1, 1941. games edule. room ebraska will be mes. nated 15 indie- shire the Some the de- dge les- sup ws wres was uull, col- mairian muestions night, and ill work e spring accept- ls paint reviewed chemical em- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN STUDENT PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Z-229 YEAR. LAWRENCE KANSAS SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1941 Glee Clubs' Concert Is Tomorrow The Women's Glee Club will present a colorful group from such masters as Haydon and Lully, including "Come Gentle Spring" (Haydn) "A highly interesting and entertaining program, for both trained musicians and the public." Thus Joseph Wilkins, director of the Men's Glee Club, describes the concert to be given by the Men's and Women's Glee Clubs in Hoch Auditorium at 8 p. m. tomorrow. which they sang on the ail musical Vespers program last Sunday. The first offering of the Men's Glee Club will be a group of Russian songs, full of that peculiar Russian flavor for which Gretchaninoff is famous Going patriotic for the evening, the glee clubs will open the concert with "The Star Spangled Banner." Giving the glee clubs a rest and the audience a comedy treat, Georgia Ferrel, college sophomore, and Spencer Bayles, college junior, sing "Grand Opera at Breakfast" (Words by Kate Masterson). Bob Jenkins, fine arts sophomore, and Eltrude Elliot, college senior, will promise another highly entertaining spot on the program with a marimba duo. NUMBER 92 Bridge Tourney Continues After a steady barrage of spades and clubs in the Memorial Union building lounge, the smoke cleared away and talley cards show the teams of Tom Eells-Dane Bales and Glenn Dunne-William Jones ranking at the top of the first play-off in the current bridge tournament. Other high ranking card ponders and lucky guessers who will face the tables and cards again tomorrow night in the second play-off are the teams of Bob McClure-Pat Maloney, Betty Wyatt-Carolyn Green, John Gleissner - Conrad Voelker, Sam Kneale-Earl Snowden, and John Weatherwax-June Griesa. The eight highest ranking teams after the semi-finals Tuesday will play the finals Thursday night. Lewis Prizes Total $225 Awards totaling $225 are being offered for the best essays written by University students in the thirtieth annual Hattie Elizabeth Lewis essay contest. "The Application of the Teachings of Jesus to Some Problem of the (continued to page eigrt) --buildings, and if they are tired there will be benches in appropriate places over the campus for them to use. Campus Scene to Turn Back 75 Years For Celebration In June --buildings, and if they are tired there will be benches in appropriate places over the campus for them to use. When old grads return to the campus for the Seventy-fifth anniversary celebration June 5-9, they will be surprised to see that the old school hasn't changed much since their undergraduate days. Simulated gas lights will throw their flickering shadows over the Hill, and vie with the June moon to produce romantic atmosphere. And just in case any old-timer drives his buggy, there will be hitching posts at convenient spots over the campus so that he can rely upon the presence of his horse when he gets ready to leave. High wheel bicycles, a locomotive of the 1866 variety, and miniature trains will travel the campus. Coeds will stroll down shady lanes in the costumes of their grandmothers and will guide visitors to the many scheduled events and points of interest. On Friday night the committee plans to woo the gustatory approval of its guests with a gigantic barbecue to be held at sunset in the stadium, followed by a stage production either in the stadium or in the Hoch auditorium. Visitors may stop in for a free snack in many of the University The chemistry department will give liquid air demonstrations and will present miniature glass birds to the visitors. Departments and schools are falling in line with planned exhibits during the four-day celebration. The School of Pharmacy plans an old fashioned drugstore of the 1866 vintage. The School of Engineering will carry on with their engineering exposition, to be shown for the first time at the Kansas Relays in April. The School of Law is collecting historical law books, and plan a display in Green hall. Downtown Lawrence is entering into the spirit of the celebration and plans an antique show to rival the one held last year for the premiere of "The Dark Command." Glenn Charlton, president of the Chamber of Commerce and originator of the antique display, is working to have wheel chairs, as used at the New York World's Fair, on the streets of Lawrence to make it easy for the visitors to see the town. Music for the celebration