Editor-In-Chief Friday Editor Elbert Editor Gilbert Smith t. Wingrove Crew Pete Wright STAFF John Paul Ginger Young Gregory Carpenter Albiah Oliver Alphabiah Oliver Ronald Holmes Ivan Pillow Martin Martin Enes Itlanchgrel Business Staff Business Staff Business Manager John Floyd McCulkin Circulation Manager James Connolly Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Intrudence, Kansas Planes, U. N., 25 and 26 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1924 IN EIGHT YEARS The first to be honored in eight years. With the installation of the Order of the Celt at the University the Relief of Law will become the recipient of that honor. Only members of the Association of American Law Schools are eligible for the honor, and, although there are fifty-eight of these schools, there are only seven that have been honored in a similar manner. In the last two years the School of Law has made rapid progress and is now ranked with the highest in the country. The courses have been strengthened, an enrichment, made more vibrant, and work put on a higher plane. That this has been productive of results is demonstrated by the fact that Knox is receiving national recognition ahead of many schools of law it is located in older and better known universities and colleges. There are few honorary societies that have not found their way into Kansai. Phil Bti Kappa, Sigma Xi and many others yearly member of the student body who show superior ability and application in their respective branches of study. With the coming of the Order of the Cell the list is almost complete and it will not be long before Kansas has a chapter of every really honorary society existing. To rank with schools on either the Atlantic or Pacific rides of the country, schools in the middle west have an almost insurmountable handicap to overcome. Eastern and western provincialism is never more plainly felt than in the question of schools. Occasionally it is a double honor for Kanu, or any other institution in the middle west to receive recognition at the hands of its eastern or western brethrs. Graduates of the school of law will watch with doubled interest for the result that this action will have upon their old school. There can be little doubt, but that they will be furnished in every way. THE THING TO DO Which is better—to have a thing of great worth in the hands of a few who value it highly, or to make it a possibility common to everyone, and valued only by a small portion of them? Observers of culture life are wondering today. If the past generation or two a college education was a thing apart, considered by most people almost in the light of a "sailorm," and comparable only to a dedication, Families thought long and deep on the subject of whether a son should be sent to collapse, or entered at once into business. Often only one child of a large family received the boeen, and the others sacrificed and skipped that he might stay the full period. A degree was a sacred thing, to be received with thanksgiving and kept with pride. Today a college or university education is considered "the idea of thing." Few dare dispute the idea of a student's fallwing the natural course which leads to the university. Mothers and father who failed to obtain such an education in their youth, and others who remember the pride of achievement represented in their degrees, send their children gladly to the great schools of the land, and continue the sacrifice of early years that son and daughter may receive not only the prized academic training, but also the social opportunities open to the modern youth. And we—we accept the sacrifices and our due and the opportunities as our birthright. The “thing to do” is the thing to be done. Father and A college education is a modern necessity like automobiles and "coles." Why quibble about whether or not one will get either? A college degree is a "portion of paper," necessary to the system. The things that one is in college, and sometimes what on does, all that count. Co—of course you'll go. It's the thing to do. IS IT RADICALISM? "Radicalism is getting to the root of things, searching for the basic principles, the fundamental." Used in this sense, all students are radicals. F. students do not double the aim and existence of everything. One who does not question the why of all things, holds a vital essentially beginning of the truly strong character. The new age is advanced in powers of observation and quick assimilation. The youth does not invite to borrow ideas. There is a tendency always to "go them one better." The day of hero worship is passing and we have left to us a valuable heiralty of truth and honesty. Sincerity and even brutal frankness have taken the place of elaborate social pulleties and false malice. There is can be for Thanksgiving that shame is wearing him. Not infrequently, a conservative starts the promontions that the world is going to the dogs; that youth is striving from the strait and narrow way. The older generation might look beneath the surface to see that human nature is still true t. forms. The historical imitations and styles are but a passing fall. It is not necessary for one to be entirely optimistic to credit some of the indirection to the aftermath of a World War which affected every part of life. TO A POET Your verse is