Page 2 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1951 To Give Vespers Program Sunday The School of Fine Arts will present the 109th All-Musical Vespers at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium. The five largest music organizations on the campus will participate in the varied program. They are the University band and the University Symphony orchestra, both under the direction of Russell L. Wiley; the Women's Glee club, directed by Clayton Krebhiel; the Men's Glee club, directed by Joseph Wilkins, and the A Cappella chair, directed by Donald M. Swarthout. The program will include: Band: "Water Music Suite" (Hand- del). Women's Glee club: "John Anderson" (Pozdro) and "Psalm 134" (Katherine Mulkv). Men's Glee club: "Hark! The Vesper Hymn is Stealing" (Russian air arr. Manney), "Turn Ye to Me" (Scotch folk song arr. A.T. Davison) and "Land-Sighting" (Grieg). Orchestra: The overture from "The Russian Easter Festival" (Rimsky-Korsakoff). A Cappella choir: "Tu est Petrus" (Palestina), "Bless the Lord, O My Soul" (Ippolitoff-Ivanoff), "Praise the Lord from Heaven" (Rachmani-nof) and "Deep River" (arr. Ring-wald). Richard Wright, tenor, and Franklin McCollum, baritone, will sing incidental solos with the Men's Glee club. Will Test On Western Civ Preliminary examinations in Western Civilization will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on Nov. 28 and 29. Louise R. Cochran, assistant director of the program, announced today. The Western Civilization preliminary is given to provide a check on progress for students enrolled in the requirement. The preliminary exam is optional; students are not required to take it. No grade is given, but the exam is scored, and the student may discuss it with his proctor. The examination will be offered in two parts: one part will cover units one through five, and the other will cover units six through ten, and will be given in 9 Strong. Both parts of the preliminary will be given both nights in their respective places. The Western Civilization final will be given on Jan. 5, 1952. Arnold Air society members will decide soon whether or not first and second year AFROTC students will be allowed to join their organization at the national conclave for AAS members in Miami, Fla., Nov. 24. Take More Men Air Society May The movement on the part of many branches of the organization to bring the basic students into the national society will be one of the primarily discussed questions. Should the motion be carried, the University Hap Arnold Jawhawk Air society for basic students will be discontinued and those men will be given the chance to go into the senior organization. The Arnold Air society is for juniors and seniors in the AFROTC program. HAJAS was organized last year. Lt. Col. James J. Hausman, associate professor of air science and tactics, is moderator of the two groups. Will Commemorate Founding Of Paris The French club, Cercle Francais, will observe the 2.000th anniversary of the founding of Paris at its meeting 7.30 p.m. Thursday at 113 Strong. A prize will be awarded to the person with the costume which best represents some Paris building. Also there will be quizzes and skits about Paris. Larry Johnston, College sophomore, will be in charge of the program. JOSEPH BENINTENDE, Kansas City, was questioned by New York police about the fixing of a CCNY-Bradley basketball game for $10,000 and also about the unsolved murder of Charles Binaggio. ISA Will Sell Xmas Cards Christmas cards with scenes of the campus will be sold by the Independent Students association Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday Each box, containing 16 scenes, will sell for 75 cents. Cards will be sold in the Union from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Monday and from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. They will be sold in strong hall from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Monday. Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College will visit the junior colleges in six towns this week. They include Chanute, Iola, Baldwin, Paola, Ft. Scott and Parsons. Dean Lawson is the chairman of the University committee on relations with junior colleges. To Visit Junior Colleges To Speak To Young Demos Robert M. Davis, professor of law, will speak on "Problems of American Government," before the Young Democrats club tonight. The meeting will be at 7:45 p.m. in 106 Green, with Martha Ann Truman, club president, in charge. Other business of the meeting included the reading and group criticism of manuscripts. Material for the next issue of Upstream was also discussed. The deadline for entering the contest will be Nov. 26. Students entering the contest are required to submit two typewritten copies of each entry to Mr. Sturgeon, room 211, Fraser. The manuscript should be identified by the author's pen name, and place the same penname along with the full name and address on the envelope when submitting the manuscript. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Efforts to solve the mysteries of diseases of the heart and blood vessels will be enlarged at the University of Kansas with support from the National Heart institute, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy announced today. All students are eligible to enter the contest. Entrants competing in the contest will be considered for membership in the Quill club. A cash prize of $10 will be awarded for the best short story and a $5 prize for the best poem. The prize winning story and poem will be published in Upstream magazine. Quill Club Plans Fall Contest The institute, an agency of the U.S. Public Health service, is giving $8,950 for a year's work. The work will be directed by Dr. Kenneth E. Jochim, professor of physiology. The KU research on the dynamics of the circulatory system is entering its sixth year. In that time the U.S. Public Health service has given $40,285 for its support. Final plans for fall creative writing contest being sponsored by the Quill club were made in a meeting in the East room of the Union Tuesday. Personnel representations of the Texas company, Tulsa, Okla., will interview graduating engineers Friday. Nov. 16. in Marvin hall. KU Receives Money For Heart Research The company is interested in chemical, mechanical, electrical, geological and petroleum engineers and engineering physicists. Amateurs Can Get Training Texaco Will Hold Job Interviews By attending all of the classes the student has a good chance to pass the government code examination for an amateur license. He will then be able to talk with any of the 100,000 other amateur radio operators in the world over his station. The sessions will train individuals to operate radio sending equipment for communications uprobes. There is no connection with commercial announcing. **NEW:** MEDICO CREST—13.00 Medico's Finestin Rich Burgundy finish. Medico V.F.Q. — 12.00 MEDICO MEDALIST—11.50 Wide variety of styles and sizes. Write S, M, Frank A, G, N, Y, Lett. Booklet 0 The Radio club of the University is sponsoring practice sessions in radio code and theory to help train interested students to become amateur radio operators. The sessions will be conducted by Richard Shackelford, engineering senior, and Kenneth Jellison, engineering freshman. Classes will be held at 7:30 p.m. every Wednesday in the EE lab behind Marvin hall. They will begin today. MEDICO CIGARETTE HOLDERS-$1 Interested persons should sign schedule in the engineering office. The oldest of the U.S. mints was established at Philadelphia in 1792, says National Geographic society. Others are now also operated at San Francisco and Denver. THE MEETING'S UPSTAIRS What happens to a high-flying enemy bomber when it meets the newest anti-aircraft guided missile shouldn't happen to a low-flying duck. Radar "eyes" and electronic "brains" make sure the meeting takes place. They guide the pilotless missile to within lethal range of the plane, then explode it. This teaming of intricate tracking and computing devices was made possible by teaming of another sort. The electronic control system was developed for Army Ordnance by the Bell Telephone Laboratories and the Western Electric Company, close-working research and manufacturing units of the Bell System. It's just one of the many important military projects being entrusted to the Bell System. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM BELL SYSTEMS INC. CHICAGO, IL 60613