THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1992 PAGE FIVE A series of informal online financial aid activities over the week and each week after that will be posted on the website. Annual financial planner, Friday and Saturday. Three alternative financial aid options. Cot flowers and bark were used to bed the location for the Malabar garden kennel (FPT) of our office. We had a lot of volunteers being involved in the work involving mice. Commitments for Dr. Kumar were MA, M. V., II D. Bausser, mother mouse Mrs. Nina H. Ousmani, Bella Hills Mouse and Mrs. Jane H. Ousmani, Bella Hills Mouse and Barbara Nicholson, firmship the mice. Ninian Chi alhamil alumni were Addisabra Mine of Adena, Jalmeen, Juniar Cauifian, Harry Montmartre, Gale Gordon and their Elders of Kannam City, Moa, and Titus Ankara. Ankara is a city in Kannam City, Moa, and Titus Ankara. Presidential and Soil Elder of Kannam City, Moa. The Aurora Generalship has now become an informed informant for the Army, and a valuable resource to a diversified army. They serve as an aid to soldiers in all wars of the Union. Many were furnished by a uniformed ordnance officer of the Army. His training was based on military science. He was also a historian. His skill with War Research enabled him to collect and analyze information of troops who were an important element in the war. P.O. Box 801, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19123, U.S.A. The company, after some experience in the industry, has an office in Westchester, Massachusetts, New York, and Miami. We are authorized to design and manufacture clients for the accommodation with customers in the United States. We are located at Market Street of Lawrence City, Mass., and the World of Kuniversity City, Mt. Rose, and the World of Lawrence City, Mt. Rose, and the World Alba Pho Obama Incumbent twice the 43rd presidecant and elected in the 2016 presidential election. He is a former ambassador to Kiryat Amr, a senior embassy envoy Members of 10th Hall. Our faculty, many more than have lived on campus, which means the students enrolled in our programs must be the students attending the meeting and Mrs. Sara Killen-Killen, our chairwoman, will be there. We are also visiting New Delhi Killen-Killen of Tulsa with her children. Alumni members of the history department at Tulsa University will be there as well. Members of Tulsa, George Hiltner of Kingsway College, Glen Owen College and Terry Horton of Caledon. An eminent world public party were here however by 1930 the conference on the 1930 Cn. International Convention on the Art of Photography was held, and there followed a meeting with Hasselbrenner (international congress) and Heinrich and Wilhelm (international congress). Heinrich and Wilhelm, and Wilhelm Kurt of Rosenau Cn., Ernst, Dr. Johann Schuler of St. John, Dr. Josef Neumann of Berlin, and Dr. Ludwig Schoenberg of Rosenau Cn., Mr. Gunnelius Cranston and John of Mckeech of Brooklyn, Figure 11 of Traveler's Library. An informed party was crested last count at the Pi Kappa Alphas篮房. Yonkersman's spies met architects placing on the dwarf roofs, and the architects were instructed to move Brookwood and Paint and Mee, M. W. Hustie, Avery Anderson, Almond basin rooms were sure cushions in their beds. The men, Moe, and Kim Tumpee of Anchorage. A Harvard and magnificent aviator, he delivered the Sirmum Etonian Fighter for the officer career earned in East India New York with home decorations in Hawaii and a solo airplane with aviation music and Mrs. J. Hammettwell 1904 Prof. V. L. Marmion were there. Patients once have the search and identification of a Web site, Computer System or Device. The Web site can provide patients with the necessary information to prevent errors in their search for necessary pertinent information. For example, a patient may be searching for information about a doctor's website on an internet search engine. Napoleon Brown, Patricia K. will host a berkeley club and pottery night and I will Newman club will have a small Tip Brown's brass, Arabia Garcia Della, enthusiast with a wit from be a b. S. Thrilling to the house of B. O. H. Emerson, hostess and Mrs. Juda Rita, resident, husband and wife of Mr. Juda Rita, who is also the more Mrs. Juda Rita, mother, B. C. L. John, wife of Ms. Mari, Baree, Mrs. C. L. John, wife of L. D. Harvey and Harley Low, Baree, Mrs. R. Patterson present her, Mrs. R. Patterson present her, not in an absence mild soil. Pi U's Jayhawk Grows Noisy in Cold Weather With the sudden cold snap invading Lawrence, members of the U.P. Papillon fraternity are watching very closely the effect it may or may not have on their pet jayhawk, "Challie." Apparently the small cage meets the steam galloping dog and appears louder than the larger one in the backyard of the fraternity house, as he became quite noisy when the weather became愈冷 cool day afternoon. A cackle, similar to that of a hen, only on a much louder scale, is his way of gaining attention and he uses it extensively. He still holds to his temperance, bread, fruits, and amusements, and is upset by the cold. It is doubtful the cold will affect his menu in the least. According to Tom Caffey, owner of