PAGE TWO 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1925 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University Fallinor-Chief Telfair-Editor Computer Editor Company Editor Newspaper Editor News Editor Telephone Editor Telephone Editor Discharge Editor Dishance Editor Alcohol Editor Brownyer Lorraine Fennion Kathleen Smith Johnny Simpson Jeremy Garvey Justin Qiushen Rachel Cohen D. Wyrigran Crime Mont Clair Shire Marcus Martinez Mervill Crimes Martin Martin Business Manager Accent, Mgr. Merrk, Cufft, Coffelt, Robert Hill Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Interested as an undergraduate mall master's degree student in history, international relations, Italian history and the art of March 3, 1967 would be interested in work on Sunday morning by students in the history department at the University of Nebraska. From the Press of The New York Times. IDENTIFIERS Editorial department K. U. 29 Business department K. U. 67 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1925 BEWARE SPEEDERS Our campus speeds are no longer to induce in their favorite nastiness with immunity. The chancellor has decided to take into his own hands the matter of regulating the traffic on the Hill, and although the bulletin which he issued today is only in the form of an urgent request, the Kansan feels safe in predicting that further violation of the rules will not be imposed by un-matted. By studying hard for our mid- week exams, we are able to start off the last tap only one week behind in our daily lessons. PILFERING A local druggist reports that several students are in the habit of helping themselves from his shelves without the formality of paying for the goods taken. On one occasion an offender was greatly chagged when he was presented with a bill for the articles he thought he had "got away with" during the past weeks. The days of the divine right of students in gone. It is reasonable to expect that anyone of university calisthen should become as much responsibility toward the community in which he lives as does the ordinary citizen. This petty thievery is not only a disgrace to the individual offender, but a reflection upon his innocent fellow students, and an injustice to the mercurian. He should not expect to be given lentient treatment simply because he is connected with an educational institution. The student who appropriates the goods belonging to another, whether far "sport" or because he cannot afford to pay for it, is a moral slouch. He is not wanted in the University of Kansas. Of course we have finals, and term reports, and semester notes to get ready every so often but most of us can be thankful that we have no in come tax report to file. BOYVILLE Boyleville is the grandest town ever known. No man can enter it, and no boy can be denied citizenship in it. Boyleville is neither a Utopia nor a paradise, but rather it is a striving, challenging community person who enjoy undeniable rights. One of these cardinal privileges is the right of every boy to play marbles, to shout "kunks down," and to decree "vent duba." Marbles are more serious and important than presidential elections and income taxes in Mantown. The business of marble playing requires hours every spring day, and it involves skill, thought, and sportmanship. Marbles is big business in Boyle, and yet the presumptions school board of McPherson has forbidden the citizens of Boyle to play marbles on the school ground. Surely this school board has forgotten the sacred rites and privileges of Boyle. Surely its members have lost the charm and thrill of their prize ague. Two often the students here regard the position of dean of men as that of a plain clothes politician. Whenever we hear of a student going to this dean's office we ask him what he has done to be called "unon the carrot." THE DEAN OF MEN We should not think of the dean of men as a teacher but rather as a true friends of the students. Other schools have such positions and they have proved of great value to both the men students and the institutions. Perhaps one of the best known dena in the country is Thomas Arkle Clark of the University of Illinois. It has been estimated that "Tommy Arkle," as he is affectionately called, talks with an average of fifty nine a day who are someone in trouble. Ninety-five per cent of those men come to him not because they are commuted but of their own solution. Denn Clark has not set rules to apply to the men; he considers every man as an individual. Whatever interests his students, interests him. His talk is confidential; that kind of talks which are made only between the best of friends. His task is to build character and he is indeed successful. We should regard the position of dean of men here as at the University of Illinois. He should be received of all the duties of an official to enforce all the laws of the University, and be a friend, an adviser to the men on the campus. When this is accomplished the position of dean of men will be beneficial to the men students; not as a police officer but as a true, confidential friend. EVOLUTION AND HIGHER EDUCATION The governor of Tennessee has just signed a bill which prohibits the teaching of evolution in any school or college in the state. Again we see that the medieval idea of the value of the suppression of free speech and discussion has not been curbred by our present supposedly higher civilization. Teaching as embodied in our pub schools should consist of the presentation of facts and theories from which the student can draw his own conclusions and convictions. But the governor of Tennessee would have only those things taught which he believes—right as—if any one man, or a dozen, could determine what is right. Suppression never exterminates anything, and in most cases, it strengthens and encourages belief in the thing suppressed. While history proves that suppression is ineffective, more deplorable in the fact that students in public democratic schools of higher education are forbidden to study and consider a theory so important as the evolutionary theory. If a college student is not old