PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, JANUARY 12. 1925 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSA Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Assocate Editor Commis. Editor Editor Alumnus Editor Alumnus Editor Editor in Chief Editor in Chief Shore Editor Shore Editor Graphographer North Kitchen Wright Beams Wright Carey Brennan Carey T. G. Bary Robert L. J. Vinson Robert L. J. Vinson Helen Clute Frederick McNiel Fernando Cantu Warren Clemens Louis Penton Warren Clemens Business Manager II, Richard McFarland Editorial Department K. U. S. Business Department K. U. C Entered as secondclass mail matter November 17, 1916, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 3, 1927. TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1925 TOLERANCE TOLERATED Scientists are the only ones who will delive into the mysteries of life and find out where man came from, what he is doing here, and where he is going. Clarence Darrow recently told a large body of hymen. Fundamentals would hall all attempts to discover the facts of evolution, he added. This noted criminal lawyer and professed evolutionist admits that he is biased. He says that he knows little but is trying to learn. Those who know everything are scored by him. upron evolution. He realizes that what is known is small to what will be known a few years from now. He pleads for tolerance so that these scientists will be able to proceed with their research problems. Interference by theologians and ecclesiastics would suggest that they fear the results of these men who are studying the beginning of man, he insists. Tolerance for the scientists as the church bodies sought tolerance will be one of the prime factors in solving this old problem. Mr. Darrow has asked the "geotrical and ignorant theologians" to please leave the scientists alone, as the church officials who have attained the question are left alone. Fair play is the keynote of Mr. Darrow's plan. In his bury life, Mr. Darrow is finding time to ask for this tolerance. True, he is being paid, but he is not receiving as much as if he were before the bench where he won his fame. Mr. Darrow is the logical man to ask the people for the tolerence of science. Should the people heed, this unrest will become a more mature of the desire to know more, and not that some one might discover something that is wanted hidden. SPORTS FOR ALL Baseball has been dropped from Iowa State College as an intercollegiate sport. Athletic Director Metcalf says this action, not have been taken because of any lack of student support at the games, but because a heavy interim schedule in the sport is being planned at the school to further interest and to give students a chance to develop better. Intercollegiate sports develop a few well rounded athletes—even some stars—but the mass of students are deprived of any benefits from athletic training, unless witnessing a game can be called beneficial. Majors have been developed during a period when emphasis is given to the individual rather than to the group However, today athletic directors, educators and others are beginning to realize that there is a higher duty than one to a baseball or football eleven. Colleges and universities in the United States contain from 300 to 15,000 students at each place. This new duty requires that each of these students be given an opportunity to play his favorite game and develop as best he can. In intramural athletics do not bring the financial return that is essential, so we must keep the major sports to provide the funds, at least, until some other scheme can be found for supporting intramural sports. A coach can direct 250 students engaged in intramural work as easily as he can train a football eleven. The action of Ames in providing an intramural schedule to care for many students in baseball, is a whiteteen sign. EXPURGATION "Captain Billy" of South Bologne wong the "Duke of South Chicago," cried while editor of *Zill's* magazine, and a number of their cohorts are due for a punch in the solar plesis or some other vulnerable spot if Harry Hayward, Wondetate courtney, and C. B. Griffith, attorney general of Kansas, are successful in carrying out the campaign they have initiated today against the many "smut" magazines being circulated within the borders of the state of Kansas. Application for 10 injections restraining the circulation of that number of magazines, and the filing of criminal proceedings against the publishers of at least one very objectionable magazine are the opening shots of the campaign. An overwhelming mass of evidence has been gathered, according to Mr. Griffith, against these digplant violators of a state law which forbids the circulation of any literature dealing with the obscene, immoral, or indecent subjects, or sex intrigue. Conviction on such a charge carries a penalty of from two to five years in the state penitentiary at Lansing. Perhaps Kansas will be emiled at by some of her blaze and worldly critics and sympathizers as she was when she took the lead in voting for prohibition, and perhaps the "New Yorker," that most worthy of Gotham's magazines, will connect another cruel and heartless pin at her expense, but this time she has a predecessor, and a