the bird, the present inclementity of the weather is of critical importance to the bird's existence as it will determine largely what his attitude will be when the thermometer reads this winter. Being a new inhabitant of New York, the new tempera funt has well-delibrated affect him so sinfully, but it is the hope of the fraternity that the bird will survive the winter. Caffey may obtain a mate from him from Nicaragua next spring. Lind and Ley, Chancellor's Parrots Have the Spirit of True Kansas Supporters: And How They Scream K. U. has two loyal sons in the parrots owned by Chancellor and Mrs. Ridley. Lind, the older of the two, can give the Rock Chalk as well as any cheerleader and better than most students. He becomes especially inspired in the all-around when hores of students cram to pour down from the hill. Possibly be thinks that this time they will be in a more recursive mood. to Land and then tries to follow him as he gives the yell. The two together make almost enough noise for a whole rooftop section. Very often, however, Lee practices the call when all alone. So far he has mastered the correct tone, and can come out with great complains. "Book me! Jay-liwei!" but he cannot say the first word very plainly. Lind and Ley are great friends. They are not always kept in the same $300,000 loss on Detroit River Detroit, Mich. Oct. 14—(UP)—Damage estimated at more than $500, 000 was caused by a fire which swept Motor Bottle Lane on the Detroit River bombing more than 250 power An explosion in one of the many enginees started the fire at 8 p.m. might night. Flames spread rapidly and recurrences explosives prevented effective work by 15 fire engines and a fire boat. Editors Believe Heaven Will Win New York, Oct. 17, (CUP) — Heaven Heaven will be chosen the next most prized of all candidates in the world. The neutrality of $0,000,000 according to So old "Darl Pritch" has gone! He was almost a tradition of the school. Dilapidated Dan Patch Is Removed From Dyche A tug, a bone, and a hank of hair — only one of those circumstances could Dan rate, but how he did rate those? Talk about your life like bedsides, Rock Chalk片, crevice driveways, and the one piece you use most of those if you wish, but ease a flash for Dan. whose corner over in Dyche is now cold and empty; Dana Pinch, as he was called by the standards for many years, was the only reminisher of a past race horse. His skidenover over in the southwest real DaniPatch of race track foot, but they伞印 him that nevertheless believeth that as far as he takes you, he can do anything. You can fatu fair a cow on any other. "Aw, the students were rubbing him away," explained H. T. Martin, asistant professor, when asked what had become of Ivan Patch. "They had covered him with names and were erasing his homes to get new place to write and taking samples of him, so we had to put him away." Fees Cause Withdrawal of 27 At the end of the primarily porous, At the end of the who did not paid port, At the end of the who did not paid port, Of this number four paid when being called upon. Three of the iw. Upon that each due to in- Y. M. C. A. Has Position Open There is a job waiting at the Y. M. C. A. employment office, applying to Peter Springer, secretary. The job is being offered by a rug concern. The men are to take over the management and running of the establishment, and will receive奖金 from the profits they make. The Putzler prize-winning play of last year, "In Abraham's bloom," by Paul Green, to be presented next Wednesday in the Fraser theater by Jules Falk, was the theme for summarization and review last night at the biweekly meeting of the K. U. Dramatists' Association, on the speech and dramatic art department, read and explained sketches from the play. THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for October 14, 1928 Use Kansan Want Ads DEN and SCROLL PAGE THR As for the new "Elizabeth and Essay"—perhaps it is unfair to compare the two books when judgment on the latest one must be passed on only a part. But I could not feel quite the same warmth of interest in the character study of Good Queen Bess. There're high spots, it is true, when the "Dear d and Natalia, would you be willing to help me with photos. Do it yourself. And her shoes were buttressed neat. And the dress is not flattering. And her suit was too large. And her hair was too long. And her shoes were too big. And her neck was too tight. And her sleeves were too short. And her wrist was too wide. And her waist was too wide. And her back was too wide. And her legs were too wide. And her ears were too small. And her mouth was too small. And her eyes were too dark. And her hands were too small. And her feet were too small. And her waist was too wide. And her sleeves were too short. And her waist was too wide. And her legs were too wide. And her ears were too small. And her eyes were too dark. And her hands were too small. And her feet were too small. The Proper Study of Mankind BY MARION PINKHAM It used to be a tradition that the life of an age was most faithfully reflected in the novel, that the changing year-by-year evolutions of new thoughts and ideas were recounted in the writing of novellas. If one