SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 48th Year, No. 13 Friday, July 29, 1960 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Music, Art Camp To Finish Sunday The 23rd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp will close out with a 'bang' Sunday with the final round of concerts by the camp orchestra, chorus and band. The orchestra and chorus will present the final afternoon concert at 3:30 in Murphy Hall. The band and chorus will close out the camp at 8 Sunday night at the Outdoor Theatre east of Hoch Auditorium PROF. RUSSELL L. Wiley, director of the camp, will conduct the band in the playing of the "1812 Overture," with the crashing finale. THE SUNDAY CONCERTS will feature appearances by guest artists on campus this week for the music clinic conducted jointly with the camp. The final programs: AFTERNOON AFTERNOON 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Requiem ... Brahms Lord, Make Me to Know Here On Earth Have We No Continuing Place Clayton Krehbiel, Conducting Opening Chorus of Peasants (Cavalleria Rusticana) ... Mascagni Varsity Choir Der Abend ... Brahms I Want to Be Ready ... Arr. Hutton Lloyd Pfautsch, Conducting Part II Orchestra Russlan and Ludmilla, overture ... Glinka Capriccio Espagnol ... Rimsky-Korsakov Alborado Variazioni Scena e canto gitano Fandango austriano Gerald M. Carney, Conducting Water Music ... Handel Allegro Air Andante Allegro deciso First Cello Concerto ... Saint-Saens Benar Heifetz, Cellist Carmen Suite, No. 1 ... Bizet Prelude and Argonaise Intermezzo Segnedilla Les dragon d'Alcala Les Toreadors Henri Temianka, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Gerald M. Carney, Conducting EVENING 8 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Band Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Part I Fugue in G minor ... J. S. Bach* Nabucco Overture ... Giuseppe Verdi* Waltzes from Rosenkavalier ... Richard Strauss* The Veterans' March ... Gabriel Pares* * arr. by Lucien Cailliet Lucien Calliet, Conducting Part II Chorus All the Earth Doth Worship Thee ... Hande Wondrous Cool Thou Woodland Quiet ... Brahm Ground Hog ... arr. Hart I'll Praise My Maker ... arr. Pfautsch Johnny Comes Marching Home ... arr. Fissinger Lloyd Pfautsch, Conducting Part III Toccata ... Girolamo Frescobald Carnival of Venice ... Del Stagirn The Magic Trumpet ... James F. Burko Byron Autrey, Trumpet Soloist Inglesina, Symphonic March ... D. Delle Cesco O Isis and Osiris ... W. A. Mozart William J. Bell, Tuba Soloist 1812 Overture ... Peter Tschaikovsky Russell L. Wiley, Conducting Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Percy Grainger Enrollment Sets New KU Record Attendance at the University reached an all-time high of 11,783 during the fiscal year 1959-60. James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions, reported today. The figure which is 328 or 3 percent more than 1958-59 record represents the number of individuals who attended KU at some time during the year. The most enrolled at one time was 9,435 in the fall semester. Although the University's single semester high of 9,751, produced by a large WW II veterans attendance, came in 1948, that year KU served 11,199 individuals, 584 fewer than in the year just ended. Women more than accounted for the entire increase. Their registration was up 636 to an all-time high of 4.427. This more than countered a decline of 308 men. The latter decline stemmed directly from a combination of stricter probationary requirements, higher entrance standards and a national trend away from engineering studies. These caused the number of individuals in the School of Engineering and Architecture to drop 312 to 1,862. Hitt noted that Graduate School enrollment had continued its remarkable climb to 1,802. up 168 Registration in the other schools was: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 3,660, up 213; School of Education, 1,020, up 71; School of Medicine, 928, up 62; School of Fine Arts, 596, down 8; School of Business, 512, down 5; School of Law, 141, down 8; School of Journalism, 87, down 11; School of Pharmacy, down 34, in a shift from a 4-year to a 2 and 3-year program. KANU to Suspend Broadcasting Sunday Radio station KANU-FM will be off the air for an indefinite period starting Sunday. R. Edwin Browne, station director, said repairs would be made at the transmitter in preparation for an increase in power this fall. He hoped the shutdown would be no longer than a week to 10 days. Camp Students Receive Honors Twenty one outstanding students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp nearing a close here have been selected for special honors. Anne Kepler, Tulsa, Okla., was named the outstanding girl in the music division of the camp and is the recipient of the $50 Chancellor's Award. She plays flute in the band and orchestra and was also selected queen of the camp at its formal dance last weekend. Ben Clinesmith, Ft. Scott, was chosen the outstanding boy musician and is the winner of the Phi Mu Alpha national music fraternity medal and $50 scholarship to the school of his choice. Runners-up in the music division are Shirley Braming, Oak Park, Ill., violinist in the orchestra, and Alvin Lowrey of Winfield, who plays trumpet in the band and orchestra and is a bass in the chorus. Lowrey was also presented a $50 scholarship to attend the 1961 session of the camp, provided by Edward Down of the Audio House in Lawrence. In the theater division, John Nance of Wichita was named the outstanding boy and Lucinda Hauser of Marion, the outstanding girl. Nancy Schroeter of Kansas City, Kans., is the outstanding student in the speech and debate section. Outstanding girl and boy in the art camp are Cynthia Conner, Oelwein, Iowa, and William Friday, Roseburg, Ore. Ken Moffett of Pryor, Okla., was selected as the outstanding art camper enrolled in another division of the camp. Others named to the honor rol in the art division are Fred Bower, North Olmsted, Ohio; Sandra Caswell, Oakley; Gordon Cathey, Fort Worth, Tex.; Jane Dvornik, Lafayette, Ind.; Roger Gilkeson, Great Falls, Va.; Patricia Anne Kirtley Oklahoma City, Okla. Berry Klingman, Galesburg, Ill.; Susan Lawrence, Bartlesville, Okla.; John Luton, Alexandria, Va.; Judy McDanel, Alton, Ill., and Debra Morast. Kansas City, Kans. The six-week camp ends Sunday. The campers will present their final orchestra and band concerts Sunday afternoon and evening. Two Seniors Get Marcy Awards Two engineering seniors have been awarded Frank E. Marcy Scholarships in Chemical Engineering for the 1960-61 academic year. Daniel Gilbert DiCanio, Long Island City, Queens, N.Y., is a recipient of a $500 award and Larry Eugene Wood of Wymore, Nebr., of a $475 scholarship. The awardee are made possible through contributions of Mr. Marey, a disintinguished graduate of the University of Kansas, to the KU Endowment Association. DiCanlo is a 1956 graduate of Brooklyn Technical High School. He is author and associate editor of the Kansas Engineer, a publication of the University of Kansas School of Engineering and Architecture, and is employed during the school year at the Varsity Theater in Lawrence. Wood is a 1957 graduate of Wymore.Public High School. He has been named to the dean's honor roll in the School of Architecture and Engineering three of the four semesters he has attended KU. He was the recipient of a Stansbury Scholarship during the 1957-58 school year and of a General Scholarship from the University in 1959. He is a member of Sigma Chi social fraternity. Weather Today through Monday temperatures will average above normal especially in the west. Precipitation will be spotty with scattered showers averaging .25 or less west and .25 to .50 east. Normal high temperatures are in the lower 90s THAT LUCKY OLD SUN-While students and faculty search out the cooler climes of the University this month, the work of KU's department of buildings and grounds goes right on. Here Mike McCaffrey and Gene Dunigan keep up the gardening work despite the rays of the sun.