SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Friday, June 17, 1960 48th Year. No.2 LAWRENCE, KANSAS Scott City Girl Inaugurated As Governor Bylle Snyder of Scott City was installed last night as 1960 governor of Sunflower-Girls State, in session at the University. A Nationalist candidate, she defeated Rae Ann Mettlen of McPherson, a nominee on the Federalist ticket. The two political parties captured an equal number of state offices in the general election Wednesday. Other winners were Donna Johnson, Leavenworth, lieutenant governor; Marilee Carr, Anthony, attorney general; Sharon Fail, Lyons, secretary of state; Patricia Talarico, Arma, treasurer; Joyce McKee, Kansas City, state auditor; Patricia Temple, Leoti, superintendent of public instruction; Norberta Wachet, Frontenac, state printer, and Kristie Moon, Cherryvale, commissioner of insurance. Justices of the Supreme Court are Karen Anderson, Bird City; Gloria McFarland, Almena; Karen Carey, Valley Center; Nancy Dunham, Erie; Julia Woolridge, Marion; Pamela Wolley, Osborne, and Judith Hunt, Cimarron. Mrs. Mary Koger, chairman of the National Legislative Committee of the American Legion Auxiliary, presided at the inaugural ceremony. Lt. Gov. Joseph W. Henkle delivered the inaugural address. The new officers will spend the remainder of the week passing and enforcing their own legislation. The ceremony concluded the reign of Ann Leffler, Pittsburg, 1959 Girls State Governor. Today they will be the guests of Mrs. Henkle for coffee at the Governor's Mansion in Topeka. Afterward they will tour the State House. Student Directory Comes Out Tuesday The issue of the Summer Session Kansan for Tuesday will include the summer session student directory. The directory will include the name, class, school, Lawrence address and telephone number of any student who enrolled June 9 and 10. It is based on information given by students on their IBM permit cards at the time of registration. Fee payment for summer session students begins next Friday. The fee payment schedule: Fee Payment Begins Next Friday Morning A-L — Friday morning, June 24 A-L — Friday morning, June 24 M-Z — Friday afternoon, June 24 All those unable to appear on Friday—Saturday morning, June 25 All fees must be paid before Monday, June 27, in order to avoid a $2 a day late payment penalty. The enrollment of any student whose fees are not paid by Thursday, June 30, will be canceled. Fees are paid at the business office in Strong Hall. TO CRY OR TO CHEER—Bylle Snyder of Scott City was a mixture of emotions Wednesday upon hearing that she had been elected governor of Sunflower Girls State. Dvkes Re-Elected to Post James E. Dykes, associate professor of journalism, has been reelected regional dean of district nine of the American Academy of Advertising. The region includes Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska. Ex-Girls Staters to Meet On Campus for Reunion The eleventh annual Girls State Reunion will be held on campus toorrow and Sunday. Alumnae of the 1957 through 1959 conventions have been invited to attend. Mrs. Mills Hollis, director of Sunflower Girls State since 1958, said that delegates "have provided living proof of the positive approach to teaching and inspiring youth to the importance of preserving our heritage." Mrs. Frances Heller, wife of the Associate Dean of the College of Delegates will register from 10 am. to noon tomorrow in the lobby of the Kansas Union. After lunch together in the Union Cafeteria, a business meeting will be held at 1 pm. in the Jayhawk Room. Liberal Arts and Sciences, will speak to the delegates at 2 p.m. Other activities scheduled for Saturday afternoon: Coke break, 2:30; election of officers for 1960-61, 2.50; banquet in the Kansas Room, 5:30; candlighting service in Union Ballroom, 7:30; reception of 1960 Girls Staters, 9:30, and an informal "Spread" at Gertrude Sellards Pearson hall at 11. On Sunday delegates will attend worship service at 9 a.m. in Danforth Chapel and a "Brunch" at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Governor for the 1959 Sunflower Girls State was Ann Leflert, Linda Seifers is president of Girls State Alumnae, and Carole Popham and Joan Marie Pistotnick were 1959 Kansas delegates to Girls Nation. Music Campers Enroll Sunday More than 600 high school students are expected to enroll Sunday in the 23rd annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Dismay Sweeps Japan Guy Fraser Harrison, conductor of the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestra; Henri Temianka, conductor of the Temianka Little Symphony and founder and first violinist of the Paganini String Quartet; Victor Alessandro, conductor of the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra. —Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi almost certainly must resign now and call new elections. The prowestern Conservatives almost certainly will win the new elections. but it appears that the 63-year-old premier is at the end of the trail. Students will enroll Sunday in one of the four sections of the music and art camp. The music and art camp is divided into music, art, theatre and ballet sections. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band, is the director of the music camp. Guest conductors for the music camp are: Lucien Cailllet, conductor, composer and arranger formerly with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra; Donald Johans, associate conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; Leo Kucinski, conductor of the Sioux City Symphony Orchestra; Lloyd Pfautsch, director of choral music at Southern Methodist University; Eugene Kenney, director of choral music at Texas Tech College, and Robert McCowan, director of choral music at Iowa State College. Students who enroll for the summer camp, which runs through July 31, will be housed in Lewis and Carruth-O'Leary Halls. The girls will be housed in Lewis and the boys in Carruth-O'Leary. Members of the camp administration are Prof. Wiley; Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education, associate camp director; Clayton H. Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music, director of the choral division, and Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp was founded 23 years ago to provide a summer program for high school students in the various fields of music and art. Short range: Enrollment for the six-week camp will be from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the new section of the Kansas Union ballroom. The three major organizations of the camp are the concert band, the symphony orchestra and the chorus. Each has daily rehearsals under local and guest conductors in preparation for weekly concerts which are presented each Sunday afternoon and evening. There are likely to be long and short range results. Short range: TOKYO —(UPI)— The Kremlin has won a great victory in Japan, but it may be a victory that will boomerang in the long run. The Communists, left-wing Socialists and the fanatic anarchists of the Zengakuren students' organization preened in the flush of victory. But coming events may make it a hollow victory. The "agents of international communism"—a tiny minority, but a minority trained in the roughhouse tactics of their political trade —forced the pro-western government of Japan to postpone the visit of President Eisenhower. For all intents and purposes, the visit is canceled. A great wave of shock, shame, anger and dismay sweet the nation. The nation will be in a state of confusion for several months to come and the Communists and their fellow travelers will attempt to make capital from it. No one can safely say how big or how small the minority was which -There will be no substantial change in U.S.-Japanese relations. Long range: —The Japanese people who saw one minority — the pre-war Militarists — lead them down the road to destruction are likely to take steps to see that it doesn't happen again. —When all quips down, there are likely to be major changes in the constitution giving the government the power it needs to protect public safety and the functions of government itself. —Again, there will be no substantial change in U.S.—Japanese relations. forced the government of Japan to lose face before the world. It can be said, however, that in no election since the end of the war has the left-wing—not even the moderate left-wing—been able to win more than one-third of the votes. But there is no doubt it is a minority. Up to now, the vast majority of the Japanese people has been apathetic—pollies on the security treaty, for example, showed a tremendous percentage of those questioned either don't know about this explosive issue, or didn't care. The apathy has now been jarred. If the majority hangs together as it has at the polls for the last 15 post-war years, there may be a political cohesion formed at last in this politically confusing nation. And it may lead to a government which can rule in fact as well as in name. If this comes to pass, the mobs before the diet will have beat Kishi—but also themselves. Science Camp Enrollment Up The fifth Science and Mathematics Camp at the University opens Sunday with a greatly expanded enrollment and several new additions to its program. More than 1,200 inquiries were received this year from almost every state in the nation, according to Robert W. Baxter, camp director. Formal applications were received from 458 high school sophomores and juniors, from which 100 were selected for enrollment. The 3-week camp has a full schedule planned covering 20 fields of science and mathematics with field trips in biology and geology and lectures and laboratory work in all. Dr. Barry Commoner, professor of plant physiology at Washington University in St. Louis, will give two special lectures during the third week of the camp. The apprentice or research participation phase of the camp will have its largest enrollment in history this year. Twenty-five selected graduates of the 1959 Science Camp have been chosen to return for actual research experience on current research programs being carried on by members of the University faculty and staff. These students will work full time on research programs in the department of their major interest, receiving food and lodging costs while at the University. The newest of the Science Camp programs, initiated this year, is an 8-week honors class in biology directed by Ronald L. McGregor, associate professor of botany. This program is limited to selected high school seniors and provides them with an accelerated start on their college careers. Full college credit will be given for completion of the course work. Fifteen students will attend these classes with their schedules being arranged so that they may also attend the lectures in the multiple-science program of the basic camp. All camp activities are being supported by the National Science Foundation. This has enabled the camp to defray all or part of the costs for students unable to pay the camp fee, thus permitting selection of the top applicants without regard to financial backgrounds. Grants were made solely on the basis of need. The Kansas camp has been selected as one of 18 similar camps chosen from 140 now operating to be studied by an agency of the National Science Foundation as a basis for evaluating the best procedures and long range effects of the nation-wide program. Weather Mostly fair through today, Warmer. High 75 to 80.