1 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1972 University Daily Kansan Official Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS EDITOR-IN-CHEF RObert WHITEMAN Associate Editors Engleman Lewis Frances Jordano MANAGING EDITOR PAUL W. VINNER Make-Up Editor Liliana Shahui Courtney Curtis Night Editor Arneol Kreismann Trigraphy Editor Harold Stewart Society Editor Jennifer Jackson Society Editor Jessica Jackson Exchange Editor Olive Dough Sunshine Editor Alfresco Dweedbeck ADVERTISING MANAGER SUNNY KROON Diverging Mar, Marketing Mr. District Manager Bill Mattingly District Manager John Deere **Kansas Horn** *+* **"cinderls** Robert Belfour, VI Master Paul V. White, M'iller Liliah Sikhoff, Lifelong Martha Lawrence Alfie Roethlisberger Ira McCarty William Prillman Telephones Business Office KU.1, 6 News Room KU.2 Night Connection, Business Office 270K Night Connection, News Room 270K Published in the afternoon, five times a week and on Sunday morning, by students in the department of Journalism of the University of Colorado at Denver, in the Press of the Department of Journalism. Subscription price, $4.00 per year, payable in advance. Single copies, so each. Entered as second-class matter September 17, 1910, at the office at Lawrence, Kansas. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1932 MORE GOOD ENTERTAINMENT Alumni and friends of the University living within driving distance of Lawrence will be interested in the 1932-33 Student Activity Calendar giving dates for the regular series of concerts, lectures, plays, and debates. The new ticket measures up to the high quality of past combinations. The concert series will be as follows: Nov. 2- Hall Johnson Negro Choir. Dec. 6 - Jose-Irwin Spanish pianist. March 9 - Jascha Heifetz, violinist. May 8 - Glades Swarthout, mezzo Season tickets to 'the concert course are on sale at the Fine Arts office for $5.50, $4.50, and $3.50. Single admissions run $2, $1.50, and $1.00. The expanded lecture course this season will include: Oct. 20 - Dr. R. L. Sutton, "An Arctic Safari" Oct. 14—Frank Kent, "The Coming Election." Nov. 3—Richard Halliburton, "The Flying Carpet." Jan. 16—Wm. H. Chamberlin, "The Balance Sheet of the Five-Year Plan." Nov. 30-William Hard, "Behind the News." The remarkably low price of $1.50 has been announced by the lecture manager for season tickets. Single admissions are 60c and 35c. Tickets may be obtained at the K. U. Business Office. Other events on the regular activity program include three plays by the Dramatic Club and Kansas Players: (November 7-9, February 7-9, and March 20-22), seven debates including a meeting with the Trinity College team of Dublin, Ireland, the annual combined glee club concert, and the East-West Revue. Famous last line: "I never start studying until the semester is at least half over."—The Purdue Exponent. A good many students on the Hill would change that to, "I never start studying until the last week of the semester." But the majority would just say, "I never start studying." THE SEASON OPENS Saturday the varsity football team opens the home season with Oklahoma, in what will surely be a close and hard-fought battle. Each team won its opening game of the season last week end; this contest will be especially significant because of that. This is a new year; the season is ahead of us. A football team represents the University just as much as a debate squad or a glee club. The manner in which the students handle themselves at this game will have a part in the outcome, whether it is victory or defeat. You are cheering just as much for the University as you are for the men who are battling for the Crimson and Blue. A large number of students have applied for admittance to the local division of the National Guards. Is such a move the result of increased interest in military affairs or of the depression? OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Vol. XXX Wednesday, October 5, 1932 No. 16 Notices due at Chancellor's office at 11 a.m. on regular afternoon publication days and 11:30 a.m. Saturday for Sunday issuers. --ing as much, and no more, as it can spare out its surplus. BAND: Band rehearsal will be hold this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the auditorium. Former members of the Band who have caps they wish to dispose of are asked to turn them in to the director. J. C. McCANLES, Director. DELTA PHI DELTA: There will be a meeting of all Delta PhiDelta members Thursday evening Oct. 6, at 8 o'clock in room 130 Administration building. MARJORIE NELSON, President. DRAMATIC CLUB: DREAMCAPE CURSE The Dromatic club will meet at 8 o'clock in Green Hall on Thursday night Oct. 6. GENIE HIBE, President. EL ATENEO: Habra un son de El Ateneo el jueves, el 6 de octubre, a la cintura media en 113 Ad. Quios