Summer Session Kansan 52nd Year, No.8 Friday, July 3, 1964 Lawrence, Kansas Two Shaffer 1-Act Plays Start July 7 Two Peter Shaffer one-act plays, "The Private Ear—The Public Eye," will be presented July 7-10 to continue the University Theatre's arena-staged summer series. Peter Coulson and Jerry Davis, theater graduate students, are directing the productions. Coulson is working for the doctorate, and Davis is an M.A. candidate and a high school teacher in Kansas City. Bruce Levitt, Kansas City freshman; Allan Hazlett, Topeka senior, and Carolyn Landen, Pittsburg graduate student, comprise the cast of "The Private Ear." The play deals with a shy clerk who invites a typist to dinner and whose evening is ruined by a friend whom he has asked to come along in case conversation lags. BOTH PLAYS begin in straight comedy that gives no hint of the serious matters to come. "The Public Eye," however, is a bit more complicated. Here a prosperous accountant, having his wife shadowed for infidelity, finds that the man who has turned her head is the detective he has hired. The detective, played by John Dennis—an Iowa graduate student—is an eccentric who carries macaroons to keep up his strength. He takes control of the situation and saves the marriage by swapping roles with his employer, Jim Cope, a Kingston, Mo., senior. Laurie Crew, Connecticut graduate student, appears as the wife in the humorous triangle. SHAFFER, THE AUTHOR of "Five Finger Exercise," is said to demonstrate his subtle understanding of human feelings through these two plays in a way that is suddenly and immensely touching. Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office at $1.50. KU students may present their certificates of registration for a single free admission There are no reserved seats. Scenes from Plays Scheduled Tonight Excerpts from four plays will be presented by students in the drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp at 7 p.m. today in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall. The four scenes were chosen from a group of 10. Selections were made from the following plays: "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by Shakespeare; "Antigone" by Jean Anouilh; "Take Her, She's Mine" by Phoebe and Henry Ephron; "Red Peppers" by Noel Coward; "Tartuffe" by Moliere; "West Side Story" by Arthur Laurents; "Kind Lady" by Edward Chodorov; "The Crucible" by Arthur Miller; "The Most Happy Fella" by Frank Loosser, and "The Chalk Garden" by Enid Bagnold. Admission will be free. English Professor Named Acting Dean Acting assistant dean of the faculties for research at KU next year will be Dr. Harold Orel, professor of English. This will be in addition to his teaching duties. Dean John G. Grumm, a political scientist, will be on leave gaining practical experience serving on the staff of Gov. Brown of California. Dr. Orel, a KU teacher for seven years, has been a specialist in technical writing for industry and has published numerous articles on 19th and 20th century British and American literature. Among his recent books are "The World of Victorian Humor" and "Thomas Hardy's Epic Drama: A Study of The Dynasts." THE ORCHARD FESTIVAL 1978 MELLOW TONES IN CORBIN—James Hardy of Wichita public schools directs girls in the chorus of the Junior High section of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, meeting in Corbin Hall. Band Wins Halgedahl Praise Many comments of approval and praise were spoken by Howard Halgedahl, guest conductor of the Midwestern Camp symphonic band June 12. "I couldn't have asked for a better performance by the symphonic band!" said Halgedahl, a Winfield High School music instructor. "It was excellent. I had been expecting the sound to be very poor, since the band concerts are always held outside. However, the sound was terrific. "I WAS SO surprised that the students mastered the new music in only five days of rehearsals! I was very pleased with the students' attitudes, music ability and technicality. "The camp is efficiently operated and well planned," he added. "The work which Mr. Wiley and others have done in the past 27 years is marvelous." friend of Russell L. Wiley, the director of the Music Camp, is a member of the Ford Foundation Committee on Contemporary Music Project for Creativity in Music Education. Halgedabl. who is a personal The committee, consisting of seven famous composers and seven music educators, select composers which are sent out to the town which also have been specially chosen. "THE PURPOSE of the committee is to give young composers a break and to raise the standards of music in the school systems," stated Halkedahl. After being at the music camp for a week, Halgedahl said, "Working with the band campers was very pleasant. The choir and orchestra sounded fine, too. Any time my summer schedule will allow it, I would love to return and be a conductor for any of the groups of talented young musicians." President Gets Civil Rights Bill WASHINGTON—(UPI)The House finally passed and sent to the White House yesterday far-reaching civil rights legislation born of race violence, bombings, vote curbs and continued resistance to school integration. The