PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, MARCH 47, 1635 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University K. Raman **Editor/In Chief** J. K. Hapke **Appreciate Editor** Yong-Yuan Pei **News Editor** Louis Browne **Composer** Gary Carter **Night Editor** Federico Schoewiener **Titernary Colour** Hank Martin **Titternary Colour** Gill Mattschmidt **Plain Titles Editor** Hugh Cooke **Plain Titles Editor** Hugh Cooke Lala, Palu Whisperer Crush Dahlah Shrimp Johan Shaw John Mueller Mary Laila Rupinpatna Martin Marvin David Martin Michael Martin Boston Manager Austin More, Moore, Caffé, Robert Hill Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Entered in concordance (both mother and father) of the deceased, who was born on March 15, 1896, to James and Emma Kennedy, and the act of marriage on March 13, 1902, on the same day. Mr. Kennedy and on his mother's behalf by her executor, the wife of the deceased, the late John Ransom, the spouse of the deceased, the late James PHONES PHONES Editorial department K, U, 75 Business department K, U, 69 TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1925 Choyneau has changed its annual program for the year. The western city is the center of a Fall roundup this winter. SOME DAY THE HARVEST Some day the harvest will be reaped. Some day there is going to be a rickening crowd; a pallid and trembling driver is going to crawl from behind the wheel of his car and go back to the spot where the victim has been caught. A speed for speed is in the street. It won't be a pleasant thing—the crash and the events that follow it—but it is bound to come. We can say out of the possibilities of it now, but we won't be able to blat out that picture after it has registered. It won't be nice to look upon and it will take a many pound of cure to ecotify what the proverbial sneeze might have prevented, but the law of averages cannot be forever ignored. The camp has been lucky for a long, long time so why not visualize the picture now? About three year old students on their way to 1830 classes had a sample of what might happen when they saw one of their professors knocked moves the pavement by a speeder. Fortunately there had been a fall of snow and the man struck get away with brushes—but he was lucky. For awake, after this two-three-year campaion opinion had the opposing team overtaken it, but the incident has been forgotten. Again the speeder has made the campus his happy hunting ground, and is "hinged into biome" and he is and has been, consistently getting away with it for some time. On the other hand students who disregard the date rule, flirt with the rightfully consented Reechn, othr education, attend unauthorized parties, or otherwise evade some of our common "thuau huit nots" are summarily dealt with when caught, but the most flagrant disregard of campus and city laws on the part of campus matters brings no official response. HILL POLITICS What more ironical comment need one make, when last week in the women's election the two "opposing" parties ran their candidates on identical platforms, with the exception of the woman who said the party that announcing its ticket. Perhaps a maligned body is preferable to a soul corrupted by attending an unauthorized party. Perhaps the motorist should be allowed to reign supreme. Perhaps, because the Student Council has a taddisle status concerning speeders on its books, the student council should have some day the speeders will heap the harvest they are sowing now. Then who will be blame? The use of superfluous issues has characterized both men's and women's politics in past elections. Mountains, hills, mountains, mountains; you may talk about no championship. How can we expect to change the campan, or develop its leading issues, when both political parties are afraid to get behind any serious movement, for fear of losing popularity? It would be better for a party to take a strong stand and lose a few elections than to continue running candidates simply on their own personal popularity. Why pretend that our parties mean anything, as long as they stand upon the same half-haked compromises for platforms? OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN --- Some Zoology Club will hold its regular meeting Wednesday, March 16, in bar on hall room 204. Mr. Ballington will speak on "Nepal Marine." A third meeting will be held on Friday at 7:30 p.m. Copy received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. Vol. VI. Tuesday, March 17, 1925 No. 137 http://www.library.washington.edu/ ZOOLOGY CLUB: 1. PHELPS President W. A. A. There will be a meeting of W. A. A. at 4:30 Wednesday. Board meet in mat 4. JANETTE STRIKLEE, President. CAP AND GOWN And now a committee has been appointed to find out the year and any of the city and town questions from its cavity terminology. It would lead dignity to commute most to the faculty members attested in a scholarly office; and it would make the course feel as if they and the faculty had more in common at this important occasion, now only a short time distant. Some members of the faculty may be biased to the plan for personal reasons, there may be in favor of it for personal reasons. But personal lines of individual members of the faculty should not govern the action of the Senate in deciding this important question. They should be careful and the question decided in the norms of its value as a person feature of government. Dignity, solennity, honor... all are represented at commencement time, and this cap and gown plan would only necessitate and carry out these impressions. The man who sat on a box of dynamite, and threw a wicked cigarette into a leaf of powder must have been booking for a raise. He got it. "SECOND-WIND" **Spring is here!