THE KANSAN The official paper of the University of Kansas Published every Wednesday and Sacrificed night of the school year. by the Kansas University Publishing Association. Office in Basement of Fraser Hall. R. L. Douglas, Editor. R. L. Douglas, Editor. Roy Moore, Managing Editor. Frank H. Blackmar, Business Manager. Members of the Board: H. W. Davis, Wallace F. Hovey. W. W. Marshall. Alma Manley. Minnie Owens. Emery Trekell. May V. Wallace. Carl Young. Roy Roberts. Ward H. Coble. Claud A. Clay. Will G. DeWeese Clinical Department: J. D. Davies, Simpson Building, Kansas City, Kansas. Subscription price, one dollar per year. Advertising rates: 20 cents per inch per insertion. Address all business communications to F. H. Blackmar, 1121 Kentucky St. Entered as second class mail matter September 30, 1904, at the Lawrence, Kansas, Postoffice under the act of Congress, March 3, 1879, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25. 1906 UNIVERSITY CALENDAR. Thursday, April 26: Baker base ball game. Friday, April 27: William Jewell base ball game. "The Sophomore." Ladies' tea. Saturday, April 28: Track meet with Emporia College. If the debate Saturday night showed anything,it demonstrated that the University debates should be under competent faculty instruction. The judges decided that Baker had the best of it on all around grading,and it was very obvious that our men had the best of the argument. The same thing should not be allowed to occur again. It is very much to be regretted that there should have been any clash between the Baker students and those of the University, and if the University people had been as careful of their own conduct as they might have been, there could have been no trouble at all. Baker was our guest, and it did not add in the least to the dignity of the University for the crowd to indulge in jibes and roasts calculated only to start something. The disturbance was not of any consequence in itself, but it was a step in the wrong direction and for that reason should be condemned. As Others See Us. Gomer T. Davies, of the Concordia Daily Kansan visited chapel the day Chancellor Strong came back after his illness. Mr. Davies thus describes in his paper his impressions of the chapel exercises: You have heard the "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U.," no doubt, on the athletic field or in the street procession, but you have never heard it exactly right unless you have heard it from a thousand throats at the chapel before the exercises begin. It begins as the roar of the coming tornado, it crawls slowly on you irresistible, you feel shaky and nervous, you are fearful something violent is going to happen, there's a chilly sensation adown your spine, there's a creepy little current of electricity playing at the roots of your hair which finally gets control and lifts each individual hair on end, when the rippling, roaring torrent of noise breaks forth into a rattle of musketry and at "boom" at the end—and it is over. You are glad it is over, and begin to felicitate yourself on the evidence before you that the roof didn't cave in after all—and it starts again. There's the moaning afar, like the soughing of the winds midst the pines on the mountain side, you hear it coming nearer, gathering force and fury as it approaches, you get nervous again, you want to find the fellow who started it and crack him one on the jaw—but it is soon over and you sit bolt upright and notice things. You engage in conversation with your neighbor, or peer anxiously over the sea of humanity in front of you for a familiar face, a friend who might lend a helping hand in case the exhuberance might get beyond control—and you wish you were home. Soon there was a lull in the proceedings—it was the calm before the storm. Every person arose to their feet and the preceding demonstration of college spirit was the noise of a babbling brook compared to the roar of the ocean on a rock-bound shore it was the ovation given to Chancellor Strong, as he entered the chapel for the first time in three months, having been precluded from performing his duties as Chancellor by a siege of typhoid fever. We wouldn't have missed the demonstration for a horse—it was like having our storage battery recharged. We had our old weazened, dried up, mummified old palpatation rejuvenated by having it attached to a dynamo as big as a horse. We wanted the boys to give us more "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U." and were a little sore because they didn't. We came away from the University proud of the institution, proud of its Chancellor, proud of its students proud above all else of being a Kansan entitled to have a part in its support, and having a Memory Books for $2.00. Start one now. Also Postal Card Albums and Souvenir Letters. UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE. Ice Cream Fruit Ices, AND FINE CONFECTIONERY AT Wiedemann's. Agent for Lowney's and Huyler's Chocolates. FRED BOYLES MOVES To 725 Mass. St. this week from his present location Where he will have a completes line of Stationery and School Supplies. and be better prepared than ever to do your printing. See Our Easter Novelties at 639 Massachusetts St. share in its glories. The "old man" of this dinky daily newspaper has a new conception of "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U." He's been at the fountain head and has received a new inspiration as to its meaning. "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U." is not the exclusive copyright property of the people of Mount Oread—it belongs to Kansas and all Kansans have a right to swell up with pride, fill up their lungs with wind, and give voice on the least provocation, to "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, K. U." Cornell University Medical College. New York City. One Hundred Teachers Here. There were about a hundred high school teachers and principals in attendance at the Conference of Teachers Saturday. There were, in all, about forty schools represented. There were several hundred high school students at the University Friday from the nearby schools. The course covering four years begins during the last week in September and continues until June. A preliminary training in natural science is of great advantage. All the classes are divided in small sections for recitations, laboratory and clinical bedside instruction. Students are admitted to advanced standing after passing the requisite examinations. The successful completion of the first year in any college or University recognized by the Regents of the State of New York as maintaining a satisfactory standard is sufficient to satisfy the requirements for admission which have lately been raised. The annual announcement giving full particulars will be mailed on application. W. M. POLK, M. D., LL. D., Dean, Cornell University Medical College, 27th and 28th Streets and First Avenue, New York City. —and all in a few seconds of time. The pressure presses an inner shell, sealing the storage use, compresses an inside elastic reservoir which then released, draws in the ink and the pen is instantly used for use. So simple is the operation that the CONLINK LINER works. THREE SIMPLE MOTIONS TO FILL The ORIGINALand ONLY GENUINE CONKLIN'S SELF-FILLING PEN Really Fills Itself. The quickly adjusted locking prevents the ink from being pulled back and the pressure is sufficient to client of fountain pens. 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