Sunday Concerts AFTERNOON Page 3 3:30 p.m. Part I University Theatre Chorus Requiem ... Brahms V. Ye now are Sorrowful Soloist: Miriam Stewart Hamilton Mass in G ... Schubert Kyrie Gloria Credo Sanctus et Benedictus Agnus Dei Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Part II Orchestra Orchestra Symphony No. 7 in C Major ... Schubert First movement: andante and allegro non troppo The Gypsy Baron, overture ... Strauss Gerald M. Carney, Conducting Ballet-Divertissement from 'Henry VIII' ... Saint-Saens I. Introduction and Entry of the Clans II. Gigue and Finale Symphony No. 2 in B Minor ... Borodine Third movement, andante Fourth movement, allegro Polynesian Suite for Orchestra ... Dai-Keong Lee I. Ori-Tahitian (Tahitian Dance) II. Hula III. Festival Guy Fraser Harrison, Conducting EVENING Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Outdoor Theatre Part I Band Jubilee Concert March ... George Kenny William Tell Overture ... G. Rossin Bugler's Holiday, Trumpet Trio ... LeRoy Anderson Richard Scott, Alvin Lowrey, and Robert Brooks Concertino for Percussion and Band ... Clifton Williams Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Part II Chorus The Last Words of David ... Thompson He's Gone Away ... arr. Clokey Soon ah will be done ... Dawson Gossip Gossip ... Arr. Hairston Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Part III Water Music Suite ... Handel Allegro Air Allegro deciso Legend ... Dvorak Suite Miniature ... Benjamin Dunford March Minuet Air Jig French Military March from 'Algerian Suite' ... Saint-Saens Guy Fraser Harrison Conducting Theme Song Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Tab Faces Charge Of Harming Dog GLENDALE, Calif.—(UPI)—Actor Tab Hunter has been ordered to appear in municipal court within the next two weeks to face a charge of mistreating his pet dog. "This is ridiculous," said the young actor. "I've been around dogs and horses all my life and have always treated them with kindness and affection. These charges against me are totally without foundation. Deputy City Attorney Don Hagler said he issued the charge after four of Hunter's neighbors signed a complaint against the actor. Rent A TRAILER! Local or One-Way Hatchell Trailers U.S. Highway 40 & 59 735 N.2nd,N. Lawrence VI 3-1175 LONDON-(UPI)-Sponsors of a fall municipal engineers' convention which will discuss "the problem of car parking" were perplexed when they announced a site change for the meeting. Parkers Can't Park The new convention site has almost no parking space. The federal government spends $2.3 billion a year to improve roads and highways. 2 Juniors Get $500 Awards Two juniors in the School of Engineering have been awarded Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation scholarships of $500 each, Dean John S. McNown has announced. Both will enter their junior years in electrical engineering at KU this fall. They are Leon Phillip Carr, Salina, and John J. McCormick, Kansas City, Mo. Carr held a scholarship hal- award his first two years at KU. His grade-point average is 2.38. He was graduated from Southeast High School in Kansas City, Mo., in 1958, and he has worked as a surveyor for an engineering firm and at a Kansas City golf course. The Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation of Toledo, Ohio maintains the scholarships, open to juniors in mechanical, electrical, or chemical engineering. The scholarships are renewable for the senior year, and recipients are guaranteed summer employment at one of the Owens-Corning plants or laboratories. McCornick held a KU general scholarship of $206 last year. His grade-point average is 2.21. He was graduated from Bishop Hogan High School in Kansas City, Mo., in 1957, and he attended Kansas City Junior College before transferring to KU in the fall of 1959. He has worked as a grocery clerk, engineering technician and research technician. SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Somewhere along the airways between Hong Kong and San Francisco, $140,000 has vanished, according to a Pan American World Airways spokesman. "We suspect a mix-up of some sort rather than a theft," the spokesman said. But he said police had been notified. Big Money Bundle Missing on Flight The U.S. currency was wrapped in a 22-pound muslin-wrapped package in a green mesh sack. It was being shipped from the Dao Hang Bank of Hong Kong to Crocker-Anglo National Bank here. A second highly valuable shipment — a package of pearls — arrived safely on the same flight. The money was reported to have arrived at Honolulu safely, but was missing when the plane landed here. 6-Hour in by 10 a.m. out by 4 p.m. Photo-Finishing FAST MOVIE AND 35 MM COLOR SERVICE (By Eastman Kodak) HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass. Summer Session Kansan VI 3-0330 Friday. July 22. 1960 1835 Massachusetts NEW YORK—(UPI)—What is a shoo-in? As of next week, it probably will be Richard M. Nixon, according to the political experts. For the Republican Presidential nomination, that is. See You Later, Alligator In a While, Crocodile Amid all the yackety-yak and hoopty-do in Chicago next week, there probably will be a good deal of yawp about fixing and rigging in Los Angeles, but the experts will tell you the GOP nomination is cut and dried. Most Americans will recognize all the slang here except "yawp." It's right here in the new slang dictionary. "Shoo-in: Any probable winner of a sporting event or contest of any kind; one favored or expected to win easily; a winner." In 1835 in America, to yawp was to talk loudly. The word was obsolete by 1910, the year "23 skiddoo" began hitting the skids as a fad expression. Those are the two definitions of "fixed" in the just-published "Dictionary of American Slang" (Thomas Y. Crowell Co.), a rich and racy collection of more than 20,000 examples of slang, including "bones" (dice) with which Chaucer slanged it up in 1386, and "beat it" (go away, scram) which was used by Shakespeare. Former President Truman may be interested to know that on the same page where "fixed" is defined there also occurs a term that leaped to prominence during his last administration, "five percenter." When Harry S. Truman said he didn't like a fixed convention, meaning the Democratic one in Los Angeles, he probably didn't mean it would have "a result predetermined by bribery" but rather that it was "unfair." Americans have been going the whole hog since 1830, getting a wiggle on since 1900, letting George do it since at least 1920, and not knowing from nothing since the 1930's. Some of them have been getting tight as a tick (drum, lord, owl, goat, mink, brassiere, ten-day drunk etc.) since the 1920's. And, starting in 1824, they've been knowing people since they were knee-high to a mosquito, frog, bumble-bee, toad, spliter, grasshopper, hoptoad, toadfrog, or duck. The mosquito usage is the oldest, but the learned dictionary adds; "knee-high to a grasshopper" is now the most common." And while we're in the K's, you might consider the remarkable sectional use of "kiss-off" in advertising, movie, television, and radio circles. In New York, "The California kiss-off" or the "Hollywood kiss" means notice, without warning, of dismissal from a job. Try the Kansan Want Ads KU Barber Shop 1 1/2 blocks down 14th Street Hill 4111/2 W. 14th Dip shell pump with pivot heel. Wear it only with everything you own. $14.95 Royal College Shop 837 Mass. V1 3-4255