PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1933 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ARNOLD KRETZMANN Associate Editors Jamie Paterson Melissa Mollett MANAGING EDITOR CHELSEA FORMAN Campus Editor Stann... Dean Landle Makeup Editor Smith... Dean Smith Night Editor Creston Group Birthday Boy Ben Moore Amount Editor Lester Miller Money Manager Melissa **Kansas Board Mentors** Margaret Gansford Charles Coleman Brooke Smith Ramee Rice Memon Kristmann Jimmy Patterson Terry Sherling Terry Sherling Pain Wasserman Advertising Manager Clairene E. Mundt Circulation Manager Marion Benty Permanent Business Officer K.C. O. District Manager Training Office 2019KC Business Transition Manager 2019KC Published in the advertisement of Tuesday, Wed tnursday. Thursday and Friday and on Sunday morning. Articles will be published in depts in the department of Journalism of the University of Wisconsin, from the Press of the Department of University of Wisconsin. Inferred as second class matter, September 17, 1875, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas. Subscriptions price, per year. $1.00 each. I include, $2.25 on payments. Single copies, i.e. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1933 DEAN BRANDT The University lost a personal friend when Dean Joseph G. Brandt was taken so suddenly from this life last Saturday night. His passing was such a shock that it is still difficult to realize it. His interest in the students was more than an official, academic one—it was warm and friendly. He was never too busy with his many duties to listen to the tales of discouraged students, and his attitude was understanding and sympathetic. Never satisfied with the obvious explanation for a student's trouble, he analyzed and searched until he had laid bare the causes of the difficulty. His counsel was sought and cherished because it was sound and often he expressed a desire to know more students, even though each day found his calendar full. Thoroughly unselfish, he thought of his own desires and needs only after he had done what he could for others. His time was never his own. Above all, Dean Brandt was a gentleman—in his appearance, his actions, and his thought. His was a kind voice, a quiet voice that was seldom stirred by anger; but it possessed a command that led those who knew him to respect and love him. In the hearts and the faces of those who knew him are the evidences of the great loss we have suffered. In everything he did he wanted his share in the work to go unheralded. He preferred to reap his reward in his own satisfaction and shummed publicity. As a scholar of the classic culture and civilization, he appreciated the value of ancient times in building his philosophy of this modern, hectic, unlovely life. He lived in the beautiful and the fine, and found beauty where others saw none. STUDENT DIRECTORIES Where is the student directory? From the Kansan reporter who needs it to verify names and classifications to the Hill co-eds who also would verify names and classifications the same cry is heard daily, "Where is the student directory?" About a month ago it was announced that the books would make their appearance in a few days. Now after weeks of watchful waiting, with no further word or sign of the directories, it is wondered if the announcement has been forgotten, or even if the custom abandoned this year. With the semester nearly half gone, it will soon be time for the supplement to be out. The directory may not be a necessary volume among the school publications, but in its purpose it cannot have a substitute. It is hoped that before much longer it will make its appearance. GRAD-DAD BABY TALK By CHRIST SHORE, One of 'em A grad-dad is a father who realizes after three weeks of fatherhood that he should have taken a course in child care rather than commercial law when he was in college. A grad-dad is a father who starts after the first day of his son's (or daughter's) birth to lay away a fund for his education so that his son will be able to attend college without having to play poker, shoot crates or wash dishes to take care of his expenses. (The dad later rob this fund to bet on his college football team.) A grad-diad is a fellow who expects his son to be able to be the whole-foot ball squaul and win games for his Alma Mater single handed when he makes the only shrug the father did to win the football games was to usher at the stadium. A grad-dad is a father who tells his son of the wonderful scholastic record he maintained while a student and impresses his son that he should surpass that record. In fact he squeezed through for a degree by the skin of his wisdom teeth. A grad-dad is one who tells his son that he was quite a sorority favorite while he was in college. In fact he waited tables