University Summer Kansan Tuesday, June 6. 1972 KU Institute Studies Shakespeare By CONNIE PARISH By CONNIE PARISH Kansan Staff Writer KU students interested in learning about Shakespeare and the Elizabethan era met Monday in the first session of the Kansas Shakespeare Festival and will continue to attend will continue July 29. The Institute, which is being offered for the first time at KU, is designed for students of various disciplines such as music, art, history. English and theatre to give under understanding of language are Not only will Shakespeare's literary works be studied, but also the music, art, and theatre of Elizabethan times. This wide range of experiences should enrich the student's awareness of Shakespeare by placing him in his cultural context, said William Kuhlke professor of speech and drama and the Institute's academic advisor. Festival activities include three Shakespearean productions, a film series madrigal music, and a contemporary art exhibit and guest lectures. asunt Vaughan, eminent American Shakepearean theater teacher for the Institute, Anne Thompson, a Shakespearean actress who has appeared in plays at the Shakespeare Festival, the Kennedy Center's Eisenhower Theatre and others, is actress in. Scholars-in-residence are Paul Murray Kendall, professor of English and Charlton Himan, professor of English. Kendall, a, historian and biographer, is a professor of Shakespearean drama. Himman is a leading authority on the editing of Shakespeare's works and currently collaborating on an edition of Shakespeare's comedies. The chairman of the festival committee in Jack T. Brooking, professor of speech and drama, will present materials other than speech and drama participating in the in- J. Bunker Clark, associate professor of music history; James Connelly, associate professor of art history; Richard Tucker, associate professor of English; Eric Wimmers, acting assistant professor of English. Charles Mastinon, associate professor of English, is the English department's student in planning the institute. "Hamlet" will be featured July 6 to 8 and July 10 and 11. Brooking will direct this production. Three dramatic productions will be staged during the festival. These productions will be open to the public. Stuart Vaughan will direct "Twelfth Night." 'to be broadcast' 24, to 26, on July 1. The final production will be "Mortchant of Venice" on July 15, to 12 or 7. It will be directed by the instructor in speech and drama. Computer Use Slowed From Page One computer center for instruction or administration. Wolfe said that the future program would have to be more efficient that it is today. "WHAT WE'RE faced with, I think," Woolf said, is "that not only the computation center operate more efficiently, but even watching it carefully when we are doing and doing essential things." Wolfe said that there was a rather large adjustment to make, and that there was no easy way of doing it. Summer School "We're probably all going to go there, a re-evaluation of what we're doing, why we are doing it, and how important it is to do it." I smile, a smile that is professional and appropriate for do all the time anyway." He said that people were going to be asked to look at reports that they receive and determine if they are necessary and have to be produced as often as if there is a economic way of producing them. These figures were released by William L, Kelly, registrar. Wolfe said the priorities of the KU Information System would have to be determined more carefully. All theatre performances will be at 8 p.m. in the university Theatre. Tickets are available with certificates of registration. Ways of reducing fixed costs, such as equipment charges is also being looked into. Wolef said they were trying to cut down on the total monthly bill on equipment and make its basic computer equipment. Enrollment is Up 3 Per Cent The projected final enrollment for the Lawrence campus is 6,388 compared to 6,343 for an increase of 1 per cent. pieces of information." The problem is also being committed by the university committee on computing. The Long Range Planning Sub- committee of the University of North Carolina is currently currently doing a study which should be completed sometime in The large increase at the Med Center is due to a change in schedule, and the new students now need more time with their parents and of waiting for the fall. "IT IS really a basic question—where are you going to put your bucks? Where are you going to get them?" "If it is important it is to have certain Total first day enrollment for the summer session at the University of Kansas and the KU Med Center is up 3 per cent over last year, and in the same year's first day totals were 5.015 in Lawrence compared to 4.953 last year for an increase of 1 per cent, and in Kansas City the total was up 14 per cent with 1.033 students to 908 for last year. Meantwhile the demand for computers increases, and as Wolfe put it, "with little or no funding increase, we're headed for an increasing amount on our portfolio for a very very scarce resource." 