Kansas State Historical Society or the bridge fonday room scores were: student, senior; r, and senior; t, and student; r, and senior college record, professor scorement. Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas 49th Year, No. 90 Friday. Feb. 15. 1952 THE KANSAS CITY PHILHARMONIC orchestra will play a concert at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium. Dr. Hans Schwieger, conductor, will direct the 80 piece orchestra. ID cards admit students. News Photographers To Take Course Here Newspaper photographers from 15 Midwestern, Southern and Rocky Mountain states will participate in a photo-journalism course at the University April 17 through 19. The course is one of three annual events beginning this year in the United States in a program sponsored by the National Press Photographers association and Encyclopedia Britannica. Arthur Witman a regional vicepresident of the NPPA, and Dean Burton W. Marvin of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information are collaborating on program arrangements. The course will be held in the new journalism building. Photographers from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Indiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado and Texas will attend. The University Extension is handling registration and housing details. The opportunity to be host to such a course comes at a very appropriate time for the William Allen White school," Dean Marvin said in announcing the event. "With our move into the new journalism building, we are preparing for great expansion in photo-journalism education. Demand for reporter - photographers and journalists who can think in terms of picture stories is increasing steadily. It is clear that we are entering a new media this summer; communication will be more and more in demand and will serve an extremely important purpose in society." The course will include studies of lighting, subject-posing, technical improvements in cameras, film color equipment and darkroom, techniques. Picture editors, news editors and managing editors will be invited, since the theme of the short course will be "camera reportage," and some non-technical data will be discussed. Twenty to 25 lectures and demon- Campus Affairs To Meet Wednesday The Campus Affairs committee meeting will be Wednesday, Feb. 20 instead of the date announced on Friday for the numbers by the Dean of Men's office. The meeting will be at 7:15 p.m. in 222 Strong. Anne Lehmman, college junior will lead a discussion on student fellowship. story on student fellowship. strations will be given in the threeday period. the other short courses in the program will be held at Boston university April 25 and the University of Wisconsin June 23 through 25. The six finalists in the Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest are: Richard Sheldon, college sophomore; William Van Almen, business junior; Don Dirkis, college junior; Sue Moyer, college freshman; Wilbur Goodseal, education senior, and Win Koerper, college senior. Six Are Finalists In Oratory Contest These six will compete in the finals Thursday evening, Feb. 21, in Strong auditorium. They are survivors in a field of 13 who tried out in the preliminaries Thursday night. Judges for the preliminaries were Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor of speech; Wilson O'Connell, assistant instructor of speech, and Gerald Pearson, director of extension classes. Songs included in her selections are "Down in the Forest" and "O, Lovey Night" by Landon Ronald, "Little Shepherd's Song," and "Joy" by Winter Watts and "Do Not Go, My Love" by Haggerman. the weekly buffet supper preceded by an entertainment program will be given at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Faculty club. Mrs. Dale E. Turner will present a light vocal program. She is the wife of Rev. Turner, professor in the School of Religion. William A. Conboy, instructor of speech who served as master of ceremonies for the preliminaries. Vocalist To Sing At Faculty Supper She will also sing numbers by Victor Herbert. Mrs. Turner will be accompanied by Mrs. Reginal Strait. WEATHER Mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday; occasional light snow in Southwest tonight and light snow Northwest and light rain or snow in the South Saturday. Colder in the Southeast portion this afternoon. Lows tonight in 20's. The Universal Day of Prayer will be observed by Christian students of more than 50 nations at 7:15 p.m. Sunday at Trinity Luther church Held annually since 1897, the observance, sponsored by the World Student Christian federation, gives Christian students an opportunity to give evidence of their unity, transcending boundaries of race, denomination, and nation. Day Of Prayer To Be Observed The program for Sunday will be sponsored by the KU Student Religious council and is open to all students. A collection will be taken to support the work of the WSCF. Fourteen national student movements in the United States, including major denominations and the NAACP, participate in the Day of Praise. Following the service the Lutheran Student association has invited persons attending the meeting to a coffee hour at Trinity church. Lutheran students will leave tonight to attend a retreat at Gray Rock Estate, Kansas City, Mo. Lutherans Attend Retreat Tobeka. Ks. KC Philharmonic To Appear Monday The Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra will give a concert at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium. Monday night's program will include the "Water Music Suite" by Handel, the Franck Symphony from "Rosenkavalier" by Richard Strauss and "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Dukas. For the third successive year the University Concert course is presenting the orchestra under the direction of its per ductor, Dr Hans Schwieger. The orchestra was established in 1933, and is now ranked among the top 16 orchestras in the country. The present season is Mr. Schwiiger's fourth one as music director and conductor of the orchestra. He has appeared with the New York philharmonic, the NBC