Friday, Sept. 25, 1964 University. Daily Kansan Page 5 Around the Campus KU Pianist Praised Mrs. Angelica Morales von Sauer, professor of piano, earned critical praise of the highest order for two recitals given this summer in Mexico City, where she also conducted master classes at the National University. Hal Hall, critic for the English-language Daily News of Mexico City, had great praise for Mrs. von Sauer, concluding the review of her Chopin recital, Aug. 24, with "And Mexico has a monument in Miss Morales, one of a handful of the truly great pianists of our times." Mrs. von Sauer grew up in Mexico. She has concertized widely there and in Europe as well as the U.S. She is the widow of the late Emil von Sauer, Austrian pianist and teacher. Carillon Recital Set Albert C. Gerkin, Carillonneur, will present a Carillon Recital at 3:00 p.m. Sunday. The program will include the following selections: "Toccata for Carillon" by Ernest van Nieuwenhove, "Sonatina for Carillon" by Wouter Paap, excerpts from the "Repertorium" of Joannes de Gruytters, "Passacaglia, Chorale and Fugue for Carillon" by J. B. Franssen, "Theme and Variations for Carillon" by Gustav Nees, and "Prelude and Fugue for Carillon" by Jacques A. Maassen. Gerkin will also give regular Carillon recitals at 7 p.m. Wednesdays and 12:45 p.m. on Sundays prior to home football games. The KU Carillon bells are housed inside the World War II Memorial Campanile. This fund, established in 1945 and supported by an estate approximating $29,300, is designed to assist those students to enter, or who now attend KU. Four KU students will receive financial aid for the 1964-65 school year from the Josephine Fuller Student Fund. Fuller Student Award The recipients, all attending KU, are: Michael Carnahan, Wichita senior; John P. Hastings, Topeka sophomore; Sharon Menasco, Wichita senior, and R. James Rhodes, Derby sophomore. Kenneth B. Armitage, associate professor of zoology, has received a $14,048 research grant from the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Armitage Receives Grant The grant, covering a project entitled "Some Annual Physiological Cycles of a Crayfish," is a second year continuation and will be effective until August. 1966. The research program involves an 18-month study examining the role of daylight as a timing mechanism for determining the physiological cycles of crayfish. He is being assisted by two graduate students: Arthur L. Buikema, Beecher, Ill., and Norman J. Willems, Reedley, Calif. The graduate assistants will continue working on the project while Armitage is on sabbatical leave during the spring semester. Series on Japan Dr. Klaus H. Pringsheim, professor of political science, will present an 8-week series of lectures on the culture of Japan, beginning Oct. 1 in Kansas City, Mo. The special course, being offered by the University of Missouri at Kansas City division for continuing education, will give enrollees an opportunity to study Japan through lectures, slides and discussions with Japanese students. Dr. Pringsheim, who lived in Japan for more than 10 years, formerly taught Japanese at the Army Language School in Monterey, Calif. He also worked at General McArthur's Occupation Headquarters in Tokyo immediately after the war. The course will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Thursdays in Room 209 of the Fine Arts Building on the UMKC campus. Russian Author Discussed The discussion of the writings by Russian author, Dostoevski, will open the Newman Forum Lecture at KU Monday night. Dr. Bernard Hall, staff psychiatrist at the Menninger Institute in Topeka, will discuss the writings in the light of new insights into the nature of man and the human predicament. The lecture will be held at 8 p.m. in the Forum of the Kansas Union. THE CURRENT Newman Forum Series with the theme "The Twentieth Century Quest for Meaning" is to examine some of the most influential contributions to contemporary thought and their relations to the traditional Christian view of the significance of human life and endeavor. Other speakers and their subjects are: Oct. 11—"Bertrand Russell," by Paul Hasvold, assistant professor of philosophy. John, please come back. I'll forgive you this once for not taking me to La Pizza. 807 Vermont Steaks, Pizza, Ravioli, Spaghetti Hamburgers, Shrimp. La Pizza 807 Vermont Rain Encloses Girl in Small Puddled World Most students grumbled about the rain. They tucked up falling hairdos and walked cautiously around sidewalk puddles while closed umbrellas banged their legs or balanced on their books. But in the secluded driveway behind Bailey Annex, one KU coed stopped beside a long puddle which may have been 3 to 4 inches deep. Her hair was straight and she carried no umbrella. She glanced behind her and, without hesitation, took off her brown NO ONE was watching, she thought, and she smiled as she scuffed her feet through the brown water and made rippling circles with a pointed toe. She walked straight through—careful not to splash the water on her plaid wrap-around skirt. But in that short walk, the campus with its enrollment cards, ball point pens and outline series seemed as far away as the clouds that had brought the rain and then departed. Once on the other side, she blotted! O her dripping feet on the dry pavement on the street and melted into the stream of umbrella-laden students on Jayhawk Boulevard. Makes Up for Others HARTFORD, Conn.—(UPI) —Although the odds on a golfer shooting a hole in one is over 8,000 to 1, pro George Bayer has turned the trick seven times during his career. Bayer's latest ace was in the third round of the 1963 Insurance City Open. PLAN YOUR BUDGET AS CAREFULLY AS YOU PLAN YOUR CLASS SCHEDULE Having your own checking account at the First National is a great aid in budgeting and paying campus bills. When you pay by check, you have a legal receipt of payment. Lawrence merchants accept checks from a local bank more readily. You won't have to write a letter or make a long distance phone call to check on the balance of your account. You can pay bills right from your desk without running all over town. The First has planned for the busy student by providing handy Bank-by-Mail envelopes and a Drive-in bank, 9th and Tennessee, at the foot of Mount Oread. Take advantage of the convenience of a checking account at the First and receive 50 free personalized checks. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE 8th AND MASSACHUSETTS • LAWRENCE, KANSAS • VI 3-0152 2. DRIVE-IN BANK AT 9th AND TENNESSEE ST. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION