PAGE TWO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 192 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN University Kansas STAFF Editor->Chief Editor->Editor Staff Editor Staff Editor Senior Editor Senior Editor Photo Titles Photo Titles Editor->Chief Editor->Editor BOARD MEMBERS Gilbert Smith Silver Creek Kim Drewman Dave Perrigo Pete Whealy Devon Stilley Silhouette Johnsonville Silve- Monte Vista Montgomery Silve- Monte Vista Glenn Clark Silver Creek D. Whitman Crone Nassau County Johnson County Hyman County Glen Lynn Greenville Respondent Merrill Wilcox Johnston County J. B. Krahn Nassau County Interest Elkhorn Court Carl Respondent Johnston County John McKenzie COUNCILS STAFF Resident Manager Operations Manager Floyd McCann Operations Manager James Cunningham Photos K, U, 25 and 58 Lawrence, Kanaus Planes, K. U. 23 and 66 Address all communications to THE UNIVERSITY PAILY KANSAN LAURIESE, Kansas TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1924 MENT The teacher had been telling a primary class about the ten commandments. In order to test their memories she asked: "Can anyone give me a command event containing four words?" "Well!" asked the teacher. A hand was raised immediately. To be sure "Keep off the grim" is even more often than the thin combatant and is disdainful as often. There is another that might be placed with it, "Pick up your carapace" is a contraint that we have heard since we are. Use cough to cut out paper deli and to whittle whaties. "Keep off the grass." We come back to a beautifully imple- mented free tree from litter and urine. The first week well-known, not poise, and dreaded notes we wave blowing about the walks and laWS. The man who we about with a cock on his bank and a stool in his hand was heard to creek: "My business is certainly picking up." The campus does not need a bit of teach to add to its extensive new. We ought to take pride in Hill andILL to keep it beautiful by heading the suggestion that our mother used to make. "Pick up your Sears." Go the habit. WHERE ARE WE GOING? We about about the den create system of education of today, but are they? The prey system of training students in college teams to do dehuman machine rather than thinker individuals. One student enrolls in a class and the professor lectures, or writes he reads from a notebook a mass of notes and reads them once fast that the student must write at maximum speed with no idea of what he is trying to get. No one face stands cut more than another, but he is chronically taken down everything. No time is given for discussion, there is no time to stop until the question is thoroughly understood. Every trace of originality is imprinted, the student be comes a phonograph record to repeat to the professor the material he has given seen. A multiple type of facture is more than his pupils have a background which most of them do not have, and lectures to them accordingly. Consequently, most of the material goes over their heads. The student flanders, hospitably, hopefully wondering what is expected of him. His answer is entirely functional; he manages to pose but lacks no breeze than be came. Waiting time is not only a student device, but also is the faculty. Some instructors speak most of the hear telling what they expect to accomplish the text, but—they never get to it. They are the one who make argue assignments that may be contained in any manner, and no two students fill them in the same way. YOU'RE OLD! GET OUT! Ere the pruning knife of time Cut him down N:t a better man was found. By the erier on his round Not a better man was found Through the town W. J. Bryan's Act Is Old," says a recent headline. The "silver-tongued boy orator of the Plattus," who, in '96, by his singing commandment, "Them not sure will cruelly labor on a course of gold" swept the Democratic convention into nominating him, an abbreviate isolator from the prairie, for the president of the United States is today "an elderly man singing his ewan song to a remnant of the fol- lowers of each r day." Walter Johnson, for almost a quarter of a century a pitcher in major league baseball, has bid his best chance. He has played in a world series. But he has lost, while younger man has succeeded in keeping teams from rising down in silencing him. He is not getting old, they say soon, when the heres of today's fan is incarnated, yourselves will say "Oh, yes, Johnson. Let's see, be pitched for New York in the 1923 games, didn't he? He was a great pitcher." He was! A husbene! But me, the youngest of Ta, future remember that, while the things for those old men fought are forgiven, the fact that they fought, and fought hard and fair and square, is not; and that those youngsters go out and fight it in the same way in the struggles when they will be facing. IT'S OVER Now that the Hill political candidate is ever let to watch for re-ruits. The election cost much time and energy on the part of both candidates and voters. The first thing we naturally look for is to see if they candidates fulfill their promises. We want to think—What were the premises? What were the issues? Why we cannot believe the three were—as less it was a question between “Can I consider the Qualifications?” and “If the Candidate that Counts.” But she always rily mean nothing. If there are no clauses of issue—of differing form—if there are no promises he out-to the student voters—what his our student election accomplished? Why waste our time watching there are no questions to decide? If there were any promises or plat terms the average student never heard of them. May the parties in the next Hill election