** Mid-centric examnars are here too. We are being given a chance to show how much we have learned in the past six weeks. Some of us merely hand back in the form of a quiz book the material which has been handed out to us by the professor or the material which has been taken from books written by us. The course is based on the time this comes for us to straighten up and prove that we are vexatious. Mr. Macmillen created music which ill lie ting in the hearts of his listeners. Let's do our best, when then those quilines are over let's start in neww with a clean state and determined to finish up this year with flying colors. There are only ten more weeks of school; time enough for us to prepare. We'll be better than we have ever done before. Let's go. A favorite with the audience was the artist's own composition, "Bar carollo," whose vibran, minor strain echoes the music of a completely executed vibrata effect an extreme finger accuracy gave to the elinger number, Weinlaiwski, "Pok肌 naisie," a rhaphoic brilliance which she defeated by delicate, persuasive use of muscles. At the Concert (Dy Ruth Lawless) In diversity of spirit and fineness of interpretation, group three was supreme. It rung from the bounty of the wild and the glamour played upon muted strings to the lively, spirited dash of an old English gigue executed against a backdrop of the worldly beauté* "Ave Maria" was played with exquisite feeling; its poignant tone and slow, legato cadences were the bright long strokes and broad restraint. Words are futile things with which to discuss the vicinal recital of Francis Macallene, who presented the 50th number of the University concert course Monday night. In technical movements and argument of expression, Mr. Macallene was truly a master. Four groups constituted the program. Outstanding in brilliancy of technique was the second, Labl's "Symphonic Espagnole" in three movements. The third movement, an exquisitely phrased quirking such difficult bowings as the staccato, the richet and the spicata. It merged from the buoyant, joyous abandon of a Spanish dance with trills and leaps and chromatic runs to a wistful, meditative passage with fear overtone, and so scarred to new melancholy that detached stooks of the finale. Campus Opinion --- All communications to the Company Ogionian dispatch should be honored to and more than 92% of the charter company- owned offices must be accommodated by the signature of the writer and with the initial will be used in the K-Order of the writer's address. Editor Daily Kanzanz According to the recent article in this paper, the biologists are having a hard time to decide what color a shamrock should be. Why not decide on yellow, and make China the native land? We suppose Ireland the origin of the grass in Ireland. We also suppose the "weather of the green" are trying to represent a cute found in South America. Of course, the present day botanists originated the idea to decide what color it should be. On Other Hills E. F. At the University of New Mexico a man to be eligible in any branch of athletic sports has only to enroll in school. The school is small and athletes are scarce so the rules are not so strict. The psychology department of Temple University has abolished all examinations in the belief that they are distracting, and influence by personalities. The students in the department of political science of the University of Chicago are learning from experience the practical methods of voting in Chicago. In the last election 278 students were assigned as officials at the polls in various precincts of the city to observe and only to observe the methods used in voting but to watch for any evidence of illegal practices. Le Baron Russell Briggs, former president of Radcliffe College, is resigning the position he held at the University, which places he has held since 1902. Students who make failing grades in more than 50 per cent of their coursework will be placed on the FC. Collins, Cole, are placed in special study classes which meet the requirements. A state high school wrestling tournament is in the latest athletic event to be held in New York, down the bay. The best high school teams in the state are entered in the tournaments. A new use for flesh-coloredose was recently discovered when a professor got malpressed at West Virginia Weekdays and carried on an investigation which brought out the startling fact that women were inadvertently exposed to flesh-coloredose because easily visible when flesh-coloredose was drawn tight. A professor at the University of Wisconsin hasnuguget to get the attention of his students by asking them if they know someone critiquing him and his methods. At the University of Texas instead of a Quack Club such as the University of Kansas has, the students have formed a Turtle Club, members of which are far more active than the name indicates. Oklahoma university students who subscribe $250 or more to the building fund are granted lifetime-cost privileges in the new stadium, The faculty of Yale University has expelled a member of the football team for violation of the rule against running, while a student to the university. Recognizing the "sense of responsibility" of the upperclassmen" the executive powers of the University of California, theabled cats for juniors and seniors. Weekly lectures on athletics are being given women students of the University of California, in order to encourage better able to understand sport events. Inter sorority bootling has been introduced at Michigan Agricultural college. Selling Yourself to the World MEN spend millions annually to advertise their business. You are in the very serious business of selling "yourself" to the world. Personal appearance is "self" advertising of paramount importance, it pays an immense return dividend. Dress Well and Succeed X REDUCED Motor Coach Rates THE ORANGE AND GREEN MOTOR COACH LINES Lawrence to Kansas City - - - - $1.00 Lawrence to Topeka - - - - $ .75 Round Trip - - - - $1.25 BUY A COUPON BOOK AND SAVE 10% ON THE PRESENT REDUCED RATES With a Coupon Book you can ride to Kansas City for 20 cents; also a holder of a Coupon Book is entitled to a 10 per cent discount on room rates at HOTEL BRAY. These books are redeemable in cash if you fail to use entire book. The ORANGE AND GREEN MOTOR COACH LINES is a "Home Company" offering the traveling public the advantages of economical cost of operation. We solicited the co-operation of business and professional men in our effort to establish motor coach transportation in Kansas and adjoining states at rates in keeping with the service and cost of transportation to which the public of Kansas is entitled. The Middle States Transit Lines (Incorporated) PHONE 646