PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1925 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University Editor-in-Chair J. B. Hugh Acoustic Editor Graze Young Journalist Gregory Young journal editor Joan Smith Editorial Assistant John Smith Night Editor Eduard Schwarzenbach Short Editor Merrell Rhawen Long Editor Merrill Cottin Frontpage Editor Michel Cottin Chronicle Editor Michael Cottin Board Members NATIONAL ASSOCIATES Lalpina Prade Coca-Cola Group Willowcress Owen Wilhigor Owens Syron Brown James Comley Lamely James Mary Lawson Steve Merrill Business Manager John Floud McConnell Manager of Finance John Floyd McConnell Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANMAN Lawrence - Kanana Determined to accumulate mail starter supplies and equipment, Kalman under the set of March 1, 1957 and April 30, 1958 at Lakeland, Florida a week and on Sunday morning by students in the university's College of Engineering in the variety of Kalman. From the Press of the University of Kentucky. PHONES PHONES Editorial department K. U. 82 Business department K. U. 64 FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1925 "PLEASE" OR "KEEP OFF" "Keep off the grass" season is nearly here again. And why don't the authorities use as effective a plan for keeping us off the grass as they had in keeping the campus dogs off? All there was to it was an official order for all dogs to keep off the grass- and Van did the rest. Now wouldn't that be a simple and pleasant way for us to be deaf with? No. editorial every day of the spring telling us to keep off the grasps and feelings with feelings, we might catch ours sneaking across zone short cut. Just an order that no one shall cut across the grass. All settled there. They might install a system of savings banks at convenient places on the campus so that offenders might contribute their nickle fine for trespassing. Or he might have every offender called up on the carpet and there influenced to keep off the grass. There have been several such suggestions that have been found successful by organizations who have tried this "please" campaign for less time than the administration and found that it was unsuccessful. Our gras does need protection—and it can have such if the administration will so decree. LEADERS—WHY? Lentine, Mussolini, Ghand—to most of us these three names suggest in rather an indefinite way revolutionary movements of a fanatic, lawless nature. In his concoction speretiery Doctor Devine clarified the lives and apparent motives of these three leaders. Each of the men had a keen feeling of the crisis his country faced, and a background which prepared him to lead. Whether we believe them to be right or wrong in their methods, we can see how we can help assist the courage with which they have entered and persisted in their programs. Thought, serious analysis of national situations, based on intelligent background, is too small a factor in the government of any of our nations today. Feeble, unsealified devotion to public interests in still more rare. The goal of each of these move ments is to relieve the part of humanity it struggles from the yoke of unjust government. Ghandi hopes to do it by self-sacrifice and nonresistance; Lennie by Bolshevism. Musolnik stands strong for the use of brute force. All have as the basis of their cause the respect for the individual. We are too close to these movements now to call them successes or failures. We cannot say that one method is right, and the other wrong. We need to understand them in their relation to the problem of the world at large. SHOVING AHEAD Go to college and show ahead. Push those in front of you to their limit. Trim them down; elbow them inside; make room for yourself; thenforge ahead. Lead out in front. Set up a table to sit on it. Such is the road to success. Ambitions, energetic, persevering young men and women through our universities, striving and scheming to get ahead. Notice them at the close of a basketball game, at the end of convocation at the crowded theater, at athletic gates. Always shoving ahead, pushing those in front to their limit, pamming, elbowing, forcing, making room for themselves. They cannot be blamed; they are bubbling over with life. They tackle work, studies and life's problems with the same zeal? Not! be not deceived. This is a transformed crowd when school work is in order. There are no maddening, shoving crowds at library doors. There are n3 wild scrambles to be first into class rooms. There are no surging mobs outside the doors of intellectual meetings or cultural entertainments. Many students feel to fall away, these things take time away, consider studies and professors a bore, sleep, dress, cat and get by. Shove ahead, those who will. The road of opportunities is unimpeded in our colleges. When bricklayers strike they sling mud on their employers. No