40 Jobs Required To Help STEP Up Several parts for men are still open in both "Hamlet" and "The Wife," so students are eligible to try out. Those interested should contact the Department of the Experimental Theatre and from 3 to 5 p.m. in Room 233. Lawrence's Summer Teen Employment Program (STEP) helps teens reach the goal of 100 job slots for underprivileged and minority students. Six Shakespearean films are being sponsored by the Student Union Activities as part of the festival. These films are open to all KU students. Laurence Olivier will be present. V' will open the series June 11. On Sunday afternoons follow on each there are production and exhibition halls, with informal gatherings for festival participants to discuss the events. In addition, Phil Briscoe, coordinator of the program for the Hellenic Academy of the Resources, said Monday the program was $5,000 short of being adequately funded. Donations are STEP's sole source of in- come. program's operating fund. STEP originally was founded to keep adolescents off the streets after school and into summer months. But the orientation now is toward helping youngsters work out attitude issues in their different environment through their summer jobs. Some job slots now provide training with Step. In some instances the employer pays his STEP employee's wages. More often, wages are supplemented or paid from the supplement. STEP want to provide more help than others said. More than anything else, youngsters need to feel that others are concern about them, "Romeo and Juliet," featuring a ballet performed by the Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow, will be shown at the Metropolitan Theater featured as Puck in Max Reinhardt's production of "Midsummer Night's Dream." A Russian-made version of *Othello* will be shown July 18, "Throne of Blood," a Japanese play that will close the series on July 23. organization Gays Continue Challenge Of District Court Ruling The Front filed suit against the University because it had refused to give recognition to the Gay Lib The Lawrence Gay Liberation Front has begun an appeal of a U.S. District Court decision F.10 which denoted the homosexual group's request for recognition by the University of Kansas. Klinknett said that one such case had been reviewed in the police station and that a man was fired from his job when he applied for a marriage license. Jack Klinken, attorney for the Front, said that a major argument centered on whether she had sufficient force people to accept its beliefs. Briscoe stressed that anyone with a job must provide an employer program to provide a steady job for a minimum of two hours a day, five hours a day. The District Court in this case ruled that the man should regain his job, but a Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court ruled that he was forcing his personal beliefs upon his employer. A record of appeal, including documents related to District Court Judge Guever Templar's attempt to have the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. The Appeals Court would make its decision on a case. All films will be shown at 2 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium in the Union and at 7:30 p.m. in Dynec Auditorium. Tickets are 75 cents. Prospective employers must be definite about what type of work needs to be done. In addition, and with the right personnel, the employer must provide supervision—positive reinforcement well trained in enforcement the well youth is doing his job. University students and faculty often make the best supervisors, said Briscoe. "I am somewhat displeased with attitudes of some people in Lawrence." Briscoe said the job slots yet to be found. Music and art offerings are also available to the public as well as institute participants. The opening of the Boydell Theater will be at 3:30 p.m. June 11 in the Spoonther Tayer Museum of Art. Participation in STEP is one form of community involvement, and the more people that contribute than one's money he said. A truly concerned citizen can show his interest in more ways than his money to his church, he said. Klinknett said that this argument was one of the main defenses used by the University. Forty students are enrolled in the institute, which is offered for both undergraduate and graduate credit. The Lawrence Chamber Players will provide music for the University of Texas program of Elizabetah music will be offered by the KU Colegium Musicum at 3 p.m. The University Spooner Thayer Museum of Art There will also be concerts each week. The final concert for the junior high camp will be at June 16, in Hoch Auditorium. Guest conductors for the junior high camp include Robert E. Foster, KU director of bands, and Michael W. Schoenberg, instrumental music in Winfield. For the orchestra, the director of music at Lawrence High School bands. Duncan Couch, director of musical music at Southern Baptist University. The Senate Executive Committee is considering a recommen- date defense-related research being done at the University, according to associate dean of law, Dr. Alex Exhairman Ron Calgaard. Calgaard said the Chancellor would make the final decisions on committee appointments and investigations, but that SenEx was considering criteria for the appointments and the committee in general. James B. Lingwall, associate professor of speech and drama and generalist of occupational clinic, said recently that anyone over 14 years of age could attend therapy. In addition, therapy would be conducted in group and individual positions. SenEx Plans For Committee There will be two bands of 150 players, and they will rehearse four hours daily in preparation for a grand concert finale to the camp. An orchestra of 125 students will rehearse the same piece at least twice as often as 150 voices will also prepare for the grand concert. Calgaard said SenEx planned to make a recommendation to the Chancellor's office sometime next week. The Spepp and Hearing Clinic at the University of Kansas will offer a therapy program for adult stutterers in the Lawrence and Buffalo areas. More information about the clinic may be obtained from the speech pathology office at UN4- 4690. Meetings will be at 7 p.m. each Thursday beginning June 8 in Room 288. Worth Hall. The first session will be a general orientation, Lingwall said. Kansas Staff Photo by LINDA SCHILI Clinic Offering Stutterers Aid Geraldine Jenkins, Kansas City, counted votes Monday in a party caucus as the electoral process got under way for the 408 citizens of Girls State. Politics will take a buck seat Wednesday after she elected officials fill their positions in the model government. This year's camp for junior high students will have an enrollment of about 400 students according to Russell Wiley, director of the camp. The only group in his age group is in music and art. Girls Reach for Office The junior