PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25,1942 Snooping Around News and Views from other colleges Fifteen future cooks and bakers for the navy began training Monday at the University of Minnesota in preparation for active service at sea. Upon graduation the men will be rated cooks or bakers, third class. Because the navy urgently needs men with this training, the graduates will most likely go into active service immediately. About two hours a day of classroom training is planned for the cooks and bakers upon completion of their month's practical training. Volunteer Land Corps at Penn. For the first month, these men will be taught cooking and baking from the practical side, acting as apprentices in the union and Ag Union kitchens. They will work side by side with regular University help. Men and women at the University of Pennsylvania have been asked by the Farm Placement Bureau of the U. S. Employment Service to volunteer to do work on farms. Volunteers may select the afternoon or days over the week end when they will have spare time. They will be given free transportation from the campus to the farm and return-plus regular farm wages. At present pickers are needed for apples, carrots, spinach, and turnips, besides a year round need for dairy labor. Workers this summer were able to earn from $4 to $13 a day, according to the Daily Pennsylvanian. Memecomers Asked Not to Come Home There'll be homecoming at Pittsburg Teachers next week end, but no emphasis will be put on students returning to the institution because of the war situation. However, dinners will be held over the state commemorating the occasion and all people close to the institution will be invited to attend the event. Featured on the homecoming program will be a snake dance, bonfire and parade on Friday evening preceding the Pittsburg-St. Benedicts football game which will be on Saturday. The Chamber of Commerce will award prizes totaling twenty-five dollars for the two best decorated fraternity houses and the two best decorated sorority houses. Iowa Engineer Brought Home Iowa Engineer Brought Home the Bacon The Iowa Engineer published at Iowa State College, was awarded the rating as the best undergraduate engineering publication in the United States at the annual meeting of the Engineering College Magazines Associated, last week at a meeting at Purdue University. As a monthly publication, the Iowa Engineer was also given the Tech Engineering News cup, given each year by the student magazine at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Selection was based on general appearance, scientific and engineering merit of articles, make-up, effectiveness of illustration and editorial excellence. Judges included several business paper editors. They're Building a Radio Station Sponsored by Rho Epsilon and the advice and counsel of the electrical engineering department, a new radio station is being constructed at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago. It is to be of the new . heralded ASHTON WILL READ— (continued from page one) time in order to keep it flexible and informal. Students and faculty members who would like to spend a few moments in meditation and listening to poetry and music are invited by the School of Religion to attend the program every Wednesday. REHEARSALS PUMPKIN— (continued from page five) son, Jean Rose, Betty Jeanne Hess, Elloise Hillenbrand, Pat Foster, Juanita Bowman, Dorothy Lee Miller, Marjorie Gunley, Martha Nearing, Gloria Brinkman, Ann Lee Nelson, and Ellesta Meyer. The 13 were chosen at a contest Oct. 15 in the Little Theatre of Green hall. They will work with the cast in the stage show. Northern Illinois State Teachers college has conducted 29 three-day institutes in nearby towns to train leaders of wartime forums. frequency modulation type. Call letters have not yet been assigned but will be received upon completion of the unit. ... BUY WAR STAMPS ... There are some 12,000 F-M sets in the vicinity of the metropolitan Chicago area and it is to these that the programs will be broadcast. All branches of the armed forces use frequency modulation radio sets. Quakers Return an Anchor— The largest single contribution to the University of Pennsylvania scrap drive was when the Naval R.O.T.C. gave the ship's anchor which rested outside the Engineering Building to the government to be used on a vessel or to be melted down. It was estimated that the weight of the anchor is close to 10,000 pounds. The anchor was given to the University nearly a year ago by the Navy Department. Due to the excellence of its condition the consensus