SUNDAY NOVEMBER 3.1940. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS A. B. C. D. News From Page One CELEBRATION PLANS I. Fraternities and men's dormitories. II. Sororites and women's dormitories. III. Unorganized and semi-organized houses. Prizes in each class will be awarded upon the recommendation of judges as follows: First prize, $8.00; second prize, $5.00; third prize, $2.00. A fourth prize of $2.00 will be awarded Class I if there are as many as 16 entries in that class. Legal Institute Another special conclave that will bring many alumni is the Legal Institute, a lecture series for lawyers being sponsored jointly by the State Bar Association, the School of Law and the University Extension THE HOMECOMING PROGRAM Friday, November 8 3:00 p.m. Registration opens in Memorial Union, W.S.G.A. and Jav Janes in charge. 6:00 p.m. Dinner hour program over KFKU. 8:00 p.m. Homecoming parade down Massachusetts street. DOWN MASSACHUSETTS AREA 8:35 p.m. Rally Eight and Massachusetts, broadcast from WREN. 9:30 p.m. Kansas Relays club mixer, Eldridge hotel grill room. Saturday, November 9. 10:30 a.m. Meeting of representatives from all classes, Memorial Union, to plan Seventy-fifth Anniversary reunions. 2:00 p.m. Football game, Oklahoma vs. Kanas, Memorial stadium. 11:30 a.m. Second and third generation group pictures, Dyche museum steps. 9:00 p.m. Homecoming Varsity, Memorial Union. 4:30 p.m. Open House, Memorial Union. Division. All lawyers in Douglas and adjacent counties have been invited as well as all alumni of the School of Law resident in Kansas. Between 200 and 400 persons are expected to attend. The sessions will run Friday afternoon and evening and Saturday morning. The Alumni office is calling in a representative from each class to confer on plans regarding class reunions at the Seventy-Fifth Anniversary celebration. Alpha Tau Omega has an enormous roll of alumni returning for its 40th anniversary celebration and new chapter house dedication. Football Teams Reunion The members of the University's first six teams (1890-95 inclusive) are returning after fifty years to attend this homecoming. The 1890 team members returning are Thornton Cooke, Kansas City; C. W. Frederick, Rochester, N.Y.; J. W. Dyer, Wichita C. W. Baldridge, Chicago, Ill.; R. D. Brown, Idabel, Okla.; and Prof. E. M. Hopkins, their manager. In addition, W. H. H. Piatt and Frederick Dobson, both of Kansas City, are members of the 1891 team who will attend. Many other members of teams up to and including 1895 will be in the party. A pageant telling the story of the past fifty years will be presented at the half-time intermission of the Homecoming game, under the directorship of Russell Wiley, University band director. Wade Pierce, '27, Lawrence, is general chairman of Homecoming this year. He has a committee of 31 students, faculty members, and alumni assisting him in the preparations. HILL PARTIES— has been waging a vigorous campaign in the hope that landslide in its favor might swing both council positions to the Rising Sun and give it the lead that P.S.G.L. now has. In the past week both parties have issued pamphlets, tags, and platforms in an attempt to sway the vote of freshman men. In the rooming house districts freshman members of both parties have been out talking to undecided voters and playing up the good qualities of their respective political societies. P. S.G.L. freshmen candidates named two weeks ago include Dale Ewing, c'44, for president, Bill Brownlee, c'44, for treasurer, and Arthur Nelson, c'44, and Jack Browne, e'44, candidates for the student council posts. Society of Pachacamac candidates are Jack Milam, c'44, for president, Roy Shoaf, c'44, for treasurer, and for the student council post, Marion Haynes, c'44, and Bill Porter, c'44. Y.M.