University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)

 - Class of 1935

Page 29 of 392

 

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 29 of 392
Page 29 of 392



University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 28
Previous Page

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 30
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 29 text:

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS The social whee BY THE SPOKESMAN THERE ' S one nice thing about this University: those who arrive here for the first time in September haven ' t the opportunity to discover that there are such things as professors, speech instructors, and classes until a good month has passed. Of course, such for- malities as registration and enrollment intrude upon an otherwise pleasant ten days, and those who can ' t stand be- fore unattentive audiences explaining the relationship between Descartes and Hobbs, but the new student wisely heeds their dissertations not one whit, and wonders only who he ' s going to drag to the first varsity. - I say, it ' s not until the old social wheel, with its monotonous and inevit- able revolutions, has Mr. and Miss Frosh under its hypnotic spell that these persons regain consciousness in a world entirely different in aspect from that in which they dwelled for some two weeks. Then the implicit faith in a forthcoming enjoyable week-end keeps them plodding from Monday to Friday. Have I made myself clear? This year, the accumulated dust and cobwebs were swept from between the spokes of the wheel by the smooth rhythms of Red Blackburn and his lads, who have apparently done some profit- able practicing during the last three months. The attendance, as usual, was almost too good, and the capacity of the ballroom floor was more than reached before the end of the dance. The following week-end was marked by the yearly reception of new and old students by Chancellor and Mrs. Lindley and a number of members of the faculty. The music which was fur- nished by Louie Kuhn after nine-thirty was not up to the standard generally set by varsities (if you ' ll forgive the under- statement (. and for some reason or other, possibly because the dance of a week previous was such a success, a large majority of those who greeted the chancellor went home rather gladly when the clock sounded midnight. Midweek varsities began four days later, the following Wednesday, and the crowd poured in most of the hour. As usual, the midweeks are holding their own as a successful Hill institution un- der the guiding hand of the new dance manager ( Ah, there, Metzler ! I The Phipps-Hibbs organization set a new high mark in enjoyable dances, the twenty-ninth of September. Not until ten minutes before sorority and room- ing house doors were locked did the dancers allow 7 the torrid trumpeter to cool his horn after a steady ten minutes of Stardust, that favorite of favorites. Even the uninspired football game with Colorado in the afternoon failed to dampen the spirits which were miracu- lously brought to life that night. There ' s a record which should stand for a good part of the year. Tommy Christian, who was billed on one of the downtown stages, took the THE OPENING VARSITY baton for the annual Jayhawk Wabble the night of the sixth. The weather man was kind, and a perfect night set the background for a second successful varsity. Sororities and fraternities con- tinued the display of their spoils wrung from the Battle of Campus Hill, the smoke of which had not yet completely disappeared. New fall dresses and plaid and overplaid suits (even if the trousers didn ' t match I appeared in large quantities. Some of the newer oampusites already were looking starry- eyed at one another, and that I-wish- I-had-an-initiation-badge.so - 1 - could - give-it-to-you gleam was seen on a few of the male faces. Oh for the halycon days of the freshman year! So much for the all-school varsities. They alone did not comprise the power which kept the old wheel spinning dur- ing the first five weeks. Three sororities opened their barns Friday. September 28. and attempted to persuade the fellows that they had the outstanding pledge class of the whole university. The Thetas. augmented by those in the new Widow ' s Retreat on Ohio, hid the furniture in the attic, or loaned it to the Phi Psis or something, scraped the accumulated gum off the floor, hired a swell band, and provided a swell evening of entertainment. The Alpha Chis were wise. Not wanting to dirty up their newly decorated house, they hired the top floor of the Memorial Union building and proceeded to open house there. Too bad all the boys couldn ' t see what a grand job the in- terior decorators did to the house perched on the top of Thirteenth Street. Well, we can ' t all be lucky. The A. D. Pis were the third to act as hostess that evening. Their two-story living room was packed by those who paraded up and down Oread Street accepting the free entertainment. One week later the number was in- creased to four, with Pi Phi, Gamma Phi. Delta Zeta. and Sigma Kappa com- peting for honors. For years now, the Pi Phi open house has been called a dance. In all probability, that quaint idea was originated by one who never attended one of the affairs. No explan- ation is needed for us old veterans who (Continued on page 57)

Page 28 text:

THE JAYHAWKER Charles Moreau Harger PROBABLY the best fitted man in the state for the position of chair- man of the Board of Regents is Charles Moreau Harger, the present holder of the office. Mr. Harger has been a mem- ber of the Board of Regents since the present system of governing the state schools was installed in 1925. He is ex- perienced in education, and in addition, is known as one of the finest journalists and business men in the state of Kansas. In 1888, Mr. Harger took over the Abilene Reflector, and since that time has built that paper into one of the finest dailies in the state. He is a con- tributor to Century, Scribners, Harpers, and the Saturday Evening Post. Mr. Harger served as principal of the schools at Hope, Kansas, for two years prior to his entering the newspaper business. From 1905 until 1910 he served as a director and lecturer in the department of journalism at K. U.



