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Page 8 text:
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OCTfll THE JAYHAWKER WEIDEMANN ' S Leads Out with the Best FOOD SERVICE CROWD Genial John Parker welcomes you to join the crowds 835 Mass. Phone 184 BRICK ' S ON THE HILL UPSTAIRS... From turkey dinner to ham san the best food in town! DOWNSTAIRS. . . The place to meet your friends. Our rustic room has all that old Bohemian atmosphere ! PHONE 50 ILTOW about you and me, fresh- man! Let ' s make a quick tour of the jelly joints. I hear there ' s been a lot of interior decorating going on during the slack season. Besides, you can never tell who you ' ll bump into around the old stomping grounds. First, we ' ll drop off at the new super Union Fountain. It ' s a cinch there will be room for us. The Pi Phis and Phi Belts can ' t fill all that space. Look at the neat padded cells in the corners. As I live and breathe, if it isn ' t that new Pi Phi, Patty Duncan, with Jay (B.M.O.C.) Watkins, the Sigma Chi flash. In that booth over there is Trueheart up to his old occupation of accompany- ing his Kappa Sig brothers on their coke dates. Pretty soon you ' ll see Mary Jean Miller come in with Jack Homer of Phi Psi fame. Come on, we ' re off to Bricks, the old faithful for dance inter- missions and cutting classes. Here too, we find that the painters have wielded a mean brush. Heard a lot about the new basement room wonder what goes on there. As usual the place is overrun with Alpha Chis and D.U. ' s playing bridge in the back booths. Also seen around Bricks is Kappa Sig- ma pledge, Harold Dumler, that slick dancer. Then we mustn ' t forget that no trip across the Hill is complete without a visit to the Cottage. We ' re sure to run into a bunch of A.O. Pis, A.D. Pis, Phi Psis, and Pi-K.A. ' s. Every gal who drops into Harzfeld ' s to see what she should be wearing, will end up afterwards for a coke at the Cottage. Let ' s hop in the car now and (Continued on Page 71) THE JAYHAWK CAFE FOR THAT GOOD TIME Cliff and Clyde WELCOME YOU AND YOUR FRIENDS AT THE HAWK 1342 Ohio Ph. 509 Harzfelds Ve repeat: Contact COAT styled by Harz- feld s . . instant suc- cess! Satin-back fleece styled to casual classic lines. Longer-wearing, versatile. Sizes 10-18. nude, camel, wine huckleberry, oxford brown, rosewood, black, gray and Indian summer. second floor also at Columbia ,: peoplf cuiiM JO I Thi nitlit ,..al and a: ofpe iniyu Foi 0 C hrls ,st ;i: think il sin nerve fiTl ' ll Nil ' ! Th you vet C.4 R.n stra adm gant USUi artk the T nia glad side peri ' mm ing i and edit
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Page 7 text:
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AUTUMN IS A ' Plcta.tot fTTHIS world may be a man ' s world but the girls bave cut a large slice of it for them- selves, in a casual way. Note: The cords, covert cloth, finger-tip T-square jackets for sport as well as dates. More shirts, boxy sweaters and straighter skirts have dawned the campus horizon. Hoods cap everything . . . The formal wear has gone strictly straight and that covered-up look has replaced the too bare and intriguing low decollete. Hats, a minor subject in campus clothes, are the masculine pork-pies and steals from Joe DiMaggio ' s headgear. The brothers will have to rise very early in the morn to keep from losing their only shirts with girls grabbing for all the man-wear they lay their eyes on. 1 (P iota? by Art Wolf) MYRA KURD JACKIE MYERS JOAN ELLIOTT THESE MAY BE FOUND AT WEAVER ' S
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Page 9 text:
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OCTOBER 1910 TF it takes all kinds of people to make a world, then it cer- tainly takes many kinds of people to make a magazine. Of course, we ' re speaking of the JAYHAWRER. This first issue is crammed with the work of 40 contributors ... all kinds of articles, pictures, and art work for the many kinds of persons who either borrow, buy or subscribe to the magazine. For instance, WASHINGTON ON DOWN, Ernest K. Lindley ' s brilliant editorial, should inter- est anyone who isn ' t afraid to think. We ' ll go farther and say it should be forced on the optic nerves of those timid or indif- ferent about pressing current issues. Then Ken Lewis ' sparkling YOU WHO! JEHUDI describes men ' s rush week in a way as new as the Old Testament and yet worth counting as Hill history. Mike Stewart and Chuck Elliott aren ' t afraid to write C.A.A. TAKES OFF and R.O.T.C., THEN WHAT? straightforwardly. They have admirably avoided the propa- ganda of puff and fluff which usually characterizes military articles during periods such as the last two months. Then the spinal column of the magazine photographs ! We ' d gladly place some of them be- side the shots in great national periodicals. Ed Garich ' s intra- mural personalities, Maurice Jackson ' s handl- ing of the W illkie and Roosevelt propagandists, and Art Wolf ' s blackboard shot receive our editorial gold stars. JAVHAUl.tll STAFF Editor: BETTY COULSON Business Manager: BOB WOODWARD Secretary: DOROTHY SCHROETER Editorial Assistants: KEN LEWIS MICHAEL STEWART BOB TRUMP Photograph ic Con Ir if tutors : HAL BRANINE ED GARICH MAURICE JACKSON HAL RUPPENTHAL ART WOLF JOHN YARNELL JIM BERNARD ROSCOE BORN JEAN BOSWELL REGINALD BUXTON ELDON CORKILL BUZZ GRAIN AL DECKER MARYNELL DYATT FRED EBERHARDT CHUCK ELLIOTT LILLIAN FISHER POLLY GOWANS VIRGINIA GRAY CHARLEY JOHNSON CHARLINE JOHNSON CLINT KANAGA Advertising Assistants: JEAN FEES TOM LILLARD ED PALMER NATION MEYER EVAN SHAIBLE Art Contributors: BETSY DODGE DON FITZGERALD MARGIE HAGSTROM BEN MANTZ Contributors: GLEN GILPIN W . C. HARTLEY MARTIN HATFIELD DUANE KLINE BOB McELFRESH DON WILLIAMS EMILY JEAN MILAM DAVE WHITNEY GRETA GIBSON KAY STINSON CECIL KING KEN LEWIS E. K. LINDLEY MARY FRANCES McANAW AGNES MUMMERT MARY LOU RANDALL MARGY REED GLEE SMITH MICHAEL STEWART JIM SURFACE ELINORE SHOCK LEY DOROTHY TEACHENOR BOB TRUMP HEIDI VIETS BETTY WEST DAVE WHITNEY LARRY WINN Office Assistants: JAMES FINN JERRY WASHBURN BUZZ GRAIN JERRY BLAKEMORE Organization Staff: JAY VORAN JACK BECK STAN McLOUD MARJORIE S1EGRIST FRANK ARNOLD MARY JO GERDEMAN Rut we aren ' t a bit ashamed of the work done by the other 33 contributors in fact we ' re proud of most of it. If the reader goes farther, he ' ll see what we mean.
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