75 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official student paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDITORIAL STAFF Wilbur A. Fischer ... Editor-in-Chief Harry Murgle ... Associate Editor Jason Mullinger ... Newer Editor Henry Pegues ... Assistant Editor Helen Patterson ... Society Editor BUSINESS STAFF William Cady Business Manager William H. Allpn Assistant William H. Allpn NEWS STAFF Paul Brinдел Marjorie Rickard by Bob Reed Bob Reed Jack Carter Subscription price $3.00 per year it advance; one term, $1.75. Entered as second-class mail multiple other locations. Kansas, under U.S. law, is a landmark city in Kansas. Published in the afternoon five times a week, by students of the University of Kansas, from the press of the Department of Journalism. Address all communications to UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas. Phone. Bell K. U. 25. The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate students to go further than they previously printing new materials. University holds: to play no favorites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be courteous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; in all, to help students qualify the students of the University. $16.66 A MINUTE! TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1916. He that will not strive in this world should not have come into it.—Ital. $16.66 a minute! Doesn't it take your breath? Well, that is what Martinelli, the famous Italian tenor, will receive when he comes here for the first number of the University Concert Course on October 12th. $16.66 a minute! Isn't that a fact which will show you that the University is trying to give you more than mere book-learning? It is also trying to give you a musical education—high class learning, too; not the cheap, flashy, catchy kind of music, but music by the best artists of the musical world. There are eight numbers in the course—including two concerts by the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra. Each concert costs the student thirty-one cents. So it will cost you one-third cent a minute to see someone earn sixteen dollars and sixty-six cents in the same length of time. Have you secured your tickets for the course yet? ORGANIZE THAT COUNTY CLUE The members of the Greenwood County Club have taken the lead in the county club activities this year and have set a good example by meeting, electing new officers and discussing plans for the coming year. With the coming election and this year's session of the legislature a great chance is afforded the University students to organize county clubs and boost for their Alma Mater. Legislators from each county are coming to Topeka this winter to make laws and vote appropriations. Upon these men depends whether or not K. U. will be hampered for the next two years because of "no funds" or whether the University shall advance with the other educational institutions of the day. The mill tax will be before this legislature again, too, so it will be a work of service to K. U. every time a county club is organized and a campaign started by letter or by person with the legislators "back home" in behalf of the University's needs. MR. FACULTY, MEET MR. STUDENT! A great opportunity for making worthwhile acquaintanceships is passed up each year at the University by faculty members and students because of the lack of mixers where the students may meet his professor and learn to know him as he is outside of the classroom. Too many students think of their professors as mighty pedagogues, so enshrouded in the authority and dignity of their position that they cannot be approached. Comparatively few graduate from the University who know their instructors any better than to merely speak as they pass. And these students are soon forgotten when they get out into the world by the men who might have been their friends had their friendship only been cultivated. The faculty members are human and enjoy moving about in the student sphere just as much as we ourselves do. In the faculty ranks are men who have traveled abroad, who have studied the problems of the cities—in short, they know life. Their ideals differ and there is a big variety of personalities. To cultivate these men should be the aim of every student because of their association cannot help being a broadening one. If you can sit in a clubroom and talk as man to man you will derive benefits from your professor that can never be learned in the classroom. This association of students with faculty members and outside men of big calibre is one of the finest advantages of the professional fraternities but still more fellowship between the professor and student should be encouraged. Invite your professors to your mixers. Some of them will be glad to come and the result will be worth while—and you too, faculty men and women, cultivate the acquaintance of your pupils. THE WEEK IN VERSE The Normals marched right up the wall. Then turned and marched back down And nighties and palamas caused The village dads to frown. Election came and now is o'er defected. Are looking glum at a winged plum Too bad, the way they're treated. The freshman lids are out again No licenses are needed, To warn the infants when delinquents Leave the rule unheeded. The showers and the Physics clock Deserve no passing mention, This aged bore that makes us sore Will some bore cause dissension. The opaque soup we drink each day is getting worse and worser And what we think as we bravely If heard, would cause remorse, sir. From what they say the Tiger fray a little blood in the time I write to you we wasting time Suppose we both go study. As an introduction to the beauties of the campus, we may still point with pride to the cinder alley extending south from Fourteenth street to Blake Hall. CAMPUS OPINION Communications must be signed as evidence of good faith and may not be published without the writer's consent IS THIS LOYALTY? of the Daily Kansan; With the football season starting off with a liberal supply of student pep and a general sentiment against dates at the games, the Men's Student Council did not show a loyal spirit in holding a dance at the time. When tradition demands that every K. U. man don the white robe and celebrate. It is hoped that it was an oversight on the part of the Council; but if it was not, the members of that committee criticism for lack of co-operation. Perhaps the Council considers the night-shirt parade a thing for the freshmen alone to take part in, and for the staff members the dance should be foremost. "One of the Paraders." TWO MEN WANTED for co-operative boarding clug coating about $4 a week. Keen ants! See Blaine at Streets Street, or Bell 2606W. 14-3 WANT ADS WANTED--Good stewart for mixed club. Call Bell 1107W. 15-3 WARNING—Party who took heavy rubber raincoat two weeks ago that belonged to H. W. C., please return it to 1438 Tenn., and挫 trouble. FOR RENT--One excellent room for one or two boys. Very desirable. Inquire, 1108 Tennessee St. 16-5* LOST-Sigma Delta Chi pin Saturday night between Santa Fe and Acacia house. Finder kindly return to Acacia house. 16-3 WANTED TO RENT-A large dining room, serving room, and kitchen suitable for a co-op club. Bell 20951. 17.3 PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. H. L. CHAMBERS. General Practice. Office at 1035 Mass. Hours 1:30 to 6:00. House and office phone. Bell 909. Home 309. DR H. REDING B. A. U. Buildings attended. Hours 9 to 8. Both phone 513 Sold in bottles and every bottle in Dash's Arested Distilled water—Adam Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Start the fall term in a Varsity Fifty Five Suit AFTER the fellows have crushed a hand and paralyzed an arm for you when you get back to college or preparatory school—they'll look you over critically; if you're dressed smartly they'll ask where you got the outfit. If your clothes are not the "last word" in style they'll probably ask if you've been up in the North woods all summer. Hart Schaffner & Marx Varsity Fifty Five variations always show the best and latest style touches. When you're dressed in one of these suits you can be sure that the fellows will ask where you got your clothes. The Varsity Five models are the favorite suits with these critical young dressers. Varsity Fifty Five is one name for a variety of models, all based on one big style idea; belt back models; double breasted; plain sack; different lapels and pockets. Peckhams KICK—PLEASE KICK If you don't get your Kansan every night—and on time—call K. U. "Double Six" We want you to receive what you pay for. P. S.—That just reminds us that a few whose notes for $3.00 on October 1, 1916 have not paid. Kindly come across.