S SUMMER SESSION KANSAN place out. with spent itiba, ation cause and 48th Year, No. 4 Friday, June 24, 1960 LAWRENCE, KANSAS MUSIC FILLS THE AIR-Members of the 23rd Annual Midwestern Music Camp band, orchestra and chorus were polishing up today 100 Teachers Attend Meetings More than 100 high school and college teachers of science and mathematics currently are attending two conferences on Radiation Biology and the Summer Institute of Mathematics on campus. Science teachers from 20 high schools are participating in the 8-week session on radiation biology under the direction of Edward I. Shaw, associate professor of radiation biophysics. The program is planned to improve the subject-matter competence of the teachers, to strengthen their capacity to motivate able students toward science careers and to bring the teachers into personal contact with prominent scientists who participate in the institute. for the first of a series of six concerts which will open Sunday afternoon and evening, with indoor and outdoor concerts. Grants from the National Science Foundation and the Atomic Energy Commission support the institute. The NSF has provided $19,000 and the AEC has added $12,000 plus providing essential material and equipment for classroom use. The 26 students in the senior demonstration class are students of highly superior ability and accomplishments from throughout the nation. They are being taught courses in probability and statistical inference and in elementary abstract algebra. The 8-week mathematics session also is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Special features of the institute are the freshman and senior demonstration classes. The freshman demonstration class is composed of ninth graders in the Lawrence school system. They are taking a special course in ninth grade algebra. R. N. Bradt, associate professor of mathematics, is the director of the institute. Placement Exams To be Given Today Placement examinations required for all new undergraduate students will be held again this afternoon from 2 until 5 in Bailey Auditorium The first session of the examinations were given yesterday. Fee Payments Due By Tomorrow Noon All students must pay fees in full to the Business Office, 121 Strong, to complete registration. Fees may be paid according to the suggested schedule following: -Today, morning-A through L. -Today, afternoon-M through Z. -Tomorrow, morning-All unable to appear today. A penalty of $2 a day for late payment of fees goes into effect Monday. The enrollment of any student whose fees are not paid on Thursday, June 30, will be canceled. Faculty Members Attend 2 Schools Two University of Kansas professors are attending Episcopal faculty summer schools in theology and religion this summer, jointly sponsored by the Church Society for College Work and the Division of College Work of the National Council of the Episcopal Church. A 97-page study of "The Rise and Fall of the Machine Tractor Station as an Instrument of Soviet Rule" has been published by the Governmental Research Center of the University of Kansas. Kenneth S. Rothwell, assistant professor of English, will attend the second school held at the Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, Mass., from July 25 to August 26. Robert N. Sudlow, assistant professor of drawing and painting, is attending the school being held at Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, from June 20 to July 22. Study of Russian Farming Published Roy D. Laird, assistant professor of political science and a consultant to the Federal government on Russian agriculture, is the principal author. Co-authors are Darwin E. Sharp of Ottawa, who earned the B.A. degree from KU in history in 1959, and Ruth Sturtevant of Mt. Airy, N. C., who received the M.A. degree in political science this month. Zeller Receives New AEC Grant Edward J. Zeller, associate professor of geology, has been granted renewal of a $25,700 contract with the Atomic Energy Commission for continued research in measuring the geologic age of limestone. He will direct his research using the thermoluminescence method he developed. By measuring the light given off by limestone at a temperature between room temperature and red heat, the amount of natural radiation damage is determined. This information, with the knowledge of the natural radiation rate, enables him to calculate the age of limestone samples. The AEC contract is being awarded Prof. Zeller for the fourth consecutive year. Two Seniors Get Awards Evelyn Leonilla Komarek of Elinwood has been awarded a $250 Girls State scholarship by the Kansas Department of the American Legion Women's Auxiliary. Two University seniors received scholarships for the coming school year this week. The scholarship is awarded annually to the outstanding junior girl majoring in political science and who, preferably, has attended Sunflower Girls State. Miss Komarek was a 1955 delegate to Girl's State. Lawrence Leon Madden of Wichita will hold the William D. Weibley scholarship in the School of Pharmacy. The award of $208 will pay all fees for two semesters. The late William D. Weible of WaKeeney endowed the scholarship 'o further pharmacy education. The award is made by W. J. Cleland of WaKeeney, trustee of the fund, upon the recommendation of Dean J. Allen Reese. Weather Partly cloudy today and tonight. Cooler all except extreme northern portion today. High 85 to 95. First Music Camp Concerts Sunday The first of six weekly concerts by the band, chorus and orchestra of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be given Sunday afternoon and evening. The orchestra and chorus will combine for a program at 3:30 p.m. in University Theatre, Murphy Hall. The band and chorus will perform at 8 p.m. in the Outdoor Theatre just east of Hoch Auditorium. Conductors for the first program will be regular camp directors Russell L. Wiley, Clayton Krehbiel and Gerald Carney. Afternoon Gerald M. Carney and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors 3:30 p.m. University Theatre Part I Chorus Ave Maria ... Bruckner Requiem ... Brahms I Blessed Are They That Mourn I Blessed Are They That Mourn Mr. Krebhiel, Conducting Part II Orchestra Overture in D ... Handel-Willner * Allessandro Stradella, Overture ... von Flotow Symphony No. 1 (Spring) ... Schumann First Movement: Maestoso and Allegro Hymn and Fuging Tune No. 3 ... Cowell Suite Algerienne ... St Saens Marche Militaire Francaise Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Carney, Conducting Evening Russell L. Wiley and Clayton Krehbiel, Conductors 8:00 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Part I Band National Capital March ... Alfred Zambarano Toccata ... Gerolamo Frescobaldi Meditation from "Thais" ... Massenet Introduction and Wedding March from "The Golden Cockerel" ... Rimsky-Korsakov Pettite Suite De Concert ... Coleridge-Taylor L. Lo Caprise De Nanette Part II Mr. Wiley, Conducting Chorus Now Let Every Tongue Adore Thee ... Bach Hallelujah ... Beethoven Ching-A-Ring-Chaw ... Copland Mr. Krehbiel, Conducting Prayer and Dream Pantomime from "Hansel and Gretel" ... Engelbert Humperdinck Love Scene from "Boris Godounov" ... Modeste Moussorgsky Overture and Allegro from "La Sultane" ... Couperin-Milhaud Ein Heldenleben, A Hero's Life ... Richard Strauss The Crowning Glory, Processional March ... Alfred Reed Theme Song rish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger M. Wiley Conducting Final Performance For Musical Tonight The final performance of "Brigadoon," the first summer production of the University Theatre, will be presented at 7:30 tonight in Murphy Hall. The summer company has been selected by the USO for a 7-week tour of military installations in Japan, Korea and Okinawa. Tickets will be on sale at the box office. Fort Scott Youth Chosen for Award Patrick William Henry of Fort Scott has been named the recipient of the Bourbon County Alumni Scholarship to attend the University of Kansas during the 1960-61 academic year. The $250 scholarship is made possible by contributions of KU alumni living in Bourbon County, to the Greater University Fund.