Page 30 text:

Behind the news THE JAYHAWKER BY GEORGE LERRIGO An account of the actual routine followed by the staff in putting out the campus paper MANY students in the University underestimate the amount of time, patience, and work, necessary to put out the University Daily Kansan, the official daily paper. If a name is spelled wrong, the Kansan receives a black eye. If the campus is unusually dead, the Kansan is blamed for putting out a dull issue, and again Dame Ru- mor takes her dig at the Kansan staff. Collecting, writing, editing, and print- ing all of the printable news on a uni- versity campus is about the hardest thing with which newspaper people are confronted. With a few possible excep- tions, campus news all follows the same Irend, and it takes an exceptional writer to make it interesting and readable. Practically all students enrolling in the journalism department, whether they like it or not, are required to take up reporting. Reporting is needed as a basis for all types of newspaper work. Perhaps students joy in the thought of writing a nice juicy murder story. But alas, on a college campus, murders are practically extinct, and the aspiring journalists find themselves tapping out L. N. FLINT a story on where Lizzie Burch of Pump- kin Center is spending the week-end. However, the Kansan does fasten on to some stories, such as convocations, enrollment, C. S. E. P., and other frivol- ous campus functionings. To obtain these bits of news, the reporters strive and sweat. When they arrive in the morning, they find on the curved desk in the front of the room, a poorly writ- ten card, which in the vernacular of the journalists, is known as the tip sheet. It is the job of the reporter to decipher the writing on the card first, and then to discover what outstanding bits of news are to ' be had on his beat. The beat is a prescribed tour which the reporter follows in his quest for news. The beat system is worked out in code, more or less, and a deciphering sheet is available to the neophyte. As the reporter covers his beat he in- terviews the various department heads, hoping, perhaps, that he can catch them off guard and get a really big story, such as the arrival of a new shipment of fish, text-books, or quiz papers. These department heads act, for the most part, as press agents for their re- spective departments, and are considered among the really good news sources. Back to the shack trips the reporter, after he has thoroughly covered his beat. He sits down to the typewriter, and writes his news in as nearly the Kansan style as he can, and places it on the copy table. Here it goes into the hands of a battery of copy readers, the size of which varies with the time of day. These copy readers work under the careful supervision of Lena Wyatt, the female managing editor. They are equipped with soft lead pencils, and find their chief delight in making long black marks through the copy that is turned in. They are supposedly con- versed with all the rules listed in the Kansan style book, and they carefully read through the reporters well-made efforts. After crossing out three-fourths of the story, and changing the rest of it, in the process known as editing, the workers on the copy desk then start to write the headline, which is a definitely harrowing process. The difficulty of this job varies with the size of the head- QUENTIN BROWN line. If the job becomes too difficult, editor Wyatt usually comes to the rescue. After all has been done that can be done to the copy in this manner it is dropped into the flat tin pipe, that is known as the copy chute. This chute carries the copy down into the plant or back office. Here it goes into the hands of the linotype operators, and is set into type on any one of the four linotype machines owned by the de- partment. From here on, the process of making the news story readable is mostly mechanical. After the proof of the copy has been taken it goes to a diminutive white haired lady, who checks it over for mistakes. This lady, Mrs. Dennis, is one of the unsung heroes of the de- partment. In her hands, lies the respon- sibility of checking all errors that es- cape the copy readers, as well as typo- graphical mistakes. Then the make-up editor checks to see how the headlines look in type. The managing editor then looks it over, as do as many reporters as can get their hands on it. So much for the news that appears on the front and the back two pages. While the news pages are being made, Bill Blizzard, editor-in-chief, is seen running around with a worried look on his face, for he is the man who guides the destinies of the editorial page. He is responsible for the selection of the

Suggestions in the University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) collection:

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


Searching for more yearbooks in Kansas?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Kansas yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.