PAGE TWO I will provide a textual representation of the image content as it appears. Due to the limited resolution and potential quality issues, I cannot accurately transcribe the image's details. Please refer to the original source or relevant documentation for accurate information. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of the University of Pennsylvania STAFF Editor-in-Chief Catherine Editor Peter Editor Jerry Editor Pete Wally Harris Editor Drexel Dillwaukee Drexel Dillwaukee Phin Tate Josephine Niagara Mont. Chair Seigle Alumni Editor Alumni Editor BOARD MEMBERS B. W. Hunger Creme J. B. Hugh J. M. Holmes Walter Groves Debbie Blumen Christopher Moore Larry Lee Rigel Louis Swift John Smith Lorelei Loh-Riegelstein Katherine Moore Mary Pike Rhonian Brown Business Staff Business Manager John Kopp McCann Circulation Manager James Cromwell Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Phone: K. U. 25 and 66 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1924 LET'S VINDICATE The eyes of the state, both official and unofficial, will be turned on Manhattan next Saturday when the University Jayhawk tangles with the Aggie Cow in the yearly battle for gridiron supremacy. The outcome of that game will be significant fewer than more one viewpoint and will demonstrate whether or not the rival state schools are justified in retaining athletic relationships with each other. Last year the contest ended with hard feelings on both sides. Charges and counter charges were hurled back and forth and much was said in the printed page that had bearing on the matter. For awhile it looked as though bae had been to triumph. No game was scheduled for this year at the Missouri Valley coaches meeting and both sides refused to admit or retract any of the charges that were being made. Newspapers all over this and other states took the matter up and it developed into a serious problem—so much so that official action was taken and a conference held in Topeka to settle the question. Officials and administrative heads of both institutions came together and an amicable understanding was reached. Kansas has shown this year that she has a remarkably clean-playing team—even for a Jayhawker eleven—and that she is able to stand the gaff. We know next Saturday's contest will prove as gratifying in this respect as have the two preceding games and that the Kansas Jayhawk will come home victorious with foothills clean, Kansas flights but doesn't stop to conquer. WHY INSTRUCTORS FAIL Students are not entirely to blame for failure to absorb knowledge from class room work. Here are three good reasons why that is true from the student's viewpoint: 1. Often the instructors are scholars but not teachers. They have knowledge but fail miserably to get their ideas and knowledge acess to the students. 2. Often instructors are not mentally or technically fitted for lecture room work. A good speaking voice an interesting personality, a pleasing personality are requisites of a lecturer who can handle such work of efficiently. 3. Some instructors, caught few, haven't the actual knowledge and training necessary to teach the subjects they attempt to teach and are only a few chapters ahead of the students in the work which they are trying to teach. Such methods are bound to be inefficient. It is probably true that every effort is made to obtain the best possible instructors for the money available, but it seems better to have well paid, intelligent instructors who can teach a few subjects well than to have a hordes of instructors who can touch many subjects half-heartedly. "A jack of all trades is a master of none." OXFORD VISITORS There are two reasons why the students of the University of Kawasaki should attend the Oxford debate Mon day. In brief, they are these: One always likes to create a favorable impression before visitors. The English student: are our guests; before when the University of Kuala must play the part of a gracious and hospitable host. No true host allows his guests to go about alone and unattended. He secures them at all times an interested attentive one. demon to what they have to say. Are we a bank or fall in this context? Are we taken back. Impressions are often the best betting. The Offer me, no doubt, will form their ideas of Renaissance largely from the reception which we are recorded here. What it is to be good or bad depends upon the nuance which will receive next Monday. Play your next act! SAY IT WITH VOTES What would happen if the federal constitution were amended as that it denied the right of voting to twenty-eight million citizens, more than a quarter of college professors, students, and business men, and also a few day laborers? Seth a ruling would not have made a ring vote less in the last presidential election. Twenty-seven million eligible voters stayed away from the poll that year. Twenty-six million elected the president. The twenty-seven million have had four years to grumble. They have had forty years to tell the world what is no matter with politics. Now they have another chance to say it with vote. As stockholders in American democracy, we cannot afford to let the value of our shuvе decrease as materially, as they are bound to do with less than 50% at the members of the corporation interested enough to vote. Are we to refuse to is not stack it those who would gladly pay the price, when more than half of us refuse to avoid ourselves of the privileges which a share in democracy implies? --renaud, LaFollette and his runaway mate, Burton K. Wheeler, were the chief factors. CAMPUS OPINION Since man first appeared upon the earth, probably nothing has done move to restrain his progress than the one thing — prejudice. This same drawback is controlling the minds and actions of many people today but the same as it did five thousand years ago yet they are unaware of this fact. This is like more or less possibly to the playing upon these prejudices by certain political leaders and certain newspapers. If we were to pick up random emo student from the student lady and ask them whether they were Republican, Democrat, or Progressive probably but over fifty % of the group that would answer in favour of the first two parties name child. If you are any thought-on-the-matter of which party narrowly probably ninety-nine percent would have a