todos los socios asistían y tristian los derechos. INTRAMURALS FOR MEN IN GRADUATE SCHOOL: This year the havoc of the depression is to be forgotten for one whole day while the Alma Mater entertains jointly for her patrons. LEO SHANNON. A meeting for all men wishing to represent the Graduate School in intra murals will be held in room 115 Fraser on Thursday at 4:30 n.m. K MEN: There will be an important meeting of the K. club tonight following the mid-week variety. Election of officers and other important business. The meeting will be brief. BILL JOINSON, Athletic Representative. JUNIOR, COEN, Secretary-Treasurer. MACDOWELL: MEN IN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS: MacDowell will be an important member of MacDowell members at 4:30 Thursday in room 316 Administration building. MARY BUTCHER, Vice President. Too long our habit has been to celebrate separately two of the most important days of the year. Of course mothers were always invited to attend the Dad's Day events and fathers to attend those of Mother's Day, but at each celebration one member of the marital contract was subordinated. MEN STUDENTS: A short meeting of all men in the School of Business will be held in room 210 North, Administration building, at 3:39. Thursday. ALEX ZIARD. All men students are required to participate in the eight shirt parade Friday night. Meet at North College hill at a e-cycle. This rule will remain in effect. MID-WEEK VARSITY; There will be a mid-week varsity tonight. All Union members must bring their Union cards and show them at the door. For the first time in years our parents are to be equally honored at one festival, which is to be held on the Hill next Saturday and is to be officially known as Parents' Day. C. OZWIN RUTLEDGE, Manager. NIGHT SHIRT PARADE WHISTLE: QUILL CLUB: The University whistle will blow at 6:50 Friday night to announce the pre-primary rally for the annual night shirt parade. DON IONEY, Chairman. TOGETHER AGAIN A WORTHWHILE INVESTMENT Quill club will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the rest room in Central Admin titation building. All members and staff are welcome. MARGARITU DAVIES, student. The announcement of the 1933 Jayhawker staff yesterday recalls again the place of this publication on the campus. The staff this year is made up entirely of students experienced in this field of work, so that the book materially should be a success. Its financial success rests very definitely with the students. Many pass up the opportunity to get their Jayhawker because they believe that the $4.60 necessary to buy the book now, will be easier to part with later. They do not realize the value in future pleasures that the Jayhawker will bring. Nothing can take its place. Where else will you be able to find twenty years from now, the pictures of your classmates and of the organizations to which you belong? Be fair to yourself and to this new staff. They have taken a great responsibility in order to give you a book that will be treasured in later years. MARGUERITE DAVIES, President. The faculty and student body of Indiana University are co-operating in a "let's go crazy" campaign, a yell-crazy drive to show the football squad that they can cheer. Anyway that is better than a whispering campaign. It's a shame that curb service disappears with the arrival of cold weather. Ice cream cones aren't nearly so palatable at the fountain. Campus Opinion In the Kansas of Monday, Sept. 26, appeared an editorial entitled "Economies," advancing the discontinuance of decorations for Homecoming. The writer must have been some paid employee; he did not leave office, turning out a "iller." That is the only excuse that can be found for such an article. Certainly no legal student, who wants to retain the University's traditions, would have written Editor Daily Kansan: Not decorate for Homecoming? And why not? For no other reason than "Economies!" The $200 mentioned by the writer is only a drop in the bucket. If you have money, if and as, if the writer says, all non-essential expenses could and should be done away with, then why not do away with Homecoming altogether, and the baseball games as well? That would save the students about 9 $pics, or about $3,000. The money spent for Homecoming decorations is not solicited from members of organized houses, but comes from their treasures, each house spend. No! Thew heavens, we're not going to drop all of K. U's traditions that cost a few dollars to伞 the fancy of a few who feel that "stress should be laid on economies" but don't know where to lay the stress. J.G. free with our 25c meal Hot Biscuits tomorrow. Eat at Don't leave the Hill. The Cafeteria 'AMpus Opinion Editor, Daily Konson Nothing is good enough but the best. edith Dirty Kakinba' Lie in the midst of the