SUMMER SESSION KANSAN 46th Year, No. 4 STUDENT DIRECTORY ISSUE LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, June 20, 1958 Truck-Scooter Crash Fatal To Student George Joseph Carrier. Lawrence sophomore, died at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday from injuries suffered in a truck-motor scooter collision at 6 p.m. Tuesday. Carrier was 27. No funeral arrangements had been made by Thursday noon. The accident occurred when Carrier, on a motor scooter, and a truck driven by C. O. Collins, 17, of Route 3, Baldwin, were traveling south on Connecticut Street. Collins said the two vehicles were about even when Carrier suddenly swerved to the left and hit the right front wheel of the truck. Carrier was knocked unconscious and never regained total consciousness according to hospital officials. He was taken from the scene of the accident to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he died. He suffered a skull fracture. GEORGE JOSEPH CARRIEP Damage to the scooter and truck was minor, police said. They said it apeared neither vehicle was traveling at an excessive speed. Carrier had been reported to be responding to treatment during the day Wednesday and was taken off the critical list about noon. He is survived by his wife, Joan, and 2-year-old son, Bryant, of 1622 Powers St.; his mother, Mrs. Laura Carrier of Pawtucket, R. I.; three sisters, Miss Constance Carrier of Pawtucket, R. I., Mrs. Gloria Lael of Chatham, N. J. and Mrs. Betty Battles of New York, N. Y.; and two brothers, Francis of Alexandria, Va. and Louis of Pawtucket, R. I. He was majoring in engineering 'Cave Dwellers' Ends Tonight "The Cave Dwellers," first theatrical production of the summer season, opened last night in the University Theatre in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. The final performance of the play will be at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Students may exchange I.D. cards for tickets at the theatre box office or the Kansas Union. Weather Scattered showers and thunderstorms southeast, elsewhere widely scattered thunderstorms today. Turning cooler extreme north today. Otherwise no important change in temperature. High today 75 north to 80s south. IT TAKES PRACTICE—Members of the band, orchestra and chorus of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp have been hard at work preparing for their first concerts to be given this Sunday. (Summer Kansan photo by Ron Miller) Music Camp Plans First Concerts The first of six weekly concerts by the band, chorus and orchestra of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will be held Sunday. A full-scale concert has been scheduled, although the musical groups have been in rehearsal less than one week. A combined concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday will feature the 100-piece camp orchestra and the 150-voiced mixed chorus, Gerald M. Carney will direct the orchestra and the chorus will be directed by Clayton Krehbiel. Both are associate professors of music education. Russell L. Wiley, professor of band and director of the camp, will conduct the 8 p.m. performance of the band at the outdoor theatre just east of Hoch Auditorium. The band is composed of more than 200 persons. The program Sunday will be: Chorus Afternoon Cantate Domino Canticum Novum (O Sing Unto The Lord) Behold, The Tabernacle Of God Silent Devotion And Response Orchestra Irish Tune From County Derry Overture In D Major Symphony No. 7 In C Major First Movement: andante and allegro The Sleeping Beauty Suite Valse Caucasian Sketches Procession of the Sardar Evening Irish Tune From County Derry Hassler Willan Bloch Grainger Handel Schubert Band Ippolitow Iwanow Proud Heritage Overture For Band Suite From The Ballet "Swan Lake" 1. Valse 2. Dance of the Swans The Dusk Of The Gods, Funeral Music Tschaikowsky Chorus Grainger Glory Be To The Father Adoramus Te (We Adore Thee) Oh! Lemuel Band Zueignung (Dedication) The Dover Coach London Every Day Suite Knightbridge March Elsa's Procession To The Cathedral From "Lohengrin" Latham Mendelssohn Tschaikowsky Wagner Schutz Perṭi Strauss Vinter Coates Wagner Concert Pianist To Play Here Monday Anton Kuerti, pianist, will give a recital at 8 p.m. Monday in the 'University Theatre in the Music and Dramatic Arts Building. Greek Housing Rezoning Asked Whether or not the City Commission will pass a rezoning ordinance to permit Greek student housing on West Fifteenth Street, will come up again next fall. The questioning of rezoning was first brought up about four months ago when Pi Beta Phi sorority requested permission to build on a tract on the north side of Fifteenth east of Engel Road, owned by Odd and Skipper Williams. The request was denied. The hearing next fall will be on similar rezoning for all the privately-owned vacant land in that area which adjoins the campus. Ben Barteldes, the other property owner involved, told the Planning Commission Tuesday he will seek rezoning soon on his land. The Williams brothers asked to have their request reconsidered at the same time. The Planning Commission, which had voted unanimously against the earlier rezoning, decided no action should be taken on the new combined requests until September. This will allow the planners more time to study the over-all zoning problem in relation to future off-campus student housing needs and also to wait until after vacation time so all interested property owners can attend the meeting. Only three of the five city commissioners voted in favor of the Williams rezoning request last March. A four-fifths favorable vote would have been necessary to override formal protests from neighbors. Mayor John Weatherwax, who cast the deciding vote in March, said then he was not firmly opposed to the rezoning but wanted the matter to be kept open pending an overall study of where future off-campus student housing should go. This is the only performance scheduled on the Summer Concert Course. Tickets are available at the School of Fine Arts office, Room 446 Music and Dramatic Arts Building. LD. cards will admit students. 00201307111800495102 ANTON KUERTI Mr. Kuerti is the 1957 winner of the coveted Edgar M. Leventritt Foundation Award, one of the highest honors offered in the music field. The recital will include the Prelude and Fugue in E flat major by Bach, Sonata in B flat by Mozart, "Wanderer" by Schubert, "Toccata" by Schumann and shorter contemporary works by Alban Berg, Langstroth and Orlando Otev. During the past season, Mr. Kuerti appeared as soloist with the New York Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra under George Sell, the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy, the Detroit Symphony, Buffalo Symphony and the Denver Symphony. After his performance at KU he will fly to Spoleta, Italy to give the final recital at the Festival of Two Worlds. Next season he appears on the distinguished Young Artist Series of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and plays with the Pittsburgh Symphony under William Steinberg. Murphy To Visit Russian Universities Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will leave Lawrence today on a trip to visit Russian universities. About eight U.S. university presidents will be on the tour which is sponsored by the State Department. It is part of the cultural exchange between Russia and the United States. Later this year, rectors of Russian universities will tour this country. The group will have a briefing session by the State Department Saturday and Sunday at Pittsburgh University and will leave New York Tuesday for Brussels. They will later fly to Stockholm and from there to Moscow for a three-week visit. After he returns from Russia the Chancellor will leave July 24 to visit South American universities. This trip will include San Jose, Costa Rica; Lima, Peru; Santiago, Chile; Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires in Brazil; About eight South American rectors will visit U.S. universities in the fall. A few will be at KU. A few will be at KU. In February the whole group will meet in Mexico City for a week. They will try to derive a comprehensive program for developing interrelations among the schools of the United States and South America. Directory Lists 2.449 Students The summer session directory includes the names of the students who enrolled at the Kansas Union on June 6-7 plus those who enrolled late through Thursday morning, June 12. There are 2,449 students listed in the directory. Save this issue for future reference since this is the only directory which will be published during the summer session.