at a sorority house. A grad-dad is a father who is handicapped at the time of his son's birth by a few old long standing college debts that have been put in the hands of a local attorney for collection. Summing it all up, grad-dads are a fair sort of fathers. Most of them have been fortunate in selecting fathers-in-law who didn't attend college and are able to see that the grad-dads have a job that will afford them a living. Campus Opinion Editor Daily Kansan; ... In answer to H.W. (the voice of the J.J.'s) I must brief the following account. Where did this Mr. H. W. get all his information concerning the Cricket and Kansas State programs? Surely he did not spend any money seeing these games after all this cry about a nickel. Now the size of the programs seems to be a big worry for H. W. He stated that the "aggie program had 64 pages, just exactly four times as many pages for the same price as the Jayhawker Gridder and the pages were approximately twice as large." Well the writer happens to have the above mentioned programs, and to be exact the Aggie pages, full of advertising and old picture books, the pages are one inch longer and three-fourths of an inch wider. But still H. W. states they were four times the size. The center score page is that of Chesterfield cigarettes, which goes a long way in paying for the cost of the programs. The reason it is kept clean of cigarette and beer ads. Pictures in the Creighton program were furnished free of charge from the office of the Jayhawk Gridster and still H.W. has such an unenum eye that he can tell they are better than the ones used in the home programs. About the advertising in the Manhattan program, the Manhattan Chamber of Commerce donated money to the Aggie programs. The profits from the Kansas State programs go to a few individual athletes, who have the program concession at OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN V06. XAAI Tuesday, Oct. 07, 1985 No. 39 Le Cerce Francaise se reunitra mercede a quatre heures et demie dans la salle 306 Frater Hall. Tous ceux qui parlent français sont invités. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS: Notice due at Chancellor's Office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication day and 11:30 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issues. The regular mid-week variety will be held at the Memorial Union Building Wednesday evening from 7 to 8 o'clock. C. OZWEN RUTLTEDGE, Manager. MID-WEEK VARSITY: SELF-SUPPORTING STUDENTS: A meeting will be held Wednesday at 8:15 o'clock in room 222 Aministration building to report on the decision of the committee concerning the cooperative plan of production. Other business concerning social affairs will come up. Please come; the meeting will not last over 30 minutes. K. U. BAND: L. WRAY CHOATE, President. Band rehearsal at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Come prepared if possible to ar- range accounts of caps and uniforms. I desire to get everything straightened out. J. C. McCANLES. The K. U. Band still has openings for a bass drummer and a cymbalist. Also Saxophone players. J. C. McCanLEN, Director. BAND OPENINGS: K-HAWK CLUB SMOKER: There will be a Halloween smoker on the third floor of the Memorial Union building tonight at 8. All non-fraternity men are invited. DANCING CLASS: ED. THOMAS, Vice President The Social dancing class will meet this evening at 7 in the Memorial Union ballroom. ELIZAABETH DUNKEL. Tau Sigma dance meeting will be held tonight at 8. ELIZABETH DUNKEL. TAU SIGMA: QUILL CLUB: The Quill club meetings scheduled for tonight have been postponed to Tuesday, Nov. 7. ELIZABETH BRANDT, President. Q4. Quick club picnic and initiation will be held tomorrow. Meet at Robinson evmuseum at 4:30. CAROL HUNTER Respectfully, J. E. H. Y. W. C. A.; The Y. W. C. A. membership banquet has been postponed until Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 6 p.m. in the Memorial Union. All organized houses have been requested to make this a closed date. FRANCES BALLARD, President. their school, while the profits from the Jainyah Gridger step to buy oranges for the football squad. After the season the surplus profits go into the stadium fund which goes to help pay for the stadium. If Mr. W. H. will call at my office in the gym, I will gladiarly furnish him with a copy of last Saturday's program as I feel sure that he does not as yet have one unless one else gave him one." Theno F. Graves. I wonder what the petty krocker who fumes about such small things as which side of the stadium he sits on, e.g., would have to say if he were compelled to sit in some remote spot at football games if he were prohibited from attending dances in the Union Building, if he had to sit in one part of the University Cafeteria or in the rearmost