University Daily Kansan 13 Fine Arts Students Chosen To Present Recital in Strong Thirteen fine arts students have been selected to present the weekly recital set for 3 p.m. Thursday, May 1. This program by outstanding students will be presented in Stron auditorium and is open to the public. Richard Wright, fine arts junior; will open the program by singing "Care Selve" by Handel. Wright is a tenor. He will be accompanied by R. C. Broadstone, a senior. A trio of flutists will play "Miniature Suite No. 2" by Abelardo Albisi. They are Jacque Cook, Carol Official Bulletin TODAY Nursing club: 4, Fraser dining room. Miss Hubert, Psychiatric nurse to answer questions. Jay Janes: 5. Pine room. YWCA cabinet: meeting and supper. 5:30, Henley house. Phi Mu Alpha: important meeting entire chapter, 7, 131 Strong. Induction of new officers, plans for chapter day and initiation. Arnold Air society: 7:30. Nominations for next year's officers. Chess club: 7:30, Recreation room, Union. Persons interested in editorship or business management of 1952-53 Jayhawker Magazine should contact Karl Klooz, Advisory Board Chairman, KU Business office. Selections to be made April 26. Senior announcements; are now on sale at the business office. Dead- Faculty Advisory group: seeks student advice on liberal arts course revision. Contact John Kliever, Phone 726. THURSDAY A.I.A. 8 p.m. Spooner auditorium. David Runnells, speaker. Quack club: 7:30 p.m., Robinson pool. Math club: 5 p.m., 203 Strong, K. C. Hsu, speaker. Deutscher Verein: Donnerstag·5, 502 Fraser. Pershing Rifles: 5 p.m., 15 M. S. building, Members please attend. Gamma Alpha Chi: 5 p.m., 104 Journalism building. Psychology club: 7:30 p.m., 9 Strong, K Wade Bennett, vice president at personnel at Macy's in 'N the Place of Psychology in Business.' All Engineers: please attend meeting, 12:30 p.m., Hoch auditorium, to nominate class representatives on the Engineering Council. Martin, fine arts seniors and Jo Anna Fisher, fine arts freshman. Judith Tate will sing Chinamade "L'Ete." Miss Tate is a soprano. Her accompanist will be Martha Green. Both are fine arts freshmen. Betty Cobb, a piano student, will play De Falla's "Ritual Fire Dance." Linda Stormont, fine arts sophomore, will sing two selections for mezo-sprano voice. They are "The First Meeting" and "Thy Warning Is Good." both by Grieg. Nancy Hindman, fine arts junior, will play a piano selection by Griffes entitled "The White Peacock." Helen Fry, journalism senior, will sing "Norwegian Echo Song," arranged by Thrane. She will be accompanied by Jerald Stone, fine arts freshman. James York, fine arts sophomore will present Five Preludes for Piano, Op. 38, by Kabalevsky. Air Force Sergeant Assigned to Detroit M/Sgt. Robert L. Williams, assistant instructor of air science, has been transferred to the headquarters of the 10th Air Force at Selfridge Air Force base near Detroit. Sgt. Williams is the last member of the original Air Force ROTC staff, which was formed at the University in September, 1946, to be transferred. Sgt. Williams will be called to active duty as a captain effective April 30. He will be given administrative duties at the Air Force base. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship: 7:30 p.m., 131 Strong, Speaker; Paul Lindell of Lutheran Mission. All welcome. I. V.C.F. Missionary: meeting, 12 noon-12:50, Danforth chapel, Paul Lindell, missionary, speaker. All students invited. FRIDAY Kappa Phi: Galloping party: 7-8:30 p.m., Danforth chapel. Come early if possible. early in position. German club: costume party, 8:30 p.m. Art Museum. Everybody interested in German invited. BRIECE ACATION all expense escorted land tours American Express - Mexico - 13 days $230.00 Berry Tour - Miami Beach - 6 days 111.90 Berry Tour - Saguenay Cruise - 11 days 247.90 Cook's Tour - Hawaii - 14 days 707.00 Happiness Tour - Black Hills - 9 days 160.25 RESERVATIONS VACATION— - STEAMSHIPS * AIRLINES City Ticket Office THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY 8th and Mass. St. Braniff Offers Scholarships Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager telephone 30 Braniff International airways will again award 50 air travel scholarships to encourage international education among the Americas. Amounting to approximately $30,000 the travel grants for the 1952-53 school year will be awarded to 25 Latin American students for graduate work in the United States and 25 U.S. scholars attending universities in Latin America. Each award consists of a roundtrip air ticket, authorized