1942 TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS t E PAGE FIVE Red Cross Offers Water Safety Class If you have a senior life saving certificate, are 19 years of age or older, and would like to take a course for water safety instructor, sign up at the woman's physical education office. Mr. Ray Rainey, district representative of the Red Cross, will be on the campus from April 27 to May 2 to conduct a life saving water safety course. Mr. Rainey is being sent from the St. Louis office. Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical education, announced today that since a few preliminary hours of practice are necessary between now and the date Mr. Rainey is to arrive, a practice class is scheduled for next Monday night at 7:45. Hill To See Miss Enters' Pantomime "Unique and enchanting entertainment" are some of the words used to describe the program which comes to the University Monday evening when the Community Lecture course presents "The Theater of Angna Enters." This fourth and last number of the current Lecture course will be a presentation which combines acting, pantomime, and dancing. Miss Enters was born in New York City of French-Viennese parents. She made her debut at the Greenwich Village theater in New York March, 1926, introducing a program entitled, "Fpisodes and Compositions in Dance Form." She has created 175 or more compositions in the largest repertoire in the field of dance. Studied in Greece After a transcontinental tour season and performances in London and Paris, Miss Enters visited Greece for study of primitive Greek mime and dance. In April, 1935, she visited Egypt and the Near East for study in Mediterranean early culture. Not only is Miss Enters known for her dancing and acting ability. She has exhibited her drawings and paintings 22 times in art galleries of New York, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Ann Arbor, and in art museums of Minneapolis, Milwaukee, and San Francisco. Miss Enters has also written two books and a play. Her first book, published in November, 1937, was "First Person Plural." Her latest book is scheduled to appear this fall under the title, "Silly Girl." "Love Possessed Juana" was the play written by Miss Enters and published in November, 1937. Critics Full of Praise Walter Terry in the New York Herald-Tribune wrote, "Enters is theater. She makes equal use of costuming, lighting, movement and drama, united in exciting dance." Gilbert Seldes in his syndicated newspaper column, said, "The most varied, the most personal, and the most entertaining entertainment you can possibly find. She is a joy to observe." This presentation comes to the University as a substitute for a cancelled number scheduled for a February date. Convocation Hears Dawber "There is a cross for everyone, but it can be borne only if a love of God is in his heart," said Dr. Mark A. Dawber, convocation speaker, in Hoch auditorium last Friday. Speaking on "Facing the Cross" Dr. Dawber said that we are always facing some fork in the road, and although we usually take the easiest path, the real test lies in choosing the best one. Dr. Dawber distinguished between courage and fearlessness by saying that a lion was fearless, but courage was doing something for someone when fear is involved. Only the fearful can be courageous, he said. "God does not always save us from the fiery furnace," Dr. Dawber stressed. "He sometimes does better for us, and walks with us in the furnace. I'd rather be in the hot place and sure of God's presence than in the easier places and not sure of it." As life becomes more complex, temptations become great. But we can have power to meet temptation if we have the love of God in our hearts, Dr. Dawber stated. All life is a cross, and the issues of life can be met if we follow in the steps of Jesus, who bore his cross with unfaltering devotion. The University a capella choir, under the direction of Dean Donald M. Swarthout, presented an Easter anthem, Prof. Laurel Anderson played an organ prelude, and Royal Humbert narrated the Gospel crucifixion during the convocation. TOO MUCH RAIN---hearted but loving Don Jose real to the audience. Rayner made his Metropolitan opera debut in the same opera. (continued from page four) will tentatively be played next Monday. They are Newman Club vs. Sig Ep's; Alpha Chi Sigma's vs. D.U.'s; Theta Tau's vs. Kappa Eta Kappa's; Kappa Sig's vs. A.T.O.'s; Deli's vs. Sigma Chi's; Jayhawk Co-op vs. I.R.G.; Sigma Nu's vs. Pflugerville; Delta Chi's vs. Phi Gam's; and Carruth vs. Battenfeld. With weather preventing today's matches, horseshoe competition begins tomorrow afternoon with the Newman's playing the Sig Ep's and the A.T.O.'s meeting the Phi Gam's, both matches being played at 6:30. In intramural tennis the Sigma Chi's are scheduled to play the Kappa Eta Kappa's and the Phi Delt's the Phi Psi's tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. Today's tennis matches were cancelled. SAN CARLO CAST--hearted but