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Page 9 text:
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me t Book other photographer and of course, being a freshman him- self, always had a good word for the class. Ready for any assignment, he would pick up his camera at a moment's no- tice and trot along with the stoic comment, I'll go. But I'm Hunkingf' Bert's masterpiece is undoubtedly his Maloney cover, but his shot of the VanderWerfs Cp. 465 and his freshman opener Cp. 575 are just as good. Although instructing this year as well as going to medical school, Jason Dixon still finds time to take pictures- for which we are extremely grateful. His best job this issue is the Theta-Phi Gam walkout Cline jaybawker Goer on a Walken!-pp. 68-695 on which he stuck by his subjects un- til they were actually in bed. Lila Jean Doughman has just about the right slant on the Hill's skepticism-and hope-in the outstanding freshman Cp. 645. Her subtle humor also adds life to what seemed the making of a very routine story on the School of Engineering Cflfter Math-pp. 48-495 and lends vi- tality to The Good Earthf' which 1 . L -'--'- mi A J she somehow manages to sift thor- LILA JEAN DOUGHMAN oughly without actually slinging. Honors for the best personality sketch in this issue go unquestionably to our senior contributor, Dean Sims, for the portrait of E. C. Quigley and his Hampshire Hams CI-Iampfbifef and Hard Work-p. 375. Jeanne McGrew did an interesting bit of reporting, too, on Calvin and Rachel VanderWerf C p. 46 J. Dixie Gilliland C3,000 Queftion About You-p. 425 and Delores Sulzman CTl9e New Bill of Rigblf-p. 475 managed to get furloughs from the shack to do their stories for this issue. Hanna Hedrick also played truant For our cover sho! tographer, raught Peggy Maloney in the basement of the Theta house pol- ishing trophies. The mood the photograph registers is typical of Peggy-if not of freshman training. from the Kansang consequently Hedrick humor brightens the beginning of the issue with a cheery account of return- earlies and their experiences CCome Early and Avoid the Rmb-pp. 14-155. Rosalie Erwin had one of the longest assignments-com- plete coverage of all residence halls, but she managed to hunt down authorities on everything. Her article Clmie- pendentr' Day-pp. 22-245 will answer all of your questions about the greater block of student life. ILLUS'l'RATOBS Mary Olive Marshall keeps insisting that she can't draw -but when she turned in the W, ,V,V .,,, ,,W,,VW Grandpa Jayhawk la y o u t, we started permanently disregarding her chatter. Burger-Baird thinks the series of cartoons with border and lettering looks professional and has taken a'great interest in Mo's graduation which, unfor- tunately for the '46 Jayhawker, be next June MARY OLIVE MARSHALL Dora Ann Brown has also done some good cartooning for this issue. We liked her idea about the bathing suit for summer session classes best-then the Jayhawks on this page and on page eight. Last-and most, we will never get over being grateful to George Zook for taking time off from his work in Wash- ington, D. C, as President of the American Council on Education to explain the veteran's program and point out the problems it will entail C The Education of Vetemm- p. 135. An old Jayhawker, Mr.'Zook answered our request for a story with I'1l do my very best to see if I can get something to you. His article arrived promptly the day before deadline. Bert Kintzel, staff phoz
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Page 8 text:
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We 64355926 nvnnwim A , ggi-in or A , 1 THE JAYHAWKICR 'N , lq ' Wx Editor-in-Chief . . Barlrzeipt Marzag er . Secretary .... flrlrerlirirzg Manager . ErlllorlalA.f,rocla1fer . . flrllflt . . Photographic Staff . . CONTRIBUTORS Mary Alfred R. J. Atkinson Earl Barney Don Diehl Lila Jean Doughman Rosalie Erwin Betty Jo Everly X Robert Gibbon Dixie Gilliland Patricia Glover Nancy Goering Joan Hayden Hanna Hedrick Joan Harris Melvin Kettner Charles Kunzelman Jill Lauderdale Dorthe McGill Jeanne McGrew Pat Penney Dean Sims Emily Stacy Earl Stanton Delores Sulzman Judith Tihen Joan Veatch Neal Woodruff . MARY MORRILL . . BEVERLY BOHAN . SALLY FITZPATRICK . . . . GEORGE WAITT JBETTY Jo EVERLY, ILILA JEAN DOUGHMAN, JHANNA HEoR1cK, IPAT PENNEY, LNEAL WOODRUFF JMARY oL1vE MARSHALL, -1 DORA ANN BROWN lDAVE HALL f JASON DIXON, Editor, JBERT KINTZEL, ' JCHARLES FISHER, LNANCY MILLER OFFICE ASSISTANTS Patricia Abbot Mary Louise Ainsworth Marilyn Carlson Cora Lou Child Frances Chubb Dorothy Dahlin Patricia Glover