doubt when plasterers strike they throw bricks. ANCIENT BUILDERS In the waste pieces they use, mans and wind blow illy over them. Hot suns and pouring rains never disturb them. Strange vehicles, more wonderful, more awe-impiring than the pretty mysteries which once transported the ancient gods, short and plow up the dust about them. The noise is not heard in the resting place beneath the earth. In the motors an eager, hunting people ride to and fro. Their steps are hurried. Their exploring hands know no reticence. With pick and hammer, with the aid of thunderning machines, they kneak upon the doors of the dead. With a great tirelessness, with a patience matching that which created the immense piles, they seek out the ruins, and prove the secrets of the past. All praise to the ancient arts and craftsmen. In eastern hemisphere, and west, they builted better than they knew. By honoring their kings in a semblance of immortality, they gave honor to their own skill, preparing for a resurrection stranger than they dreamed. Closing the door upon the civilization of a past age, they called it good. But they left the key imbedded in the lock. The pyramid which forms alike tomb and monument for the deceiving members of another age paints have. And modern science, keen to discover and compare the achievements of ether eras with its own, is picking slowly at the lock. SUNBOWN ON THE KAW The very glow of setting new Han, it seems, the power to soften Their land mammals, as they have An olddy, there a ripple Whisper softly, as with awe They witness heavens' transforma It is sun down on the road. While its face gleamed bright, repleudent. In the store of day-time ans, Now its countenance grown more dim As the babblings of its tongue. Now the vase light fades to twilight In much the same manner. In much the same manner are the owl It is studious on the Kwei. A. NONYMOUS, Plain Tales From the Hill Even a professor in a School of Education class uses "curriculum" in his lectures. "Are you going to the violin school?" asked a very pretty little girl of a student hurrying to the post office. "Do you need the stowed inside a black fibre case." --the announcement of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs, J. Edward Todd, Feb. 29, has been received. Ed Todd, son of Mrs. J, F. Fodd of Lawrence received his degree from K. U. in 1918. Bewildered stewed in front of Weaver's window: "Dresses, or blouses!" Theft of the six most beautiful women of the Kansas State Teachers' College in the crime of which the Kansas City Journal Post is accused by the Bulletin. A recent Sunday feature on the photographs of these women under the heading "College of Emporia Queena." The Bulletin demands that the Kansas City paper make retribution for the wholesale way in which she turned the term beauties and hands over to the smaller college. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN The students of French will present on Saturday, March 14, at 8:15 in the Little Theater, the twenty-four annual play, which will be "Girls" by Alison Hewitt. Vol. VI. Friday, March 18, 1923 No. 184 ANNUAL FREEDAY DIV. Copy received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. APPLICATION FOR SCHOLARSHIP: The engineer of the University of Utah plan a celebration of Pascal's theorem, this showing will be the biggest the engineers have ever made on the An Egyptian ballet, the dances and costumes of which are original work of students and teachers, was given at the Kansas State Normal School in 1896. It is planned to be typical of ancient Egyptian religious ceremonies. Before the end of the spring semester, fourteen gift scholarships and two honor scholarships are to be awarded, as set forth in the catalog, for women who will attend the university. Two new societies have sprung up at the Pih Mui Delta house at Northwestern University. One is called the Richelieu" Club, and to become a member one must confess that he never been jilted by some fair lady. On Other Hills Students desiring to make application for one of these scholarships should see the chairman of the Committee on Scholarships before March 30, in room 301, Fraser, on Monday, Wednesdays or Fridays, from 11:30 to 12:30, all by appointment. E. GALLOO, Chairman. Colorado College at Colorado Springs; Colo., looks like the probes that篮球队 in Mountain Conference basketball channels to coording to reports. They have yet to lose a game and last week they won 52-40. Denver, the Denver U. These two teams were considered their hardest games. Colorado College has held it for three years. Jungge, star guard on the Syracuse football team, has withdrawn from school. He is the eighth man to be lost to this years team, graduated in 2014, and Shaugher, star freshman quarter, left this semester, due to low grades. Frank Mahoney, star center on the Creighton basketball team has been declared