30817HEVQA MARMAX SMORTAG Frosh were easy to spot in 1919 Frosh - spotting in 1919 was considerably easier than today. Upperclassmen must now observe nervous glances at watches, hopeless expressions of room-searching, or—the surest giveaway of all—the dictionary of the ever-popular English I classes. Frosh politicians could not pass campaign tickets on the sidewalks and were advised to speak respectfully to all upperclassmen. Forty-seven years ago, however, freshmen drowned blue beanies. They also had no dates at football games, under penalty of being "tossed in a blanket." Bv JACKI CAMPBELL FRATERNITY PLEDGING added more to frosh responsibilities: sweeping snow off the walks, dusting the house furniture, furnishing smokes for upperclassmen, preparing Sunday evening lunch, polishing shoes and answering the phone at all times. Today's fraternities devise useful projects for the freshmen. Lecture series begins 20th year The KU Humanities Lecture Series will begin its 20th year when Victor Henri Brombert, French instructor at Yale, speaks of "Malraux and the World of Violence," at 8 p.m. Oct. 11, in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Admission is free. Brombert is the author of "The Criticism of S. T. Eliot," "Stendhal et la Voie Oblique," "The Intellectual Hero: Studies in the French Novel, 1880-1955," and "Stendhal: A Collection of Critical Essays." His latest book, "The Novels of Flaubert," will be published late in 1966. One is Dr. Marilyn J. Richtarik, University of Arkansas Medical School graduate who spent her summer here four years ago. Four new doctors join staff at Watkins Leaving the staff are Dr. Gunnar Erdal, who has returned home to Norway, Dr. Brian Joseph and Dr. Laura Koehn. Dr. Raymond Schwegler, director of the student health service, announced recently that Watkins Hospital had been certified for three more years, by the National Joint Commission on Accreditation for Hospitals. He also announced that four new doctors have joined the staff, all of whom, he said, would function "essentially as general practitioners." Dr. Swegler said he expected Dr. Kollbjorn Jensen any day now. Dr. Jensen has been visiting his family in Norway. ternal medicine specialist and formerly in private practice in Lawrence, joins the staff along with Dr. Jorgen Jorgensen from Norway, and Dr. L. G. Gaughan, a graduate of KU and the KU Medical School. Dr. Gaughan will live in Westwood (Shawnee Mission) and work full time at the health service here. Dr. James W. Campbell, an in- BROMBERT SPEAKS four foreign languages: French, Italian, German, and Russian. His primary interests lie in the 19th and 20th century novel, history of ideas, and comparative literature. He is currently doing a study of the Romantic Imagination. A native of Paris, Brombert came to the United States in 1941. He earned his doctorate from Yale in 1953, and did post graduate work at the University of Rome in Italy. Chairman of the Literary Program on Directed Studies at Yale, Brombert has also taught during summers at Middlebury College, University of Colorado and Avignon. Daily Kansan Tuesday, September 27, 1966 We're full of it! Inside information on music, that is. And you can be full of it, too. Get smart. Bone up on background. And embarrass your wiseacre friends the next time cocktail-party conversation turns to music. Send for The Crossroads Digest of Musical Minutiae. No Beethoven-Brahms-and-Bachophile will ever bully you again. Wise up. With this. For once in your life, would it kill you to clip a coupon? (It's even free.) ESS___ Gentlemen: I'm sick and tired of having the conversational sand kicked in my face. Rush me "POOF!-YOU'RE AN EXPERT" and I'll show the world! NAME TY___ STATE This ad is brought to you as a public service by Crossroads Records, the most exciting new name in music. ZIP CODE CROSSHART Records, P.O. Box 748 Port Washington, New York 11050 c New gym to have open house, soon Open house in the new Robinson gymnasium and natatorium will be staged around Parents' Day festivities here Oct. 15-16. Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and department chairman, said there would be no speeches and the program would consist of informal demonstrations by physical education students in various parts of the facility. Love-nest re-decorated SALINA — (UPI) — Charles Francis and his bride don't know it yet, but their "friends" have re-decorated their apartment as a welcome home surprise. While the couple was honeymooning, friends filled the bedroom with 12,000 lbs. of newspapers. A lipstick greeting on the bedroom mirror reads: "with friends like these, who needs enemies?" THE NEW STRUCTURE, facing Sunnyside Avenue across from Summerfield Hall, was first occupied last spring. The swimming pool was opened in mid-summer. Old Robinson Gymnasium, built in 1906, is being used temporarily as a classroom, laboratory and office building until the completion of new Fraser Hall. Old Robinson will be razed in 1967 to make way for the first unit of the large humanities hall which will eventually fill the Robinson-Haworth sites. Sign too wide, sign says The two-story gymnasium cost $931,000 and the natatorium $425,- 000. LARAMIE, Wyo. — (UPI)—A sign on a bulletin board at the University of Wyoming student union warns against posting notices more than 15 inches wide. The sign is 16 inches wide.