PAGE TWO MONDAY, MARCH 22. 1926 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief Warren Griffin Campaign Editor Fidell Flores Campaign Editor Fidell Flores Telegraph Editor Nathan Linton Short Editor Renée Roberts Junior Editor Kimball Junior Editor Kimball Fashion Editor Moe Rosenfeld Fashion Editor Moe Rosenfeld Fashion Editor Moe Rosenfeld Reckitt Editors Robbie Dollman Reckitt Editors Robbie Dollman OPTAH DEAR BOARD MEMBERS Raymond Newman T. C. Rybak Allen McKenna B. L. Chow Joseine Brewer B. L. Chow Ransel John M. Foley Josie Edmundson P. J. Faye Prestwick McNeil R. Matthew Richard Matthews --- Business Manager ... H. Richard McFarlane Editorial Department ... K. U. 23 Business Department ... K. U. 66 centred on second-order mail matter (the *Mails*). Mailed letters are issued by the Department, Kansas under the act of March 18, 1903, and on Sunday morning by students in the department at Kansas. The front of the Department is located at Kansas, from the Front of the Department to the back. MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1926 THE MILL GRINDS SLOWLY Well over a month ago there was considerable agitation on the part of the Women's Student Governing Association in regard to abolishing the date rule for senior women. The matter was brought up at one of the regular meetings of the women's governing body, commented upon favorably from all reports, and given a great deal of publicity. Numerous senior women had visions of being able to forsee their regular week-night gallery locations in theaters, now occupied menhog, for seats downstairs. Hill man had similar visions of fewer exchequer drains for transportation purposes, since appearance downtown accompanied by a member of the opposite sex was to be deemed perfectly legitimate and above board. And now the interim, which has begun to assume ponderous proportions, isn't there an old adage about finishing an undertaking until it is begin? THE SIX DAY UNIVERSITY Some men fall in love so easily that they will even give a dumbbell a ring. THE SIX DAY UNIVERSITY If the policy of having regular classes on Saturday was arbitrarily begun at the University, it would probably be the subject of considerable complaint from a large number of students. Regardless of this probability, however, there are a number of reasons why such a system should be instituted here and why it should receive favorable consideration by students. The inauguration of such a plan might stimulate better scholarship at the University. Often, under the present system, students are required to pile all of their work into a large number of three-hour periods and are consequently unable to do full justice to the entire schedule in the time given. The Kansas does not favor compulsory attendance of Saturday classes. It realizes that many students are employed at needful occupations on week-ends. Nevertheless, if cluses were held six days a week, it would offer students a wider selection of three-hour courses, which sometimes is impossible under the present schedule. THE NEW REGIME The Kansan invites discussion of this problem in its Campus Opinion column. Perhaps a thorough airing of all views on the subject would result in a more efficient system at K. U. Thursday was a quiet election day for the women. Although the new system provided for no electioneninger and no drumming up of the candidates it was a pronounced success. The results showing the number of votes cast for each candidate prove that the nominee was elected on her individual merits and not on the name of the supporting party. The old party lines have gone, as far as the women of the Hill are concerned. In former elections many women were elected who really were not representative women; the party put them across. By the new system it is noteworthy that the candidate is supported by the woman who feel she will be representative, and that she may be trusted with the responsibilities of office. The new election may have its faults, but with repetition it will improve. It is distinctly a move in the right direction. SWALLOW FLIGHT I love my hour of wind and light, I love men's faces and their eyes Like weavers on evening skies Like weavers on evening skies Sara Teasdale. THE MUD HOLE THAT IS SOUTH PARK The most beautiful spot between the business district and the Hill is mud hole. West Park, with its cushion and beautiful shrubberry and trees, is one of the few Lawrence beauty spots which the vast majority of University students see regularly. The place which used to be a path, and still is supposed to be used for that purpose, is a regular bog wall. The city fathers sent sentimental last year and decided