like Palm salt Heavy in texture Odorious with gardeniness. Long crushed yellow and flung aside Your verse is like Vine verse is like White eaten Found with glittering complexities Of iridescent crystals In a Brandon pattern. Will you always write —so— Tracing mutual circles of crystal On shimmering silica? I shall grow satire With richness— Give me rather Something ethereal, Silver-green with cool austerity, Lovely with reticence— Shathing a silver thought. —Dolgar Maria Bishop v. ON OTHER HILLS Plans are being made for the installation of a powerful broadcasting station on the campus of the University of Arizona. The outfit will probably be a 500-watt Western Electric set. ON OTHER HILLS Herbert C. Opitz, member of the Wisconsin football team, died at the university hospital at Madison, Wisco Thursday afternoon as a result of a stroke he received in the University electrical laboratory earlier in the day. Lobert Frost, the famous poet, who is now on the faculty at Amherst College, has accepted a fellowship of letters from students to pot to Anna further September. Mr. Frost will not be a regular number of the faculty but will have several classes. The fellowship is for an indecentate man. The College of Emporia has recently purchased a grid-graph board, on which will be shown the out of town football games. The Western Union will furnish the plays to the host. The University of Missouri has a rule to the effect that no woman is allowed to wear knickers other than in the physical education departments. What is claimed to be the first freshman band in the United States, has been formed at the University of Texas. If the color of the uniforms have anything to do with it, the band will wear green and white sweaters, with green and orange fozes. The money --for the swaters & being raised by the Texas Cowboy, an organization at the University of Texas, they have already raised 8100, and expected to raise the rest of the money in a very short time. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN There will be an all University concession in Robinson Gymsnas on 10 o'clock Monday, Oct. 2, to hear from Cameron Beck. Copy received at the Chancellor's Office and 11:49 a.m. No. 627 Sunday, October 26, 1921 No. 12 CONVOCATION: E. H. LINDLEY. The Zeta Obsher of Retinia Circle will hold phaging service Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock in Myerle hall. HEARLE YOUNG, Press. BETHANY CIRCLE: There will be a meeting of the department of English at 4:30 o'clock Monday, Oct. 27, in room 205 Foster hall. ENGLISH DEPARTMENT MEETING: The German Club of the University will meet for reorganization at 12:30 Monday, Oct. 27, in room 335 Friar Hall. Old members, and others interested, are invited to attend. LEO BUEHRING, Pres. W. N. JOHNSON, Chairman Department of English. GERMAN CLUB: Pitl Beta, Omega, local fraternity of Elder University, was installed recently as Theta Kappa No which is the first men's fraternity to be founded in Texas. It was founded June 9, at Dairy College, Springfield, Mo. A unique system has been established at the University of California, for 'the taking care of big crowds in football games. An intercommunicating telephone, the opium, has been set up. The whole thing The University of California at Berkeley has enrolled more students this year than any other university in the United States. Columbia, Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio come next in the order named. HUEN SINGISK Is Your Coffoire Attractive? We have up-to-the-minute, modern equipment, also the SUN-AERO in reeof WILSON'S DRUG STORE 634 Mass St. It has no equal for the Water Wave and Facials. which combines the beneficial effects of Light. Heat and Air Marcels a Specialty Wilson's Beauty Shon Phone 31 for Appointment is under the supervision of the stadium manager, who also in the press at 10:58 p.m. the stadium from the gate, you pick everything going on. Moving pictures are the latest addition to the course of instruction being given to the Northwestern University football squad this fall, Film taken in practice sessions and during the first two games of the season are being shown to the People criders in the field house. The Record of the Woodstock Typewriter stands out conspicuously as one of the great achievements in Typewriter history. Proprobly no writing, machine has stepped into prominence with less add or been received with such universal favor as the WOODSTOCK. Sold on easy monthly payments. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 737 MASSACHUSETTS Photographers To K. U. Students For 20 Years Squires Studio Bobbed Hair ANNOUNCEMENT Photographers to K.U. Students Bob-Curt $1.50 Shampoo .50 Marcel .50 Bob-Curt .50 Marcel and Bob-Curt. 1.00 Shampoo, Marcel and Shampoo ... $ .75 Shampoo and Curl ... 1.00 Shampoo and Marcel.. 1.00 Heavy Hair, Shampoo Long Hair Scalp Treatments, $1.00; six for $5.00 Facials Blackhead Facial ... $2.00 Cream Facial ... 1.00 Pool Facial ... $1.50-2.00 Mincure ... .50 Marcels Retraced within three days ... .50 ...$1.00-$1.25 Beauty Shops Anna M. Johnson Mrs. Nellie Beal Josephine Long Milady's Shop Mrs. Charles H. Wilson 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. 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. 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