] PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6: 1026 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Associate Editor Associate Editor Sunday Editor Sunday Editor Assistant Sunday Editor Assistant Sunday Editor Warrife Griffith Campus Editor University Editor Exchange Editor Exchange Editor Night Edition Night Edition Spotter Editors Editor OTHER BOARD MEMBERS George Calvo Raymond McGallogh Ben Howell T. C. Kyrther C. E. Rathfer Robert L. Canton Ellen Blair Ellen Blair, Lawrence Business Manager... H. Richard McFarlane Editorial Department K. U. 2 Bureaucratic Department K. U. 6 Entered as second-class mail matter June 25, 1937. Arrived in Kansas, on the under of act March 3, 1937 and on week and on Monday morning by student mail and on Sunday morning by student mail. On Wednesday of the variety of Kansas, from the Ft. of the Missouri, at Fort Smith. The St. Louis whiskey eleven was cheered in defeat even as victory when it left for Leavenworth for a long period of training amidst the penitentiary goal-posts. Not a kikl was made by the losing team even as it was escorted from the home field by a heavy guard. WEDNESDAY JANUARY 6, 1926 THE WHISKEY TEAM It was with heavy hearts that the St. Louis threw us their star triple-treatmen, Nat Goldstein and William Kinney, cheer. Cheer after cheer rolled from the rooting section after the train which carried the martyred St. Louis Bootleggers to play the hardest game of their heicer career against the husky Levenworth Guards. It appears that the people of St. Louis make martyrs of their bootleggers. They cheer them as they leave for prison. They shower them with gifts. That is the way to uphold the Volunteer act. POLAR PASTURES Saint Nicholas is to be deprived of exclusive rights to his favorite reindeer. At least, such a statement seems warranted after reading an article written by Vikhilajar Stefanson in a recent issue of The Forum, Man, one hundred years hence, will have to avail himself of reindeer meat to satisfy his carnivorous appetite or become strictly a vegetarian epicure. Thus Santa Claus may yet be forced to abandon reindeer and use the more modern airplane, a thing his stronest adherents have striven to keep him from doing. Stefanson's reasoning seems logical as a method of overting the Malthusian doom. Various portions of the earth are overpopulated. To raise meat in these crowded lands requires the consumption of two or three times as much corn or wheat as the amount of meat produced. Densely settled countries then must either import a greater portion of their food supply, or become heroverious peoples. It has been estimated that he Arctic grasslands can support 100,000,000 reindeer and 5,000,000,000 ovibus With the present forest cleared away double or treble this number could be pastured. Sea farming, tropical development, or synthetic food may also solve the problem concerning the food supply. Certain it is that hunger leads to war, and abolition of war is the universal appeal of the present day. If man cannot be changed into a vegetarian, then the reindeer which have been considered as rightfully belonging to the reverend old Saint Nick must be scarified on the altar of man's carnivorous appetite. Reindeer thrive in the great wastes of the Arctic circle. In the summer they eat the grasses and in winter they subsist mainly on the lichens. These however are scarse, and the grazing is limited. Grasses are obtainable the year around, but they do not seem to care for them. The muskox, ovibion, or sheep-cow is the only other animal that has been found that thrives in the northland whose meat is considered good for human consumption. These animals are about the size of a cow, but have wool like sheep. They eat grasses, and so about five times as many of them can be grazed on a given piece of land as can reindeer. Their wool is beautiful and fine, and will not shrink. The hide has been used for making harness and boots. A GOOD NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION The incident of a foreign student in a great American university who was once found alone, gazing through a window at a group of American students, with tears in his eyes, should cause the average American student to nausea and think. He should stop to think of what his own feelings might be if he were in a foreign country, away from home and friends, and found himself excluded from society and denied the fellowship of a vast majority of his associates. There are a few foreign students on the University of Kansas campus, such as Wongwai, who have won the acquaintance and friendship of the student body. They are greeted by the goodnatured "hello" on all sides. They are accepted wholeheartedly as one of the "fellows." But such is not the case with a majority of the students who have come from other hands to the University of Kanawa. They are left to themselves. They enjoy the friendship of only their own small group. On the Hill and in the class room they are treated as strangers. The customary good-matured greetings which are exchanged daily between American students are not extended to the student from China Japan or Hawaii. It is this unintentional overtight more than anything else that occasionally brings the pung of loneness and homeiness to his breast. He longs for fellowship, And it is all unintentional—just because the American student is thoughtless. He doesn't intend to ignore or highbrow his classmate from another country—he just doesn't stop to think. Wouldn't it be a fine thing if, after all other New Year's Resolutions have been broken, each native student on the campus would resolve to be more friendly with all foreign students and take it unto himself to cultivate the intimate friendship of at least one such student? Day by day, in every way, life becomes more and more discourging. A psychology professor now comes forward to manifiest that there is no such combination as a "swak mind and a strong back." The weak mind have wack backs also. And that isn't all, he explosions the "practice makes perfect" theory, and battles the "if at first you don't succeed, try, try again" slogan. KERCHEW! Have you a little cold in your head? Pour out of five on the campus have. If you are one of the elite don't worry you will not be missed. The unwelcome visitor is in our midst and one knows when and how he came in. The uninvited guest came back after the Christmas fests. He seems here to stay, for the winter at least. He came at the most inappropriate time of the year—the week