loving Don Jose real to the audience. Rayner made his Metropolitan opera debut in the same opera. (continued from page one) States. They agree that her mezzosoprano voice, her dramatic talents, and her alluring beauty make her one of the foremost Carmens of the past decade. She plays the castanets and dances well. In fact, to quote the critics, "She brings to dramatic life a character that is by turns, impudent, passionate, humorous, and fateful." The Washington (D.C.) Times-Herald wrote; "Coe Glade's Carmen is of course famous. The Metropolitan has none to match it. It is daring, fascinating, carnal in song, in surprisingly graceful dance, in pantomime that has nothing in common with plotted, meaningless operatic gestures. In short, it is the greatest Carmen of the day." The Supporting Cast Sydney Reyner's tenor voice is well adapted to make the simple- Women's Intramurals BY PAT BOWMAN Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical education, announced today that the schedule for women's softball games is ready and, weather permitting, the first games will be played tomorrow. Miss Hoover said that the games are to be played as scheduled, and that any games called because of bad weather will be re-scheduled later. Drawings for the tennis and archery tournaments have been posted on the bulletin board in the hall outside the women's physical education office. Miss Hoover requested that the players call at the office and make arrangements to play these matches. The first round should be played off by April 11. The San Carlo ballet troupe is headed by Mlle. Lydia Arlova, premiere danseuse, and M. Lucien Prideaux, premier danseur. In Act II of the opera, in the Tavern Scene, occurs the lively dance by M. Prideaux with Misses Marjorie Ammon, Mara Davidora, Helen Ward and Virginia Weder assisting, which leads into the famous "Habanera" by Carmen herself. In the final act, before the bull- The Most WALKED ABOUT Shoes on the Campus PALACE WASHBURN'S Are as Trim as the Navy's "Greyhounds" Ready for Action Alert Styling Fine Craftsmanship Built to give you more in smartness, comfort and long wear. $5.85 - $6.85 - $7.85 ring, occurs the Bohemian Dance by six of the ballet, the Beggar Dance by Arlova and Prideaux, and the Farandole with the two leading dancers and the complete ensemble HILL OPERA---crowd. Carmen promises to marry Escamillo if he is victorious in the arena. Don Jose, attending the bull fight to make a last appeal for Carmen's love, becomes mad with jealousy and stabs her as Escamillo is triumphant in the bull ring. Don Jose gives himself up with a last cry of love for Carmen, as the curtain falls. Palace 843 Mass. The College Man's Store (continued from vage one) of Lillas Pastia, a meeting place of a band of smugglers, of whom Carmen is one. Escamillo, the to勒or enters with great pomp, is treated coolly by Carmen, and leaves with "the Torеador Song" ringing in his ears. Don Jose, just released from prison, where he was placed because of Carmen's escape, meets Carmen, and sings the tender "Flower Song." A fight over Carmen occurs between Zuniga, Jose's superior, and Jose, who is now forced to join the smugglers. The curtain rises for the third act in a wild mountain spot. The well-known card scene takes place. The activities of the smugglers are shown in this act. Carmen becomes cold to Don Jose, changes her affections to Escamillo. Blood and Sand The fourth act is prefaced by an entra'acte, which introduces the atmosphere of the bull ring. The curtain rises on an open place in Seville, crowded with vendors and traders. The toreaders, headed by Escamillo, are enthusiastically greeted by the Farmers Need More Storage Facilities Now Portland, Ore. — (UP) — In World War No. 1, Pacific Northwest farmers scrambled to grow more wheat. But in World War No.2, they are scrambling to find adequate storage space for the largest supplies in the region's history. Warehouses and elevators are filled to capacity both at rural points and city terminals. Report's reaching here indicate that most farmers are planning or starting the construction of new storage space on their farms. And Uncle Sam favors it with ready priorities for building materials, because wheat stored on sprawling farms is a much less likely target for fifth columnists than wheat concentrated in large city terminals. Now—more than ever before—those railroad warning signs should be rigidly observed, night and day. A fleet of powerful Union Pacific locomotives are hauling precious cargoes over the Strategic Middle Route, connecting the East with the West. Rolling over the rails are shipments of materials for armament plants, trainloads of troops and supplies. They must go through without delay. America's welfare — and your welfare — are at stake. Please, then, be extremely careful when approaching railroad crossings. In that way — you, too, can help. The Progressive UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD The Strategic Middle Route