Around Campus Art Festival Plans Made KU students and Lawrence area residents who have created works of art will soon have the opportunity to display and sell their creations. The opportunity will be the second annual Art Festival sponsored by the Lawrence Art Guild and the Lawrence Recreation Commission. The Art Festival which will be held May 10-12 in the Community Building. 115 W. 11th St., is open to any person who wishes to display his work. Each person will be limited to two entries, for which there will be an entry fee of $2. Entry blanks may be obtained at the Recreation Commission office, Carter's Stationary, or Keeler's Bookstore. The deadline for entries is May 1 with the objects due from 9 to 5 p.m. May 9 at the Community Building. All entries will be insured. Division entries of the festival include textiles, silversmith, prints, drawings, water colors, jewelry, sculpture, silk screen, weaving, ceramics and oils. As one of its first projects last year, the Lawrence Art Guild organized the Art Festival. Some 240 entries were registered with about 1800 visitors attending the show. The festival will run from noon-7 p.m. Friday, May 10; from 10 am.-9 p.m. Saturday, May 11, and noon-7 p.m. on Sunday, May 12. It will be open to the public without charge. It will be open to the public without charge. Students to Attend Festival Students from over 100 Kansas high schools will participate in the State Speech and Drama Festival to be held here Friday and Saturday. All activities of the festival will be held in Murphy Hall. Ratings are given on a four point scale, with First Division ratings going to the best performances. There is no limit to the number of First Division ratings that may be given. Students participating are those who received First Division ratings in the district festivals that took place over the state last month. Entries fall into seven categories: extemporaneous speaking, informative speeches, one-act plays, duet acting, orations, readings and oral interpretation. Oral interpretation is divided into poetry and prose interpretation. Medals and certificates of merit will be awarded. The general subject for the extemporaneous speeches will be foreign affairs. Within this category there are 25 subtopics selected from the Dec.1,1962 to March 1,1963 issues of Time, Newsweek, U.S.News and World Report, and The American Observer. The entries will have a choice of one of three topics that they draw. After the choice they will have 20 minutes to prepare a five to seven minute speech. Judges for the festival will include speech and drama instructors from KU and other Kansas universities as well as other people active in the field. Safety Lessons Start Monday A Red Cross water safety instructors course, open to anyone with a current senior life saving card, will begin Monday in Robinson Gymnasium. University Daily Kansan Page 11 The course will be divided into two phases of five lessons each. The first phase will be from 6-8 p.m. April 22-30. The second phase will be from 7-10 p.m. May 13-17. University students will be given first enrollment preference, and if there is any room left in the classes, others will be accepted. Interested students can register with Mary J. Mulvaney, room 106. Robinson Gymnasium. Anyone who finds it impossible to take the course at the time it is offered here may call the Red Cross Community Building, VI 3-3550, and find out when other Red Cross Water Safety Instructor courses are scheduled throughout the state. Those taking the course here must furnish their own suits, and girls must bring their own caps and wear them. Art Exhibit to Open April 30 An exhibition of the works of Albert Bloch, former KU professor, will be presented April 30 at the KU Museum of Art. The 92-piece showing will be introduced by Ernst Scheyer, Wayne State University professor, who will speak on "Albert Bloch, An American Blaue Reiter." THE RECEPTION will mark the opening of the exhibition of Bloch's drawings, watercolors and prints. The lecture will be given at 8 p.m. April 30 in Fraser Theater. A reception at the Museum of Art will follow. Corps Placement Test Set Bloch who taught at KU from 1923 until his retirement in 1955 was head of the Department of Painting and Drawing. He died in December of 1961. A placement test for KU students interested in the Peace Corps' summer training programs will be given at 8:30 a.m., Saturday, April 27, at the Lawrence Post Office. A new test consisting of half-hour sections on general aptitude and on modern language aptitude will be given for the first time. Candidates who have any background in French or Spanish must take an additional one-hour proficiency test. Applicants who have not submitted a questionnaire to the Peace Corps must bring a completed one with them to the test. Questionnaires are available at the campus Peace Corps office in the Kansas Union. The 43rd annual Engineering Exposition being held in Allen Field House will be open until 9 p.m. today. Engineering Exhibits End at 12 Tomorrow Expected to participate in ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Exposition at 9 a.m. tomorrow are Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Sen. Frank Carlson, Rep. William Avery, Dr. Joseph Shea, a NASA official and Capt. Joe Engle, an astronaut-in-training who is a 1956 KU graduate. Friday, April 19, 196: A 2,000-pound mockup of the Mercury spacecraft will be on display at the Exposition. A glass window in the capsule will allow persons to see a dummy of an astronaut and his controls. The exposition ends at noon tomorrow. Chancellor To Speak On Accountant's Day Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak at the buffet dinner concluding Accountant's Day activities which will be held by the KU Accounting Society Monday, April 22. Accountant's Day is an annual function of the Accounting Society carried out in cooperation with the Kansas City Chapter of the National Association of Accountants. The day's program will begin with a special regional symposium where several technical aspects of the accounting field will be discussed. Dr. Sherwood Newton, associate professor of business administration, will moderate. speaker will be Harry Stover, a past advisor of the Kansas City, Mo., Junior Achievement program and a certified public accountant for the Arthur Anderson Co. The symposium will be followed by a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. The A panel discussion at 2:45 p.m. will conclude discussion of the topics begun at the morning symposium. "The NEW LOOK in Internal Auditing" will be the topic of the National Association of Accountants panel discussion at 4 p.m. Dr. Howard F. Stetler, professor of business administration, will moderate. Alvin K. Heyle, president of the Kansas City chapter of the National Association of Accountants will preside at the buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m. ROSE MARIE REID Set your fashion sights on "Sail Away"—a two-piece maillot that brings the sailors out to see! Its scooped neckline leaves more of you for tan. Self-belt and bra top are trimmed in white. A spanky swimshape in soft Helanca® nylon knit, 7-13, $19.95. CAMPUS 12th & Oread DOWNTOWN 835 Mass.