PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THURSDAY, OCT. 22. 1925 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS Editor-in-Chief ... Kenneth Simmons Associate Editor ... George Garvey Cannon Editor ... John F. Martin Cannon Editor ... Helen Clutter Responsible ... Raymond A. Cline Sunday Editor ... John F. Pat Asstistant Editor ... John F. Pat Asstistant Editor ... Graham Curtiss Alumni Editor ... Fredwick McNeil Alumni Editor ... Fredwick McNeil Plain Tale Editor ... Joe Jensen Plain Tale Editor ... Joe Jensen Sport Editor ... Ray Flohreau OTHER BOARD MEMBERS Belle Dale Lawrence T. E. C. Rither Jennifer Rutherford Josee Edmondson Lucile Fenton Helen Clint Robert L. Tausman Elizabeth Samburro Elizabeth Samburro Merrill Sawmon Business Manager...H. Itthard. McFarlane Editorial Department K. U. 2 Business Department K. U. 6 Emerald is second-degree mail master bachelor's degree in English and foreign languages from Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1987, week and on Saturday morning by students in the College of Letters. From the Press of the University of Kentucky, from the Press of the University of Kentucky. THURSDAY, OCT. 22, 1925 NATIONAL EGOTISM In there an individual anywhere who likes an egistical person? Yet the majority of the people of the country make up an egistical nation, a nation whose people think they are the best of people, a nation whose people believe they are never wrong in matters of war and peace. One can scarcely say that the United States should use a little more caution in dealing with this nation or a little more tact in dealing with that one, without everybody yelling out that the United States is absolutely all right. The cause of this goes back to the instincts of the individual. Persona will form judgments whether they have information about the subject or not, and once the judgments are formed the thinking process is one of trying to find proofs for the belief rather than trying to find out whether it is true. This national epiphany of ours has got us into trouble and will continue doing so as long as we believe that the United States is infallible and other countries are all wrong. For this fault there is only one remedy. It must be shown to the people, all of them, that their judgment is no better than their information, and that if their conclusions are to be right they must know something about the subject. Whenever more individuals take that view, instead of a blind faith in whatever America does we shall contribute our intelligent part toward making her always right, and the preliminary step toward ending war will have been made. Kansas cheerleaders should start dancing school. HORSEBACK RIDING Riders must lash their mounts as they attempt to force them to a faster gait over rough and hard paved streets, while out for a joy ride. Little thought is given to the torture the animal is undergoing while being riding by such a negligent person. Trucks and cars, not horses, were meant for use on hard surfaced streets and roads. The wide open space, or at least the soft bare earth, was made for horses to travel over. This is especially true when the horse is to be driven or ridden at high speed. Each step is one of pain for the animal if it is made to gallion furiously to appease the mania of someone for speed, and the torture is more severe if the animal happens not to be shod. Many lakes and country roads surround Lawrence, which offer excellent trakce for horses in good weather. If you are going to ride a horse, ride him slowly to the end of the pavements. Galloping a horse or the pavement accomplises only one end. It's a good way to show off. Alpine hotel keepers request that patrons set their bills before starting out on long and dangerous climbs. Lawrence rooming house keepers might as well make the same request of students before they start out to walk across the campus, judging from the regard which car drivers pay pedestrians. "WHEN CUPID GOES TO SCHOOL" Perhaps you have seen them in one of your classes, the enraged couple. Why should they listen to words of academic wisdom when they have each other? The storm cloud of the instructor's wrath to the laeviceck sophomore only brightens the sunshine of his sweetheart's smile. Gene is the unsteadiness of youth, in its place the seeming responsibility of maturity. No more the wild rush for dates and the thrill of a new crush. Gone all this and in its place a matter of fact devotion to the one and only. A thing of the part are those between class smokes with the gang on the steps. Instead he harries to West Ad where she has her clothes to carry her books for her. And at parties, no trapping, no cutting in, they dance straight through. Life is not so tight that they can bear to be separated for even a few minutes. Unblinkingly they use enduring terms in their conversation and hand in hand they stroll about the campus. No more the thrill of trying out their life on a new date. All that has vanished. No matter whether the blue love mean of September or the golden distance of romance of June are the immediate causes; one realizes that studies are only a secondary inter- est when Capid goes to school. Campus Opinion EPIRO3 DAILY KANSAN; Od Dad felt a surge of joyfulness vaultiness in his heart when he begged his daughter over long distance man to told her he was ready for "Dad's Day." When he reached Lawrence, her welcome was an exhilarant and an encouraging jolt. He was delighted to see him and that she wanna preto引进他 to her secrets and feel that he was good for that they were glad to meet him. Whe she wasn't quite an straight and step on for gorges-four as he had been among the rooters of his school days but his continuation was just as great. When he came back home he started thinking that he was a real part of it all again. With his daughter, the need of a ride in his bike, he started with McKeol and we were stuck as they needed the Stadium, his daughter said, respectfully, "Oh bud, I forget to tell you," and "You are I have to sit in the rooters section." Right how old D-interrupted with indignant voice, who would I go but there?" Daughter replied, "I know Dad, that you were some rover in your day and I guess you still are al that, but they have put the students off in a section all together this year. It feels like we have with same Trum! I think it sorry." "Four old Dud! This irridant dream of being a real part of it all again turned true. He so wanted to be in the midst of the young enthusiasm, to be part of it, to single his voice out, and to make it feel like "Rock Chill!" it as itoured forth from the strong young student threats, to the shoulder with the boys and girls who knew the heroes of the grindrums and whose voices would rise out in fame upon the field. Of course, he cared but it wasn't the cause off there that drove him, he was there been with all those young folks, he felt that he could have overlooked that funnel and sent over to encourage the poor boy who made it. It wasn't so many years ago that he felt this real part of the great student body. That in he had always felt that he could feel someone tie his feet to the house, old. He could not sit with his daughter and mother, but she was disappointed and rosters. He was disappointed and disappointed. Alma Mater did discovered him. Alma Matter did discovered him. He didn't stay for the banquet in the apartment. It seems to me that L. R. S.C., R. C. J., G. and many others were well-recently born, because recently, have been waking but over a more or less trivial mistake; it is important not to obsess over ours, what we so often do in the larger world—stampeding (to use a word familiar to us) with ourselves away with ourselves over something that should cause no second alarm. Ded is going back for the Thanksgiving game. Mother and Aunt* point with her finger to the team. They look, too, but the team's laughs bought before any of them know that the capture of mishapging with the present team will cost no money in the course, but they have no happy anticipations. They know themselves who will not belong in the roster's section. An Old Dad— J. A. S.—A. B.'03. Editor. Daily Kansas: We read a newspaper story, a highly colored newspaper story—wherein some communist has been arrested for spreading hate, country, and immediately pull our hair and rant and rave and spend sleepless nights because the Red Shirts are on our government. We read of the ex-election of an warlord to the presidency of the German republic and we heave wigs of woe and all but breathe our liver in contempt for us, and for the catastrophe it is about to befall us. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN SQUARE AND COMPASS: SQUARE AND COMPASS! The regular meeting of the Square and Compass Fraternity will be held this evening, October 22, in Room 310 Snow Hall at 7:30. All members are urged to be present. F. E. POTTER, President. Copy received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a. m. Vol. VII Thursday, Oct. 23, 1925 No. 40 SQUARE AND COMPASS: RESEARCH COMMITTEE OF GRADUATE SCHOOL: There will be a meeting of the Research Committee of the Graduate School at 4:30 Friday, October 23, in the Graduate Office. IN CONFLICT WITH THE STUDENT DEPARTMENT. Dean COSMOPOLITAN CLUB: A special meeting will be held on Friday at 7:30 sharp. Very important matters to be discussed. All the members must attend. E. B, STOUFFER, Dean. ALPHA DELTA SIGMA: ALPHA DELTA SIGMA: Alpha Deltasigma will meet tonight at 1319 Vermont St. at 7:00 p.m. OTHER SIRWOOD, President. We don't take the time to get at the real facts in the case. We don't stop to think that the whole propaganda fund of the US government has a dent in forming public opinion in the United States as the advertisements of Pepedon tooth paste; or that the German president is a firm advocate of more power for our vice