most worthy one at that, in the District of Columbia, where a large number of the country's most learned minds are centered, which purged itself of such questionable magazines some weeks ago. "Judge Takes 'Father's Side,'" a headline in the Kansas City Star. Only one-thirdth of Adam's dice was taken, and look at the dire allegations that resulted. THE FEET OF THE FAIR Women's feet, the morning dispatches tell us, are becoming larger. But in spite of the common belief that the site of women's feet have always been a touchy subject with her, the announcement has failed to cause much excitement among the members of the fair sex. The figures are authentic, coming from George H. Sprague, manager of the National Shoe Retailers Association, therefore it is not because of disbelief that the women are not oblecting. The fact seems to be that the women do not care. That the average size of a woman's foot has enraged from four and a half to six and a half since nineteen twenty, because, according to Mr. Spangler, the women of today wear low legged oxords, is comparatively unimportant evidently, in their eyes. Man must admit defeat. Women have at last disproved at least a part of their old prejudice that to women vanity means more than comfort. The modern woman has at last convinced man that she is ascending in the ladder of good sense, by her championship of bigger-and-better-feet. The Kansas City Police department should be given a vacation for their strenuous efforts in bringing to justice such a dangerous criminal as the code writer, Dusel Slim. THE SENATE TAKES A HAND Again the Walsh senate investigation committee has had to take a hand in the prosecution of a trust case. Attorney General Sargent's duly tactics in the prosecution of the Aluminum Company of America, charged with violating the Sherman anti-trust law, have come under the eye of the senate investigators. Sargent, upon being questioned before the committee last Saturday, showed actual ignorance as to the prosecution. From the testimony of the Vermonter, it is evident that he does not know what it is all about, and isn't interested in finding out. The attorney general freely admitted that he didn't even know who some of his departmental heads are, and that the first he had heard of the case was through the newspapers. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Copy received at the Chamellero office until 12:00 a.m. Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic frenemy, will meet tonight at 10 o'clock on the Pi Upson house. Phone (800) 647-3920 or GRAEVES, Secretary SIGMA DELTA CHI: Vol. VIII Tuesday, January 12, 1928 106-34 [1928] U.S. Code § 4520.100 PEN AND SCROLL: Pen and Secretary will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the rest room of central Administration building. BERNARD BLCH, President. The World Court Conference As Seen by the K. U. Delegate This is the second book of a writer by Fred Simpson, delegate to the national interlibrary speak court conference held at Princeton University. The Editor. Senator Jim Reed of Missouri no doubt includes University students and their conference at Princeton among the victims of "a great nationwide propaganda scheme" for the Boston bombings, he should consider the influences bearing open student opinion: This opinion beyond doubt has been subject to propaganda, and plenty of it, favorable to the court. Of course, the charge of propaganda influence it not in itself wholly disproportionate, so that whether this strong advocacy has been made贞柔 and fairly, In reply to a question of the committee as to who a "Mr. Meyer" is Sargent replied, "I think he is in the man under Donovan." (Donovan is assistant attorney general). Before the conference and preparatory to the poll on the World Court conducted by the New Student, campus organizations like The Y. M. C. A., the Y. W. C. A, and the paper were bombarded by questions about acquiring the cause of the World Court. A news service which was highly pre-occupied was furnished the campus papers. Speakers spreading the gossip of international coercion—specifically through the court—were sent abroad by the authorities. All this was a strong influence upon the thought of interested college students. And it was pangrigna. But, as far as I can see, it played fair; it did not twist the facts; and it gave the opposition the best publicity it got, for the opponents did not, or could not take steps to put their side before us. As far as the conference itself was concerned, the delegation were of concern for the fact that the influence before going to Princeton. The organization which initiated the A lack of interest such as shown by the attorney general in the aluminum case, one of the most important to come before his department since he came into office, is 'entirely inconvenient. It seems that the head of the department should at least be informed on the nature of the violations of federal statutes. Our Contemporaries (New York Times) Whether the fact that the secretary of the treasury, Mellon, has a large interest in the aluminum company has and any thing to do with the justice department's attitude in the matter is not known, but the present administration has been unusually lax in its presentation of