-Y.W. Cabinets Hear Denver Pastor Principal speaker for the meeting was the Rev. Edgar Wahlburg of Grace community church in Denver, Colo. He spoke on three topics: "Christianity and the Modern World," "Techniques of Christian Living," and "The Meaning of Christian Commitment." The first in a series of retreats planned for the Y.M. and Y.W. cabinets was held yesterday at the Methodist church in Reno, Kan., John J. O. Moore, executive secretary, has announced. Homing pigeons will fly from 600 to 700 miles. A 1,500 mile distance has been flown, but this is an exceptional record. The consignments from the U.S. are handled by a group of 40 women, most of whom are Americanborn. Clothing, which is scarce in England because war-time manufacturing concentrates on military needs is needed, spokesmen say. Clothing and food supplies go without discrimination to any country's refugees who have arrived in England and need help. Air raid victims benefit greatly from the fund. The Relief Fund is working to supply mobile canteens or "kitchen wagons," which are greatly needed after air raids to provide food for the victims. Special shipping and distribution facilities have been initiated to hasten the delivery of the much-needed supplies, not only for the shipments of the Fund, but for the other relief organizations of this country as well. Seek Aid For Civilian War-Victims Winthrop W. Aldrich, president of the Allied Relief Fund, an American organization formed to help relieve the suffering among London's poor, has asked Americans to contribute as much as possible to aid Great Britain in securing civilian and medical needs. Any donations are to be sent to the Allied Relief Fund, 57 William Street, New York, N.Y. Contributions are cabled to London as rapidly as the money is received by the Fund. The Relief Fund hopes to aid in maintaining the morale of the people which is so necessary in time of war. Virtually all former airplane manufacturers in France have been arrested charged with slow production in a critical time. TYRONE POWER — In His Greatest Role Since "Jesse James" — and Lovely Dorothy Lamour, Revealing Her True Allure: POWER DOROTHY LAMOUR with EDWARD ARNOLD LLOYD_NOLAN CHARLEY GRAPEWIN LIONEL ATWILL A 20th Century-Fax Picture 2nd HIT The Strangely Thrilling Story of "Millionaires in Prison" LEE TRACY Back on the Screen at Last! Two National Speakers At Journalism Meet MONDAY NITE, 8:30 Social Security Nite $55 CASH FREE! editors and publisher of Kansas newspapers. Albert T. Reid, noted New York cartoonist, and head of the Reid syndicate, and Floyd L. Hockenhull of Chicago, publisher of Circulation Management magazine, will be principal speakers at the University of Kansas annual journalism roundtables to be held next Saturday, Nov. 9. The roundtables are conducted for editors and publisher of Kan- $ ^{2}$ Reid, who several years ago, presented to the department of journalism a collection of more than a hundred original cartoons by well-known artists, will speak on the part cartoons play in the political campaigns. Hockenhul has as his subject "Workable Ways to Increase Net Profits from Circulation." If circumstances permit, Cliff Stratton, Washington correspondent, will also be among the speakers. He is to analyze the results of the election. Mo. C. O. Doggett, president of the Oklahoma Press association is also on the list of probable speakers at the conference. The roundtable sessions will begin early Saturday morning and continue until the time of the formal program at 10:30. The "Wrangle List,” a group of topics, sent in by Kansas editors, will be discussed and debated. Publishers and their wives will be guests at a noon luncheon served at the Memorial Union building through the courtesy of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the University Daily Kansan. In the afternoon, they will be guests of the University at the football game between Kansas and Oklahoma. Has Textbook Published Announcement was made yesterday by Prof. J. F. Brown that his text "The Psychodynamics of Abnormal Behavior." published by McGraw Hill in New York, will be off the presses tomorrow. Today Continuous From 2:30 4 GRAND DAYS! They're Terrific Together ... turbulent romance as two desperate desires wage tragic warfare in a woman's soul! CAROLE LOMBARD CHARLES LAUGHTON "They Knew What They Wanted" FREE GIFTS TO ALL LADIES Starting Monday for 6 Days WE WILL GIVE AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE ONE OF AMERICA'S FOREMOST COOK BOOKS COMPILED BY THE CULINARY ARTS INSTITUTE. THE ACTUAL VALUE OF THIS BOOK IS 25c AND IT IS TITLED 500 SNACKS — BRIGHT IDEAS FOR ENTERTAINING! 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