The K Book,KU's official datebook goes on sale officially next Monday Same old story first day is hectic "I went to three classes and had two pop quizzes." "Would you believe a 21-page class outline?" Mixed emotions and a good deal of confusion were the order of the day yesterday as students attended their first classes of the semester. Sidewalks and halls were crowded as they searched for the right rooms, and freshmen were not the only ones to get lost. "They told me my class had been moved," said one senior. "I didn't quite catch the room number, but I was sure I could find it. I walked into a large class where several people I knew were in my class. My name wasn't on the roll when the professor called it, so we spent ten minutes discussing the way to pronounce it and spell it. Then I discovered it was political science instead of German." "He has a Southern accent and he looks as if when you don't understand something, he'd explain it to you." One freshman added, "It sure takes a long time to get from Murphy to Blake between classes—especially when you don't know where you're going." ANOTHER STORY MAKING the rounds was about a boy looking for a class in a building coded "C O R." He finally discovered that it stood for section C in Old Robinson Gymnasium, not Corbin Hall. Comments were varied. "You should have heard that professor trying to pronounce my name." There were time conflicts too. "I got enrolled in two classes at the same time," said one girl, "so I just went to a different section that was closed when I tried to enroll in it, and talked the department into letting me stay." THE BOOK STORE WAS still crowded with students trying to find the right books—and return the wrong ones. THE TOWN CRIER 912 Mass. 12 Daily Kansan Tuesday, September 20, 1966 FEATURES SUPPLEMENTARY TEXTBOOKS PAPERBACK BOOKS MAGAZINES NEWSPAPERS GREETING CARDS & GIFTS Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Daily Including Sunday Half-price to college students and faculty: the newspaper that newspaper people read read... At last count, we had more than 3,800 newspaper editors on our list of subscribers to The Christian Science Monitor. Editors from all over the world. There is a good reason why these "pros" read the Monitor: the Monitor is the world's only daily international newspaper. Unlike local papers, the Monitor focuses exclusively on world news — the important news. The Monitor selects the news it considers most significant and reports it, interprets it, analyzes it — in depth. It takes you further into the news than any local paper can. If this is the kind of paper you would like to be reading, we will send it to you right away at half the regular price of $24.00 a year. Clip the coupon. Find out why newspapermen themselves read the Monitor -- and why they invariably name it as one of the five best papers in the world. --- The Christian Science Monitor The Christian Science Monitor 1 Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 Please enter a Monitor subscription for the name below. I am enclosing $ ... (U. S. funds) for the period checked. □ 1 year $12 □ 9 months $9 □ 6 months $6 Name... Street... Apt./Rm. # ... City... State... Zip... ☐ College student... Year of graduation... ☐ Faculty member P-CN-65 Authentic classic man-tailored moccasins ... in miniature! Lady Bostonians Lady Bostonians are exactly the same as men's Bostonians. The same leather. The same stitching. The same everything . . . except . . . the size. Lady B's are smaller. For smaller people. Girls. People who wear twinly skirts and hair ribbons and rouge. And little moccasins. Which are really exactly the same as big moccasins. Indoors or out, warm weather or cold, Lady Bostonians offer you the chic fashion look in classic fun footwear. Put a bee in your bonnet—and come slip into a pair of Lady B's—TODAY! LADY BOSTONIAN Genuine Moccasins . . . from 813 Mass. VI 3-2190