before final examinations. If there is anything that a student does not want when theres a lot of work to be done it is a sluggish brain. That is what the visitor gives one. The visitor is a persistent fellow, too. He sticks and sticks to the job. He may remain a few days, a week, or even a month. And after he leaves he may return again. The Hill hacks and coughs, snifflies and sneezes. A little germ has done it all. Few, at most, seem immune, and they will probably not escape long. It is hard to get the best of the visitor. One cannot see him for all his hosts seem bent on introducing him around, and he has many helps. Kerchew, he's after you. This problem involves other things besides the relations of men and women outside of the classroom. It brushes up the question of whether men and women can do their best mental work while associating together elbow to elbow in the classroom. A WORTHY COMRADESHIP A WORTH COMMADESHIP The question of the date rule and how it works or fails to work comes up frequently, bringing to us the problem of whether co-education is best for our University. Many exponents of separate education believe that widely different educational means and methods ought Vol. VII Wednesday, January 6, 1920 No. 85 MAGICOWELL PICTURE: The MacDowell Club picture will be taken Thursday, Jan. 7 at 12:30, at Squire's Studio. FRANCES ROBinson, BIPLOTER OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Copy received at the Chancellor's office,附上1 a.m. Quill Club will not hold the regular meeting this week, on account of the Bohemian Marque to be given Friday night. AASE GEORGE, Secretary. Copy received by: Vol. VII Wednesday, January 5, 1926 No. 8. QUILL CLUB: On Other Hills The next lecture on context on contemporary literature will be given by Miss Hanken, in room 200 Fraser, at 4 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 7. The FRESHMEN The interfraternity council at Berkeley University, Calif., has recommended that all Fraternities not manishting at least a "C" average to be on probation for a year and not enroll until their averages are raised. Of course there is that ever-press danger of their comradeship becoming undisciplined and undignified. This danger is, however, less active when the comradeship is a wholesome one, built working together and thinking together as well as playing together. In universities of separate education, men and women meet just to dance, play and enjoy themselves. Their relationships in such a place would be more apt to be not what should then in a co-educational institution. It is when men and women think and work together, play together, and worship together than the finest kind of comradeship is secured. W. S. JOHNSON, Chairman of the Department of English. A college course for washermen is being organized by the State University Extension Division in Massachusetts for the purpose of teaching to be employed in fitting men and women for totally different spheres of duty and usefulness. But are their fields of duty so different? If the men and women are educated together they will be better fitted to work to gather in fields of industry and, what is more important, in the home. A similar training, it would seem, would anake for a greater harmony, a more beautiful and successful home. Do A. Herbert Gray, a London minister, says, "Everywhere we do our best as a race when men and women work together and supplement and complement each other's work." Those men who say that they cannot keep their minds on their studies or get the most out of a class in which there are women, are confessing a deplorable weakness in themselves. Probably one of the greatest mistakes of our forefathers was that men and women met too often only to play and enjoy themselves together; concerning the more serious problems of life did they not work together. Plain Tales From the Hill Mild excitement rewarded in an elementary geology class when the instructor asked half a dozen young indians "Would a world rain thrown in at the oak swan into the bottom? They answered, positively: "No." He was a happy-go-lucky student, and the professor was slightly aloof. A girl on the left side center of the class room had just answered a question she didn't know. "Is that right?" be asked. The happy-go-lucky student made a low-voiced remark regarding the previous answer. The instructor whirled. "You look like a young man booked in unimposibly." "w-c-ll! Yes." he drawled. "She was beautiful but ———." She just simply couldn't understand the reason. "Why?" she asked. "You'll see in a moment," said the professor, then with an air of resignation he added: "Maybe." After stating the calculated age of the world, a geology professor went on to explain that: "As time goes on on the age of the earth will be extended." The course, which does away with rubbing over wash tails, is called the "Laundry Institute," and is meant not only for professional clothes but also, for any women interested in booking female洗衣棚. skilled and scientific methods of modern laundry technique. Tasty short orders are our specialties There has been a recent tendency on the campus to speak of the senior engineers wearing their red and blue sweaters, as "striped creatures." The McGill University Chess Club has accepted the challenge of the University of Oklahoma Chess Club to a correspondence chess match. GEORGE'S LUNCH Just North of the Varsity Business as Usual Phone 75 weekly for a press—on steam machine Phone 75 monthly for thorough cleaning Owl Service So many students (and others) have called "75" since vacation that we are sure they know "Master" cleaning. We present a chart for "refreshing" school and business clothes—suits, dresses, hats and coats. Once in a while we do things by halves--not often--this is once A Three-Day, Half-Price Sale in which you may have your unrestricted choice of: Any Dance or Party Freck Any Evening or Dinner Dress Any Crepe or Chiffon Scarf Any Corduroy Robe Any Handbag or Party Bag A rack of handsome Fur-trimmed Coats Sales Are Final Bullene's "exclusive but not expensive" No Approvals Please on all remaining coats in stock. All of the finest materials and luxuriously fur trimmed. Sports coats from Golflex with and without fur trim in imported materials. on all remaining afternoon and evening dresses. Silks, satins, crepes, and some wool dresses. Dance frocks and dinner gowns from America's finest designers and from France. Saturday, Jan. the 9th closes our Mark-Down Sale Innes Hackman & Co. Courtesy-Quality-Value