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Page 18 text:
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fl F256 I-lMDJXl . f? f? qxf 3 QQ X T1 Sl-IE NAD A T Br-TEST X EANDAGSE, L fl I-low X COULD J MOU 'Ebb Z 1'- Fa It all began in the Greek houses as the actives moved in to prepare for the impending flood of rushees. And the rushees came, 685 strong. With the close of rush week came the rest of the new students and some of the old, Orientation Week began, and the Fall Festival was on. For a while it was indeed a festival. Orientation Wfeek provided those on the hill with a continu- ing string of parties, watermelon feeds and dances, bull sessions and more parties. The new students drifted from conference to conference, dean to dean, with the Student Union, as usual, furnishing a starting point and a place to relax after the conferences and the tests were over. But above it all hung the nemesis of enrollment, that mysterious process by which a student offi- cially joins the University, and which makes many a student feel a little like a white rat in a maze. Enrollment over, the general idea seemed to be to make that last week end a memorable one. The gridiron Jayhawkers did their part by defeating the Horned Frogs, and the parties went on. Then classes. September l9th work started in earnest. The wonderful win over T.C.U. furnished a common denominator for conversation as the students began to get acquainted with their new class- mates and to start things anew with last year's friends. The traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard was a mass of students with armloads of books, and the newest freshman, Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, was officially welcomed to his new office, as he had welcomed the new students into the Univer- sity family not so many days before. September waned into October, K.U. won another football game, and the Campanile chimes still didn't agree with that obnoxious whistle some master planner put right next to I4
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Page 17 text:
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Page 19 text:
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Festival the hospital. K. U. found itself with one of the top ten teams in the nation, the University The- atre produced The Ladylf N or for Burning. K.U. lost a football game to the number one team in the nation, it was no longer possible to tell a freshman by the number of books he carried, and the parties went on. Not all the time, though. Some people actually studied consistently. Some studied only occasionally, some studied not at all, but the great tradition of T.G.I.F. went on. K.U. won still another football game, people discussed the unusually warm weather for this time of year, the sophomores talked about last yearn to show everyone that they were no longer freshmen, 8 oiclock classes got worse than ever, everyone had so much to do but nobody really worried. The S.U.A. Carnival provided a pickup for those almost too tired to move after the Gklahoma football game. Then the bottom fell out. Six weeks grades were released. Some people swore to do better, some were elated, some merely satis- fied, and everybody wanted to go to Miami if K.U. won the Big Eight. The Experimental The- atre presented The Trial of Captain john Brown and Tea ami Sympathy, the seniors optimistically counted the day 'til graduation and held coffee after coffee after coffee, and a few eager beavers started their beards for the approaching centen- nial year celebration. As the Fall Festival drew to a close and it began to get colder, people looked back with mixed emotions. Some still had headaches from that last T.G.I.F. party, some were glad it was over and some wished it had never ended, but there was one point of complete agreement. It may not have been the best, depending on your point of view, but with a record enrollment of over l0,000, it was certainly the biggest. 15 i 5 i IF THIS turns out good, it'lI be the first time. THE CHURCH Council plons its activities for the coming yeor AND THERE'S olwoys enrollment. M M 5 ,V
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