Page 5 Homecoming To Feature Dance The homecoming dance which will end the homecoming weekend activities will be held 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Nov. 8, in the Military Science building. Music for the homecoming dance will be supplied by Gene Hall and his orchestra. Tickets, at 50 cents a person, will go on sale Oct. 27, at the Information booth and the Strong hall rotunda. Tickets will also be sold in men's organized houses. The general theme of the dance has not been picked yet, but Jane Bock, publicity chairman, said the dress will be informal. During the halftime intermission of the dance, the Homecoming queen will be presented to the audience. Fred Rice, college sophomore, chairman of the dance, named the sub-committee for the affair today. They are: Publicity, Jane Bock, college junior; chaperones, Marion Clyma, fine arts junior; ticket sales in men's houses, Jack McCall, college sophomore; street ticket sales, Ron Evans, engineering sophomore; alumni ticket sales, Mary Porch, college sophomore; entertainment, Jerry Scott, college junior, and building, Stuart Knutson, engineering junior. Engineers' Meet Slated Oct.24-25 The annual Kansas-Nebraska sectional meeting of the American Society for Engineering Education will be held at the University, Friday, Oct. 24, and Saturday, Oct. 25. A dinner program will open the meeting at 6:15 p.m.at the Plymouth Congregational church,925 Vermont street. Prof. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry, will be the guest speaker of the evening. He will speak on the experiences of a Fulbright lecturer in Egypt. Following the dinner meeting, there will be group discussions, by departments, at Marvin hall. Saturday morning, the meeting will be held in 426 Lindley hall, starting at 10 p.m. W. R. Woolrich, dean of the School of Engineering at Texas university, will be the speaker of the day. Dean Woolrich is the national president of the American Society for Engineering Education. The meeting will close at a lunchcon to be held at 12:15 Saturday, at the Faculty club. Approximately 250 engineering instructors are expected to attend the meeting. Vince Di Maggio struck out 134 times with the Boston Braves in 1938. KANU Radio Schedule The new KU radio station, KANU, heard at 91.5 megacycles on the FM dial, will broadcast the following programs this week: | | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1:45-2:00 | Previews | Previews | Previews | Previews | Previews | | 2:00-2:15 | Uncle Dan | Let's Find Out | Distant Lands | Distant Lands | Growing Up | | 2:15-2:30 | News | News Childrens News Reporter | News | News | News | | 2:30-2:45 | Art by Radio | | Playtime | Playtime | Time for a Story | | 2:45-3:00 | This is KU | | | | | | 3:00-4:00 | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | Time to Visit | | 4:00-4:30 | Smor-gasbord | Smor-gasbord | Smor-gasbord | Smor-gasbord | Smor-gasbord Southland Serenade | | 4:30-4:45 | | | | | Fifteen Steps | | 4:45-5:00 | | | | | | | 4:30-5:00 | Bard of Avon | | | | | | 4:30-5:30 | Cooper Union Forum | | Canterbury Tales | Canterbury Tales | Keyboard Concert | | 5:00-5:30 | Master-works from France | | | | | | 5:30-5:45 | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | Jazz Concert | | 5:45-6:00 | Sports | Sports | Sports | Sports | Sports | | 6:00-7:00 | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | Candle-light Concert | | 7:00-7:30 | The People Act | Symphony Hall | Jeffersonian Heritage | Jeffersonian Heritage | Music from Mt. Oread | | 7:30-7:45 | Ballet Music | | | Organ Concert | Football Forecast | | 7:45-8:00 | Invitation to Read | | | | Instrumental Interlude | | 7:30-8:00 | Jazz Story | Organ Concert | | | | | 8:00-9:00 | Music of the Barogue | Starlight Symphony | Starlight Symphony | Opera Is My Hobby | | | 9:00-9:15 | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff | News Signoff | University Daily Kansan Programs from 2:30 to 3 p.m. and 7 to 7:30 p.m. can be picked up on A.M. Says Capital Lack Hinders Egyptians There is 10 to 20 times as much foreign as domestic capital now in Egypt, he added. "Lack of capital handicaps industrial development in Egypt," Dr. Ray Q. Brewster, chemistry department chairman, said last night at a meeting of the American Chemical society in Bailey hall. with 97 per cent of its total land untillable. Egypt is hard-pressed to make wheat food for her 20-odd million people, he pointed out. people. Dr. Brewster, a Fulbright lecturer at the University of Alexandria, Egypt, from January to June, added Another, handicap to industrial development is lack of coal for fuel needed for mining and manufacturing. There is, however, a possibility of electro-chemical industry as soon as dams for water power can be built on the Nile, Dr. Brewster said. Cash and Carry . . . 99c Pick-up and Delivery . . . $1.10 "FOR THE BEST IN LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANJNG." Sequoia seedlings, germinated at the University of California, are growing again in Alaska for the first time in about 35,000,000 years. Best Dressed Man "On the Hill" that with its increased interest in public education and with assistance from other nations in development of natural resources, Egypt will soon be "ready for company." Bring your suit in for us to clean and press before the week-end begins. BACHELOR LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Phone 646 ACME Be the 1111 Mass. when you get a complete car check-up BRIDGE Standard Service Phone 3380 601 Mass. BEAT OKLAHOMA —SINK THE SOONERS— Turtle Neck SWEATERS For Campus AND ALL-AROUND CASUAL GOING Interlock Cottons in NAVY WHITE GOLD RUST $3.50 ALL WOOL JANTZEN KHARAFLEECE in NAVY - WHITE - BROWN $11.95