symphony, the Chicago symphony, the National symphony of Washington and the Houston symphony. He gave a series of guest appearances with the Berlin Philharmonic orchestra last spring. Mr. Schwieger was born in Colloge, Germany, where he began his musical education at five. At 21, he became assistant to Erich Kleiber, then the Berlin State Opera house conductor. After three years, he became conductor at Cassel. The following season he wasductored by the composer Augsberg and in 1932 becamedirector of opera and symphony in Mainz. At the Conservatory of Cologne, he concentrated on composition and conducting. Simultaneously he studied philosophy at the University of Cologne and later at the University in Bonn. In 1936 he was general music director for the Free State of Danzig. He gave concerts for six months in Japan. In 1944 he went to Fort Wayne, Ind., to conduct an amateur orchestra. With his performances, he gained national recognition. Phi Kappa To Initiate Bishop E. J. Hunkeler Sunday's carillon program will be played at 3 p.m. by Stanford Lehmberg, college junior. Mr. Schweiger arrived in the United States in 1938. His first position here was music director in Columbia, S.C. There he organized and conducted the Southern symphony orchestra. Student To Play Carillon Program While in Kansas City, one of his major accomplishments was the establishment of the Kansas City Philharmonic Choral society. Other guests will include the Rev. George Towle, pastor of St. John's Catholic church in Lawrence and chaplain of Epsilon chapter, and the Rev. Charles Aziere, O. S. B., of St. Benedict's college in Atchison. The program is "Angelus" by Massenet; "The Girl with the Flaxen Hair" by Debussy; "Dido's Lament" by Purcell; "Suite Archaique" for carillon by Clement; "Londonderry Air" (a folk song), and the hymns, "Crown Him with Many Crowns," "Once to Every Man and Nation" and "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God." The Most Rev. Edward J. Hunkeler, bishop of Kansas City, Kan., will be initiated Sunday as an honorary member of the Epsilon chapter of Phi Kappa, national Catholic social fraternity. The ceremony will be held at the chapter house, 1120 W. 11th street. Joe P. Wimsatt, business senior and president of Epsilon chapter, said today that the schedule of events includes the introduction of Bishop Hunkeler to alumni at 3 p.m. Sunday, the initiation at 3:30 p.m. a reception at 4 p.m., and a buffet luncheon at 5 p.m. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy Wimsatt said that the guests will include the Most Rev. Mark K. Carroll, bishop of Wichita and an honorary member of the Iota chapter of Phi Kappa at Kansas State college, Manhattan, and Jerome S. Koehler, Kansas City, Kan., lawyer and former national president of Phi Kappa. Mr. Koehler will present the pin to Bishop Hunkeler. and the various deans of the University have been invited to attend the ceremony, Wimsatt said. Bishop Hunkeler was installed as bishop of the Kansas City, Kan., diocese in May, 1951, after the death of the Most Rev. George J. Donnelly. Before that he had been bishop of Grand Island, Neb. Phi Kappa is a national Catholic social fraternity founded in 1889 at Brown university in Providence, R. I. The fraternity has 32 active chapters. Epsilon chapter was established at the University in 1915. It was closed during the war years but was reactivated in the spring of 1946. At present 45 men live in the chapter house. The housemother is Mrs. Dana L. Anderson and the advisor is Emil L. Telfel, associate professor of journalism. Organ Recital In Art Museum Set For Sunday Prelude in E Flat Major Otto Meyer, concert organist, will play an organ mass on the baroque organ in the Museum of Art at 4 p.m. Sunday. The mass, the third part of the 'Klavierubung' by Johann Sebastian Bach, includes the following selections: The Gloria: God in the highest be praised (trio). The Kyrie: Kyrie, God, Father in heaven (melody in soprano), Christ, Comforter of the world (melody in tenor), and Kyrie, God, Holy Ghost (melody in bass, 5 voices). The Creed: We all believe in one God (Fugue). The Ten Commandments: These are the holy Ten Commandments (melody in canon). The Lord's Prayer: Our Father who art in heaven. The Baptism: To the Jordan came Christ our Lord (melody in pedal). The Holy Communion: Jesus Christ, our Savior (melody in pedal). FIGURE 15. Mr. Miller, the church music director for the city of Ansbach, Bavaria, is now on a concert tour of the Midwest sponsored by the Kansas City chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Six University artists are represented in the Joslyn Art Museum's second biennial Midwest Exhibition of Paintings, Sculpture and Graphic Arts which opened Tuesday, Feb. 12, in Omaha. KU Artists' Works Shown In Omaha From the total number of entries received, the jury selected for the exhibition a total of 185 paintings, sculpture, prints and drawings by 130 artists. Purchase awards will be made and announced near the close of the exhibition. University artists represented in the exhibition include: John G. Armstrong, instructor of drawing and painting; Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting; William Dean Eckert, instructor of drawing and painting; John D. Peabody, museum curator; C. Tefft, instructor of design, and Marjorie Whitney, professor of design. This exhibition is open to artists in a ten state region, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming. Motorcyclists Need Permits Motorcyclists must apply for parking permits in the traffic office, Robinson gym, or be subject to a traffic ticket for running Wednesday's Kansan incorrectly said motorcycles may be parked behind Bailey Chemical laboratories. Jayhawker Deadline For Pictures Feb.18 Any club or honorary organization which would like to have its picture in the third issue of the Jayhawker must contact Bob Garrity, 868, before 4 p.m. Monday. The cost for a full page is $78.75, half-page, $48.75. Graduating seniors who want their pictures in the fourth issue must have them taken at Hixon's studio before March 15.