frenzied clashes that surrounded them, there spread forward a House President's association composed of the presidents of the various fritreates. This organization has saken upon itself other duties con- serving management of fraternity and security houses. It has taken on the impact of a permanent organization to leave the city, which the Pan-Hellenic council for settlement. The criticism has been made of the Pal-Helenic council that it is too weak to keep the organized houses from disobeying its laws. Can the House President's association more effectively handle the problems than a council of men chosen to represent these groups? If so, let us ablist the Pan-Hellenic council completely so that we may have on hand the faculty to which to settle fraternity problems. The Pan-Hellenic college is without a president this year, owing to the fact that he did not return to school. It would seem that there should be business for school and thus beginning of school and thus far, to no avail there are still no plans for meeting. Let us have some action and determine upon whom authority shall rest. Let us have some action and deter mine upon whom authority shall rest. —W. G. H. Sez Kansas Editors To assist freshman women at tea, etiquette rules were given out on the Southern California campus. According to these rules such remarks as "I am afraid I have stayed too long" or "hope I haven't bored you talking so much" are very bad taste—Southern California Daily Trojan. Flowers for the Freshmen—Dr. Bernard Bell of Columbia University says "The average freshman is an untrained cub. For the most part they cannot look at things and tell what they see, neither do they see, hear, feel read nor write correctly. College students will come prepared with these neces syllabus." -The St. Mary's Collegian. A West Virginia, college announce that no admission will be charged for their football games. That's carryin the idea a little too far, but we thin it would be a good idea if the athletics associations would have a ladder idea for their games. And they paid male admission. Any man who takes a woman to a football game is on sites to some sort of compensation-Garden City Daily Telegraph. Along with that there's the one about the very proper co-ed who wouldn't even do improper fractions. Chuckle, chuckle.-Purdue Exponent. Amella Earhart carried a plea to President Hawke this week for an amendment providing that "men and women can be out the United States." But there are so many other things demanding attention now that there is not much chance of obtaining the additional privilege for men this year -Pittsburgh Headlight. A boy probably has finished five years of college work at K. U. in three. By the time his classmates graduate, he should have a job — Chanitze Tribune. Class cutting has almost disappeared at the University of Maryland. Every cut costs the student $3—Oklahoma Daily. A reader of an exchange has written in for the proper formula for tanning indes at home. Brother Bill Hubbard of the Haguten Hermes suggests that when he was a boy they used harried waffles, and there were more stairs. —Morton County Farmer. A Year's Subscription to the Kansan Brings You all this Regular Kansan Features Six times each week the Kansan brings to you by a carrier service to your front door an up-to-now daily paper containing: 4. Home Town Briefs 5. Correct Social Media, Baseball World Series, Big Size 1. United Press Wire News—Local, State, National, Worldwide. 3. Chancellor's Bulletin—K.U.'s Only Official Bulletin Board 4. Home Town Boards 2. News of Campus Activities 5. Complete Sport News-Baseball, World Series, Big Six, Other Conference Reports. 9. Alumni News 7. Live-Wire Editorial Page 8. Campus Opinion Column 10. Society Happenings W. Podhale W. R. 11 Daily Weather Report 12. Informative Ads of the Best Lawrence Merchants 'n' six bits 1932 Fall Feature: All cash-in-advance subscriptions whether made through student salesmen or the Kansan Business Office will carry with them this new 1932 fall feature. As an added feature this fall a 75c coupon will be given to each Jayhawker subscribing to the University Daily Kansan. The coupon will be good for the insertion of a classified advertisement six consecutive times in the Kansan at any time during the 1932-33 school year when presented at the Kansan Business Office with your receipt for a year's subscription to the University Daily Kansan. The coupons and receipts are not transferable and only one coupon will be redeemed for each subscription. Kansan subscribers are given an opportunity to become better acquainted with the services of the classified columns by means of this free coupon. University Daily Kansan SIX TIMES A WEEK $4 SIX TIMES A WEEK ASK A STUDENT SALESMAN ABOUT IT TODAY. $4 IX TIMES A WEEK