Friday, June 30, 1961 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Pianist, Claudette Sorel To Be Guest Lecturer at KU Miss Claudette Sorel, noted concert pianist, will be guest lecturer in piano at KU during the 1961-62 year She fills the position of Mrs. Marks Gets Ph.D. Grant Two students at Kansas schools are among the four who will receive fellowships for 1961-62 from the American Society for Engineering Education as program administrator for the Leeds and Northrup Foundation. They are Jay S. Marks of Mission, who will be financed in study for a Ph.D. degree in chemical engineering, which he hopes to receive in 1963 from the University of Kansas, and Richard D. Chelikowsky, who will begin studies next fall for the master's degree in electrical engineering at Kansas State University. These and the other fellowships to students who will study at North Carolina State University and the University of Wisconsin were announced Tuesday at the banquet of the society's annual meeting at the University of Kentucky. Marks held the Monsanto Chemical Co. scholarship in chemical engineering in the year just ended He is a 1955 graduate of Shawnee Mission North High School and in 1959 received the B.S. degree in chemical engineering from KU. Canterbury Meeting Wed. The Canterbury Association will have an open meeting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, July 5 at the Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana. All are welcome. Angelica Morales on Sauer, professor of piano, who will be on sabbatical leave to play concerts in Europe and to judge an international piano competition. Miss Sorel, although only 28 years old, has made 55 appearances with 32 symphony orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, and the Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Detroit, New Orleans and NBC symphony orchestras. She has made four concert tours of Europe and has played in more than 150 American cities. A 1948 graduate of the Juillard School of Music, she also has studied at the Curtis Institute of Music. In 1954 she earned the B.S. degree, magna cum laude, from the Columbia University School of General Studies. "We are exceptionally proud to have Miss Sorel join our faculty," Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts said. "Once a child prodigy and now a finished artist, she also brings to KU a broad liberal arts background as part of her teaching qualifications." Priscilla Burton Is Elected by Methodists Miss Priscilla Burton, Kansas City, Mo., journalism senior, was elected national editor of Candle Beam, the official publication of the Kappa Phi club, an organization for college Methodist women, at the club's Council of Chapters held at the University of the Pacific, Stockton, Calif., last week. Miss Burton's term of office will be two years. Mrs. Karl Edwards, 1645 Barker, sponsor of the local chapter, and Dorothy Burton, College sophomore, also attended the council. BUSINESS MACHINES CO. Portable typewriters 49.50 up. Cleaning and repairing for all kinds office equipment. PRINTING by offset. 912 Mass. VI 3-0151 Mimeographing and Ditto work. Sportswear Clearance 1 group of Blouses, Shorts Skirts & Pants. $ \frac{1}{3} $ OFF Terrill's 803 Mass. Guest Conductors for Camp Concerts The Midwestern Music Camp will have guest conductors for its band and orchestra concerts Sunday. The chorus will be conducted by Gene Kenney, who is director of choral music at Southern Methodist University. This will be the third year Mr. Kenney has appeared as guest conductor at the Midwestern Music Camp. The band and orchestra will also have a guest conductor this week. Leo Kucinski, who is conductor of the Sloux City Symphony Orchestra and American Legion Band. This is Mr. Kucinski's seventh season with the music camp. The orchestra will open the Midwestern Music Camp concert Sunday afternoon with "John Alden and Priscilla" and the "Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" from McGuffey's Reader, Suite. Part II of the afternoon concert by the Chorus will include a portion from Mozart's "Requiem," the "Dies Irae." Mozart was working on this requiem mass when he died. He had been ill for some time before his death and had been obcessed with the idea that he was writing it for himself. On the advice of his doctors his wife took the manuscript away from him and his health improved Go not for every grief to the physician, nor for every quarrel to the lawyer, nor for every thirst to the pot—George Herbert Typewriters Electrics, Manuals Rentals, Sales, Service Office Equipment Lawrence Typewriter 735 Mass., VI 3-3644 for a while, but he was determined to finish. On the day before he died he realized that he would never complete it. Grove points out that in spite of its beauty "traces of the agony of spirit in which he wrote it have passed into the music." The band will be featuring fourth of July music and will open with the "Star-Spangled Banner." Others will include Morton Gould's "American Salute," which will be familiar as the "When Johnny Comes KU BARBER SHOP One Block Down the Hill 411 $ _{1/2} $ W. 14th FINEST BARBERS Marching Home" theme, and they will end the evening with an old favorite, "Semper Fidelis March," by John Phillip Sousa. GOING ON A PICNIC? Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PICNIC SUPPLIES LAWRENCE ICE CO. 6th & Vt., VI 3-0350 Monday-Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday 1:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. BETTER HURRY! Last 4 Days at the university shop's ANNUAL SUMMER SALE Final Reductions One Group SUITS Values to $45.00 Now $20 One Group SPORTCOATS Values to $37.50 Now $15 ALSO: $2 BARGAIN TABLE 45 Sportshirts ... Values to $5.00 21 Wash Slacks ... Values to 5.95 5 Islander Pants ... Values to 4.95 6 Corduroy Vests ... Values to 6.95 $3 BARGAIN TABLE 16 Summer Dress Shirts Values to $ 5.00 8 Sweaters ... Values to 11.95 4 Dress Slacks ... Values to 12.95 12 Swim Trunks ... Values to -5.95 24 Sportshirts ... Values to 5.95 SHOES - OUTERWEAR - REG. WEIGHT SUITS KNIT SPORTSHIRTS - REG. WEIGHT SPORTCOATS All Drastically Reduced 1420 Crescent Road AI Hack "On the Hill"