that they would build a baseball diamond at the north end of South park. They destroyed some of the forest of the old trees, and graded and leveled the tract until a half decent infield has been constructed, and then they stopped. The grading dammed up the drainage which now gathers in stretches of mosses between the fountain and the court house corner. The cinder path was not raised, and has become covered by the accumulation of mud until in damp weather the rain is almost impossible and after a rain the entire north end of the park is a dreary Slough of decomp. The cost of filling the path in with cinders would be insignificant, and the result would be an improvement which townspeople and students alike would use with pleasure where now they pass the mud hole with disgust for the laxity of a city administration which would permit the continuance of such a condition. Most of the country is in good shape but there is a slight depression near Sharon Springs. A DOUBLE RESPONSIBILITY Everyone will rejoice over the news that the bootleggers who hold whisky to Kannan City high school students are being severely dealt with by the courts of justice. Heavy fines and long terms in the penitentiary could make them堕落 ultimately to reduce the possibilities of such occurrences. While the responsibility for the somewhat loose morals of high school students of today lies partly with the parents, a great deal can be done by prosecuting those who are directly responsible for putting liquor in the hands of students. A deeper responsibility and more co-operation should come from the parents in dealing with this problem. When the older generation stops the bootleggers from bringing liquor into the home, it will not be so difficult for the police and other law enforcing agencies to plug up the flow of liquor to students outside the home. If parents and police unite to stop the supply youth will find something else with which to occupy itself. At the Concert The new organ was introduced by Helen Marcell, whose playing of "The Bells of St. Anne" was a trifle begged. The tone of the organ is well adapted for the room in which it has been played; both sets run out of decept covering for the vital parts, so they gathered over three lattices from some householder's back porch, and added some cheap pine boards and shoddy composition panels. The appearance of the organ screen might be improved with the adjoining set in a curtain behind the lattices and several coats of paint to the woodwork. By Frederick McNeil Sunday afternoon the School of Fine Arts gave its third audacious vaser service. The artist remained by the artistic playing of the Mendelssohn "Finali" from the "Trio in D Minor" by Miss Ross, Mr. Krusteiner and Dean Swarthout. The understanding with which the artists played the delicate movements, merging easily into the suavity which marks the later moods of the composer's final finale, was pleasant to hear in a program of less than usual merit. --nursed during the playing of this number by the efforts of a youthful couple to recilain their lost child, who was adding to the music of the afternoon from the front row of the balcony. By Frederick McNeil The tenor and bass duct is a nice number; but the tenor was handicapped by a severe cold. The ensemble (in reality a trio by Professor Geltch, Miss Sweeney and Professor Skilton) was played with deliberation, but the tenors were not in sync. The number for two钢琴 was accurately played, but too long. A diversion was Vol. VII Monday, March 22, 1936 No. 140 * The Chairman of the Scholarship Committee will see applicants for scholarships between the hours of 11:50 and 12:59 at Westfield Memorial University in EUGENE GALLOL. SCHOLARSHIPS: OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Cook received at the Office's lunch at 11:50 a.m. Copy received at the Conference Room No. 104 Vol. VII, Monday, March 22, 1926 No. 140 COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Community Club will hold its spring initiation ceremony Monday in arch 22, at 7 p.m. All members are required to be present. In the singing of the Gouned quartet, "Adore and Be Still," Miss Miller and Miss Dorn apparently had not earned their words; at any rate they 'failed to enunciate them with a devent degree of clarity. The Women's Club did fairly "The Cross" or "The Cross" by Warz. The group has excellent tone in the lower voices, but shows a tendency to screech on the top notes. Prof. S. W. Perr, head of the division of industrial chemistry at the University of Illinois, has been awarded the eighth annual Ruth J. McCormick Award in recognition of his discovery of the method of coking Illinois