PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1931 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of STAFF Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor News Editor Newspaper Editor Telegraph Editor Film Editor Platinum Exchange Editor Christoph Editor Gibbett Smith Denver Dillaway George Church Hazel Eberhardt News Marrith Moon Chair March Chair Clair Snow BOARD MEMBERS B. Wingene Moone J. B. Eskel Moone Walter Grace Dibblah Kimmons Jane Winkler Thomas Mary Loehr Riessenthal Lennox Searn Mary Lee Riessenthal Lennox Searn Lyle Pike Elen Kernan Elen Kernan Byron Brown Business Staff Business Staff Business Manager John Fleay McCormit Circulation Manager James Connolly Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas Phone: K. U., 21 and 65 MONDAY, OCTOBER 27,1924 AS NECESSITIES GO What professor hasn't asked his class, "How many of you didn't go to convocation?" and how many students wanted to go and couldn't because there was scarcely standing room? Student have contributed to the stadium and the union building, but the assembly hall which might have been the first consideration, was lost in the enthusiasm growing out of the memorial drive. The stadium, a need for a few months of the year, is a splendid achievement, and the union building will revive a school spirit and comradery which has been disappearing at the University grows in numbers, but few people believe there is a more important institution than the all-University conversation, which is not only a tradition, but a force to hold students together for nine months, to bring the different schools into one unit and to avoid feeling and support for the athletic events. The convocation is one of the few free institutions which are open to all. An auditorium large enough for all the students) for all the year it is not too much to expect. It is a neat site—a need growing more urgent as the number of students increases. WHAT OR THE FLOCK? The least trust two ministers of the gospel have lately figured in the headlines as criminals has caused some people to recount. "He was supposed to be a shepherd or a flock and if the shepherd loses his way what of the feet?" His mist that the blame of the minister in any way reflects on his congregation is antiquated and short-sighted. A minister is a man, a professional man it is true, but after all he is only a man and as such is their t; the weakness of the flesh the same as any man. We hire doctors to keep us well, lawyers to adjust as legal entitlements and ministers to attend to the things of a spiritual nature. But if a doctor goes wrong no one holds his clientele responsible with him. If a lawyer is proved a skinner his clients are not banned on dishonest. Why then should a minister's congregation or denomination share any of the dishonor of his act? Must the flock necessarily follow the acts of its sheepher? LAZY-MINDED It is aggressive focalized study that counts. A half-hearted sort of concentration never did and never will accomplish anything, and the person who specialized in this manner of study is doing himself and injustice. Valuable hours are wasted—and all because he can’t bring him if he to attack the problem at hand with a sufficient amount of centralized effort and enthusiasm. The mental dailier is a common species among us. He is so slovenly in his habits of thinking that he may even cause our own ways of study to become disjuncted and second-rate. He does not hold up us to our best efforts at thought in our associations with him. He is content to "get by" with the least amount of thinking possible, and, deprived as it may be, he seems entirely satisfied with the results. The unaggressive thinker dreams over his lessons, giving them only a careless, wandering attention. Important points elude him. He becomes lost in a great maze of unimportant detail. He has no goal; the ability to see that far ahead is deed. ailed him. The mind of such a person becomes listless and paralyzed through dishease. He is an obstruction—a great wall in the way of progress and new thought. It is aggressive, formalized study which counts, but he knows it not. PENELOPE Penelope sat on a throne Waving a linen down Her sonne hair was smooth and low Her slender hands moved to and fro And her eyelids were cast down. Penelope, sedate and fair Piled her subtle art; She smiled as she spread the garment wide. Then dropped her eyes as though to hide The secret in her heart. Pioneer, were you so who? To hide your love away? Did peace come to your artful bead? Before the break of day? —Euther Freese, c'23 CAMPUS OPINION What is the matter with us this year? Are we, being wilfully unsportsmanlike or is it merely thoughtlessness? During the game Saturday, the Nebraska rosters and hand stood with bared heads every time the Alma Mater was played, d but did we return after a win? It was one of the braka Alma Mater was sang by the Kansas students all stuck to their reats as though they were glued there. This is one of the reasons for the question. Another reason is in the cheering. It has been the custom for the rosters to cheer any player when the Nebraska team won; unlike the Nebraska game, there were many substitutions made when there was no cheering at all. In one or two cases, the players were relieved in the last quarter. These players had played through the first three quarters and had starred in their different departments but they were greeted with only a slight gleam whet they Let's show a little courtney to our little players and rosters and stand for their players when they are injured or removed. A Senior. What's all this crubbing about Jayhawks letting their macronutrients grow? The only trouble with that is that it isn't cough. It would have been a great thing if we were not afraid of coughing. We were in the clinic. Most of the students who went to Agigoville last Saturday, thought that we would win. Why? Because of these 18 years without ice. We didn't go over there with