booth of the Union Fountain before he could be revered, if we were barred from the Military Training Corps, departmental clubs, and proper physical training facilities, if he could not participate in any form of competitive athletics on the hill whatsoever, and then still be required to purchase an athletic ticket and pay off fees in full. Editor Daily Kansan; I should think he would have a kick coming, wouldn't you? Why, yes, of course! But if he has a brown skin and is a Negro? And this is a glorified institution of higher education in a country of men created equal in the land of the free! Your Success in School Depends on Good Health GOOD HEALTH GOOD HEALTH Depends on GOOD FOOD You will find Good Food at the CAFETERIA --the embellishment party because of "recurring" pains (embarrassment, too) when you can tell friends the reason. But now, no need to flunk an exam or miss a party. When you are below par, take care not to overexert yourself in Johnson & Johnson especially to relieve "recurring" pains; such headache backaches and Klamas are safe, do not affect dightion or heart action, and are not habit-forming. Your drug - DON'T WAIT — GET YOUR DATE NOW JAYHAWK WABBLE Real Dancing Music by The World's Premier Saxophonist The Annual Dance Given by KU KUs and JAY JANES Frankie Trumbauer Direct from Lincoln Tavern, Chicago and His Orchestra Saturday, Nov. 4 A Turkey in the roaster is worth two on the roost. And that the suit and overcoat you buy today at our low prices, will cost more if you wait until they are gone. We mean this — That the suits and o'cats we own today at yesterday's low prices, will be more when we have to go back and replace them tomorrow. Our prices are based on what we pay . . . and as long as this present stock lasts, we're going to sell it at- $20, $25 and up to $40 And it's all beautiful clothing, for it's tailored by--the embellishment party because of "recurring" pains (embarrassment, too) when you can tell friends the reason. But now, no need to flunk an exam or miss a party. When you are below par, take care not to overexert yourself in Johnson & Johnson especially to relieve "recurring" pains; such headache backaches and Klamas are safe, do not affect dightion or heart action, and are not habit-forming. Your drug Griffon and Society Brand KALMS FOR RELIEF OF "RECURRING" PAINS FREE SAMPLE-SEND COUPON UNION BUILDING 9 to 12 $1 STAG or DATE Johnson a Johnson NEW BRUNSWICK NEW JERSEY Send me a FREE sample of Kalms. Address 321 HALLOWE'EN FUN FEST TONITE 11:15 P.M. Maurice Chevalier in "THE WAY TO LOVE" Favors for All DICKINSON TONIGHT - WEDNESDAY THURSDAY The Season's Finest Picture "GOLDEN HARVEST" Richard Arlen Chester Morris Genevieve Tobin Our Prices Till 7—15c After 7—25c COMING SOON "LADIES MUST LOVE" -37 Want Ads twenty-five words or less! 1) Inherits; interacts with; inventor; engages in; adopts, adapts,ANT AUS ACCOMPARED WITH ACCOMPANIED BY CASH. 1) LOST: At K.U. football game Saturday, wallet containing money and personal papers. C. B. Lloyd, Reward. Phone 195. —37 GOLF CLUBS: for sale. 9 registered Krydon high-power irons, 4 Kennett Smith刀架, 8-inch leather bag. All less than 1 year old. Outfit cost $55, will take $80. Can arrange terms, Sunday till noon, then Phenom. 3041. LOST: Brown coat sweater left on faculty tennis court. Reward. C. D. Clark. Phone 2761. -34. EXCHANGED: The party who, by mistake, took a light saucer jacket at the Sigma Nu party Saturday night, please return to the owner for theirs. Winifred Koenig, Phone 1341. 1706 End. LOST: Kappa Kappa Gamma key, Gold set with pearls, Reward. Finder please call Mary Aston, phone 1818W. EXPERT TYPING: Student manuscript and class papers typed, A-1 quality, low cost, prompt service. Call Paul Wickes, Phone 1248. Typing called for and delivered. —55 CLEANING—Men's suits and O'cats 50c; Ladies' plain dresses 50c; Ladies' pleated dresses 75c; Fur-lined coats 75c. W. H. Walden, 117 E. 9. Phone 185. JOUNNEAL-POST delivered to you each evening and Sunday 15ce week. Sports, news, comics, up to date pictures. Phone your order to 608. Read the Kansan Want Ads. at the Union Fountain Sub-Basement, Memorial Union POTATO SALAD 10c TONITE'S THE NITE at 11:15 Last Times Tonite! PATEE WHERE THE BIG PICTURE PLAY STARS in a ROMANCE of the SKIES. ZASU PITTS COMEDY RIOT CARTOON-NEWS HERE IS THAT BIG Hallowe'en Owl Show 11:15 TONITE Stuart Erwin - Warner Oland "BEFORE DAWN" Mystery - Chills and Terror "THREE LITTLE PIGS" Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf? ETHEL WATERS ETHEL WATERS Cullud Musical Hotcha Show Your First and Only Chance. It's your hard Luck if you miss it. Regular Prices Preval Wednesday—3 Days Working Girls by Day— Working Men by Night MADGE EVANS ALICE BRADY UNA MERKEL "BEAUTY FOR SALE" "TARZAN" - NOVELTY NEWS V