coal. Creighton University has received $1,000 from the estate of the late Dr. James S. Foote, a professor in the college of medicine for over thirty years. It is to be used for purchasing books for the dentistry library. On Other Hills --will be plenty hot at the The Ohio State University Men's Glee Club will make a trip through the east, March 22-27. Concepts have been arranged at New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Schemehachy. The committee on scholarship at the University of Iowa recently ruled that for every four hours of "A" earned by a student he should automatically receive an extra hour of "A" toward graduation credit. Thus a student who maintains an unusually high average may graduate in three years. A Goa Conset printing press is a part of the new equipment of the department of journalism at the University of Indiana. It weighs 22,000 pounds and prints the university publication at the rate of 3,000 an hour. All female roles in the all-University play, "The College Widow," at the University of Washington, will be for April 16 and 17. A junior co-eat at the University of Wisconsin started her classmates by declaring that one has not been to a movie since the debut of Chip Chap. Kansas is not the only place where the wind blows. One hundred feet of coefighting was blown from the harrache State University by a demigale. The Tall Men's Association is organizing a chapter at the Oklahoma A. and M. College, Benjamin Ostend, national president of the organization that there are 400 million organizations in the country at the present time. The school of law at Creighton University has nine men on the Varsity debate squad. A park on the grounds of the University of Washington is being planted in native grass at the university. It contains 25 acres. Among the trees planted are overgrown, Oregon grape, huckleberry, hemlock and red dogwood. In celebration of the end of the season of winter sports at McGill University, Montreal, a giant togobogan tickets. Tickets were sold at $1.25 per person. Marquette University will be represented through students, faculty members and alumni, in the cast of the biennial production of the Milwaukee passion play to be given March 27, 29, and 30. "Eutlichen," meaning right living is the term applied to a new department at Vaundu college. It corresponds to a home economics department. The summer session at the University of Wisconsin is not attended solely by a group of graduate students. In the 1925 session three-fifths of the 5,015 students enrolled were undergraduate from every state in the Union except Delaware, and from 19 foreign countries and territories. Plain Tales From the Hill Dietetics A gorgeous display for home eco- conomics majors was exhibited Friday afternoon at the corner of Ninth and alamanda streets. A case of eggs was crambled upon the main thorough- are. A fraternity freshman was seen one rainy morning last week, without his customary bright yellow slicker. "Where's the rain coat this morning?" he was asked. "There are just 15 slickers in the house, and I was the sixteenth to leave," he answered dejectedly. A comparative anatomy student was in search of the Snow hall junior to get him to unlock a classroom where she had left a book "Oh, I beg your pardon, Professor, It is so dark here," she blrhingly apologized. "Are you the janitor?" she asked a man coming down the dimly lighted hall. He (a senior) "Tix better to have lived and loved—" She (a little freshman miss) "Than never to have lived at all!" Buy 'Em by the Sack 5c — Hamburgers — 5c SNAPPY LUNCH 1010 Mass. Gifts of Distinction 1023 Mass, St. Your "BLONDIE" Coming $ \mathrm{I}_{8} $ You ought to try a malted milk at the Fellows! The KANSAS/TEACHER PLACEMENT BUREAU 943 Kansas Ave., Topeka, Kansas VARSITY ANNEX (Next to the Varsity Theater — **Student Tours to Europe** — 38 Days—$395 . . . . . 58 Days—$585 Personally conducted, all-expense paid tour under camper, experienced company. Visit Scotland, England, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Germany. — Folders and Information on Request 13417 Phone 1408 Edward C. Spencer 11. 1014 Miss. OLDFIELD BALLOONS HIGH PRESSURE Manufactured by the Fireston Tire & Rubber Company BALLOONS 29 x 4.40 ... $14.05 29 x 4.75 ... $17.50 31 x 5.25 ... $21.95 32 x 6.00 ... $25.15 See This New Line of Tires! Compare These Low Prices! 30x3$^{1-2}$ Full Oversize Cord $11.35 NOTE Mail Order Price $11.25 Pareel Post Charges .38 Money Order .05 Postage .02 Total Mail Order Price ... $11.70 Our Price—$11.35 Carter Tire & Battery Co. Tires Tubes Yes. Sir! Jimmie Mitchell's Orchestra Eight Pieces Varsity Dance Saturday Night F. A. U.