milestone measure — enacted' after more than a year of congressional consideration — was sped to the White House where President Johnson planned to sign it into law last night at a televised ceremony. THE FINAL congressional action came when the House voted to accept the bill as amended by the Senate. The vote ended a prolonged and bitter fight by southern foes of the legislation. The bill puts new federal muscle in efforts to end race discrimination in schools, voting, and use of publicly owned parks, playgrounds and the like. It imposes a new federal ban on race discrimination in "public accommodations" such as hotels, motels, theaters, service stations and restaurants. It bars discrimination by employers and unions. It sets up machinery to cut off federal aid funds where discrimination is practiced and cannot be halted by less stringent methods. FINAL ENACTMENT throws the boiling civil rights fight into the forefront of the coming presidential election. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., was among only six Republicans who voted against it when the Senate approved the bill 73 to 27 June 19. The House on Feb. 10 had passed its own version of the bill by a lopsided 290-130 vote. Yesterday's vote was on accepting the Senate amendments, and the only question in the minds of the managers of the bill as they went into the final test had been how many of the 138 House Republicans who originally voted for the bill would switch to follow Gold-water's lead. Urban Tasks Called Urgent Why put a man on the moon if we can't solve the urban problems that exist at home, a University of Kansas professor asked this week at a hearing of the special subcommittee on air and water pollution of the Senate Public Works Committee. "No engineering programs in the United States are devoting sufficient time and effort to the training of engineers capable of handling the problems created by municipal refuse disposal," testified Ross E. McKinney, chairman of the civil engineering department at KU. "SCIENTIFIC technology has furnished us with the techniques to dispose adequately of municipal refuse without creating air pollution problems," he said, "but engineering technology has not yet learned how to translate the basic scientific criteria into operating plants." Engineering schools should devote a portion of their efforts to educating engineers to meet the problems of urban areas, Dr. McKinney said. Air pollution from municipal refuse disposal is only a small part of the overall problem of urban engineering, he added. APPEARING BEFORE the Senate group at the invitation of its chairman, Sen. E. S. Muskie, D-Me., Dr. McKinney traced changes in municipal refuse collection and disposal practices. Here's Program for Two Sunday Concerts Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday Afternoon, July 5 Daniel Moe, Guest Conductor University Theatre 3 p.m. Concert Choir Gloria 1. Gloria 2. Et in terra pax Almighty and Everlasting God ... Gibbons Blessed Be the Lord ... Moe Every Nite When the Sun Goes In ... Arr. Owens Symphony of Psalms ... Stravinsky Part I Mr. Moe, conducting Chamber Choir Commit Thy Way ... Liebold Tenebrae ... Ingegneri Hosanna to the Son of David ... Moe Sure on This Shining Night ... Barber Standin' on the Walls of Zion ... Arr. Gardner Marches of Peace ... Frackenpohl Mr. Moe, conducting 12 minute intermission Orchestra Vilem Sokol, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Old American Country Set ... Cowell Meeting House Charivari Cornhuskin' Hornpipe Canland Mr. Carney, conducting The Planets, Suite ... Holst Mars Venus Jupiter Mother Goose, Suite ... Ravel Favan of the Sleeping Princess The Princess of the Pagodas The Fairy Garden Symphony No. 5 ... Tschaikowsky Finale, andante maestoso Mr. Sokol, conducting Concert Band and Symphonic Band Sunday Evening, July 5 Vilem Sokol, Guest Conductor KU Outdoor Theatre KU Outdoor Theatre 8 p.m. Symphonic Band March, The Youth of Britain ... Coats Andante and Finale from "The Firebird Suite" ... Stravinsky Prelude in A Major ... Chopin Slavonic Rhapsody, No. 2 ... Friedemann Cmdr Brendler conducting Cmdr. Brendler, conducting Water Music Suite ... Handel I. Overture II. Bouree III. La Paix IV. Menuet V. Allegro Fatue of the Bowers ... Halvorsen Mr. Sokol, conducting Concert Band Celebration Overture ... Creston Pictures at An Exhibition ... Moussorgsky 1 Promenade 2 The Old Castle 3 Hut of Baba Yaga 4 Great Gate of Kiev Mr. Wiley, conducting Jubilation Overture ... Ward First Suite in E Flat ... Holst Chaconne Intermezzo March Amoroso Salute ... Gould Mr. Sokol, conducting Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 3, 1964 A Teacher, First and Always In the tragic death of Arvid Shulenberger last week the University lost one of its most memorable teachers. It is presumptuous at a time like this to say that so-and-so is "what he would have wanted," but one can be reasonably sure that this is the way he would have chosen to be remembered: as a teacher who made a uniquely deep impression on the hundreds and thousands of students who sat in his classes since he came to KU in 1951. THOUGH HIS OWN list of publications—in fiction, in verse, in criticism and critical theory, in literary history—was extensive, he consistently expressed the view that the best, the most meaningful scholarship took the form of the spoken rather than the written word, was expressed in dialogue rather than in print. To him the class and the conference were supremely important. Certainly he lived up to his own standards. His courses in American literature, creative writing, literary criticism, and Shakespeare were always filled to overflowing, and he was constantly sought out by graduate students who wanted him to supervise their research and direct the writing of their theses and dissertations. A man like Arvid Shulenberger, who enriched so many young lives, will not soon or easily be forgotten. TO ALL THESE STUDENTS he gave of himself unsparingly: his time, his energy, his ideas, his wit. A genuinely learned man, he never let his knowledge degenerate into stuffiness or pedantry. He was rare in his ability to inspire admiration and affection in those whom he taught. — George Worth Chairman, Department of English Reston Compares Kennedy, Johnson Sees Texan as Characteristic American By David Schultz News Workshop, New York University The room was uncluttered as Washington newspaper offices go. At one end there was a green metal desk. That was cluttered. Behind it sat the dean of political columnists, James Reston. News workhoppers sat at a table, and against a wall. Wearing a tweed sport coat, a blue oxford shirt with button-down collar and a black-and-gold diagonally striped tie, he spoke softly, slowly, as thought he were searching for the right words. He was comparing our last two Presidents. "Johnson is the first man to come to the White House whom the press corps really knew well. Because he was a majority leader, we saw him almost every day." BITING ON THE END of an already well-chewed pipe stem, he stopped his comparison to search for tobacco. He found it, filled his pipe and lit it. He then continued. PAUSING FOR a moment, he gazed over the top of his horn-rimmed glasses perched half-way down his nose. He reflected for a moment. "Kennedy was not at all a typical American. He was an Atlantic man. His was the America of Boston, Washington, New York and Palm Beach. It wasn't trans-Appalachian America at all." "Johnson is a characteristic American; optimistic, gregarious, a hard-working guy who loves physical activity. He works too hard, is a little too rough, maybe a little coarse. I think he's a remarkable human being myself. "Johnson loves to talk to reporters for hours. He has no outside interests other than his job. Johnson is a political animal. "Kennedy was a much more private person. He had no outside interests." "Johnson has always been paranoidic about the press. If you're with him 90 per cent of the time . . . oh, that other 10 per cent." IN HIS COLUMNS he had written of the working methods of Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. In a column on July 26, 1962, shortly after the medicare bill had failed in Congress, Mr. Reston wrote that President Kennedy "asked for everything he wanted all at once, sometimes with the result that he overwhelmed certain committees with work they could not hope to get through in a single session of Congress." On January 26, 1964, Mr. Reston wrote: "President Johnson is playing the political game with a skill and persistence that has not been seen since the days of Roosevelt. "THIS IS NOT a part-time operation. The President works at it 18 hours a day. If there is a key committee member whose vote is required on the tax or civil rights bills, it will be surprising if he is not asked to come upstairs in the President's house to talk. Social occasions are working sessions, directly or indirectly." Having considered the men, and their methods of working. Mr. Reston turned to the press conference method of each. enforce the method. He told the Workshoppoppers, "I didn't like the Kennedy system; it was a brilliant theatrical performance. A press conference of this size is extremely difficult. There is no intimacy. It is like trying to make love in Carnegie Hall." He turned onto the relationship of the President with the press. "I DON'T BELIEVE in intimacy of the press with the Presidents. His (the President's) duty is to be clear as to his relationship with the reporters. Television destroyed the intimacy of the press conference. Nothing could be said off the record." One wall of the office was covered with a map of the world. Another wall had a reproduction of a political cartoon from a Washington newspaper. Mr. Reston, sounding more like a university professor than a journalist, took a look at our last two first ladies. "THE DIFFERENCE between Jackie and Lady Bird is the difference between Bonwit Teller and New York Hospital. Mrs. Kennedy is interested in the arts. Lady Bird's principal interest is in the humanities. One is interested in pictures, the other in people." Capsulizing Lady Bird, as he had done with LBJ, Mr. Reston said, "She'll be nearer in action to Eleanor Roosevelt than she is to Jackie, even though she looks more like Jackie." Once again, puffing on his pipe, Mr. Reston