Friday, January 5, 1968 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN This is an example of a simple Java program that prints the name of a person. It uses an if statement to check if the input is empty and then prints the name of the person. The program also includes some basic formatting and spacing using text attributes and HTML tags. B Six recitals to close fall calendar Recording artist John Browning, described by Time magazine as "one of the most gifted pianists of his generation," will present a concert chorus recital at 8:20 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre. The School of Fine Arts also will present five student recitals during the last days of this semester. Browning, who has toured at least six countries, began his international career in 1956 when he won the Gold Medal Award of the Concours International Musicale. Browning's recital will include "Five Sonatas" by Scarlatti, "Sonata in A Major" by Schubert, "Four Preludes" by Debussy, and "Etudes Symphoniques" by Schumann. KU students may reserve seats for the Browning recital at no charge with current certificates of registration. Tickets for general admission, available at the Murphy Hall box office, are $2.50, $3 and $3.50. The student fine arts recitals will include original compositions by James Wintle, Kansas City graduate student and assistant instructor of piano, to be presented at 8 p.m. Friday in Swarthout Recital Hall. Wintle is presenting the recital in partial fulfillment of requirements for the Doctor of Musical Arts in Composition degree. The program includes Introduction and "Allegro" for Violin and Piano"; "Sonata for Clarinet, Violin and Piano"; "Music for Chamber Ensemble"; "Brass Quartet," and "Sonata for Piano," all composed since 1965. "Requiem," written in 1874 by Italian composer Guiseppe Verdi, will be presented by the Combined Choruses and the University Symphony at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium. Soloists for "Requiem" are soprano Ineta Bebb, assistant instructor of voice; mezzo-soprano Judith Hughes, Skokie, III., senior; tenor Bruce Gardner, assistant instructor of voice; and bass-baritone Gerald Phillips, New York City graduate student. Contralto Mary Kistner, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, will present a recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall in partial fulfillment of requirements for the Master of Music in Voice degree. Works by Mozart, Strauss and Debussy will be included in Miss Kistner's program. Two senior recitals, presented in partial fulfillment for the Bachelor of Music degree, will be presented next week in Swarthout Recital Hall. Keith Dougherty, Westmont, Ill., will present a trumpet recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Linda Drake, Westope, N.D., will accompany him on the piano. Pianist Marlea Zimmer, Chappell, Neb., will present her recital at 8 p.m. Thursday. Sports cars will rally around the 'Arctic Circle' The North Pole will be the imaginary destination for entrants in a Jayhawk Sports Car Club time-speed-distance (TSD) rallye Jan. 7. The actual destination of the midwinter "Arctic Circle Rallye" is a secret, said Joe Goodman, Overland Park sophomore and rallymaster, but Goodman promises a party for those reaching it. In a TSD rallye the entrants must calculate exactly how long it will take them to drive a specified number of miles. For instance, they may be told to drive 35 miles per hour for 10 miles, then 40 m.p.h. for 12 miles and so on. They attempt to drive exactly that speed while calculating their time to double check their speed. Questions about landscape and points of interest along the way also must be answered while on the road, Goodman said. The winners will be the entrants whose times come closest to the actual time required to cover the set distance at the set speeds. Trophies will be awarded to the winners. Goodman said the rallye will be about two hours long. Registration for the rallye begins at 12:30 p.m. at the Malls Shopping Center and the first car will leave at 1:31 p.m. Entrants should bring writing materials, a navigator and a watch, he said. A short-tempered man from Wheeling, Lost his cool and went clear through the ceiling, The night he found out That the Schlitz had run out. Now his head and his ceiling are healing. 1997 Jos. Schiltz Brewing Co. Milwaukee and other cities KU official to speak in Detroit Carl G. Seashore, director of KU's continuing education program for supervisory management development, will be a speaker at the annual meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers in Detroit, Mich., Jan. 8-12. His paper will be on "The Scientific Application of Optics and Accident Prevention to Mirror Vision for Commercial Drivers." 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