enough to study and evaluate the theory for himself, he will be will. Now that the governor of Tennessee has said that there is no truth in Darwin's theory of evolution and has prohibited it to be taught in the state, think of all the trouble Darwin went to for nothing. On these spring days, a student's fancy often turns to the tennis racket and the net—yea, verily, even on Sundays. But the average student has to stop with thoughts, because it brings these thoughts into action would be sacrilege. Unchaperoned steak roasts are thoroughly proper and in keeping with the Sabbath spirit, but never, oh, never, a tennis game! RACKETS It has been said that citizens living near the University courts might be disturbed by the noise of a tennis game. It is at least a novel idea to class anything so gentle as tennis with the load, noise, rough game—but perhaps the thud of a great tennis ball against a racket would disturb the peace of Lawrence. However that may be, tennis is a healthful game and a thoroughly natural game for springtime. With the little matter of classes and activities on the Hill, students have but scanty time for games during the week. Sunday afternoons offer ideal times, but the University courts are an uninterruptedly close. A few private courts are open, but they cannot begin to accommodate the number The schedule of budget conferences for Thursday, March 26, is as follows: 2:00 to 3:00 - Physics and Astronomy. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Copy received at the Chambership Office until 11 a.m. o. Vol VI. Wednesday, March 25, 1925 No. 144 E. B. STOUFFER, Chairman Budget Committee. PROJECT CONFERENCES: SCHOOL OF BUSINESS; The School of Business will meet Thursday, March 20, at 11:00 in room DJ Watson Library, to consider places for the first annual school of Business. INDOOR RIFLE RANGE; On Friday and Saturday, March 27 and 28, the inboard rife range will be open to the members of the engineer rife team only. The national R, O, T, C rife competition for the Society of American Military Engineers trophy will be fired on three dates. J, R, CVGON, Major. Pen and Scroll will meet Thursday evening, March 25, at 7:30 in room 208 West. Administration building. JAMES CROW, President. PEN AND SCROLL: 13 Atencio se reunirá jueves, el 29 de marzo, a 4:30 los 15 de Ag. Atención refresco, wspaces y programación; tandem notificar de las Juegos Filarmonicos; atención médica y sanitaria; información del Fondo Florentino. EL ATENEO: on the Sabbath morning or on Sabbah eavens would disturb the dumbering neighbors, then why doesn't same public spirited put an end of students who would like to try their skill with the racket. If tennis enthusiasts who would indulge in their favorite sport early Three freshmen at Northwestern University discovered the inadmissible rule that most rules when representatives of the sophomore class recently put caps lined with powder on their heads for not wearing their ordinary capes. to the cardinals and robin whose songs interrupt the eternal calm of Lawrence on the Kaw? Insist on WIEDEMANN'S ICE CREAM The Cream Supreme Special for this week— Honey Moon and Vanilla Chocolate and Fruit Ice Nanpolitan (Chocolate-Straw berry Vanilla Marbled Vanilla Hillie and Birchwood Coconut and Vanilla Cinnamon and Vanilla Mango and Vanilla Raspberry and Vanilla Cheesecake and Vanilla Chocolate and Vanilla Caramel Nut and Orange Folate饼 Black Walnut and Vanilla Any flavor you want in one- flavor bricks Sherbets: Fruit Lime Green Gage Pineapple Cherry Our customers are satisfied PHONE 182 SHOOT! 18th Annual Kansas State High School Basket Ball Tournament Friday-Saturday—March 27-28 FIRST GAME BEGINS 9:00 A. M. FRIDAY 16 Games--16 Strongest Teams in Kansas By means of elimination tournaments only the strongest teams in Kansas will appear in the State Tournament—this should be a banner tournament. (Watch this space tomorrow) Here's the latest Brunswick Record by Nick Lucas "The Crooning Troubadour" Somebody Like You . . . Because They All Love You Two clever selections on one record . . No. 2803, 75c HAVE you heard Nick Lucas and his magic melody? Have you heard him tease the tantalizing tones from his galloping guitar? Have you heard him croon the words of your favorite dance tune—a novel way he has of singing a record so you can dance to it, too? Well, if you haven't heard Lucas do all that—you ain't heard nothin' yet, that's all! Because until you hear Lucas play on Brunswick music you'll have to wait for a new album from many artists. Today you'll be in ard hear Nick Lucas' records. If we have left, we might even part with one! That's the kind of fellowness we are. And at the regular price—only 75c for two selections on one record. You can't beat that! Here are some other recent hits on Brunswick Records we'll gladly play for you: MY BEST GIRL—Guitar and Voice DREAMER OF DREAMS—Guitar and Voice ON MY UKULELE—Vocal Duet with Piano, Uluatele HOW DO YOU DO YOU—Vocal Duet with Piano, Banjo The Happiness Boys, Jones and Hare I CAN T REALIZE SINGing Compound DOES MY SWEETIE THAT—Piano Passage by Ohman—Singing Cordelemme Marion Harris TIGER RAG—Fox Trot DEEP SECOND STREET BLUES—Fox Trot. Mound City Blue Blowers INDIAN LAW CALL—Fox Trot—From "Rose-Marie" ALABAHY BOUND—Fox Trot J. H. BELL MUSIC CO. --- 925 MASS. STREET LAWRENCE. KAN. TOWER'S FISH BRAND COLLEGE COATS SNAPPY,SERVICEABLE WATERPROOFS All the go with College men Varsity Silckers YELLOW OR OLIVE! Sport Coats YELLOW OR OLIVE! TOWER'S TRACE MARK FISH BRAND "The Rainy Day Pal" AJ.TOWER CO. BOSTON MARS Tonight A STORY OF SPRINGTIME "ENTICEMENT" With Clive Brook and Mary Astor Thursday-Friday-Saturday Some Gal Was "FRIVOLOUS SAL" DONT FAIL TO SEE THIS BIG ACTION THRILLER VARSITY Tonight - Tomorrow "The Dressmaker From Paris" WITH 14 INTERNATIONAL BEAUTIES AND LEATRICE JOY NOW PLAYING AT THE NEWMAN IN KANSAS CITY Friday - Saturday "WIFE OF THE CENTAUR" John Gilbert and Aileen Pringle ORPHEUM Friday - Saturday Greater Than Marriage WITH MARJORIE DAW and LOU TELLEGEN Appropriate Short Reeds to All Features— Some Lineup. We'll admit it ourselves.