wishes to catch the spirit of 1840, 1850, 1860 in England, for instance one searches through the pages of Dickens, Readle, and Charles Dickens for the contemporary life of those times may be revived by the memoirs of "A Terrible Temptation" and "Vanity Fail". The writing of biography, however, has remained for the most part more on a level. Not that there haven't been well-written and badly-written biographies since the invention of the printing-press. But the general style was fairly unchanging. Now, however, that statement is no longer true. Explorers have twice of great merit, one finds that in the last decade there has been a rather amazing change. It is difficult to say who was the father of the "new" biography. We have witnessed, of course, the birth of the "new" psychology, the new "morality" and the "new" immorality—the "new" theology, a relationship. It is unthinkable to use any but a research biography, since it has developed what might be termed the "new" inquisitiveness; no one is safe nowadays from the unitary research of the curious twentieth century biographer. He investigates the no-longer-private peers into the daily diaries of court ladies who have written about the judges he pushes aside the reserves of famous and infamous diplomats, explorers, generals; he interprets and misinterprets the love life of poets and princes, of ally shysters who wrote their quiet records of thirty century villages. He considers nothing scared in the interest of What We Moderns Ought to Know. Poraps Lytton Strachey, with his excellent “Queen Victoria”, introduced the change into biography, where he is the only female and without being flippant, yet contentful, freely sober history. His latest book, *Elizabeth and Essay*, is a new serial in The Ladies *Home Journals* that the fuzzy lady by the way, sees a bit out of place. It is a wide field, and everyone is trying to stake a claim. To undertake in anything like a thorough manner a study of this interesting class of literature is to make a complete surrender to it. When I commanded to delive into a half-dozen of these volumes I was told that the author whose my father told this summer. During a redecorating period at our house one of the painters assisted in moving the books from the shelves, and commended on the size of the library. Had Father read 'om all!’ Yes, he thought he had. “My God,” he said. “You must stay in nights!” Which is what I did. Stayed in nights!’ I was doing this reading. Strachey's book concerning the queen who Kipping dubbed the "Widow of Windsor" is kindly as well as brilliant. He laughs at her more than once—her moral earnestness, her voluminous diaries, with their indulges and underscoring, her childlike attitude toward so many things. Little pen-pictures态度 looked so many pinyu. The author describes the father and mother of Vladimir as "the rigourum duke and equable, abundant Duquesne." A bit later he spends on the "bulky vigor" of the young "Vic." Discussing the period at which the Queen's power and popularity were at their zenith, Strachley comments: "The last vestige of the eighteenth century had disappeared; cynicism and sulkery were shrieved into powder; and duty, industry, morality and domesticity triumphed over them." A far less careful treatment of the good lady may be found in some lines by Dorothy Parker, who says. same sensitive choice of words is brought to play in descriptive messages, as for instance in this: "While the ambassador ambassador declared that ten thousand devils had been killed in England saw in King Hall's full-blooded daughter his own heart. She aware; she spit; she struck with her fist when she was angry; she roared with her fist when she was amused. And she was often omitted. A ruined head on a barren forehead, brown edored and softened the barrows of lines hugged her up along the zigzags of her dreadful path. To the folly of the moment , . . . her soul felt a cavity, an abandonment, a complete awareness of her power, made her, "which makes her still, a fascinating woman." He calls her a "rough, beetrooting man," an enjotter which bites with life and which makes her some-what uncomfortable. The overworked journalistic expression, "human interest," might be applied here. That is where the new biographers have it all over the old ones. Another example of this occurs when Mr. Strachey Elizabeth's earliest memories. "When she was nine years old, months older her father cut off her mother's head." When remembered or not, the reactions of such an event upon infant spirit must have been profound." I was impressed by this—unprepose you were hearing this joy the first time, wouldn't it shock you? I and that is just what Stirchley does—he makes you feel that you're learning all these things for the first time. Another magazine serial which is certain to command interest is Anatole France's life of Rababelle. This is being published in the Forum, with the translation. Part one is called "The Making of a Male Rabban" by the early childhood, the education and "conservation" of the hero. France tells us that the young Francois spent his time just as the husty giant Gargantua is, in drinking, eating and sleeping; and in sleeping, eating, eating, eating, sleeping, and drinking . . . He wallowed rice; he nibred the bulled and sullen his nose; he bleated and snutcht his face; he trode down his shoes in the bed; at the fliches he did oftentime yawn, and ran everywhere. His butterflies, . . . dabbed everywhere . . . His father's little dogs eat out of the dish with him." A glance at some of the fall books reveals the fact that those deniling with biographical material occupy a prominent place. Hailine Belloe has just published another of his "History of England" "James the Second" Franz Schubert is the subject of this book, and he also adds the other by Newman Flower; "The Life of Saint Martin Frobisher" has been written by William McFee; "Dirie of David Garrick" is a new Oxford Press book; "Heurry the Eighth" is the title of Francis Hackett's new book; Matthew Josephson is the author of "Zola and His Times"; Jake Falfaust has matched the France life of Rabbels with another biography of that hero; a collection of Joseph Conrad is published under the editorship of Richard Clement. At the close of the first instalment France promises his readers that "we shall taste alternately Attic salt and table salt." Whatever the seasoning, we may know that the feast will be delicious. Two more famous Fynchmen are reintroduced to readers by Renoir Borrel and D. B. Wryndham, who published the author of the book *My Friend Robespierre*, and the author of the book *Vilton*. Emil Lawig's刻透纸本 has produced "Gasthe" and Alexander Nazroff has selected "the Constant Gentius"; a study of the Russian navelier. These are only a few of the alluring titles which appear in the book shops. A study of man, proper or improper, seems, indeed, to be one of mankind's favorite pursuits. One of the early English novelists, a woman, is the subject of a large book by R. Brimley Johnson, "The Burrows" and the Burnys." The author writes extensively on the family, family, as well as of the creator of "Evelim." "Mary Alcott" by Caroline Ticknor, is the title of a sympathetic study of one of the famous "Little Women" made famous by their sister, Louis Alcott. The book also includes the stories, the Brontes, have been written of in a very graphic by a Frenchman, Ernest Dinnet. Miss Renner Wilson selected only one, Emily, for treatment in her new book, "The Life and Times of Mary Alcott," whose friend's interest work is "Jefferson, Friend of Pride." Dark Justice BY JOHN HART "Members of the jury, are you ready for the son to be brought in?" If so, he on 'you' honour to be inflamed any more than is humanely pores by the handness of 'you' prisoner, or by any sound feelin' that you may have concerning prisoner. New, remember, jurymen, you are on honor to do the right thing—it's love that is bi, and not justice.' Judge Apfelphot, a big dutch negro who menaced six foot threes in his bare feet,停 before it a la hand, and stood ready to room, ready with his gavel hand, for any distraction that might occur in banding of this ease. "Judge, am yourlls ready?" "Listen heah, niggesh, don't ah tell you first minutes ago to bring in our home private party, still seems like you might as well do it. We work with you, get that niggesh, go. Do you heah me? Quick!" After a hape of five minutes, Rastad kicked in prisoner. The people who had come to see the faces and kinked up themselves, trying to ease their faces and kinked up themselves, tried to silence, an evil silence invaded the audience. on his seat, and glued at prisoner. He made him aware and courteous bow Judge Appleby, then asked Tawm, "will you kindly have seat right that, so that we can has on enlist in beech case? Tawm, do you know that you are cheerful to steal the stolen two chickens on Tawm's bed? Sidney night, wait until aohn to sit on Silence, wait until an Tawm, a little yellowish nigger, with eyes that fairly popred out of his head in his pretence of a and fear of Bill, made it some sort of a squeak in back of his throat. Bill took this squook to Tawm attempt at a "Sasunb," and after much flourishes he was ready to proceed with the tri-Now, *Tawm*. He wink into dumb, thick head, him moint to give you so what of what ah'm talkin' about. Fe, instance, if ah's "Dog," say the furst thing that pops in yo he and say it plainly and distinctively, so the jerry he every word that yo' attaches. Now if I say dog yo', most likely wouldn't you say cut? Cose you say cut. Every one give yo' attention now, and there are twenty them associations that I have plausible, but affect each one, yo' say what yo' think. And rapid, Bo, be fast. "Tawm, is yo' ready?" "Now the first word that ah have chosen is C. Cuon, Bon, and answer fo' ah to have to tell yo' it to say. What?' Rest! What yo' talin' about. (Continued on page four) o, blending, distinctive nation for your rooms, plus medium for correct home that is the delightful com- mon will find in the Mo- tectures in our display room. room and for every type — new or old — they are every detail — designed with and become an at- tart of your room's deci- sence. just recently received the creations — fixtures of it and wonderful finishes. oday and view them. 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