Tuesday, Dec. 17, 1957 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Vespers Success Critic Says By NANCY STUTZMAN (By NANCY STUTZMAN (Of The Daily Kansas Staff) The School of Fine Arts wished a "Merry Christmas to All" Sunday with two presentations of the Christmas Vespers Sunday. Hoch Auditorium was peacefully lit with a soft blue light. Into this haze filed the A Cappella Choir singing "O Come All Ye Faithful," accompanied by the University Symphony Orchestra. The singing of this season favorite set the stage and warmed the hearts of the audience. There is something about a choir of magnificent voices at Christmas time which sets forth a flood of warm feelings inside and makes the entire world glow. A choral ensemble sang from the balcony during the presentation of four tableaux. These were entitled "Annunciation," "The Angel of the Lord," "Three Kings" and "Adoration." They were beautifully done. A little humor was introduced into the solemn ceremony in the afternoon when a young cast member in "The Angel of the Lord" stood up, straightened his robe and sat down. The audience chuckled but understood that the young man was interested in how he looked in his first stage appearance. In the middle of the service, plates were passed for contributions to the Christmas Vespers scholarship fund. During the collection, the Symphony Orchestra played Corelli's "Christmas Concerto." It was a beautiful thing, and well done. 3,200 Methodists To Visit Campus About 3,200 Methodist students and adult leaders have registered for the Methodist youth conference to be held here Dec. 27-Jan.1. There will be 46 KU students representing the Methodist Student Center at the conference which is held every four years. The conference was held here in 1954 also. The students will stay in vacant organized houses and dormitories. The theme for the conference to be held in Hoch Auditorium is "Religion and the Arts." At the conference there will be Bible study, guest speakers, discussion groups and religious entertainment. Edwin F. Price, director of the KU Wesley Foundation, said the previous conference was attended by persons from every state and 37 foreign countries. Featured in the entertainment will be a world premiere of an oratorio by students on the Wesleys and the Wesleyan movement. There will be an interpretive dance done by the Robert Joffrey Dance Theatre. IFC Picks Officers New Members Stuart Gunckel, Kansas City, Mo. senior, Monday was elected president of the Inter-fraternity Council for the second semester. Others elected are Bruce Rider; Wichita senior, vice president; George Smith, Lawrence, secretary; Hulen Jenkins, Kansas City, Kan. treasurer, both juniors. Newly elected members of the executive council are Dick Patterson, Kansas City, Mo., Dick Jones, McPherson, Lynn Miller, Dodge City, juniors; Lance Johnson, Wymore, Neb. Joe Reitz, Kansas City, Mo. sophomores. The Twelfth Day, Jan. 6, signifies the official end of the Christmas season. Alumna Gives Photos To KU Two framed photographs of the Cathedral of Saint Trophime in Arles, France, have been presented to the Museum of Natural History by Miss Alpha L. Owens, 1329 Kentucky St., who is a 1901 graduate of KU. The front of Dyche Hall was modeled after the portico of Saint Trophime. The photographs were purchased in 1920 by Miss Owens during a visit to France. The photographs will be kept in the front office of the museum. 3 Art Films To Be Shown Thursday Three art films, one telling the Christmas story with 18th century Italian creche figures, will be shown at 7:30 and 9 p.m. Thursday in the Museum of Art lecture hall. The film titled "God's Monkey," will feature the Hieronymous Bosch painting, "The Garden of Delights." Edward Maser, museum director, said the painting represents the last influences of medieval culture in the world. A 45-minute film, "Rubens," shows the scholarly development of the work of the 16th century Flemish painter, Peter Rubens. The film will show and analyze the composition of several of his major works. Advertising Clubs Plan Tour Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternities, will tour the Kansas Color Press in Lawrence at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Pizza Delivered VI 3-9111 Campus Hideaway 106 N. Park U.N. Views Heroes' Trial Around The World Hungarian revolutionary sources in Vienna and New York have reported Maj. Gen. Pal Maleter, Maj. Gen. Istvan Kovacs and Col. Sandor Kopacsy have been brought to trial by the Moscow-supported puppet regime of Janos Kadar. A 5-nation committee met in the U.N. headquarters in New York today to consider the plight of three heroes of the Hungarian freedom uprising on trial for their lives in Budapest. All three held important government posts until the uprising in the fall of 1956 when they openly joined the Freedom Fighters. In Paris, the NATO powers were reported preparing a 2-way program that calls for cautious new talks with the Soviet Union and a reinforcement of the Atlantic alliance with the latest weapons, including a stockpile of U.S. nuclear weapons and the establishment of missile bases in Europe. In Washington, a long court trial appeared likely to keep the nation's largest labor union—the scandal-ridden Teamsters—without effective national leadership for many weeks. Attorneys for 13 rank-and-file members who are seeking to prevent President-elect James R. Hoffa from taking office, planned to present testimony today to support their contention that election of Mr. Hoffa and other officers at the Union's recent Miami Beach convention was rigged. The trial now is in its third week with the end not in sight. Meanwhile, four vice presidents have been suspended without pay by the Bakery Workers Union for heading a movement back to the AFL-CIO. The four officials are setting up a rebel union apart from the parent organization which was expelled by the AFL-CIO on corruption charges. The rebel union was chartered the day of the expulsion. In Jakarta, Indonesia, the Indonesian government seized Dutch ship cargoes and acted to restore commercial shipping among the nation's many islands. The Dutch ships have been held in Indonesian ports since the shipping company was placed under government control as part of a reprisal campaign for the refusal of the Netherlands to give West New Guinea to Indonesia. In New York City, subway trains were running on time today. An 8-day strike of motormen, longest and costliest transit tie-up in the city's history, ended last night and the motormen immediately reported back to work. They went on strike Dec. 9 to protest their forced representation by the giant Transport Workers Union. A decisive factor in the motormen's back-to-work vote was the promise of state legislation that would transfer determination of union representation from the city's Transit Authority to the State Labor Relations Board. U.S. Consul General To Visit Brother The American Consul General to Greece, Philip W. Ireland, will be visiting his brother, H. A. Ireland, professor of geology Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. Ireland is on a three months leave after serving two years in Greece. He will meet with Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy and a few faculty members during his stay here. Party? why sure! - Luncheons - Weddings - Pre Parties - Dinners Party House East 23rd Street VI 3-8791 Mary Beth Noyes Daily Kansan Society Editor Who's Doing What? Parties, pinnings and engagements—all are taken care of by Mary Beth Noyes and her staff of society reporters. This, however, is only a part of the coverage given the campus social scene. House, chapter, and pledge class elections, pledgings, inititions, exchange dinners, hour dances and other informal gatherings are also covered. Called society news, which is usually thought to appeal mainly to women, the Kansan coverage appeals to both men and women. Both are interested in the activities of their houses and the students they know. Special fashion features are directed toward the distaff side. The society page is another feature used by the University Daily Kansan to keep the students informed of campus activities. University Daily Kansan