PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Increased enrollment overflows Flint Hall Students seated in the doorway and out in the hall in one class . . . Eight typography labs, including two at night, compared with four last year. More than 250 students enrolled in Principles of Advertising classes. . . Flint Hall is figuratively bursting at the seams this fall after the largest enrollment, by far, in Loan funds still available With all university enrollment fees due Oct. 1, the Student Financial Aid Office is swamped. Short-term loans, with a $200-maximum for each individual for the fall semester, are still available, said Mrs. Jo Hutton, secretary in the office. Mrs. Hutton said the funds are limited. She could not estimate how much money has already been granted in loans, but noted that the office's allotment for September was $100,000. She added that more funds would be available Oct. 1. Mrs. Hutton said that most persons requesting loans at this time are graduate students whose teaching pay will not be available until October; students whose money from home has not arrived; and students who came to college without money, hoping to get a loan and pay it back through the semester. Daily Kansan the history of the William Allen White School of Journalism. Tuesday, September 27, 1966 WITH 180 JUNIORS and seniors and 13 master's degree candidates, the school's enrollment is one-third more than last fall's 138 undergraduate and eight graduate students. The school's advertising sequence experienced the biggest jump, with 103 majors this year compared to only 66 a year ago—a whopping 56 per cent increase. Included are 53 seniors and 50 juniors. Radio-television-film also is up from 18 a year ago to 28 this fall. The news-editorial sequence, on the other hand, showed a slight decline—from 54 majors last year to 49 this fall. In all, nearly 1,200 students are enrolled in journalism courses this fall. Sixteen full-time and six part-time faculty members are teaching 3,396 semester hours, 1,030 more than were taught last year. COMMUNICATIONS IN Society, the basic course in journalism for pre-journalism students and non-majors, attracted 179 students, and Reporting I, a required course for students in all three sequences, enrolled 91. "With this large registration in basic courses, everything points to a continued upward trend in our enrollment," said Dean Warren K. Agee. "The surge this fall has cramped our quarters and forced us to make some last-minute additions to our class schedule. But those are problems we don't mind having." ALL STUDENT COUNCIL INTERVIEWS 8 Applications due Monday, OCTOBER 3 Interviews on Oct. 5 (Wed.) and Oct. 6 (Thurs.) 7-10 p.m. Sign up for interview on the ASC door at the Kansas Union and slide your application under the office door. Positions Open: - Committee on Academic Affairs - Campus Chest Committee - Facts & Statistics Committee - Traditions Committee - and others Living group presidents have applications. If you must make your own, include: name, address, phone, previous experience, over-all grade average. ★ FRESHMEN are especially urged to apply. Vacancies have been reserved for you. RECORD DEPT. Presents The Newest Sound In Classical Records CROSSROADS (Quality Recordings at a Low Cost) $242 INTRODUCTORY PRICE 9th & Mass. Downtown CROSSROADS WHERE EVERYONE MEETS GREAT MUSIC (A Product of Columbia Broadcast System)