Wednesday, March 31, 1965 University Daily Kansan Page 3 Yugoslav and KU Students Present Native Plays Six Yugoslavian students will present a program tonight designed to present some examples of Yugoslavian drama and six KU students will give a performance tomorrow of the scenes they will be doing on the Eastern European tour. The six Yugoslavian students, here on a cultural exchange with their instructor, Predacj Bajcetic, will give their show at 8 tonight at the University Theatre. The six KU students who are going on a tour of eastern Europe next week with their instructor, Gordon Beck, instructor of speech and drama, will give their show at 8 tomorrow night at the University Theatre. THE YUGOSLAVIAN students, from the Academy of Theatre, Film, Radio and Television, will be playing their scenes in the original language, Serbo-Croatian, but William Kuhlik, KU's actor in Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has been named to receive the Outstanding Achievement Award of the University of Minnesota, according to notification by Dr. O. Meredith Wilson, president of UM. KU Dean Gets Minnesota Honor The award, voted by the University regents upon recommendation of the faculty committee on honors and the administrative committee of the senate, is reserved for former students "who have attained high eminence and distinction." The honor will be bestowed at the annual meeting of the Education residence, will give an introduction to each scene. One of the highlights of the program will be a revival of a four-hundred year old play. It is a farce by Nikola Maljeskovic, and will be performed in full by the students in Belgrade this summer. The sketch tonight will be the first performance of this play seen by any audience for 400 years. The farce was the first of its kind written in the Serbo-Croatian language. TODAY Official Bulletin Author," by Luigi Pirandello, the table scene from "Tartupe or the Hypocrite," by Moliere, and three scenes from other plays. tury comedy, and two scenes from two national romantic comedies, also nineteenth century works. Kansas Hi-Y Youth in Government, All Day. Kansas Union. SUA Table Tennis Tournament, 6:30 p.m. Ballroom, Kansas Union. Men's Singles and Doubles. Formally a lecture. Lawrence Student Center. Fr. Joseph Dillon. "The Meaning of Sin According to Biblical Theology." The first of these will be a scene from "What Did You Learn at School Today," a contemporary work by Wallace Johnson. THE OTHER Yugoslav students performing are Neda Spasojevic, Jelisaveta Sablic, and Zdravka Krstulovic. Carillon Recital, 7:00 p.m. Albert Gerken. The performance will end with an exercise called "An Invocation Against Sleeplessness," and a Montenegran dirge, as improvised by the peasants there. Classical Film, 7:00 p.m. "Day of wrath." Fraser Theater. One of these, "Stanoje Glabas," by Dura Jaksic, is about a national hero in the liberation struggle with the Turks. The plot involves a turkish Pasha that desires the girl of the hero for his harem. The other play, "Maksim Crnojevic," by Laza Kostic, is set in Venice. It is a tragedy in which a girl falls in love with the enemy of her brother, the hero of the play. The hero, Maksim, kills his foe. The selected scene portrays the girl and the wife of the slain man. The wife blames the girl for the death of her husband. The KU Eastern European tour members will present scenes from "Six Characters in Search of an The second scene will be from "Luv." Murray Schisgall's current Broadway success which stresses the comic element in love. The chosen scene takes place on Manhattan Bridge, where at least two people are contemplating suicide. THE MOVEMENT exercises will include some fencing done by the male members of the group. Petar Kralj, Slobodan Djuric, and Zafir Hazimanov. The Yugoslavian program will start with a traditional address by the Renaissance writer Drzic. It was written in 1550. This will be followed by demonstrations of movement, diction, and voice training exercises. Classical Fine Arts p. 12. wash with Theater. p. 14. College Life, 7:15 p.m. 1921 Vermont St. Speaker will be John Petrehn. Recital, 8:00 p.m. Norma Sharp, soprano. Swarthout Recital Hall. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "Music in the Theatre." Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. The last scene is taken from a Yugoslavian play, "In Agony," by Miroslav Krieza. It is a portrait of the ruined society in the Yugoslavian part of the ruined Habsburg Empire after World War I. Taking part in the scenes and also going on the European tour are Teddy Weddingfeld, Norfolk, Neb., senior; Sylvia Groth, Mayville, N.D., graduate student; Gigi Gibson, Chicago, Ill.; senior; Richard Caskey, Overland Park sophomore; Steve Callahan, Independence graduate, and Bill Bowersock, Shawnee Mission sophomore. Scenes of the plays that will be presented include portions of "A Liar and an Archil," by Jovan Sterede Popovic, a nineteenth cen- TOMORROW Catholic Masses 145 p.m. pastorate Church Student Center, Co- fessions before and during mass. Epicopalac Holy Communion, 11:35 a.m. Canterbury House, 1116 La. A.A.C./T.T.A.A. Kansas Union. All Day. Area Principals Meeting, All Day, Kansas Union. German Club Informal Meeting, 4:30 p.m. Hawk's Nest, Kansas Union. All are invited. Wesley Foundation Evensong, 5:00 p.m. Methodist Center, 1314 Oread. Scientology Colloquium, 7:30 p.m. 206 Blake. Christian Family Movement, 8:00 p.m. Group 1, Chairman Bill Kackley, VI 2- 0750; 8:30 p.m. Group 2, Chairman Don Yonke VI 2-0830. Experimental Theatre, 8:20 p.m. "U.S.A." Murphy Hall. Epicopalac Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Who shall be the judge? Alumni Association, April 30, in Minneapolis, Minn. A doctor describes his moral struggle—should he deliver this baby girl who would never dance or run?—and tells how his decision was sustained 17 years later... in the April Reader's Digest, with more than 40 other features now on sale. Corey Ford offers a few hints "marriage counselors may have overlooked." THE MINNESOTA announcement sites Dean Anderson "because he has demonstrated outstanding achievement and leadership on a community, state, national and international level." Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Find out the one thing to murmur when your wife (tardy) asks if you've been waiting long or your husband (lost) drives 50 miles before asking directions . . . in April Reader's Digest. Also— Dean Anderson earned B.S., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Minnesota He joined the KU faculty in 1948 and became dean of the School of Education in 1952. A bachelor's guide to marriage THE DIAMOND RING YOU CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE ... fine color ... flawless ... meticulously cut ... the center diamond of every lovely Keepsake engagement ring is guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured). Look for the Keepsake name in the ring and on the tag. Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. VI 3-5432