TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Convocation, Concerts Fill Music Week Slate Featuring a varied program of well-known American musicians and University musical organizations, Music Week will be observed on the Hill, May 3 to 8. Special observances in Lawrence churches Sunday will open Music Week. At 4 p.m. Sunday afternoon the Lawrence public school music vespers will present the Lawrence schools in a concert in Hoch auditorium. Annual Fine Arts day Monday will begin with an all-University convocation in Hoch auditorium, at which Roy Harris of Cornell University, a distinguished American composer, will speak on "Music and People." The University symphony orchestra and the band will play. Artists to Dine The annual Fine Arts banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the ballroom of the Memorial U nion building for everyone interested in fine arts. Speakers will be Governor Payne Ratner, Chancellor Deane W, Malott, and Roy Harris. Dr. Wiktor Labunski of the Kansas City Conservatory of Music will play for the banquet. Helen Traubel, dramatic soprano of the Metropolitan Opera company, will be presented on the University Concert Course at 8:20 o'clock Tuesday night in Hoch auditorium. Give Gala Concert Wednesday night the last number of the University Concert Course will be presented, Carroll Glenn, young violinist, winner of the 1941 Federation of Music Clubs $1,000 prize in the annual Young American Artist program. A gala concert of American music will be the fare for music-lovers Thursday night at 8 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. Compositions of Roy Harris will be featured by the University Symphony orchestra, the University band, and the A Cappella choir. "Land of Our Hearts" by George W. Chadwick for chorus and orchestra will also be presented. The Music Week will close Friday with the annual banquet and initiation of new members of Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary music fraternity, at Evans Heard. W. Otto Meissner, professor of education and public school music, is president of the organization. The departments of design and drawing and painting are showing exhibits on the third floor of Frank Strong hall. Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, will show an exhibition of oil paintings in Spooner - Thayer museum. KFKU's Music Week program will include a radio interview on "American Music" by Roy Harris and Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts at 2:30 p.m. Monday. Miss Minerva Davis, Margaret Dunn, and Eugene Ninger will present a recital at 2:30 Tuesday afternoon. At 6 p.m. Wednesday the University band will be heard, under the direction of Russell L. Wiley. Clark To Discuss War Economy C. D. Clark, professor of sociology, will address the fourteenth class of the World at War series Thursday on "Social Dislocations in the U. S. Under a War Economy." Wheeler To Explain Morale "Psychology Explains the Present Lack of Morale" is the title of an address to be given by R. H. Wheeler, chairman of the department of psychology, over KFKU this evening at 6 o'clock. Topeka Alumni Fete Students, Parents The Topeka Alumni Association will act as host to University students, parents, and faculty members at a K.U. picnic at Lake Shawnee at 4 p.m. Sunday. The picnic will be held at the Kiwanis Youth Camp on the lake; the road will be marked with Jayhawk signs. Entertainment will be provided in the form of baseball, horse shoes, volley ball, boating, and dancing. A picnic supper will follow. Co-chairmen in charge of the picnic are John Slocum, a student from 1937 to '39, and Saul D. Kass, business' 36. Hugo T. Wedell, president of the University Alumni Association, will be present at the meeting. Tickets are on sale at the alumni office in the basement of Frank Strong hall. Admission for adults will be 56 cents, for children 30 cents. Help Plan Rural Life Meet George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, and H.B. Ingham, director of the extension division, are in Kansas City today attending a meeting of mid-west educators. Purpose of the meeting is to plan a conference on rural life, to be held at the University next year. ADDITIONAL SOCIETY--- KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . Sunday dinner guests were Gov. and Mrs. Payne Ratner of Topeka, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Fees of Iola, Charles Rayl, and Nick Hoffman. Mr. and Mrs. Waldemar Geltch, and Winifred Hall, all of Lawrence, were dinner guests Monday. CORBIN HALL . ...weekend guests were Betty Roth and Earline Roles, both of Kansas City, Mo., Norma Lee Carothers of Anthony, and Loretta Osborn of Kansas City. ...Sunday dinner guests were Miss Virginia Revere, Miss Cecilia Meisner, and Miss Darlene Meiserin, all of Manhattan; Miss Ruth Brown and Mr. Wilbur Brown of Sabetha; Lou Allison; Mary Helen Wilson; Mary Margaret Reynolds; Lee Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Figley of Kansas City; Miss Barbara Priest of Whiting; Miss Dorothy Weidman of Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Butts and Orville Butts of Hutchinson; Norman Butts of Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bunch, Dorothy Frances Bunch and Ruth Bunch, all of Fredonia; and Betty Charles. ...weekend guest was Joe Murphy of Russell. KAPPA SIGMA .. ...Sunday dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cullin of Ellinwood. ...Bill Murfin and Howard Rankin are attending the Kappa Sig district conclave in Lincoln, Neb. University Students Speak at Meeting ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . ★ ... pledges will entertain their dates with a hay rack ride and picnic Friday night. Four University representatives attended the National Convention of Press Women held in Topeka last Friday. The representatives were Heidi Viets, Betty Abels, Mary Frances McAnaw, and Kenneth Jackson, all college seniors. The group met to criticize representative newspapers of the country. The news story was criticized by Heidi Viets, the feature story by Kenneth Jackson, the columns by Betty Abels, and the women's page by Mary Frances McAnaw. Two representatives from Kansas State College criticized the women's page features and country correspondence. Almost 150 Kansas women attended the convention. More than 1,500 University of Michigan students are receiving military training as a part of their college work. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EXAMINATION SCHEDULE SPRING SEMESTER, 1942 May 22 to May 28,1942, inclusive FRIDAY, A.M. 3:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 MAY 22: P.M. 1:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 2:30 to 5:20 SATURDAY, A.M. 9:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 MAY 23: P.M. 9:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 4:30 classes, all hours at 3:30 to 5:20 MONDAY, A.M. 10:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 MAY 25: P.M. 10:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 TUESDAY, A.M. 2:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 MAY 26: P.M. 11:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 1:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 3:30 to 5:20 WEDNESDAY, A.M. 8:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 MAY 27: P.M. 8:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 TUESDAY, A.M. 11:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 2:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 3:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 3:30 to 5:20 Stamp! Stamp! Stamp! The Boys Are Marching DON'T DELAY Today is what counts in the battle with our enemy powers. Tomorrow,with its "good intentions" and far-off plans may be too late. Our forces are fighting the battle today,not tomorrow. Our fighting forces need planes, guns, ships, tanks bombs, shells, and a million other essentials today. We must provide these arms as they are needed Not tomorrow, or the next day, for today's battles are the ones to win the war. So put those extra nickels, dimes, and dollars in Defense Bonds and Stamps. Do it today. Give our fighting men all they need to do the job right. Put your dimes and dollars to work