantage in study over those who live in fraternities, sororites, or roaming houses is the assertion of the University of Oklahoma Daily. A social swim night was inaugurated recently at the University of Waterloo, where participants in the task at the women's team from 739 to 9. The swim will be held every Friday and is being conceived as a physical education department. Miniature airplanes, looping the loop and deploying in battle formation while suspended from a moving aircraft. In one of the earliest and the business district of Berkley as a part of the Engineers' day page, at the University of California. DROP IN AND SEE WHY OUR MEALS MAKE YOU FEEL AT HOME SUPREME CAFE $ 914\% $ Mass. REBUILT PARTS We sell rebuilt parts and accessories for all makes of cars Bring your worn-out cars to us. We buy them. AUTO WRECKING & JUNK CO. M. Cohen, Prop. Phone 954 A SAUCY TURBAN OR A DISTINGUISHED HAT Whatever you're looking for, you can discover in this new collection of Panetta Hats. Every week brings the new styles direct from New York, so you can wear the Fifth Avenue 43rd. No Hat over $5.00 at $5.00 Hat Shop --- JUST RECEIVED A Fresh Shipment of Donaldson's and Chase's Box Candy Just the Right Gift for Her Earliest Present The Oread Cafe "Just a place to be here." "Bricks" E. C. BRICKEN, Prop. Beginning Tonight (Annual W. S. G. A. Musical Comedy) Everybody's Going Absolutely the biggest hit of the season. 75 in cast. Best talent of the Hill. BOWERSOCK TONIGHT and TUESDAY Nights—75c-81.00 Tuesday Matinee—50c-75 Carrise rises at 815 tonight How Adam Got His Easter Suit Eve sewed on a new leaf every day! Now you can buy a stylish "Ober Fifty" Suit $50 with two trousers, on the Budget Buying Plan. A moderate initial payment and the balance weekly Let us Restring your Tennis Racket (1)