FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Attend Church First Baptist Church II. E. Koelb, minister 9:45. Sunday school. 11:00. Morning service with sermon by minister: "Nearer the Dawn and a Song." 6:30. Service for young people in recognition of Music Week. First Methodist Church First Methodist Church O. E. Allison, minister 9:45. Sunday school. 10:50. Morning service and sermon: "Accepting Yourself and Liking It." 7:30. Evening service. Sermon by minister taken from the 12th chap. of Exodus. **C. Church of the Nazarene** **C. E. Teliver, minister** 10:00. Sunday Bible school. 11:00. Sermon: "Safeguarding Our Salvation." 7:45. Evening service and sermon: "Fruits of the Spirit." Mahieu Speaks At Emporia State Friends Church Clinton Presbyterian Church Clinton Presbyterian Church B. C. Montgomery, minister 11:00. Morning service and sermon by the minister: "The Beauty of the Lord." Alfred Smith, minister 10:00. Sunday school. Lawson to Conference of Deans Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, is attending a conference of the deans of Midwestern universities held in Bloomington, Ind., this week. He left the University Wednesday night and will return Tuesday noon. Music library at the University of Wisconsin contains more than 2.500 volumes of an historical, biographical, critical or scientific nature, as well as several hundred miniature scores. Lawson to Conference of Deans Professor Robert Mahieu, of the department of Romance languages, delivered the principal address Wednesday night at the annual spring banquet at the Kansas State Teachers college of Emporia. 16.00. Sunday school. 11:00 The guest speaker will be Rev. Gale Whitney, Manhattan. 7:00. Christian Endeavor. 8:00. Evening service. The banquet group was composed of French club members and other students of Romance languages of both Emporia State Teachers students and the College of Emporia students. Mr. Mahieu's address was on Voltaire, a name as well as a title. University students will have a chance to hear this same topic discussed on May 13 in Fraser theater. This speech will be given as the third in a series of public departmental lectures on French masters. First Christian Church Harald G. Garr, minister Royal Humbert, associate minister 9:30. Sunday school. 10:45. Worship and Communion. Sermon: "On Wings of Song." 5:30. Recreation and lunch for all University students. 6:30. The Forum. "Reminiscences of an Army Chaplain," by Rev. Barr. Three-Year Courses Designed to Speed Medical Training Dr. O. O. Stoland, secretary of the School of Medicine, has announced a new program to be followed by the School of Medicine when classes for the summer session start in June. The program is designed to speed training for medical students. The classes which will start in on the new program will include those students who have completed premedical training before June. Classes will start in June and will run constantly through summer and winter, thus allowing students to finish in three years' time. The freshman and sophomore classes will not start their program until September but will then be able to go on through under the provisions of the new program. Freshman classes will graduate six months early and sophomore classes will graduate three months early under the program. Education Seniors Must Pay Diploma Fee Before May 15 Candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Education must pay their $7.50 diploma fee at the business office before May 15, Laurence Woodruff, assistant registrar, warned today. Longest biography in Who's Who is that of Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia university.—129 lines. Kansan Board Plans Yearly Award Dinner The Kansan Board, governing body of the University Daily Kansan, will present awards to outstanding journalists in the department, at its annual banquet at 6 p.m., May 12 at the Colonial Tea Room. The L. N. Flint awards will be presented for the best news story, feature story, and editorial appearing in the Daily Kansan during the past year. Winners of the Jack Penfold photography award and of the Henry Schott award for the most promising junior man in the department of journalism will be announced. Last year Bob Trump and Stan Stauffer were named recipients of the Henry Schott Memorial scholarship award. Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity will name the senior journalism majors outstanding in scholarship. Those honored last year were Margaret Hyde, Betty Coulson, Ruth Spencer Ashercraft, and Virginia Gray. The program for the dinner has not been completely planned. A guest speaker will be present. Henry J. Allen, former governor of Kansas and once a United States senator, was the speaker last year. Seventy-two per cent of the students in the University of California college of dentistry work while they are in school. SPEND IT ON BONDS INSTEAD OF ON BLONDES She may have a gait But the U.S. can't wait WHY NOT LET YOUR MONEY CARRY A NATION'S MESSAGE INSTEAD OF A PERSONAL ONE? The Independent Students Association is planning a second horseback riding party for Wednesday night from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. There is room in the party for 17 persons, Allan Cromley, chairman of the ride, said. It is strictly a non-date affair, he added. BUY TODAY! The riders will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the Memorial Union building, from where they will go to Mott Stables for mounts. A weiner roast on the trip will be a feature of the ride. Cost, for the evening is 75 cents. Grads Take Med Technology Exam Barbara Owen, a graduate of the University in 1940, and Grace Ouishi, a student from Honolulu who graduated in 1941, are in Kansas City today taking board of registry examinations for medical technology. A number of Wayne University classes in retailing are being conducted inside Detroit stores this semester in a project to make university vocational training of the most immediate value possible. Program, Dancing Entertain At 'Home Night' Reception KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS K.U.66 Vicker's Gift Shop University High School's "High Home Night" was celebrated last night when the students gave a reception in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building for parents, student teachers, and friends. Jewelry and Gifts for Heisey Crystal 833 Mass. Students commuting from their homes to Massachusetts State college and back again pile up 2,479 miles each day. "It Pays To Look Well" HOTEL ELDRIDGE BARBER SHOP Vicker's Gift Shop 1011 $4 Mass. Wits End Stationery Frames for Graduation Pictures Thumbs Up Dolls ROBERTS Charles Ise, high school senior, acted as master of ceremonies. The program consisted of a welcoming address by F. O. Russell, associate professor of education; two numbers by the mixed chorus of the school; a chorus made up of student teachers; and Wilma Wells, high school junior, read Browning's "My Last Duchess." Mrs. Marion Barlow and Mrs. R. S. Tait, mothers of pupils, served punch. The remainder of the evening was spent dancing. CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. (Opposite Granada Theater) Thesis Supplies Phone 1051 WANT ADS Marion Rice Dance Studio Private Lessons in Ballroom Dancing 927 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St. 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 961 TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG Bicycles Repaired Lock and Key Service RUTTER'S SHOP 014 Mass. Phone 319 LOST: Phi Beta Pi fraternity pin. On Campus, Monday, April 27. Call James Good, 1018. 683-121 Latest Used Phonograph Records — Reasonable JOHNNY'S GRILL 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 96 Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed Guns, Clothing for Sale WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Shoe Service 1113 Mass. St. Phone 141 BURGERT'S Webster Collegiate Dictionaries $3.50 KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. Glasses Fitted Eyes Examined Broken Lenses Duplicated NOLL OPTICAL CO. 839½ Mass. Over Royal Shoe Store Res. Ph. 761 Office Phone 979 The Real McCoy COCA-COLA at the ROCK CHALK No advance in price STENOGRAPHIC BUREAU Typing Mimeographing Journalism Building HIXON'S 721 Mass. HEADQUARTERS FOR Cameras & Supplies. Moving Picture Cameras — Projectors For Sale or Rent Expert KODAK FINISHING