call some definite malt Poetry From the Campus "M.T. OREAD" If I find slaves like the Thunder's wing, and could lift the Wood Thunder slings Thunder the way to hang and the storm come I would have them far behind to grant the crown know. O Mount Gond; O the dawn old; would hold me dead. If I find values like the Thunder whirls and could muddle myself into life as by faith. He even抓 from beneath my way, I would rescue the length of rainday day To breath in the life of the free air and hide my thieves at the funnel fair. If I could sing as the Wood Thrush sings, With a note in my throat as he boister alces, I would one of the arpegs that drives man! Till they have behind all lesser gods, and awakening then to the inner theme Mahat truth intersect?live content? Okay. A night-shirt sarade after a deaf feat; Wild cheering and yelling and seeing through the streets; elder and doughnuts for everybody; the gigantic bounce with hilarious humour racing at offerces with p.o. and earlthorns and the free use of the cap of the night or celebration. *n* CAMPUS OPINION Just what would you expect would be the attitude of a cheer-leader on the night after his school team had suffered defeat? Of course, he would have that professional pop-instilling talent. He would have two hours of naked freakiness. And those letter men who had battled so hard in previous years to bring victory to the institution would be out with paddles to tactfully persuade all student enkleks to enter into the mirrory. Surely a celebration after defeat it has happened before but may it never happen again. Just what set of school loyalty is this? The following verse to be sang, chancted, or rhoited, as the mood decrees to the tune of "It Ain't Goin' to Rain No More," was written by a woman student who saw a cloud in the sky immediately after she had bathed in water. Oh, of rains he has an awful dread, She heaps it rains no more, She herpes it has no more, For if she has a curly head, She must buy it at the store. A Senior Surely a celebration after can not be called a school tradition. OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN --- Copy received at the Chancellor's office until 11:09 a.m. Vol. VI Tuesday, October 14, 1924 No. 32 At an all-engineered convention in the assembly room of Marvin Hall at 10 (30) Wednesday, October 16, the Rio Plages will be announced. ENGINEERS' CONVOCATION: Copy received at the Chancellor's Office until 11:00 a.m. R. S. PATTerson, Secretary, Engineering School GRADUAL Members will meet at 5:39 Wednesday evening at Prince Hall. Bring original poetry. RHADAMANTH1: CARL POPPING, President. EL ATENEO TRYOUTS: The attention of all those eligible and interested is called to the trouty or El Atoneo, which will be held Thursday afternoon at 4:30 in room 105 East Administration Building. The committee in charge will also be ready a offer, suggestions to those unprepared. M Y R O N S W. M. W A G R I O N E. P ro t e m i s h A G R I O N E. F r a c t i c l o w A g r i o n e. PAYROLLS: The irregular payroll will be open for signature until Friday evening, October 17. All time for the irregular payroll should be reported at the end of the pay period. CONVOCATION: KARL KLOOZ, Chief Clerk. There will be an all-University convention at 10 a.m. Thursday, 16th oct., in Robinson Gymnasium, Mr. Whiting Williams will speak. JEANETTE STRICKLER, President. W. A.A. Regular W. A. A. meeting will be held Wednesday, October 15th, at 10 a.m. in the Gymnasium. The board will meet at 3:00. All association Make Jayhawker Appointments NOW at— SQUIRE'S STUDIO Phone 517 These pictures will a'so solve your Christmas gift problems. College Men now keep their hair smooth, lustrous, always in place Today, as never before, college men have smooth, well-kept hair. Wh? In clubs and fraternities, at the theatre or the game, today you can A few years ago the hair was a nuisance to趴 everyone, as he was often the only active part of the appearance — always unkempt and an hour long. It is responsible for the amusingly bad hair. And it has made possible for every woman, however "difficult" her hair, the new smooth effect so much more. There was no way, then, to keep it being as, Old disharmonious ponda pots that it grew. Water evaporated quickly and left it driiter and more unruly. Smooth, kettle cone curls Now Stacbam—a delicate, invisible cream for keeping the hair in place—has changed all that. Today everyone can have soldom find even one case of unkempt hair. 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St. What Is More Important Than Well Kept Teeth? DO YOU NEED A TOOTHBRUSH? Dr. West's - Owen's - Nyals GUARANTEED GUARANTEED Rankin's Drug Store 1101 Massachusetts THE RIGHT IDEA Mrs. Wise was in to see us this morning and told us what a wonderful thing she thought the store was doing by giving The $500 to the church or Charity that won the voting Contest. She said that she Had heard so much about It in church yesterday and That the members of her church Had planned to organize their votes And try to get the $500. All The women she had talked to Had planned to make all their Necessary purchases at Innes' In order to get all the votes Possible. She told us that last night she Made a list of the Necessary things She could purchase and do you Know she was surprised to find so Many things. There were sheets, Spreads, blankets, towels, Soap, toothpaste, handkerchiefs, And stockings for the whole Family and lots of other things She didn't get today but she Told us that she had cast seven Votes for her favorite organization This morning and had planned to Come in each day this month And do her part. 1