1942 SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Naval Air On Campus As Sailors Inhabit West Ad The United Etates entry in the European conflict was driven home to the campus and Lawrence on July when the first division of trainees for the United States Naval Training school (machinists mates) arrived to begin a four-month training course to fit the men for service on ships. The trainees are sent here from an intensive six weeks boot training at the Great Lakes Naval Training* station in Illinois. Located in West Frank Strong hall, the sailors brought several innovations to the campus. The quarters, which included a partitioned section of the lower, main and second decks, (naval terminology for floors) and all of the third deck, are closed to the public as are all military stations. Trainees are restricted aboard ship (quarters) and are kept within the naval area unless given permission by an officer. Liberty within Lawrence is from 1400 (2:00 p.m.) to 0100 (1:00 a.m.) on Saturday and from 0800 (8:00 a.m.) to 2100 (9:00 p.m.) Sunday. Overnight liberty is granted one platoon of each division and the men who receive best recommendation for their rooms at inspection. Four days a week captain's mast is held in the captain's office, at which time men who are charged with violations of rules are tried. Such violations have been scarce so far. Serious offenses include absence over leave (which includes late arrival from liberty hours), or A.W.O.L. On the main deck are located the officer's quarters, telephone system, and watch. Below deck are showers; sleeping quarters and bunks are located on the second and top decks. A ship's service, where trainees may get personal articles, candy, cocacola, and similar small purchases, has been established in a recreation room where the trainees are allowed to smoke, read, and relax during their free time. Profits derived will come back to the men in the form of athletic equipment. Classes, which are held in Fowler shops and Frank Strong hall, are in two divisions: shop mathematics and machine work. The regular training procedure is to start with blueprint reading and bench metal work, and continue through instruction in the operation of milling machines, shapers, lathes, pianers, and in precision grinding and welding. Study in the mechanical engineering laboratory completes the training. BUY WAR STAMPS . . . Bradshaw Appoints Ryther As Senior Air Raid Warden Prof. George W. Bradshaw, in charge of civilian defense training for Lawrence, has appointed Thomas C. Ryther, director of the University press, as the University's senior air raid warden. A junior air raid warden has been appointed for each University building. The wardens attended warden's schools which meet two nights a week for two hours in 206 Marvin hall during the summer with Prof. William Boardman of the Kansas Electric Power Co., and William G. W. Bradshaw, W. H. Hinton and Evans of the Haskell Institute as instructors. University air raid wardens who have been attending the school include: Additional University men attending as wardens from one or more of the other 26 sectors include Charles F. McCreight, A. H. Turney, Ogden S. Jones, H. W. Hargiss, and E. G. Stith. C. M. Baker, R. Q. Brewster, W. F. Smith, Paul G. Hausman, R. S. Tait, E. H. Taylor, C. J. Posey, E. O. Stene, Frank S. Owens, Adolph Ochse, J. W. Twente, Clarence Baker, Charles Wolfson, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, and Thomas C. Ryrhe. Own 3,000 Chapter Houses Chapter houses are owned by nearly 3,000 fraternities and sororities. HONOR ROLL— A Word of Welcome (continued from page six) Donald Ross Germann, Alta Vista; Claire Eileen Giles, Abilene; Mary Tudor Hanna, Lawrence; Winfield Scott Harvey, Salina; Harmon Mills RENT: Room for woman graduate student or instructor. 1531 Kentucky, Apt. 207. Phone 3025-M after 5 p.m. week days or all day Saturday and Sunday. 2-4 from WANT ADS Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" Students Jewelry Store for 39 Years. 911 Mass. St. Holladay, Jr., Midian; Robert Baker Hutchinson, Hutchinson; David Niesley Hutchinson, Wakeeney. Lucy Jeanne Johnson, Rosiclare, Illinois; Vivian Lorraine Johnson, Enterprise; Virginia Irene Kline, Miller; Floyd Harold Krebiel, Mounddridge; Margaret Kreider, Lawrence; Benjamin Bernard Lampert, New York, N. Y.; Betty Lucile Learned, Belmont, Mass; De'mar Leonard Lefmann, Lawrence; Jane Wofford Malin, Lawrence; Robert James Mann, Woodbine; Kathryn Louise Martin, Pratt; Melvin LeRoy Masterson, Louisburg; Elizabeth Shirley Maxwell, Leavenworth; Jack Edward Moore, Salina; Frances Ann Morrill, Hiawata; Veda Mignion Morton, Nortonville; Anna Mary Murphy, Lawrence; Jean Anderson Murray, Lawrence; Philip Lawson Nesbett, Kansas City. Dorothy Nicholson, Ellis; Doris Louise Nieweg, Leavenworth; Arthur Partridge, Coffeyville; Kathryn Louise Pearcy, Wichita; Thomas Rugely Perdue, Horace; Lavon Marie Peters, Minneapolis; Robert Gene Pippin, Wichita; Lewell Sylvan Porter, Council Grove; Dan David MacReynold Ragle, Lawrence; James Sidney Reed, Salina; Paula Vera Reeve, Phoenix, Arizona; Victor Merlin Rew, Norcature; James Evan Roderick, Jr., Wetmore; Harriet Clark Rouse, Hays; Richard Paul Royer, Abilene; Vern Hampton Schneider, Lawrence; Rodney Walden Selfridge, Liberal; Alice Irene Shaffer, Great Bend; John Morley WELCOME K. U. Students THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel New Fall Books are coming in daily and you are cordially invited to come in and see them. Webster's Colegiate Dictionary, Rand McNally's Readers Atlas, special books on aeronautics and mathematics are here for you to see. We also have the complete Modern Library series and a Rental Library of the popular fiction, nonfiction and detective stories. We hope that you will consider this your bookshop and drop in whenever you are down town. Shløtlen, Great Bond; Jeanne Emilie Shoemaker, Salina; Eugene Smith, Topeka; Persis Snook, Hutchinson; Ruth Ann Stair, Topeka; Elizabeth Stephenson, Kansas City, Mo.; Virginia Lou Stephenson, Lawrence. Robert Stevens, Oskaloosa; Flavia Stone, Vinland; Helen Marguerite Stormer, Dighton; Lawrence Stream, Kansas City; Betty Jo Svoboda, Lawrence; Edward Nelson Tiben, Wichita; Ruth Ann Tippin, Topeka; Judson Townley, Topeka; Settime Trapani, Leavenworth; John Roger Triplett, Emporia; Sidney Carr Walker, Kansas City, Missouri; Nona Maurine Waterstradt, Detroit; Quentin DeLattice Whelett, Gypsum; Phyllis Mary Wickert, Claflin; Suzanne Wieder, Kansas City, Missouri; Georgia Frances Wiggins, Great Bend; Susie Mae Wilkerson, Lawrence; Lois Elaine Willows, Topeka; Jeanne Williams, Clay Center; Bernard Edward Welkow, Wichita; George Irwin Worrell, Kansas City. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE, KANSAS Eighth & Mass. St. Phone 30 The Student Bank Since 1877 Member of Federal Reserve Bank and F.D.I.C. Greetings Students and Faculty- For over forty years we have extended greetings to you at the beginning of each school year. Through all the years we have been serving the faculty and students of K.U., we have kept our laundry and dry cleaning service as fine as money can buy. You can rely on the best in laundry and dry cleaning if you send them to— Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners 10th at New Hampshire Phone 383 We clean everything you wear but your shoes