definite, clear reason. Why? Because they have made a change and to make a change requires certain mental processes, while it doesn't take thought to stand still or drift along in the same current. If my fathers and brothers have always voted the Republican ticket I can go on and vote that ticket without engaging in any mental gymnastics, but if I am to be persuaded to vote (or else versus) or to a new party I must use research certain mental reasoning to bring about a positive motive for the change. My people have always been "bold Republican" and I have voted that ticket in two presidential elections yet I couldn't agree with only a third of the voters in this column in praise of that party. Most of that letter was comed from Republican campaign literature and in many instances a shout ("would like to follow down through the letter and show in practically every instance how it is misleading. For instance, it lada Dawes in a way which would lead one to think that he was the great reconstructionist in the European matter. He did a great work yet he didn't do so. The Democratic degrades as much credit as Dawes possibly more, for Dawes merely helped work on the plan and Young has taken the whole burden upon his shoulders to put it into force and is still "carrying on" while Dawes is touring the country "puffing" about what he and the Republican party has done. Probably no government since the time of Nero was ever elected by the Republican party a year and a half after it came into power in 1921 and the United States government which it was administering. He has it cleaned up that corruption? It only has as far as it has been forced to, contesting and fighting every inch in trying to keep their ring intact. The Democratic party demands much of the credit for what he has done, but can have done and practically all of it was forced through by the small group in Congress that were ridiculed as "radicals." OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN In order to stimulate interest in decorations for Homecoming, a special prize has been offered for the best decorated house. All groups are urged to compete. The name of the group and its leader, and the address of the home decorator, should be turned up by Oct. 21. TRESHIE MAY, Group Chairman. Conv received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. SPECIAL PRIZE OFFERED: Vol. VI. Fri. July 17, 1924 No. 35 * ************************************************************************ * SPECIAL RATE OFFERS. Friday, October 17, 1924 If they be "redriens," my only relief is to be in a scandal as a radical. The leader of this group, Robert M. La丘列库, has more constructive views than the American statesman. He has seen a man standing alone for 40 years as a great balwark against his exploitation of the people by him. As governor of Wisconsin, LaFolte made the state famous through the world as the "Model Commonwealth." When he took office he state was in debt $330,000. When he resigned five years later to go to the United States senate, it and a surplus of $475,306. Today Wisconsin has no debt, its axes are lower than in the adjoining states and we find that under the progressive government the manu- 術ure in that state have increased in recent years. In Man- burghs, Illinois, Indiana, or diminnec- then we wonder why Wisconsin favors this "destructive adi- ficialism." Public Finance courses well as other courses here in K.J. look to Wisconsin as an outstand- ing example of what a state government should be. Lafollette as United States senator, has for 20 years been the recognized leader of the progressive forces $n^{-}$ their fight for clean, efficient government. His legislative achievements would fill a volume, 'he first Employers' Immunity Act, he Seamans Act, first Tariff Commission bill, Legislative Reference Jurory, Railroad law, Antitug law to the Law of Criminal Service Law, and he Railroad Valuation Act are a few of the many measures which he us conceived. Equally important have been LaFollette's incessant and uncompromising battles against corruption and peculiar privilege—against political corruption, the economy, and Newbury, whose help is needed to incarve. Against the Tapp Done LaFollette has been for all progressive legislation looking toward freedom, enlightenment, and the betterment of the people—for women, for minorities, for men's wage, working conditions, maternity legislation. (For peace through international arbitration, reduction of armaments, referendum of war, and conscription of our citizens only when wealth is conspirated also.) La Folettée has saved taxpays,money. In 1917-18 billions of public debt was prevented by forcing higher taxes on war profiters. In 1919 $800,000,000 was saved by forcing appropriations to go over to special session where they were reduced that amount. In 1921 $800,000,000 was saved by defeating a proposal to exempt foreign-trade corporations from paying the land income mental in defeating the Harding proposal to lend the railroads $500,000, G00 which no doubt never would have been paid back. LaFollette has vision. He has blazed the path of progress. The platforms which his supporters have presented to each successive Republican convention have been denounced by the reactionary delegates as being submitted by the 31 proposal submitted by them in 1988 and 1512, 30 are now law. Among the measures for advocacy of which LaFollette was called is most "dangerous radical" are direct election of senators, graduated income and inheritance taxes, Departments on Health, Commission and Woman Suffrage. Some criticize the LaFolette and Wheeler platform yet by reading it over several times I could see no reason for anyone not indorsing every phrase of it as being based on sound democratic principles. Some my air war report was bad yet in reviewing the things for which he was criticized for advocating, I find that he was doing sound thinking while the rest of us were "being our heads" under the war excitement. LaFollette during the war stood for practically the same things as did the man who is at the helm of the French army. He is at the head of the French government. No, I was not a pacifist during the war. I lost my share of blood and suffered my share of broken bones in doing my bit. F. A. W. 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