SUNDAY, MAY 17, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Fine Art Talent Is Featured In Music Recitals Yolande Meek, student of Dean D. M. Swarthout, will open tomorrow night's program playing the piano "Concert Etude—Autumn" by Moskowski. June Hammett, from the studio of Irene Peabody, will sing "Rain" and "Forgetfulness," while Margaret Fultz, pupil of Ruth Orcutt, will play "?" No. 8 from "Children's Suite" and "Games" No. 8 from "Children's Suite," by Turina. Featuring advanced students from the studios of Fine Arts instructors, two recitals will be held at 7:30 to-morrow and Tuesday evenings in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall. A violin composition will follow, the "Siciliano and Rigaudon" of Kreisler, played by Charlotte Loomis, student of K. O. Kuersteiner. Two voice selections by students of Joseph F. Wilkins feature Helen Colburn singing "Kommt ein Schlanker Burch Gegangen" from "Der Freischutz" by Weber, and Maxine Pringle singing "Le Lever de la Lune" by Saint-Saens. Helen Pierson, violin pupil of Waldemar Geltch, will play "Ballade et Palonaide" by Vieuxtemps; Mary Elizabeth Bitzer, student of Carl A. Preyer, will play Arensky's "Piano Etude in F Sharp major." The first movement of the Tschaikowsky Trio will be played by an ensemble composed of Betty Buchan, piano; Leora Adams, violin; and John Ehrlich, cello, all from the studio of Raymond Stuhl. Sidney Dawson, of the Meribah Moore studio, will sing "Extase" by Duparc, and "Zaza, Piccolo Zingara" from "Zaza," by Leoncavello. Martha Dooley, student of Carl A. Preyer, will play the Paginiin-Liszt piano composition, "Etude in E Flat major." Clarnell Wehrli, student of Meribah Moore, will sing "Three Little Fairy Songs" by Besly, and Photos Plus Jayhawker Out Thursday The fifth and last issue of the 1941-42 Jayhawker, a commencement issue, will be ready for distribution Thursday, Jim Surface, editor announced yesterday. Copies may be obtained during office hours at the Jayhawker office in the basement of the Memorial Union building. A full page picture of the Jayhawker queen chosen by Gilbert Bundy, noted illustrator from New York, is the outstanding feature of "Come Unto These Yellow Sands" by LaForge. Brahms' "Sonata, Opus No. 5," allegro maestoso movement, will be played by Eugene Jennings, student of Howard C. Taylor. The last violin composition of the evening will be presented by Peggy Kay, student of K. O. Kuersteiner, the first movement of Vieuxtemps "Concerto in D minor." "Che Gelida Manine" from Puccini's "La Boheme" will be sung by E. M. Brack of Alice Moncrieff's studio, while Edward Utley, piano student of H. C. Taylor, will play Saint-Saens "Etude in Forme de Valse." The program will close with the first movement of Beethoven's "Quartet in C minor," played by Donald Michel, Peggy Kay, Barbara Huls, and David Draper, of the studio of K. O. Kuersteiner. Tuesday evening's program will include piano, voice, violin, cello, and ensemble compositions presented by Anne Krehbiel, Nadyne Brewer, Melvin Zack, Doris Turney, Suzanne Schmidt, Joanne Johnson, Dorothy Mae Nelson, David Draper, Emma Elizabeth Strain, Clayton Krehbiel, Donald Michel, August Vogt, John Cole, Jack Moehlenkamp, Peggy Kay, Jack Stephenson, and Edward Utley. the issue. Bundy's work appears in Esquire, the New Yorker, and other leading magazines. Another page will show the next four beauties as chosen by Bundy. The remaining fifteen candidates will also be given. Featured on the cover are Tom Walton and Margaret Anne Reed, both college seniors. Three predominating colors, green, tan and red are used throughout the magazine. The issue will contain the senior pictures and group pictures of the honorary societies and the senior nurses and doctors in training in Bell Memorial hospital at Kansas City. A section consisting of several full-page pictures of the campus as taken by the staff photographers will also appear. A calendar of the year's events will feature the full schedule of the commencement program. Spring Beckons ★ ★ ★ Brushes Fly The number also announces the Jayhawker staff for the school year 1942-43. With brush in one hand and water colors in the other the freshmen of the Composition I class under the direction of Donald Silks, instructor in drawing and painting, have taken to outdoor life. Each Thursday afternoon these students are seen at various places on the campus doing their best to make their compositions look like the real thing. Their assignment is a short one of only one word—landscape. No flower or shrub has escaped. Every building of the University has been portrayed by the brush of the fine arts students interested in composition. . . . Buy War Stamps . . . Graduates Take Officer's Training at Camp Davis Phil Thomason, a student here in 1934-38, was sent from a Coast Artillery replacement training center to Officer's Candidate School at Camp Davis, N. C., last week. If he successfully passes the course, he will be commissioned a second lieutenant in the Coast Artillery (Anti-Aircraft) at the end of a 13-weeks period. Rayburn Bond, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, who was graduated from the School of Business in 1934, is expected to be sent from a Coast Artillery replacement center to Camp Davis this week. Graduate to School Position Minor Wallace Major, who received his M. A. degree here in 1989, has been advanced to the position of superintendent of schools at Augusta, Mo., where he has been principal of the high school for the past year. Major will assume his new duties on July 1.