ineligible on the eve of the National Tournament. Mahoney is in charge of managing and the authorities would not overlook the offence. The standards are being raised at the Omaha school and while their action may cost them money they the "powers that be" at Creighton have to be commended on their stand. The growth of the southern branch of the University of California, now located in Los Angeles, has brought a new campus or a new site and more modern facilities. California cities, each desiring to have the university permanently located with them, are offering inducements such as a tuition-free campus. Los Angeles, among other inducements, proposes the beautiful Beverly Hills district as the logical site for a university. Beverly Hills is in the heart of Los Angeles and is easily reached. The membership rolls are now about equal. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority of Northwestern University has opened a shoe shining parlor in the barber shop of a hotel near the university. Twice a week shoes will be collected from dormitories, shined and in the money taken in will be turned into the fund for their new house. The other section has the name Phi Mu Mu Alpha, signifying "Phuture Married Men's Association." Requirements for admission are: A must have ONE steady and she must be to solt water without burning it. The cigarette is slowly disappearing from the habits of the men at the University of California. In its place the "manhattan" pipe is being replaced by a flammable pipe supposedly due to the fact that the cigarette is rapidly becoming an estimated part of a man's equipment. The pipe is just going the ladies one better. First they took over the boyish brush wool sweater, then the men's shiny leather jacket, and later the tuier made shirt. As for the pipe, that is doubtful. Jayhawks Flown Are You Irish? George W. Staplin, LL, B2, 24) is traveling out of McPherson for the Quiring Movement College of Weihang at the De La Ciha house on Friday. Harold Pagett, A. B.24, who is working for the Bullock Printing Company of this city made a buni-trip to Coffeville last Saturday. --- J. C. Moffett, of Sterling, visited Wednesday and Thursday with his son, T. H. Moffett, who is working for his master's degree in chemistry after getting his A. B. from Sterling College. Miss Helen McClun, a student at Marshattan, and Miss Kathleen Lannon, ex-28 of Isla, will be guests at the Alpha Delta PI plaque this weekend. They will attend the formal Friday, March 13. Arnold Nordstrom, A. B. 17, recently gave up his position as Sport Editor of the Daily Free Press at New York's Country Newspaper at Jordan Jennin. C. V. Waddington, ex'12, of Wichita is now assistant engineer of the Kansas Gas and Electric Company. Bill Barrett, A. B.'24, is in the insurance business at Concordia. Will Pierce, A. B'21, is selling printing ink in Kansas and Nebraska. Bernard Guffler, ex-21, will graduate from Princeton this spring. Walter Wilson, ex-22, will graduate from the Wharton School of Finance this spring. Order your Shamrocks for St. Patrick's Day now. Also— Our Week-End Special TWO-LAYER BRICK Vanilla—Mint—Pineapple Mrs. Albert E. Hyres, B.M.-24, of Olathe, has arrived in Lawrence for a visit with friends. Mrs. Hyres was born in Cleveland and is the member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Webster Holloway, A. B., 123, in Lawrence on business last Friday. Mr. Holloway is a bond salesman of the Trust Company of Kansas City, Mo. Shamrock leaf-centered bricka Two-layer bricka—green and white Charles Puffer, A. B.22, has accepted a position on the Topeka Daily Capital. Greenn Gage Kaw Valley Creamery ICES Pineapple Spring Styles Men's Oxfords $6.00 Balloon Toe in the new shades of tan and black. RUSSELL'S Do these folks use care in the cleaning and pressing of clothes? ASK LITTLE BOY BRIGHT—HE'S RIGHT! LAWRECE STFAM LAUNDRY Phone 383 They most assuredly do. We receive a commission from you in the same manner that a good tailor takes your order. We put style into worn, faded garments. FILL THOSE EMPTY SOCKETS WITH There is a right lamp for every purpose. Let us show you which ones are right for study. The Kansas Electric Power Co. PHONE 209 | 719 MASS. PHONE 590 719 MASS. Company Same Time Same Place GOT A DATE? "The Dixie Handicap With Lloyd Hughes and Claire Windsor Tonight - Tomorrow VARSITY Tonight - Tomorrow LOIS WILSON and NOAH BERRY in "CONTRABAND" ORPHEU M EVA NOVAK and HARRY MYERS in "Listen Lester" Tonight - Tomorrow APPROPRIATE SHORT REELS TO ALL FEATURES- Coming Soon RICHARD BARTHELMESS in "New Toys" UNIVERSITY CONCERT COURSE First Appearance in Lawrence OF Francis Macmillen AMERICA'S GREATEST VIOLINIST ROBINSON GYMNASIUM MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 16-8:20 O'CLOCK Seats Now on Sale—$1.00 and $1.50 R. C. Drug Store Bell's Music Store School of Fine Arts Office