cases involving members of the cabinet. George Washington University has just taken one look at the latest number of students. It shows that the contents are "snappy," and expelled the editor. An earlier number of students, according to the editor, "offended the etchic sense of some people." These are now subtle in the news. Every little bit of a college paper is made on the mails from the mails on the ground of what the mid-Victorian "prey" describes. This is frequently secure vacations and烂商学院 editors and敛縻 frequently secure vacations. It may be a news story a bit too pungeous to make stand out, and a majoritarian professor which persists in applying ice water to the brown of among the "boobs" and the Botanists entrenched in the Faculty, let it be conceded, for the sake of security, that they are truly in the right. The question remains whether youth is not being a force; how long can youth go on undermining fire. How long can young go on undermining flaming without burning itself? What would you say to Miss Edna St. Vincent Millay that although her candle, burning at both ends of its wick, makes a lovely light in the process of duplex combustion, but if that spark comes from theouth of America, what will be the result. Miss Joy may win; miss Mary will lose; miss our own purpose. It will have Too Flaming Youth plan for a national student conference upon the issue of the Permanent Court of International Justice, namely the Council of Christian Associations, hoped and expected that out of it would come the "voice of the students of America"—arbitrine in calling the entrance of the United States into the World Court. And that is exactly what happened. In the selection of speakers to present the issue of the courtroom preference was shown to the friends of the plan. The analysis of Senator Leo root, defending the court, was matched with brilliance of Clarence Barnes relational Yet the organization of the conference did not necessitate this action. The delegates went to the conference considering it a forum for the discussion of a big current issue, not a tool for putting over a certain policy. Every opportunity was given for the expression of opposition to it. It was not the conference, fault it was exercised by only four delegates. Yes, there has been World Court propaganda in evidence on *College campuses*. The pity is that as long as most students are content with academic material for their education on international problems, the courts cannot or perhaps they money, to present its arguments as fully as the proponents of the court. However, it is conceivable that without the court proprenga, university students would be capable of coming to a conclusion by themselves favorable to the entrance of this country into the World Court. On Other Hills made a grand illumination for a little white, only to be conquered by the forces of darkness under the leadership of *61 Queen Victoria*. The powder can be used to prepare for the long trench warfare will have been dissinated in rocket wargl. At least one Parents Association in New York City is now debating the problem how to discourage the young parent from attending school and maturely. It is a parliamentary way of raising the question whether high school and college youth must graduate before they can remain emotionally starved. What bothers those parents is that it is likely to traumatize them. A case among case at 16 and James Levy and D. H. Lawrence at 18, Jules and E. W. Lawrence at 18, and Experience will there be left for youth to conquer at the age of 20. Flaming at 18, cinders at 24—the prospect is not cheerful for aPermanent Parent Association. --- Those sinister mid-Victorianis, re-fusing to flame in adolescence, are to keep alive their innate need for physical strength at 80. Buffalo is doing it at nearly 80. Chichewan carries it with a fierce wickedness. How are they to be beaten and tamed by those who are young in their youth? To keep youth's own standards the mid-Victorianis are no longer the ideal. To keep youth alive for life's own sake, to economize its energies for the future, to develop an executive pressure, not flaming youth to save up a few emotions and experiences for the future—say, at least until the age of 80. The resignation of Dr. Horace M. Evans, as president of Valparaiso University, has been accepted by the Valparaiso University Association. Rev J. C. Dau, of P. W. Wayne, will set out his plan for the doctor Evans career soon is appointed. Modern women's dress may or may not be good for the thermals of this season, and there is a need to health. Since the indulgence fashion has disappeared, Chlorosis, for instance which used to make men's dress "grossing" is no more With it have disappeared several other Two famous pianists will appear on the concert course of the University of Illinois this month. Gabrielli, Russian-American pianist, will give a concert Jan. 12, and Paderewski will appear there Jan. 22. An unusual feature in the way of a contest between colleges, was the spelling match held between the Oklahoma University and the University of Oklahoma this week. The Fewer the Better (Tonoka Daily Capital) Rickets is practically an impossibility, to the modern-couple girl who does not know how