high students will The 5th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp will get underway Wednesday with a group of junior high school campers. sements. The junior high camp will last ten days, an abbreviated journalism camp for high school students a week and a five-week camp for music, art, journalism and speech and drama will start June 17. Three Are Named To Get Promotions Gilbert Dyck, an assistant registrar, has been appointed KU director of admissions. Vice President of Education, Balfour announced Saturday. Dyck has been an assistant registrar at KU for the past four years and was previously a teacher in the university mission. Before joining the KU staff, he was director of records at Kansas State University and a professor of research for Wheaton, Ill., public schools, a coach and counselor at Riley County High School, and a coach and teacher in the school. Two other appointments were announced. Jan Roakam, professor of aerospace engineering director of the flight research laboratory of been named chairman of aerospace engineering at the School of Engineering and Robert T. Angeenbrug has been named director of the Office of International Research and Planning. Dyck, who will begin his new job in august succeeds tax law Dyck, who will enter business. Roskam succeeds David Kohlman, who will be on sabbatical leave during the summer. Angengruben will replace George Baxter Smith, who is ap- posed to retire at a reti- retirement age for administrators and plans to return to his professorship in the School of Law. He earned the Ph.D. degree in 1965 from the University of Washington in aeronautics and aviation, he received a KU faculty in 1967, he was an aerodynamic engineer with the Boeing Company in Wichita for eight years and was a part-time instructor at Wichita State University Roskam's appointment will become effective at the beginning of the fall semester. Aangenbrug, now directed by the Institute for Social and Environmental Research, has assumed his new position July 1. projects in the lab for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. In 1960 he won a scholarship to teach Award in engineering. Aangeenbrug received his B.A. degree from Connecticut State College in 1958, taught in New York and then went to the University of Wisconsin where he earned his Ph.D. degree in 1965. He came to KU as assistant professor of history at Boston University faculty. In 1988 he was appointed director of the Center for Regional Studies at KU and the following year he became director of the Institute for the Environment Studies. Aangenebrug is chairman of the Governor's Technical Advisory Board and Communication Systems and serves as a member of the board of directors of the Urban and Regional Association. Aangenebrug has served for the past two years on the Governor's Advisory Council on Ecology from KU in 1967, his A.B. from Bethany College and his M.S. from Rocskam. He roskam, a native of the Hague, Holland, was educated in aeronautic engineering at the University of Delft, University at Deft, Holland. At KU, he has been instrumental in the development of the flight research laboratory and has conducted research He received his Ph.D. degree from KU in 1967, his A.B. from Bethany College and his M.S. from Kansas State University. Band Camp to Start Wednesday ROLLING STONES The Bess Stone Activity Center, a workshop for mentality and physically handicapped adults, began moving to its new home, Cottonwood, Inc., Monday. The new facility is located at 3145 W. 20th Street in Cottonwood, where the director, plans an open house in September. Cottonwood will carry on Atlantic Records New Facility Opens for Handicapped "Exile on Main St." Kansas Staff Photo by PRES BRANDSTED on programs already existing at the Bess Stone Center and gradually expand them. A new emphasis will be on job training; preparing persons for actual employment as well as training them in the production of handaerds and goods and services for wholesalers. Reg. $9^{95}$ $5^{88}$ enroll Wednesday and will be housed in McColium Hall during their stay at KU. Discount Records MALLS SHOPPING CENTER After 967 the enronem- droped off at the KU camp as well as many other camps across the nation The Midwestern Music and Art Camp was organized 34 years ago by Wiley. The enrollment has increased from the handful of students who started in the first year to the enrollment of 2,400 students in 1967. "The economic situation in the United States became a little tighter." Wiley said, "and many of the other camps had to close down. Even some of the shortest roads were run for only a week are closing." Disc Preeners The 1,100 students who were PG METROCOLOR MGM Eve. 7:30,9:30 Mat. Daily 3:00 Eve. 7:30. 9:30 Ends Tuesday HAPPY HOUR COLOR Ends Tuesday Evenings Matinee at 7:30 & 8:30 2:30 Jesse James and Cole Younger's most daring bank robbery! enrolled this year is down somewhat from the expected enrollment of around 1,200. An Incredible Adventure of the Future . . . to Save What We Abuse Today! A UNIVERSAL RELEASE Adult 7:45 & 9:30 Chil- 1.50' Hillcrest 7.50' The final camp is a concentrated journalism camp that will start Sunday and end June 23rd. To attend, the concentration of the camp will be a senior high students. There will be about 85 students in this section of the camp. "We have always had a real fine camp program," said Wiley, "and even with the fewer num- bers we year will have a great camp. WANT ADS WORK WONDERS HANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES Three days Oral day (1) oral food / fewlet : $7.98 (2) additional fewlet : $0.51 The senior high camp will preside in each of these concerts there will be three bands, one chair and two orchestras. The concert will Accreditation, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanana are offered for college credit, gold, cremation, or national origi- How do we advertise? If you don't. 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