Page 8 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 19, 1957 Speech I Workshop Tryouts Set for Today A speech workshop will begin at 7:30 p.m. today for students in Speech 1 classes. The final programs are set for Thursday and Tuesday, April 26. Participants in the workshop will be screened tonight for appearance in the final programs. The finals will be held at 8 p.m. in Strong hall. Eight speakers will be selected for each. Students from the classes conducted by Lynn R. Osborn, instructor of speech; William Crews, assistant instructor of speech, and William Conboy, assistant professor of speech, will try out in 103 Green. The classes of Kim Giffin, associate professor of speech and drama, Ruth Dodrill, assistant instructor of speech and drama, and Nathaniel S. Eek and Charles L. Holt, instructors of speech will try out in 104 Green. Those in classes conducted by Charles W. Dodrill, assistant instructor of speech, and Milton B. Howarth and Richard W. Wilkie, instructors of speech, will meet in 105 Green. Members of the speech and drama department will judge the participants. A list of those chosen for the final programs will be posted outside 5 Green. Mr. Conboy said the workshop was not a contest but a joint class project to give those in Speech 1 classes a common experience and to provide a special motivation for the best speakers. Official Bulletin **Petitions** for producer, assistant producer, director, and business manager of the 1956 Rock Chalk Revue must be submitted to the YMCA office before 5 p.m. today. Applications for Student Union activities officers and board members may be obtained and must be turned in to the SUA office. Student Union, by tomorrow. TODAY Pre-nursing club 7:30 p.m., dining from Fraser Nurses students from Moss Mountain **Museum of Art record concert,** 4 p.m. Schoenberg; Verklaert Nacht; Anton Reicha; Quintet for Wind Instruments in E minor. CUN all-member meeting, 4 p.m. Pine room. Student Union. Ellis Ellis College. Phi Delta Kappa dinner meeting, 6 p.m. English room, Student Union. Mr. Willism D. Wolfe, superintendent of Lawrence public schools, speaker. Forensic League all-University symposium on "Honor Systems." 7:30 p.m. Ballroom, Student Union. Everyone invited. Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Fraser Theater. Mr. James Swensen, director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, N.Y.: "The Language of Painting." Alpha Phil Omega, 7:30 p.m. Student Union, Election. TOMORROW Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Holy Communion, 7 a.m., Dantorthville Morning meditation, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth chapel. Everyone invited. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. The Well Tempered Symphony, a masterpiece by Joshua Bardin. Education club. 4 p.m. 306 Student Union. Talks by 3 student-teachers. Faculty Student coffee, 4 p.m. Student Union, Bill Eldis, YMCA guest speaker, Billy Smith, Walt Disney World El Alueno se reune a las 4:30 en 113 Strong Que vengan todos. History club, 7 p.m. Pine room. Student Union, William A. HauFS AUFS Newman club executive meeting. 6:30 p.m., Castle; Choir, 7 p.m., church. (86) for banquet reservations. Law wives, 8 u.m. . Law Lounge. Law wives. 8. p.m. Law, Lounge, Green hall, Mrs. Elmer Broer, speaker. Green hall. Mrs. Elmer Bront, speller Humanities lecturer. Mr. James Johnson Sweeney, to meet with Fine Art students and others interested, 3 p.m. Spooner lecture room, Museum of Art. African Negro Art" (illustrated.) Lecture Topic On Exhibit EXPERT WATCH REPAIR A display of African primitive art—which will be the subject of a lecture tomorrow and is part of the field of interest of tonight's Humanities series lecturer—is now being shown in the Museum of Art. Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 Week or Less Service The speaker is James Johnson Sweeney, who, in addition to his talk tonight, will lecture at 10 a.m. tomorrow on "Antonio Guadi" and at 3 p.m. on "African Negro Art," both in the Museum of Art. WOLFSON'S The display is from the collection of William Harvey and Claude Brown. It includes woodcarvings and carved figurines from the Matabele, Mashona, and Bajokwe tribes of Belgian Congo and possibly parts of Angola. 743 Massachusetts The second issue this year of the Sour Owl, campus laugh magazine, will go on sale at the Information booth in front of the journalism school and at the door of the Hawks Nest tomorrow. Sour Owl Sales Begin Tomorrow The Owl will be delivered to organized houses during the dinner hour today. Students Entertain At Winter General Students from Alpha Epsilon Pi and Alpha Chi Omega last night entertained patients in Winter General hospital, Topeka. The show, sponsored by the Douglas County Red Cross, was given in the recreation hall and in four individual wards. Those who participated are: Eugene Bortnick, college senior; Jack L. Bloom, fourth year architecture; Philip K. Rubin, engineering junior; Kenneth D. Lerner, business junior; Myrna M. Schneider, Lynne E. Gaumer, and Harvey S. Bodker, all college sophomores. "The Rivals in the School for Scandal," just back from a tour of six Kansas towns, will be presented at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater by the Studio theater under the direction of Allen Crafton, professor of speech and drama. The play is an adaptation of two plays, "The Rivals" and "The School for Scandal," by Richard Sheridan, 18th century English dramatist. It was adapted by Nola Ring, drama librarian of the extension library. Studio Theater to Give Play The plot revolves around two young heroes—Capt, Jack Absolute, played by Morgan Sherwood, graduate student, and Sir Charles Surface, played by Dale Lowery, engineering freshman—who sur- Comedy is furnished by Mrs. Malaprop, played by Judith Heinrich, college sophomore, and a group of ladies called the school of scandal. mount parental disapproval, and feminine whims to claim their loves, Lydia Langish, played by Ann Straub, college sophomore, and Maria, played by Vera Stough, college freshman. The world rice harvest of 1954- 55 is exceeded only by the record crop of the previous year. CAMPUS "STAND-OUTS" Real Gone Gal THIS IS IT! L&M's Miracle Tip's the greatest-pure and white. And it draws real e-a-s-y-lets all of L&M's wonderful flavor come through to you! No wonder campus after campus reports L&M stands out from all the rest. It's America's best filter tip cigarette. © LIGGETT & MYERS TORACCO CO.