Joy Godbehere Jean Hendrickson Bonnie Holden Sue Jamieson Dorothy Kintzel Martha Laffer Mary Longenecker Mary Gayle Marsh Eileen O'C0nnor Margaret O'Neil Patricia Rolley Joann Ruse Rosemary Ryan Sara Jayne Scott Emily Stacy Elaine Thalman Nancy Tomlinson Barbara Varner Mary Jane Waggoner Joanna Wagstaff Patricia Williams ADVERTISING STAFF John McGlaughlin Dwight Rounds Kelma Smith Earl Stanton Harold Warwick Virginia Winter Anna Young BUSINESS ASSISTANTS Don Brown Pat Rolley Bonnie Holden Harry Stucker COPY READERS Dorthe McGill Delores Sulzman Elaine Thalman Jayhawker INCE so much of this issue is dedicated to freshmen we have tried to select staff members who would in all ways be sympathetic to the freshmanls cause. After reading the works of R. Atkinson, Don Diehl, and Lila Jean Doughman, and seeing Charles Fishers pictures, we feel we have succeeded. Everyone has been quite sympathetic -especially Charles. One long year of being a freshman and going on three of training them has made R. Atkinson somewhat of an authority on pledge training. His article concerning same CUVhal'r Wrong with Thlr Picture-pp. 58-595 is full of only Atkinson cracks, and, although typical of all sororities and fra- ternities, gives the discerning reader an insight into what makes Phi Psils like that. Atkinson fans will also like R. J.'s comments on the new navy band. C Bell Bottom R. J ATKINSON Blaer-p. 52.5 Don Diehl, navy medic, attributes his remarkable under- standing of women to his summer spent interning in a ward of Waves at the Staff hospital in Norman, Okla. Don served as masseur, hypodermic expert, and general errand boy. His new insight, applied to K.U. coeds, results in the schol- arly article CThey're All Fair in Love and Wfar-p. 613 in our freshman section. PIl0'l'0GIlAPllEIlS Charles Fisher says the first time he tried, his film pack was faulty. Anyway, he managed to have the four freshman women on pages 60, 62, and 63 pose for him twice in a Fraser theater lighted only by two dim ceiling spots. Handi- caps of lighting, a small camera, and a ladder tripod were waived by the enthusiastic Fisher and his zest for the work. Bert Kintzel took more pictures for this issue than any
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Page 10 text:
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6 THE JAYHANYKER SEASON'S GREETINGS for JAY!-IAWKERS Gift List PERFUME HOSE SCARFS BILLFOLDS PURSES HOUSEHOLD GIFTS ARMY GIFTS CANDY SOAPS SHAVE SETS HANDKERCHIEFS SWEATERS ROBES LINGERIE A ll these and many more at D CAN BE yr WF 'ngiiiffs 'Gillis Mar: 'ii' You rgrxe BWI' Num BE Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Products by Lila -lc-an Iloughman T Ginny Larson and Jim Baska have a friendly disagreement out on a sandbar in the Kaw. That is a blanket-but the photographer, and say about 35 other Sig Alph's and their dates standing out of range put every- thing on a legal basis. Katie Gorrill and Doc Lamkin leave a mid-week early. There are three possibilities. They could be going to the library or to the 'Mite .... -KINTZEL HE G00ll EARTH HINGS seen and heard on the Hill often times become a bit confused. From such a jambled mess emerge a few tid-bits that will no doubt prove of interest only to those whose names appear in print - ego -- it is sometimes called. In this case the best isn't saved 'til the last. The pause that refreshes bears the label Bob Henry. Perhaps his fame is due to the frequent trips that he and his Phi Delt pledge brother Mike Kuklenski make to the cosmetic counter at Weavers. That droning sound you hear is Fiji Earl Stanton's continued crooning of Her Tears Flowed Like Wine. Does this include Sally Krehbiel's, too? The commotion that invariably necessitates reprimanding by Watson Library's Gravel Gertie is due to the heated discussion between Nancy Love and Dordie Waite while in their respective Pi Phi and Phi Gam study halls. Yeah Study! Looks as if Don Relihan, SX, might be polishing that proverbial apple just a shade by sending Eileen O'Connor's parents pheasant between semesters. Food for thought no doubt. Three blind mice or the eternal triangles: Marge Beneke, Elton Hoff, and Barbara Neely. Thats what happens when an active appears back on the scene. Edith Darby, Kenny Nohie, and jack Nesselrode. Due to rationing it ain't patriotic. Ruth Wright, Ross Skinner, and Jack McDermott. Even orchids fail to make the decision easier. Joy Godbehere, Carl Clark, and Martha Bonebrake. Maybe it will take one of those Phi Delt frys to do the trick. C onlifzueci rm Page 10
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