PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1941. Downes Will Speak On Fine Arts Day Fine Arts Day at the University will be Tuesday, May 13, and will open with the all-University convocation at 10 a.m. at which time the distinguished music critic, Olin Downes of the New York Times, will speak. Special music will be furnishee by the University A Cappella Choir and the University Band. The Fine Arts banquet takes place that evening in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building, and as speaker for this event, Dean D. M. Swarthout has secured Earl E. Harper, director of the School of Fine Arts of the University of Iowa. Following the banquet, the Young American Artist program will be presented in Hoch auditorium. The program this year will feature not one, but two highly gifted young artists. These are Virginia Haskins, coloratura soprano from the Chicago Civic Opera company, and Thaddeus Kozuck, brilliant young Polish-American pianist. Father of Betty Bridges Dies at Norton Mark Bridges, Norton, father of Betty Bridges college senior, died Monday as the result of a heart attack. During the Landon administration Bridges lived in Lawrence where he was on the state auditor's staff in charge of sand royalties. Life Saving Classes Listed for Tomorrow All students interested in passing the requirements for the senior Red Cross lifesaving certificates are asked to report to Jim Raport, instructor of physical education, at the University pool in Robinson gymnasium at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon. Raport says that it is necessary for those individuals interested in the course to be there Thursday. The sessions will be conducted for a week. National Contest For College Poets Held This Month Calling all poets! A nation wide college poetry contest is calling all undergraduates with inclinations toward writing verse, to snuggle with the bees and flowers and produce some lines of rhyme. The contest is sponsored by the "Poetry Week" Fellowship, a group of poets and friends of poetry in New York City, who wish to advance the art, particularly during the annual international celebration of Poetry Week, which occurs the last week in May. All entries must be original, un- Training Specialist Exams Announced The United States Civil Service Commission has announced an examination for position as training specialist in government departments. Applications must be on file in the Commission's Washington, D. C., office before May 28, 1941. TONIGHT, 9:00 To be eligible, applicants must have experience in organizing and administering training programs for employees in industry, business, or government. They also must demonstrate a thorough knowledge of at least one field in which they have organized and administered such a program. The positions pay from $3,200 to $5,600 a year. For complete information concerning this examination, those interested should write the secretary of the Board of U.S. Civil Service Examiners, either at the post office in Washington, D.C., or at any first or second-class post office. ublished, and approximately 30 lines in length. Ten dollars and a medal will be awarded the winner of the contest and several added medals and books will be presented to other prize-winning contestants. The contest closes the end of National Poetry Week, May 30, and all entries must be turned in to John Ashton, professor of English, in room 203 in Fresher hall by May 28. COMPLETE SEMINAR--lott said today. "We are offering one now which deals with the problems, but if it does not prove adequate, we will remedy the situation." share comman interest and ideas." Students More Sensible Now Mrs. Groves was a college student during the last war and emphasizes the difference in the attitude of the present college student and that of the pre-war student in 1914. "In 1914, a war marriage was the most popular thing to do. People got married simply because everybody else was doing it. Now, students have a more calm and sensible viewpoint. They aren't rushing into marriage without consideration as they did then." Every school, college, and university in North Carolina offers a course in marriage, Mrs. Groves commented. Chancellor Sees Need "I realize the need for such a course," Chancellor Deane W. Ma- SENATE MEETS---prove Tobey's resolution. Sen. Robert A. Taft, R., O., who presided at the meeting, said the action did not "necessarily" refer to the administration's patrol system, "although it might mean that." Mr. Roosevelt said yesterday that he knew nothing about the German combat zone. But he said that there was no Neutrality Act prohibition against American warships entering combat areas which he, himself, had delimited around the belligerent states. He explained, however, that did not necessarily mean American warships would enter those zones. EXAMINATION SCHEDULE May 28 to June 5,1941. INCLUSIVE WEDNESDAY A.M. 2:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 May 28 P.M. 2:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 THURSDAY A.M. 8:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 May 29 P.M. 8:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 SATURDAY A.M. 9:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 May 31 P.M. 9:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 MONDAY A.M. 11:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 June 2 P.M. 11:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 TUESDAY A.M. 10:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 June 3 P.M. 10:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 WEDNESDAY A.M. 1:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 June 4 P.M. 1:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 THURSDAY A.M. 3:30 classes, 5,4,3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 June 5 P.M. 3:30 classes, 2,1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 P.M. 4:30 classes, all hours at 3:30 to 5:20 Be Assured of Better Grades-- Have Your Term Papers Typed Typing, Mimeographing, Multigraphing STENOGRAPHIC BUREAU Journalism Building