Wednesday, April 19, 1961 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Engineers to Open Exposition An estimated 15,000 persons will attend the 41st annual Engineering Exposition to be held Friday and Saturday in connection with the Kansas Relays. The Exposition will open at 10 am. Friday. Mrs. W. Clarke Kocee, wife of the Chancellor, will cut the opening ribbon at a short ceremony. The Relays Queen and her two attendants will also be present for the exposition opening. The exposition will be open free to the public until 9 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Displays will be in Marvin Hall, Fowler Shops, Lindley Hall, the Nuclear Reactor Building and the Engineering School annexes. Nineteen engineering departments and organizations will sponsor displays at the exposition. Three awards will be given for the most outstanding, most original and best academic displays. The theme of the exposition is "Prospects for the Future." Thomas O'Brien, Great Bend junior and president of the Engineering Student Council, said there will be an attempt to show what the engineer does after graduation as well as what he does in college. Entrance to the exposition will be gained through the traditional archway constructed in front of Marvin Hall by Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity. The exposition activities will conclude with a banquet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Murray Wilson, Salina, regional president of the National Society of Professional Engineers, will speak at the banquet. Awards for the three best displays will also be presented. Malicky to Give Recital Tonight Joyce Malicky, Baldwin senior, the first individual scheduled to receive the degree, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre and Voice will present a recital in partial fulfillment of that degree at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall. Joining Miss Malicky, mezzosoprano, for the recital presentation will be Irving Carlson, Wayne, Neb., senior, and violinist. Miss Malicky will sing Henry Purcell's "Orpheus Britannicus," which consists of six songs and five songs by Gustav Mahler. The program also includes two songs by Aaron Copland from 'The Tender Land'; "The Queen of the May" from 'Albert Herring' by Benjamin Britten; "Lullaby" from 'The Consul' by Gian-Carlo Menotti, and "Alleluia" by Ned Rorem. Carlson, who will receive a degree in Music Education with a minor in violin, will play "Ciaccona" by Vitali and "Sonata in G" by Lekeu. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 231 Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin materials to only Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Episcopal Evening Prayer (Daily): 5 p.m. Canterbury House. Ph.D. Reading Examination in German, May 6, 9 a.m., Candidates must sign up in 306 Fraser by noon, Saturday, April 29. Applications for editor and business manager of Student Directory and K-Book Date Book should be sent to Tom Clark, 1120 West 11th, or by fax to (866) 345-7890. Clark is at April 26. For additional information call Clark at VI 3-7212 or VI 3-6908. TODAY Angel Flight Meeting: 7 p.m., Military Science Building. Jay Janes: 5 p.m., 306 Kansas Union. Communion: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel TOMORROW Business Placement Bureau Job Interviews; 202 Summerfield Hall. Contact Dana Covens, Placement Director. Oil Corp. Office, counting positions, etc.; A. S. Alcoe For surgical Sales, and Laboratory Sales. Episcopal Holy Communion; Noon, Soccer Practice: 4 p.m. Intramural Fields Der Deutsche Verein triff sich wieder am Donnersag. den 20. April, in 502 Fraser. Wir werden Gesellschaftspfelle haben. Der Speicher haben muss die Sprichwortern. Nach den spielen gibt es einen Kaffeelatsch. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen. Barristers to Be Tested on English Beginning next November prospective law students will need to pay more attention to the development of their writing skill and their knowledge of this country's cultural background. The Law School Admission Test, now required by 86 of the nation's law schools, will then include separate tests of writing ability and general background. The 80-minute writing ability test is to measure the student's command of grammar and diction as well as his ability to recognize ver- bose or uncle writing. It will test his skill in organizing ideas and require him to demonstrate his competence by re-writing and editing prose passages. The test of general background is to measure the student's awareness of the intellectual and cultural context in which the law functions. The test is designed to indicate the candidate's understanding of important ideas, events and cultural developments of the past and present. It will include 30 questions in each of the three fields of humanities, science and social science. The Law School Admission Test is administered four times a year in November, February, April and August at test centers throughout the United States and abroad. Crime Doesn't Pav SOUTH ATTLEBORO. Mass. — (UPI) Thieves who broke into the Dane-T-Bits Bakery's distribution center found that "crime doesn't pay." Police said the thieves fled with a net haul of four pennies. Two Announcement Desians Sold Out There are six choices of senior announcements left. Two of the original designs have been sold out and will not be reordered. Only 400 of KU's 1200 seniors have ordered. The Union Book Store reports that five booklet designs and one folder type announcement remains. The booklets sell for 80, 60 and 45 cents by color. The folder is priced at 20 cents. Sorrows remembered sweeten present joy—Robert Pollock