legs from following the styles acquired their disabilities were developing. The Colds are fewer, and fewer of these develop into tuberculosis. So much it might be that Plans are under way at the University of Indiana for the W. S. G. A. midwifery convention which will be held there during the third week in April. That the Bachelor of Arts degree will not be conferred by the Kansas State Teachers' College was decided by the present board of regents. The reason given was that intensive training is better than extensive training and that the college should confine itself to the training of teachers. Louis Grauveure, noted bartillon will give a recital at the Kansas State Teachers' College of Emporia on Jan. 19. Mr. Grauveure appeared on the concert course at the University of Kansas last year. Completion of details for the nationalization of Kappa Tau Pi, interdenominational religious fraternity, were made at the Oklahoma A. & M. during the holidays. Chapters with a other college by means of lectures. Even bobbed hair shares the glory. Even loveliness can be shared. Women in bobbled-haired women are less "cantankerous," have fewer innervations, and are more tensions than their long-hairdied sisters. A rule at the University of Oklahoma forbids women to have dates after 7 o'clock on week nights, and further provides that walking home with a man from the library may dismiss from school. Nothing short of an angel could stand-and-cover a piece of land on their hands. And now that they have found out what it is that they are responsible for, envoyable that women ever will submit to them, they can pile on their hands. Book Notes Wild Green, by Martha Ostense; Dodd, Mead and Company; New York. Much attention has been drawn to the success of a company which received the $15,500 prize. Many people now buy poted even greens to use as an Christmas trees these "grow up with the children and can be used, year after year." There is no doubt but that the author possesses much skill and power although she has let a few minor errors creep into her work. Briefly, the story deals with one Caleb Gare, a crude but forceful farmer of the Northern prairie. Aavricous and tyrannical, he holds his family to the soil by the fear of exposing an indiscretion of his wife. Only one member of the family, his daughter Judith, is at a distance to oppose her brother in the face of her father's brothers and sisters feel strongly at times the urge to rebel from the ceaseless drudgery to which they are subjected. Matters are finally brought to a climax by the precipitant epiphone of Judith whose mother is made to suffer under the sword in her head, just as the character of the domineering Gare been built up that the reader feels the invasiveness of his death which comes about through his enclosure. The rage of this fire from the ravages of fire Judith and her father stand on most vividly as the central figure around whom the action revolves, all though the author has devoted less skill to a presentation of certain other characters. The book is written by the teacher, who comes live with the girls and by whom the story is厉害 told. Another weakness lies in the author's carelessness in the introduction of the various personalities and the lack of attention to detail, a characteristic which may be overmeasure, however, in later work.—A. V. M. Dizzy Rabbits Learn to Keep Their Heads Baltimore, Jan. 12 - If rabbits in a laboratory are made dizzy for a brief period each day the semi-circular cans in their heads become filled with water and finally their heads do not swim any more. Evidence of this phenomenon has been presented by Dr. Kraight Dunlap, proponents at Johns Hopkins University, here. Jayhawks Flown It had been previously found that candidates for aviation need not be rejected because their heads swam easily when they were spun in a clair as they might easily become adapted to the unusual motion. The net result of the investigation, according to Doctor Dumliap, is to emphasize the great complication of the apparatus which controls the equilibrium of the body and to outline fresh mazes of necessary research. Calif., Wirt, A. B., '05, Riverides, Calif., has been running a chicken farm for several years and is having an interesting time in this unusual Carm Wolfe, A. B. 93, of Topeka, sailans Jan. 21 on the "Republic" for Palestine with Dr. and Mrs. Charles Shelford. During the time she was teaching in the Topeka High School her English III class established a Little Theater in the high school there. Bernice Christian, A. B.' 25, is teaching in the Dennison high school. Mrs. Ollie Sage, (Vielan Eychetson), A. B. 21), is teaching in the Speed high school. Rabish M. Gray, A.B. '21, is working in an insurance firm in Kansas City, Mo. Frank Manurah, A. B., 24, was in Lawrence Monday evening. Manurah is employed by the Bell Telephone company, with headquarters at Tulsa. 500 bargains for 500 Stationery Customers If You Need Stationery It Will Pay You to Investigate Rowlands YOU'RE RIGHT! There Will Be A Regular Varsity Dance Saturday Night--Jan. 16 FAU Isenhart-Jenks Singing Orchestra First engagement in Lawrence after returning from a two weeks' trip through Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma P