THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Miss Blitz, Dean of Women, says: "I heartily endorse the idea of the Jayhawker Sales Contest which will give the organized houses for women, selling the most possible products that will be worth their effort. "I know that the management is trying to make this year's Jaya-hawker the best book that it is possible to put out, and I trust that the students will give them the heartiest support." Pauline Newman, President of the Women's Pan-Hellenic Council, says: "We endure the 1922 Jayhawker Sales Content and urge every girl to work for the honor of K. U. The Jayhawker is the means by which others judge us. We want it to be the best book ever." Dorothy Stanley, President of the W. S. G. A. says: "The Jayhawker to be successful, must be the product of the entire student body. The few men and women on the staff can not adequately操 the opinions the likes and humors of four thousands and students without their active co-operation. The W. S. G. A. is solidly behind the 1922 Jayhawker Sales Contest." Mr. Dyer, Dean of Men, says: "The Jayhawker, the magic mirror of University activity and tradition, appeals to every student's heart. Linked this year with the Stadium and the Union it is doing best. Its financial success depends largely upon student support in this sales contest. I trust it may have that in fullest measure." JAYHAWKER TAKES FLIGHT The Administration of K. U. is solidly behind the 1922 Jayhawker the only publication that adequately describes how the hopes and interests of the state have been met in various departments at the University of Kansas. In order to see everybody on the Hill in a short time the Jayhawker managers are going to have a Sales Contest for organizations which will be all co-op houses, sororities and organized rooming houses for womenall are automatically entered. The organization that sells the largest number of 1922 Jayhawkers will receive the first prize, $75.00; second prize will be $50.00; and third prize will be $25.00. This contest will be an easy way for some women's organization to win $75.00. The 1922 Jayhawker Contest Starts Noon, November 7 and Closes Noon, November 16. Winners Announced at Soph Hop Expect to Sell 2,000 Javhawkers During Big Contest Other schools with no larger enrollments than the University of Kansas sell more than this number. Considering the merits of the coming book as well as the fact that everybody in the University will be solicited, the 1922 managers believe that this goal will not only be reached but may be surpassed. Every Jajahawk so means that the book will be just that much better. Buy your annual early during the contest. You will help your favorite organization by doing so as the number of votes given with each Jayhawker decreases every three days. Schedule of Votes Is One Vote for Each Cent Paid in For every penny that you pay to the solicitor, you will get one vote. In addition to these votes a bonus will be given for every Jayawkman sold, regardless of whether the full amount is paid at the time of purchase. One hundred votes will be given as a bonus for every Jayhawker sold on the 7th, 8th and 9th of November. But only fifty votes will be given as a bonus on the 10th, 11th, and 12th. Then from the 13th until the contest closes the 16th only twenty-five votes will be given as a bonus. Now you can see how important it is to start working the very first day. Indeed it would be better if every woman in your organization started tonight to line up prospective purchasers. The organization which will win this contest is the one that sells several hundred Jay-hawkers the first three days. And selling the Jayhawker is only a matter of seeing all your friends. The first organization to get started has the best chance to win. But don't forget that everybody can not be seen these first three days. After a good start keep working. If you cannot sell a person the first time, try to sell him later. Remember there will be only one reason (financial) why a loyal K. U. student does not buy a Jayhawker. Rules of the Contest e Few and Easy to Follow 1. The organization sales contest will start at twelve o'clock, noon, Monday, November 7 and will close at noon Wednesday, November 16. The results will be announced at the Soph Hosp, Friday night, November 18. 2. Votes will be issued on a basis of one vote for every cent paid in with a bonus of 100 votes for every Jayhawk sold on the 7th, 8th and 9th; a bonus of 50 votes for every one sold on the 10th, 11th and 12th; and a bonus of 25 votes for every Jayhawk sold on the 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th. 3. No votes will be issued until receipts of the Jayhawkers sold are turned in to the Jayhawker business office. 4. Votes are not transferable in case any organization drops out of this contest. tion do. No member of the 1922 Jayhawker staff will assist any organization in the sale of books. 6. This contest will be conducted under faculty supervision. Jayhawkier Office Is in Alumni office—room 110 Fraser The Jawahra business office is located in the Alumni office, Room 110 Fraser. The Jawahra telephone number is K. U. 9 and six o'clock, 27043K. Office hours are from 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. m daily except Sundays. 1922 Jayhawker Has Many New Features Which Please The 1922 Jayhawk will feature the new Stadium and athletics. The Jayhawk management has reserved an entire section for the stadium. In this will be a series of photographs which will be almost a motion picture. This will give you the complete completion of the stadium. A description will be given here of the work involved in raising the money for this project. Athletic Section to Be Larger Than It Was in 1921 The athletic section of the 1922 Jayhawk will undoubtedly set a record for completeness. Carp Gavin has set aside eighty-five pages as a minimum for this section. Last years annual had only sixty-five pages. In addition to showing pictures of K. U. athletes in ordinary pies it will be the aim of the sports editor to show pictures of K. U. athletes. The admirable work of the Ku Ku Klan will be given full credit in the athletic section. Campus Scenes from New Angles—Also Aerial Views In the view section there will be two pictures of each building on the campus. These pictures will be set in artistic panels of new design. Perhaps the most striking feature of this section will be several aerial views that have been pronounced by authorities to be the best ever obtained in this way. Every building, every shrub, even criss-crossing footpaths may be easily distinguished in these pictures, which will give you a new idea of the beauty of old K. U. Humor Section to Turn Searchlight on the Dark Corners From the entirely original design on the division page until the end of the section, the humor section will sparkle with wit. Snapshots, cartoons, clever essays and jokes pose the weaknesses, and the blair air of K. U. society. Class Pages Will Be Given Special Attention this Year The Class Section will be at the front of the book this year. Pictures and records of the class of 1922 will be in a new arrangement. The pictures of the Juniors will also come in for detailed attention. Cap Garvin and Isern expect more picture books than this book than in any other. There will be no Fire section unless one hundred glasses are turned in. The snap-shot pages in any annual are either the best or the worst part of the book. The 1922 Jayhawker will carry an unlimited number of snapshot pages. There will be only a few snaps on each page. If those vacation pictures are at home send for them and then turn them in to the annual. It needs 'om. No Limit to Number of Snapshot Pages in the Jayhawker Division Pages Will Portray Medieval Activities There will be eight division pages separating the different sections in the annual. Each division page will have a four-color insert of some medieval activity carrying out the idea of the section which it proceeds. Your Degree Worth No More Than Your University "The time spent in college is the most unique period of one's life. It is a period of romance. While it is a real life in a complete and definite sense, it yet has the glamour of unreality about it. The sordid things of life do not obtrude themselves; the fierceness of competition of years has not yet come; life has not taken on the aspect of a battle; and while college men are critical they are yet at the same time generous. "The thing that stands as the personification of all this is the institution itself, the alna mater to which we are responsible, the mother toward which our loyalty ought to be forever undummed. It has happened to many a man that the relation he bear to his alma mater inspires, inspires and enabling things that life brings to him . . ." "All of this begins a great obligation. In the first place it is a material obligation... In the second place it is a spiritual obligation that arises through the demands of the higher honor that these obligations be lived up to by loyal service."—Written by Dr. Frank Strong for the 1912 Jayhawk. The Jayhawker Is the Only Complete Record of K.U. The Jayhawker, to be successful, must be the product of the entire student body. The few men and women on the staff can not adequately grasp the opinions, the likes and humors of four thousand students without their ac- The 1922 Jayhawker is asking for this co-operation because it is the only complete record of K. U. It visualizes the various departments of a school, which would be the model of scholastic and organization life which otherwise would be unrepresented. Organizations Will Sell Jayhawkers to Put K.U. First Then too, without a Jayhawkwer how can you describe the scope of Life University to your parents and friends at home? Perhaps when you go home next summer you shall have collected several dance programs, theatre checks, Sour Owis, football programs, and a key to some hotel room. And these relics will be the only material things you will take home and you will have a Jayhawkfolks, but if you can show them a Jayhawk the entire life of this institution is at once laid before them. Include the Jayhawk in your budget. The women's organizations who are going to sell the 1922 Jayhawkers during the next few days may look in some degree to the large prizes offered, but more probably they look on this content as a means to help pat K. These organizations know that outsiders will judge this institution by quality of its annual book. Also they know that high school students will be attracted to this school if they like K. U. as portrayed in the annual. And home folks are better satisfied with the expense of sending a son or daughter through school, they can see how much more there is to an education here than what is given in the catalog. Therefore when the women approach you Monday asking that you buy a Jayhawker consider that they are doing you a favor in selling these books as every book sold increases the prestige of your school and your degree. Cap Garvin, Editor Elmer Isern, Business-Manager Cap Garvin, the editor, and Elmer Isern, the businessmanager, of the 1922 Jayhawk have been working all last summer and will work all this winter in order to publish a Jayhawk next spring which will surpass all previous annuals, if possible, in excellence of material, clever handling and quality of illustrations. K. U. Men in Charge of Printing and Engraving Every phase in the publication of this year's Jayhawk will be under the supervision of some K. U. man. The engraving will be done by the Southwestern Engraving Company, Fort Worth, Texas. Roy Beard, a former K. U. man, will have charge of engraving for the layer, layers. Ross K. Russell, Kansas man, is district representative for the Southwestern man. The printing will be done by the Hugh Stephens Company, Jefferson City, Mo., which has printed the Jayhawkers for the several years past. The personal services of Ben Seward, head of their college annual department, has had a lot to do with this company getting the contract for printing every year. Staff for Jayhawker Was Selected Entirely on Merit These are the members of the 1922 Jayhawker staff, together with their positions: with their positions. Ted Hudson, Associate Editor. Leroy Hughes, Advertising Manager. John Millis, Editor Editor. Marion Collins, Junior Editor. Karl Rugh, Sophomore Editor. Gilbert Tuecker, Sports Editor. Stella Dutton, Women's Athletes. Maurine Franklin, Assistant to Miss Dutton. Joe Turner, Humor Editor. Doris Fleeson, Assistant to Mr. Turner. Addison Massey, Organization Editor. Olivia Kubik, Government. Clare Ferguson, Sororites. Louis Kendall, Art Editor. Kenneth Alexander, Assistant to Mr. Kendall. Squires will be the official photographer of the 1922 Jayhawk by appointment. Aim of Jayhawker Is to Show K. U. as It Really Is The aim of the 1922 Jawahar will be to reveal the University of Kansas in its true perspective—in an attempt to show the natural beauty and appeal of the institution set in almost ideal surroundings and then to demonstrate the direct connection between the fields of service and the University and their relative contributions to the state. 1922 Jayhawker Intends to Make Several New Records The 1922 Jayhawk intends first to set a record in the careful and accurate handling of school life. Second to sell more copies of the 1922 Jayhawk than have ever been sold before in any one year. Third, to show the awareness of students in such a manner that many students will be attracted to K. U. through reading the pages of the Jayhawk. The Price of the 1922 Jayhawker Will Be $5.00 Cash or $5.50 if Paid by Installments—Pay Cash Save Ten Per Cent