University Daily Kansan Page 3 Carillon Recitals Set for Summer A change, effective this summer, in the schedule of recitals on the carillon was announced today by Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts. Recitals are now played at 3 p.m. Sundays and 7 p.m. Wednesdays. Effective June 4, the Wednesday concerts will be started an hour later, at 8 p.m. "I have just returned from visiting the carilions between Chicago and the west coast. The University of Kansas instrument was the finest carillon on the finest site that I have found anywhere on the trip. Percival Price, famous carillonneur to the University of Michigan who recently played a recital on the KU bells, this week sent Dean Gorton a letter of high praise for the instrument. He wrote: "I hope that with this fortunate combination it will be of good cultural influence and give pleasure for centuries until people regard it with pride as an ancient instrument, and you with esteem for having established it in the troublous times of the 20th century. "The University of Kansas is supporting a high level of carillon music which would shame many places in the east. It was a pleasure to play your fine carillon." Magazine Publishes KU Alumna's Story Mrs. Martha McMillin, who received an AB degree from the University, is the author of a children's story in the May issue of The Instructor magazine. The story, "The Alpine Horn," is for middle and upper grades. Mrs. McMillin, a former school teacher, has contributed children's stories to several other magazines in recent years. She is now living in San Bernardino, Calif. At KU Mrs. McMillin was Martha Piotrowski of Fort Scott. Social Work Group Holding Discussions First-year graduate students in social work who have been doing field work this semester are meeting with members of the faculty of the department of social work for an afternoon discussion and a picnic, Wednesday. The event is being held in place of the annual Social Work day which cannot be held this year because of construction taking place in the meeting rooms in the Union. The 26 graduate students are participating in a discussion with faculty members from 1-4:30 p.m. for the purpose of co-ordinating their field work experience with class work. Following the discussion, the graduate students, faculty, and undergraduate social work majors will meet at the home of Miss Twente, 2145 Barker street for a picnic supper. PETER PAUPER PRESS BOOKS Beautifully printed and attractively bound. $2.00 Gerard Manley Hopkins-Poems Songs of Sappho Robert Herrick-Songs and Lyrics John Donne-Love Poems Housman-A Shropshire Lad Browning-Sonnets from the Portuguese Chinese Love Poems Keats-Poems, Odes, Sonnets Shelley-Poems and Lyrics Kipling-Barrack Room Ballads You are cordially invited to come in and see them. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 WeaverS 910 Mass. Pharmacy Seniors To Be Feted May 2 The junior class of the School of Pharmacy will give the annual dinner in honor of the graduating seniors Friday at the Eldridge hotel. Thursday, May 1, 1952 J. Allen Reese, dean of the School of Pharmacy, will present the scholastic awards and Duane Wenzel, assistant professor of pharmacy, will present the American pharmaceutical association award. Carroll Smith, president of the junior class, will be toastmaster. Eugene Kermashek, vice-president of the junior class, will welcome the seniors and Harry Foster, president of the senior class, will receive the welcome. O. P. Backus, assistant professor of history, will be a speaker at one of the sessions held on Friday. His topics will be "Was Moscovite Russia Imperialist?" and "The Catholic Orthodox Struggle and its Effect upon Historical Interpretation." Faculty members of the department of history will attend the meeting of the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields in Topeka Friday and Saturday. Professors to Attend History Meeting At a luncheon Saturday, George Anderson, professor of history, will speak on "History Versus the Social Sciences." Loan Fund Set Up By Harmon Co-op The establishment of the Harmon Co-op House women's loan fund of $341.85 at the University was announced today by Irvin Youngberg, secretary of the KU Endowment association. Esther Harms of Whiting today turned over a check for that amount representing the balance remaining after settling all accounts of the Harmon Women's Co-op, which suspended operations in February 1951. Patronize Kansan Advertisers. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 41...THE MAGPIE He's a chatterbox himself—outclassed by no one! But the fancy double-talk of cigarette tests was too fast for him! He knew—before the garbled gobbledygook started—a true test of cigarette mildness is steady smoking. Millions of smokers agree—there's a thorough test of cigarette mildness. It's the sensible test...the 30-day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke-on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once you've tried Camels in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why ... After all the Mildness Tests . . . Camel leads all other brands by billions