was that it would not be melted down with other scrap. Interested throngs of students gave moral support to the men from the Navy Yard, who equipped with a truck, pulleys, crowbars, and ropes, toiled in the rain attempting to raise the anchor onto the truck. Officers' Dinner To Climax Navy Day Celebration E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and drama and general chairman of Navy Day observance, will be master of ceremonies at the officers' dinner beginning at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Eldridge hotel, Lt. A. H. Buhl, commanding officer of the Naval Training School for machinists' mates announced yesterday. Lt. Comm. Webb B. Key, medical officer of the school, will speak on "Medical Care of the Navy Today." Lt. Buhl will address the attending officers and their guests. The dinner will conclude the Navy Day celebration and is given by the officers of the machinists' mates school, to which various celebrities have been invited, as well as persons who have submitted "Brain Buster" questions which stumped the Quiz Kids in the radio programs broadcast over station KFKU. Other activities of the day include speeches before churches, civic clubs, and radio; window displays; and a parade. More than 2400 members of city and campus organizations will take part in the parade which will begin at 5:30 p.m. by South Park and will proceed up Massachusetts Street to Sixth Street. Turning left, it will march to Vermont street and disperse. The University will be represented by 75 members of the band, 550 ROTC cadets, the Coed Volunteer Corps, and the 600 members of the Machinists' mates school. Civic organizations participating are the Dorsey-Liberty Post of the American Legion Color Guard and drum corps, Red Cross, Ladies of the G.A.R., Girl Scouts, Women's Relief Corps, United Service Mothers, American Legion Auxiliary, and Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary. Haskell Institute will be represented by 70 members of the Haskell Indian club, all in tribal costume. The Junior high school and the Liberty Memorial high school bands will play. TODAY THRU THURSDAY GRANADA SCORE OF INSTRUCTORS (continued from page one) cussion leader at the session on Mental Hygiene and Learning at 9:30. Miss Margaret Anderson will address the 8:30 Speech session at the Wichita Convention on "Remedial Reading in the Speech Education Program." Prof. E. C. Buehler will report on the "Survey of the Teaching of Debate in the High Schools and the University of Kansas." At the Salina convention Dean J. W. Twente will speak on "Schools Meet Present Needs" to the 9:30 Senior High School Session. He will also address the Rural and Third Class City High School Session on "Education, Here and Now." Dean Twente will speak also at the Hays Convention at the College and Junior-Senior High School Sessions at 2 p.m. Friday. Miss Mary A. Grant will lecture on "Ostia and Herculaneum," two ancient Roman cities, at the Latin and Modern Languages Session at 2 p.m., Friday at Salina. (continued from page one) spoke on "Utopian Pharmacy" and "Milk and its Sanitation." Nash stated that pharmacists in the sole source of pharmacy troubles. The pharmacists can settle their differences by uniting in a common front to manufacturers who may run small pharmacies out of business. The first ethics of the employer should tend toward employees and prevent uncomplimentary practices. Poor products should be ousted to prevent loss of the true professional art by presenting a unified front to gain the Utopian pharmacy. Butel stated that students who felt the recent effects of the milk shortage will be interested to learn it was the result of a greater demand in communities paying higher prices. Consumers are protected against bacteria endangering our health by the enforced state laws which provide antiseptically clean condition and pasteurization. NASH, BUTEL- HIS NEWEST IS HIS BEST! VARSITY All Shows 20c plus tax Shows 2-7, 2-9, Continuous Sunday TODAY THRU WEDNESDAY 2—TOP HITS—2 No. 1 THRILLS In the Wide Open Town of the Wide Open Spaces Tombstone' The Town Too Tough to Die Richard Dix - Kent Taylor — No. 2 — The Bauer's Shock Troops Grossa the Skids for the Axis! The East Side Kids 'LET'S GET TOUCH' Tom Brown - Florence Rice And the East Side Kids PATEE Shows 2-7-9, Continuous Sunday TODAY AND MONDAY ALL SHOWS 15c The Bride Wore a Startled Look! No Girl Ever Got So Many Surprises on Her Honeymoon! 'One Thrilling Night' J BEA - WANDA McKAY TUESDAY—3 Days Double Shock Story Men Without Women! — Shock No. 1 — "Men of San Quentin" — And — "TODAY I HANG"