president. And so it is here in this all-important little sphere of quaintness we see a freshman unimpaired college student, the champion of the chauffeed because he abutilously refuses to comply with the rules of the university and a great abundance of pity wells up in us and we are imbued with a love of barbarism that seems sweeping over our campus. Or perhaps we want to perfect domination over the cows and die-hardens back home and as one of them we are apt to think it is a far call from our present life, but the other we are apt to think it is a find ourselves. And so we must air our indignation and call upon the Gods to Why make such a serious matter out of such a trivial affair? What if one individual has the power to give him that individuality? What if the society does become a corporation, and the certifying agent goes back into the told? Sooner or later that individual will find that the greatest pleasure, and most benefit from the group, but by co-operating with it. And the group will learn to temper its actions. To use the idea of the freemain cap and its enforcement with the puddle he merely an open a pool in a little sportsmanship and sportmanship is the essence of loyalty. If one freemain himself is sufficient it will hurt no one but himself. Surely not the 20 or 30 years old who would be bended, even though they may in their momentes deeply regret the mob shirt which caused them to act unresponsibly. They must bend his back to the puddle and to come up smiling he will deflorate this sportmanship and loyalty. And in developing this sportmanship he will learn to give and take with the muddy water going along with men—a point L. R. S. might well remember the most time he feels recent and the "system" of K. U. Brookley' constet, one of the seven periodic visitors to the earth that have been expected this year, and the rocket astronomer at Kiev, Rusin, has not been located in the sky by astronomers at the U. S. Naval Observatory, even though several clear nights of 36 inch cameras has been used to search for it. W. J. M. Park college, at Parkville, Mo, has imposed the strict regulations on freshmen at the school that have been imposed on them, according to the "college" college publication. The men must wear their trousers turned up five inches from their shoe top, or high enough to show the sunshe. They are not to use hair oil, or be on the streets after 9:30. Women must On Other Hills A live wilhelm as a mascot, is the boss of the football team of Northwestern University. The beast was captured by Dr. R. A. Dumington of the Northernwest faculty on a recent bunting trip in Canada. curties to all professors and carry vanities and pencils in straw baskets "My Wild Irish Rose" is a more suitable time than "Red Hot Mama" for student social affairs," said President W. A. Brandenburg of the Pittsburg Teacher's college, in address students before an all-college party. The Chemical Industry club of McGill University, Montreal, took an excursion recently to the Frontenac Brewery. The McGill Daily says they were joined by a team of brewers on n irrigate scales, of one of the oldest beverages known to man." An innovation was introduced between halves of the Geneva and Alemania football game when two football teams composed of picked men from the freshman class broke out. The men were clad in jalpaes of various colors. It had been planned to use a pumpkin for a ball, but in practice preliminary to the final match the shirtless in an unfortunate fumble. The regular ball was then used. At the University of Indiana freshman women are not permitted at the library after 7:30 p. m. WARNING! Wichita Students Better come down town early Sunday morning for that Wichita Eagle or Beacon. HESS DRUG STORE Beauty Parlor in Connection Phone 537 Next Door Merchants National Bank Phone 537 GOOD NEWS FOR THE RAPID READER New Club Plan Rate Effective - $200 Until January 1st "Read as fast as you like—one book at a time" 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 666 Fur Coats --will be on sale— Friday and Saturday Special Prices for a few days only Coats of Quality in Hudson Seal with skunk, squirrel and fox trim Raccoon Squirrel Sealines $75 to $475 Hallowe'en We have a great supply of Hallowe'en novelties—Masks, Napkins, Hats, Invitations, Tally Cards, Place-cards, Horns, etc. University Book Store Harl H. Bronson, Prop. 803 Massachusetts Street Seventy Five Smart Winter Hats at There are Velvets and Felts In close shapes and large shapes Hats of black or of color Hats in harmony with your coat or frock $3.45 The price in many instances is half the original Bullene's Fragrant but not fragrant --- College men have decided the cut of the clothes we offer to college men. The makers (Society Brand) consulted the preferences of the leading universities before they made a single college garment. The result is what you might expect. The cut that college men want insist on, and wear.