PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1 图 1.2 轴流式曝气器示意图 THE KANSAN COMMENTS In line with a little project to raise money for their class, Alpha Delta Pi pledges recently confiscated all male pictures from actives' rooms and offered their loot for sale at an auction during dinner. Because the freshmen sounded like they really would burn the endearded portraits unless they were purchased at a good price, the actives bid actively (Janeine Haycock sacrificed several dollars to get Kenneth Crowley's TKE countenance back) and the freshmen are now rolling in the chips. 油渍 The next time you wish they would put more wax on the outside dance floor at the Dine-A-Mite, consider all possibilities and then retract your improvident thought. There was a new wax job on it Wednesday—and Mary Ann Gray, Delta Gamma, went hurrying down the little incline at the back door. She smiled at her friends on the far side of the square, did an unexpected three-point landing, very informally slid past startled couples, across the dance floor to the foot of a howling escort. Lucille Hammer, 1200 Louisiana, asked Stanley Ringold, A-12, if he would like to go to the Corbin Halloween party with her—and Ringold promptly accepted for himself and for eight other Lindley hall boys. Not considering herself capable of doing justice to nine men at once, Lucille drafted friends in 1200 to take blind dates with the surplus. *** But the dates won't be exactly blind. The extra A-12 escorts bustled in at 1200 around 10 o'clock the other night, measured the selected girls with an air of extreme efficiency, apportioned dates among themselves, and left. * * During the "blind date period" Fred Meyn and Charles Fink, Sigma Chi actives, decided to have dates with a couple of Delta Gamma freshmen they knew. So they fixed things up with D. G. actives and got themselves substituted for two Phi Delt sight-unseems on a Saturday night. For the benefit of their fresh friends who might be disappointed at the prospect of not meeting someone new, the boys had two of their own pledges call the girls, says they were freshmen of another fraternity, 5 feet tall each, cross-eyed, with negative I. Q.'s and they would be around at 8. The University Daily Kansan Student Paper of Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-chief ... Joy MILLER NEWS STAFF Managing editor FRANCES AMER Campus editor VIRGINIA JONCOLLEY JANE MARSHALL ANNIE LANNE JONES, ANNIE LO JEANNE SHOFMAKER News editor RUTH TIPPIN Sports editor BOB BOCK Army-Navy Sports writer BILL KANAGA Society editor CLARA LEE OXLEY BUSINESS STAFF Business Mgr ... BETTY LOU PERKINS Advertising Mgr ... RUTH KRIBELB UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Member of Kansas Press Association and of National Editorial Association. Represented for national advertising by National Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Subscription rates, in advance, $1.50 a semester. Published in Lawrence, Kansas, on Saturday and Sunday, and University holidays. Entered as second class matter September 17, 1910; at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under act of March 3, 1879 girls were so worried about what they were getting into, they were overjoyed to find even the countenances of Fink and Meyn at the bottom of the steps when the night came. * * The fiend of the journalism shack sat up all last night and emerged victorious this morning with another pistol packin' joke. You have to admit this is pretty good for a professor. "Did you hear what the Papa Sunflower said about the Mama Sunflower? Quoth he: "She's a pistil packin' mama!" " Decrease in Debts Is New Trend in'43 Living beyond their means in an effort to keep up with the next-door neighbors is out for the duration for most citizens. Although thousands of American families are living better than ever before, the higher wartime incomes have enabled them to pay back their debts. Brought about by increased wages and government regulation of installation and charge account payments, this state of relative solvency is a new and important advance for the American public. It has given a feeling of security and self-sufficiency to a great number of families whom the defense plant work has provided with more than a hand-to-mouth existence. According to statistics prepared for the Federal Reserve system, loans have decreased considerably, sharply reversing in one year the normal trend of personal indebtedness. Even pawn shops have felt the pinch of the new thriftiness. For 61 years, this Company has been the manufacturer for the Bell Telephone System. In the important war work that Western Electric is doing today, college graduates—men and women of varied abilities—are finding opportunities to serve their country well. THIS Coast Guardsman stands watch over the convoy—telephones warnings that keep it in protected formation—helps to get fighting men and fighting equipment through to their destination. On every battlefront—at sea, on land and in the air—telephone and radio equipment made by Western Electric is seeing plenty of action. IN PEACE...SOURCE OF SUPPLY FOR THE BELL SYSTEM. IN WAR...ARMS OF COMMUNICATIONS. EQUIPMENT. Western Electric Buy War Bonds regularly-from now till Victory! Important as being free from debt is to the individual, to the government and the public at large it will prove a safeguard against inflation and post-war economic shocks. Americans being in what bankers call a "completely liquid position" cannot alone avert infiation, but this paying off of debts makes for a greater normalcy and reduces threat of inflation. WANT ADS Do You Wear a Red Feather? HELP WANTED: Men for work in the Ships Service Store. From 7 to 9 on week nights. See Lt. Pederson, USNTS (MM) 3t Cazell Now Statistician in WSA G. F. Cazell, formerly instruct in economics, is now a statistic in the division of training of War Shipping Administration. is at the large training school the merchant marine, Sheepshe Bay, Brooklyn, N. Y. OFFICIAL BULLETIN UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, October 21, 1943 Notices due at News Bureau, 8 course am, at 10 a.m. on day of publication. SERVICE MEN- CARRY TRAVELERS CHEQUES Sigma Xi: The first meeting of the year will be held in the Lecture room of Blake hall, Thursday, October 2 7:30 p.m. Dr. Olof Larsell, Professor of Anatomy and Dean, graduate Division, Oregon State System Higher Education, will report research on "The Development of the Organ of Corti with Relation to the Inception of Hearing." Anyone interested is cordially invited to attend. Beulah M. Morrison, secretary No matter what branch of the service you are headed for, you will find AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES the best way to carry your money. They are not only spendable everywhere, but they have an important function that protects you. It is this; if they are lost or stolen, you get a prompt refund. Issued in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100. Cost 75¢ for each $100. Minimum cost 40¢ for $10 to $50. For sale at banks and Railway Express Offices. AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES CLASSIFIED ADS FOR CLEANING OF ALL TYPES--- COURTVIEW CLEANERS Phone 646 1111 Mass CALL F YOU ARE HUNGRY---- There are two places to eat MARRIOTT'S CAFE and home Open 5:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. daily 832 Mass. SIX-FIVE TAXI 107 W. 7 Phone 65 Try the New INKMAKER PEN Makes its own ink ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass Latest Used Phonograph Records — Reasonable JOHNNY'S 1031 Mass. Phone 2085 25 Years of Service 25 Years of Service Our Health Depends on Good Food DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass. Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted LAWRENCE OPTICAL C 1025 Mass. 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