for a year's study, and available between any of the nine cities served by Braniff in Latin America and any of the 29 cities on its U.S. routes. The scholarship program is authorized by the Civil Aeronautics board of the U.S. department of commerce. The institute of international education will select the student. The institute is a 32-year-old organization devoted to the exchange of students among 73 countries of the world. To be eligible, a student must meet certain scholastic requirements set up by the institute and must be unable to provide his own transportation and year of foreign study. North American students applying for these fellowships should write to the institute of international education, One East 67th st., New York 21, N.Y., attention Eleanor Middleditch. Plans Completed For Pledge Picnic Plans for the sorority pledge picnic were completed during the Junior Panhellenic meeting yesterday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house. At 11:30 a.m. May 3 the pledge classes will gather at Potter lake. Box lunches will be provided by the Student Union for 55 cents. Shirley Bailey, fine arts junior, is in charge of the food. Mary Lou Penfold, education junior, in charge of entertainment. It took three football players, wire, a wastebasket and a screen, to rescue a muskrat trapped in the window-well of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority house. Shirley Deniston, fine arts sophomore, first saw the animal through the basement window. She and Janet Allen, college sophomore, called Andrew Tutt, the houseman, to get it out, and then threw toast to the animal "because it looked hungry." Donation Forms May Be Secured Students who wish to donate blood must have parental release forms, if they are minors, signed by both parents and a witness. After the forms are signed, students may make appointments at Watkins hospital to donate blood. The Red Cross bloodmobile will be set up in the lounge of the Student Union. "I'd like to get 100 independents to give a pint of blood apiece in this drive," Dr. Canuteson said, "to show that they are behind this as much as the organized houses." Envelopes containing all the necessary forms have been distributed in all the organized houses, and the desired goal for the drive is set at 600 pints. Anyone who gave blood in the University Jan 8, 9, 10, and 11 when the bloodmobile visited the ROTC units, is eligible to donate again. Independent students who wish to donate blood in the Red Cross drive May 14, 15, and 16 may pick up parental release forms at Watkins hospital, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director, said today. Muskrat in Window-Well Causes Sorority House Stir None of the blood collected in the forthcoming drive is to be used for civilian consumption in local areas, Dr. Canuteson pointed out. Most of the blood is sent to Korea as whole blood with the remainder being used on other military installations. THIS AD! EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. E. Moore, 838 Lm. Apl. 4, upstairs. P. 2775J. . . LIKE SO MANY OTHERS BROUGHT Results! "I've had many replies from my ad in the Kansan." Said Mrs. E. J. Roscoe. Proof again that it pays to use KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS SO IF YOU - NEED SOMETHING - WANT TO SELL SOMETHING CALL K.U.376 The first opinion was that the animal was a rat. Someone mentioned that it was a muskrat because of the animals' long teeth, and no one could think what else it might be. Merlin Gish, Oliver Spencer, and Galen Fiss, education juniors, came to the muskrat's rescue in the afternoon. It was suggested that some of the boys who come around should get it out. Sometimes he was gently nudged with a long pole to make him run out of a corner so that the curious could get a look at him. After removing the screen from the window, Spencer and Fiss stepped into the well. They trapped the animal in a corner with the screen, and then put him into a wastebasket, which Gish drew to the top of the well with some wire. But the muskrat jumped back into the window-well before the basket reached the top. After several such quick and unsuccessful tries, the basket was slowly hauled up and the muskrat was released. He nonchalantly ambled out of the crowd, rounded the neighbor's flower beds, and headed for the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity's woodpile. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any items or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. YOUR EYES Patronize Kansan Advertisers. ---