will be furnished by the Men's Glee Club, the University Band, and the A Cappella Choir. Almost all of the plans are still in a tentative stage, but it looks like a celebration to be remembered for a long time. Front row, left o right—Edward Moses, Eldridr King, Nail Naff, Laurence Nelson, Lander Chassen, Prof. Joseph Wilkins, John Riisoe, Jack Coyle, Robert Gale, DeLloyd Tibbs, Kenneth Lewis. Second row, left to right—Robert Jenkins, Robe t Akey, Eugene Miller, Gerald McDonald, Curtis Alloway, Marshall Butler, Norman Fuller, Duncan McGregor, Stanley McLeod, Bill McIntire. Third row, left to right—Stewart Exon, Otto Kiehl, Joe Nelson, Thomas Eells, Louis Thompson, Spencer Bayles, Edward Badsky, Leland Huddleston, Junior Gale. Fourth row, left to right—Robert Taft, Jack Perkins, Jack Singleton, Warren William, Craig Howes, Harold McCarthy, Robert Lacee, Joseph Wilson. The latter part of the program is composed mainly of melodious and lilting folk songs, including "See the Gypsey Munching Cheese" (Hungarian folkson) and "The Nightingale" (Kentucky folksong), by the Women's Glee Club. The men will sing a group including "Steal Away" (a Negro Spiritual; "Grandma Grunts" (North Carolina Mountain Song); and "Home on the Range" (Cowboy Song). Concluding the program, the combined glee clubs will sing "I'm a Skyhawk" and the "Alma Mater". Make-up Quiz Given 20 Students About 20 students, who enrolled for the first time in the University this semester and had not taken their psychological examination, took the quiz yesterday in Frazier hall under the direction of A. H. Turney, professor in the School of Education. 'College Crowd Is Best Says Jan Savitt "To play for a college dance is a criterion of an orchestra's success because the college crowd knows what it wants and they go out to get it at all costs." stated Jan Savitt in an interview as he was dining in the Hotel Eldridge last night. The fact that college crowds clamor for the music of the "Top-hatters" is being well evidenced on his present road trip. Savitt said that he would much rather play for a college crowd than at a dance for the "400" or in a metropolitan ballroom because the students $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $ seemed to be more receptive to his music. During the past four months Savitt and his band have played at nearly every major college or university in the South and Midwest including In remarking about the dance at Missouri University Friday night, Savitt said that the students at the dance thought that the Tigers did not have a chance of winning the K. U.-M. U. game. As the dance progressed, he said, he could tell by the Tennessee, Alabama, Tulane, Louisiana State, Auburn, Virginia, West Virginia, Virginia Military Institute. (continued to page eight) Music Teachers Here March 3,4 Plans have been completed for the thirty-third annual meeting of the Kansas Music Teachers' Association to be held on Mt. Oread, March 3-4, as was announced yesterday by Karl Kuersteiner, president of the group, and director of the University symphony orchestra. John Thompson, noted composer-teacher, will conduct master classes in voice; E. Power Biggs, artist for Victor red-seal recordings, will conduct a master class in organ; Theodore Harrison will have a class in voice; and Cecil Burleigh, eminent American violinist, will conduct a master class in violin. Features of the program will be two concerts by the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra, one of them for children, with Karl Krueger conducting; and recitals by E. Power Biggs, Cecil Burleigh and Theodore Harrison will have a class to appear before the music teachers will be Chancellor Deane W. Malott, Dean Luther Leavengood, of Southwestern College; Dean Donald M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts; Dr. Orville Borchers, dean of the music school at Emporia State Teachers' College; Prof. Albert D. Schmutz of the Emporia College music faculty; Cecil Burleigh, University of Wisconsin; Donald L. Coats, dean of the Organists Guild; Dean Oscar Lofgren, Bethany College; Prof. Hugh Miller, Hays State College, and many others. Marriage Discussion Is Tonight How to know when you're in love, and other vital aspects of the birds and bees problem, will be discussed by Mrs. Else P. Heilpern, noted German psychoanalyst, this evening at 7 p.m., in the parish house of the Plymouth Congregational church. Mrs. Helipen's talk on, "A Doctor Looks At Marriage," is the second in MRS. ELSE P. HEILPERN a series of lectures on marriage sponsored by the Plymouth Congregational church. Mrs. Heilpern has taken out her naturalization papers since she arrived in America in 1938. She ac- (continued to page eight)