them, so of giving the team the run course. When young Meeks scored, most everybody cut down and moaned when they should have been no yelling their beads off. If a team need support they would be silenced, that around the crowd was silent. I would just like to hear and see, and I bet "Bob" would tell, the tep shown this year, that was evident at Lineback last year. If we go into that game Saturday, we'd probably win. All of Oklahoma proved that the Huskers can be beaten by a Valley team. It's up to us to keep up with the Sooners, and if these students that arerowing about not shaving will stop and show that they're Kansas, they will get to play the week-end. Unshaven When the autumn days come around, college students are inspired to many different kinds of exercise. Frequently, groups of girls are seen :e-reck-back riding. The other day, one young lady went galopging out into it; the exercise was rather unground for her, and she proudly told everyone about it. Plain Tales From the Hill It was a glorious night. Everything second ideal for canvases. Yet when young Romeo returned, he announced that he had had tire trouble. When a man called her up in the evening, instead of her the customary, "What do you know?"—she said, "What did you think I have been doing?" "What?" she asked. "The little jauit, answered, 'You've been abusing dumb animals.'" "How's that?" his room-mate asked. "I got tired of my date and she got tired of me," he answered. It happened in a sociology class. The professor was explaining that statistic show that there are more men in the income majors than women. In chemistry class, the professor naked, "What is contained in sea water?" He asked the class how to account for such a condition and got this response: "boum chloride," was the answer. "What else?" "Fish." A freshman, seeing only the red 'f' the flag flying in front of Green Hill this morning was greatly shredded by the police. "The Law Seen and guaranteed?" "Because women drive men crazy." The Inquiring Reporter --lecture. He says that they are so fond of relating some boyhood experience, and forget all about the subject they are teaching. The Inquirer reporter 7. Question: What is your chief grievance against the faculty? "They are cold and uncompetitive. They do not seem to understand their students." said Rene Gutter, c'27. "Lots of the instructors are so uninteresting and horreous," said Holen Walton, c27. Lionel Semon, U25: The answer faculty member thinks that his class is the only one on the Hill. Helen Cook, e25: The faculty tends to assign too long lessons and expects one to spend "all his time" accordingly for their subject without regard for the other assignments and other subjects taken by the student. Willa Follows. 28. The instructors and professors of the University faculty tend to give the same lectures, and some assignments year after year. You may borrow an "A" student's notebook c. the previous year. Louise Forney, 'e24': "I think for one thing that the teachers are selfish with their time. They over rate the importance of their own class and don't take into consideration that pupils have other classes because they need to study in these active activities of enough importance to allow any time for them." "I am positively against some protefs keeping their lectures about thirty pages behind the reading no more," and "Red" Robinson, m28. M. L. Jones, A. B. 24, says that most instructors get too far away from their assignments when they "The proxie give too many reports for the grades they give."—R. R. Walker. "There profs talk too long for the ideas they try to put across."—J, L. Williams. Doris Ramsey, '27, and Jennie Springer, 'c27? The faculty seems to take too much for granted in explaining difficult problems. The faculty seems to assume too much in taking students as students he never head of the particular problem to which the instructor refers. Phone 346 Over Gustafson's Vogue Beauty Shop HARPER METHOD 合 Shampooing and Scalp Treatments at murphiel Monday, Nov. 3 The Bowersock SEE 911 1/2 Mass. Mrs. N. Beal Tuesday Special Clip this ad. It is worth 50c on every $1.50 worth of work Our operators are school trained and give expert service Phone 573 for Appointment "The Romantic Age" 英语四级听力 Princess Pat Beauty Shoppe 10 179 256 1. Straight-line visibility 2. Ten-inch carriage 3. Self-spacing carriage return 4. Self-reversing ribbon 5. Standard four-row keyboard 6. Margin release on keyboard 7. Back-spacer on keyboard Seeing Is Believing One good look at the New Corona is all-convincing F. I. CARTER 0 Frances R. Hilderbran, Manager HESS, DRUG STORE 742 Mass, St. EXCLUSIVE DEALER 1025 Massachusetts Street The Mount Oread Studio of Dancing Opens Oct.27 for Registration ECKE'S HALL Phone 1649 or 1104 Private and Class Lessons in Ballroom Specialty Ballet Interpretative Clogging Corrective Watch the Daily Kansan for Ads giving further information of this New School What Was "Robin Hood's Barn" NIGH on to a thousand years ago, wealthy wayfarers learned to choose some roundabout route into Nottingham, rather than the short cut that led straight through Sherwood Forest. For the forest was "Robin Hood's barn" and doughty Robin and his merry men were eager coin collectors. People who buy without regard to advertising nowadays journey at high cost in roundabout ways, to make their purchases where dollars are dubious. For the shrewd buyer of anything, in our times, sends his money to market the straight, sure way, guided by advertising. What is not advertised may be worth buying. But what is advertised simply must be beyond question. He would be a foolhardy merchant, or a reckless manufacturer, who dared publicity for anything questionable. All the risk these days is in going round Robin Hood's barn. Buying on the strength of the advertised promise is the way to buy with least risk of disappointment and greatest certainty of satisfaction. X MAKE USE OF THE ADVERTISEMENTS! 2023年12月16日 深圳市恒鑫精密科技有限公司 深圳市恒鑫精密科技有限公司