made a final observation on the Kennedys to the Work- shoppers in his office. "They had an appeal for the young that Johnson will never have. To your generation, JFK was a man of the 20th century, Johnson a man of the 19th." IN HIS JAN. 26 column, he had revealed another side of Lady Bird. "Mrs. Johnson works at this (playing politics) as hard as the President. Senator's wives who have seldom been upstairs at the White House are there constantly now." On the Republican Presidential nominee, he said, "They've got to nominate someone; why not Lodge?" CHANGING TO the Democrats, he observed, "On the basis of everything we know and guess, Lyndon Johnson is going to win the Presidency." He then considered vice-presidential hopefuls. "Humphrey may be punished by his ability, Bobby Kennedy ran the campaign against Johnson in 1960. He cut up Johnson." He made a more revealing statement in his Jan. 26 column: "The President's approach to the vicepresidential nomination on the Democratic ticket has troubled many of his supporters. He approaches this the way Roosevelt did in 1944 by indicating that the race is wide open. More than most Presidents he is in a position to choose his running mate on the sole ground of who would make the best President, rather than who would help win the election. "ALL THE INDICATIONS at this point are that Mr. Johnson is well ahead in the race, but men around him are talking about running mates who will help him get the sentimental Kennedy vote or the Catholic vote, or the labor vote. "This was probably inevitable in an administration so politically oriented, but in view of the President's own heart attack, there is a very strong feeling here that on this one question at least, the interest of the country should be put ahead of everything else." The Workshoppers in his office asked about one of the biggest topics of conversation last year stemming from the remark of Undersecretary of Defense Arthur Sylvester that "news is a weapon in the arsenal of the government." Most reporters in Washington agreed that the Sylvester statement had been taken out of context, that in times of national crises, news management is permissible. "ALL GOVERNMENTS manage the news," Mr. Reston said. "All women manage the news. The whole country's cosmetic industry is based on that. Why should we tell the Russians if the country's in a critical position?" In a column of May 10, 1961, shortly after the Bay of Pigs invasion, Mr. Reston had criticized the press for a "publish and be damned" attitude. His column cited the false information that was fed to the press from the CIA, regarding the details surrounding the invasion attempt. "The best proof of the value of the Fulbright speech was the reaction to it. I think this argument about Cuba is false. It's surprising how much press coverage it got. It implies how rigid we've been in our thinking. The important point in his speech is that he said let's look at the world the way it is instead of the way we'd like it to be." Shaking his grazing head, the hair just short enough not to be too long, he broke into one of his not infrequent pauses and smiled. One of the Workshoppers offered: IN HIS OFFICE, he tapped his pipe and turned his remarks to the "mysts" speech of Sen. William Fulbright. "Thank you, Mr. Reston." Summer Session Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646 newsroom Kansan 111-120 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newsname Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22 N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS THAT SUMMER IN PARIS, by Morley Callaghan (Dell, 60 cents). The lost generation is still with us. Hemingway's "A Moveable Feast" is taking up much space on book pages these days, and here we have a book of reminiscence by a lesser literary figure who knew Hemingway, among others. The summer with which Callaghan is concerned is 1929, just before the crash, when there were still many lovely illusions. Callaghan was in Paris, with people like Hemingway and Fitzgerald, and we are treated to the Left Bank, the cafes, the bright young people making themselves immortal. Hemingway and Fitzgerald are the big names in this book, but Callaghan also gives us glimpses of Joyce, Sinclair Lewis, Sherwood Anderson, Ford Madox Ford and Maxwell Perkins. The book should have great appeal to enthusiasts of either the twenties or the literary figures of that time. * * * IS SEX NECESSARY?, by James Thurber and E. B. White (Dell, 50 cents). This delightful book goes back to the twenties, when Freud was enrapturing most of our literary greats. And those two warm and delightful gentlemen who have given us so many perceptive and entertaining books and essays took off after the sex craze in a comic work. Mothers and fathers who are shocked by their children reading this book should not be. There's nothing shocking in it. It is broad and engaging satire. And Thurber's illustrations give it even more flavor. FROM APE TO ANGEL, by H. R. Hays (Capricorn, $2.65). $$ * * * * $$ This is a book about anthropologists, which the author subtitles "An Informal History of Social Anthropology." This means that it can prove as delightful to the layman as it is informative for the expert. The style is entertaining and on the light side, and there is a great store of material. Hays attempts to show the world of custom and the development of thought concerning ethnology. He includes many illustrations, to make an excellent paperback purchase. Those anthropologists who are considered include Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, of the American frontier; Lewis Henry Morgan, the celebrated pioneer; the students of Darwin; Sir James Frazer; Franz Boas; Bronislaw Malinowski; Margaret Mead and Ruth Benedict and Ashley Montagu. * * * THE ANCIENT GODS, by E. O. James (Capricorn, $2.25). Here is a survey of the religions of the ancient Near East and the Mediterranean. The scope is wide, as James ranges from Italy to the Indus Valley in area and the Paleolithic era to the rise of Christianity in time. The work is scholarly rather than popular in nature, but should appeal to non-students as well as students of religion. There are numerous illustrations, and the approach should be of interest to anthropologists. * * * THE AGE OF MAGNIFICENCE: MEMOIRS OF THE COURT OF LOUIS XIV, by the Duc de Saint-Simon (Capricorn, $1.85). All is arranged in topical sequence. Portraits of Louis XIV and the chief people of the court are provided, along with views of Saint-Simon himself and scenes of Versailles and other palaces. Sanche de Gramont selected, edited and translated this document which gives us a view of the splendor of the court of the Sun King. The original work was a weighty one, but from it the editor has gleaned representative selections. * * * A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY THROUGH FRANCE AND ITALY, by Laurence Sterne (Capricorn, $1.25). Slight, light and short is this celebrated classic of the 18th century by the author of "Tristram Shandy." Sterne wrote the book in reply to Smollett's description of a similar journey, and it is in the delightful mood of 18th century writing. delightful mood of Irish country. It is in the tradition of other adventures of the time, whether by real-life Sterne or Smollett or fictional Tom Jones or Joseph Andrews. ***** INCREDIBLE ERA: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF WARREN GAMALIEL HARDING, by Samuel Hopkins Adams (Capricorn, $1.85). It took a popular novelist-short story writer to present one of the most thoughtful and entertaining books of the twenties. The story is shocking, as was the administration of the gay and lovable Harding, the man who couldn't say no. He was eminently unfitted for the presidency, and he became one of the most beloved of presidents, despite his incompetence. Scandal still reverberates around the memory of Harding, rumors of his birth, rumors of his death, rumors of a mistress, of an illegitimate daughter. And the few short years in the White House—Teapot Dome, the veterans' administration. Adams has written one of the most fascinating and bizarre of American political biographies. \* \* \* \* PHILOSOPHICAL SKETCHES, by Susanne K. Langer (Mentor, 60 cents). The author of "Philosophy in a New Key," which has been read by many university students in recent years, discusses in this book the relationship between the human mind and feelings. There are nine philosophical sketches, from theoretical considerations to broad speculations. She considers existence, the psychology of the self, the origin of speech, the definition of symbol and art, and the impact of technology upon society and the individual. technology to make people happier. To Prof. Langer, art is of greatest significance in human development, and she deplores its vulgarization. And art must act upon science if science is to help create a true culture. Page 3 Please, May 1 Buy a Dress With No Top (Editor's note: Sidna Brower is 23, comes from Memphis, Tenn., is a former editor of the University of Mississippi Mississippian and winner of a Scripps-Howard Henry Taylor internship under which she currently is working with United Press International in London.) 1 stared timidly at the current world stir, the topless dress. It had taken me all week and several trips to Oxford Street to work up enough courage to ask for the new fashion. LONDON — (UPI) — "There 'tis, Madam—the dress." My curiosity finally got the best of me. I bravely walked past the naked bust mannequin in the window. After fumbling among the rain-coats for a few minutes, I blurred out my request to the saleslady. By Sidna Brower Summer Session Kansan "OH, OF COURSE, right over this way," the plumpish bleached blonde said as she led me to a rack with four black sheaths hanging in cellophane bags. "May I try one on?" I gulped. "Actually, I just want to try one on." my voice trailed off in a panic as she turned to another woman. May I try one more? "I think so, dearie, but let me check," the saleslady said. "You may have to order one." "Here, dearie, follow me," the blonde said. "You can probably buy this today. Usually, you have to order them, but we have several extras today." "Why, we've sold hundreds," she rapidly answered. "Well, here 'tis, Madam—the dress." "YOU MEAN, you've had that many requests?" I asked with a little more confidence. When she closed the door, I stared at the slinky black dress and glanced around the tiny dressing room. Cautiously I peeped through the narrow crack in the window to make sure no one could peep in. One more glimpse around the drab cubby-hole and I decided I might as well plunge in. Or out? WITH A SHORT tug, I achieved the intended effect. I shuddered. What if my dear mother could see me now? But on second thought... Then I recalled the label on the dress—"It's a symphony." Yes, I suppose such a dress would cause quite a bit of noise, but not necessarily music. I undressed and dressed—if you can call it that—at record setting speed. At once I realized the topless dress wasn't designed for my figure. The neckline was only sweeping—not absent. More thoughts rushed through my mind when suddenly I shivered. Not that the stuffy little room was chilly. Self-consciously I looked over my shoulder and took one last look at the profile in the mirror. Hastily I threw on my own conservative clothes and not a moment too soon. Just as I had feared, the saleslady barged in. "WELL, DEARIE, how did it do?" she inouired. "It doesn't fit," I sheepishly replied. "It doesn't fit around here," I said, indicating the waist. p "What do you mean 'it doesn't 6t?'" she snapped. "But that isn't the point, dearie, is it?" she remarked. "Don't you want it?" Friday, July 3, 1964 "No. I really don't think so," I admitted. She grabbed the dress and walked out, looking, no doubt, for braver souls. Slowly I started out of the store. The mannequin with the toppless dress in the window now had a chiffon cape draped over her shoulders. Well, no wonder! A University of Kansas alumnus, who earlier this month received KU's citation for distinguished service, has been elected to a 5-year term on the governing corporation of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. KU Citee Wins Term On MIT Corporation M. Wren Gabel of Rochester, N.Y., a native of Larned, earned an engineering degree from Kansas in 1931, and was the honor man of that class. He is now executive vice-president of the Eastman Kodak Co. Three films will be shown at 8 p.m. today on the lawn east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Hawaii Calls," "Three Trout to Dream About" and "Glacier National Park." Three Films Tonight SAIGON, South Viet Nam—(UPI) —Communist Viet Cong guerrillas ambushed a South Vietnamese army convoy in broad daylight Wednesday. Twenty-nine soldiers were killed and five were missing. At least three Communists were killed. Ambush Strikes Viet Convoy The Defense Ministry said the Red rebels hit the convoy of 27 vehicles before noon as it climbed into the foothills of the rugged central highlands near An Khe, 258 miles north of Saigon. The trucks were carrying supplies from the coastal city of Qui Nhon to the headquarters of the Vietnamese army's II Corps at Pleiku. The Communists left three bodies behind before they were beaten off, but their full casualty toll was not known. The Reds also lost three submachine guns. They captured one machine gun and 30 smaller weapons. In other violence, a bomb believed to have been thrown by a Communist terrorist exploded yesterday on a sidewalk several hundred yards from the American officers' quarters in a Saigon suburb. A Chinese taxi driver was injured. The bombthrower escaped. Jaycees to Present Fireworks Saturday in Stadium An extensive Fourth of July fireworks display will be presented in the KU Memorial Stadium at 8 p.m. Saturday. The event, which is sponsored by the Lawrence Jaycees, also will feature a band concert at 7 p.m. at the stadium by the Local Federation of Musicians Union No. 512. The $1,700 display will feature a large selection of ground and aerial displays including the Apollo missile, seal juggler, Indian, buffalo, and flying fox. Tickets purchased on an advance basis will cost 25 cents, and are available from many downtown merchants. Sales will last until 5 p.m. Saturday. Tickets will be 50 cents at the door. All pre-school age children will be admitted free. SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN DANCE HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? Irish Dancing ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Hot Summer Weather Needs The Freshness Of Independent Dry-Cleaned Clothes! 100% F The hotter the weather, the harder it is to keep summer cottons looking fresh — it's very important to have them dry cleaned often to retain the colors and crispness of spring. Call for our convenient pick-up and delivery this summer. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi HUNTINGTON Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 3, 1964 KU Construction Booms... NEXUS ... There's the new dorm and beautiful Blake ... or the Phi Psi house... Photos by Dan Austin (see page 5 for related story) ALLEY HALL and Watson's Wing (1) K T D Sei for t one- Engl Friday, July 3, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 KU Skyline To Include Dorm, Blake By Emery Goad September of 1965 is the date set for the opening of the new $3 and one-half million residence hall on Engle Road. The new hall is one of many new buildings on the campus which will improve study facilities and housing for KU students in the next few years. The hall will have a capacity of 976 students, making it one-third larger than Ellsworth Hall, completed last fall. The building, which is as yet unnamed, will be in a "T" shape, with the top facing the adjacent Ellsworth Hall. THE 220,000 square feet will feature snack areas on the second and eighth floors, a music room, and a library. The walk-in second floor will house the main desk. The first floor will contain the dining area and kitchen. Blake Hall, a new three-quarter million dollar many-purpose building. will be completed in September. The five-story building will house the departments of political science, governmental research, sociology human relations, and the social work office, in its 43,000 square feet. The first and second floors will house general use classrooms. THE NEW BUILDING replaced the controversial former Blake Hall, which stood in the same place, unused since 1952. Watson Library will open its new east wing for use in the fall, pending arrival of equipment and furniture. The second floor is already occupied by the preparations and acquisitions offices. The basement will house the special collections and a branch of the Union Bookstore THE FIRST FLOOR, when ready will contain a general reading room, and the top level will have seminar rooms. Faculty study rooms will be on the first floor. Excavation work began on the new wing in the summer of 1962, and construction was started that fall. Because of the added space, all departments in the library have been re-arranged. The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will move into its new building later this year. It is expected that the building will house approximately 75 men, or 25 more than the former house at 1100 Indiana St. was able to house. THE OLD HOUSE has been sold to the Acacia fraternity, which will move out of its residence at 1225 Oread. The new home for Acacia will mean twice as many members. The new Phi Fsi house, being constructed by the Winn-Senter Construction Co. of Kansas City, Mo., will be of colonial design, and brick. The firm of Folger-Pearson is the architect. Other items on the campus being replaced include sidewalks. The old asphalt and gravel sidewalk from the steps at the back of Strong Hall to the steps at Marvin Grove and from Memorial Drive to the steps at the west of the Student Union will be replaced. THE UNDERWOOD Construction Co. is in charge of the sidewalks, and Norris Bros. Heating and Electrical Co. of Lawrence has the contract for walk lights along the new sidewalk. A new door soon will replace the plaster and cracked stone door at the entrance to Watson Library. New aluminum and glass doors also will soon divide the lobby between the east and west wings on the third floor of Strong Hall. Work is being done by the Wilson Glass and Window Service of Lawrence. Wallace Gives Terms On Quitting Contest MONTGOMERY, Ala. — (UPI)— Gov. George Wallace says he might step out of the presidential race to support a national candidate if that man were committed to back the "principles of the South." Wallace indicated he would consider supporting either major party candidate who would campaign on a platform favoring and protecting states rights and local government. "We want people in both parties to worry about us and to think about the people of our region," Wallace commented. 'Lion' Wallace Hooplas in Jackson for Votes (Editor's Note; Tom Coftman, Lyndon senior who was editorial editor of the University Daily Kansan in spring semester, is journeying through the South doing free-lance reporting on the racial situation there. This is the first of a series of articles he is sending for publication in the Kansan.) By Tom Coffman JACKSON. Miss.—The lion of Alabama, Gov. George Wallace, spoke here June 25. A crowd of 10,000 packed in to hear his call to block the electoral college in October with an uncommitted southern delegation Approval appeared to be unanimous; the gracious-living delta folk joined with the rednecks of the hill country to shower the orator with magnolia. The nation is in grave danger, he cried, and he preached at the jammed coliseum about the Founding Fathers and constitutional government—yet there was not an American flag in the house. It was a lily-white night in Mississippi (the only Negro on the fairgrounds was dressed and painted like a darky minstrel), and when the lion roared the crowd came back: "Give 'em hell. George!" BEFORE THE speech-making started, there was a half hour of general hoopla. First, an invocation: "God, help us as a Christian nation to preserve its government as the forefathers designed it . . . preserve us from the gigantic forces which seek to destroy us today. . . . Let us be slave to none except Christ." Then an introduction of honored guests, including members of the state legislature, which is now in extraordinary session to work on a new school bill in view of pending civil rights legislation. The proposed bill would give $185 to each student to attend either public or private school. Out came the Hinds High-Steppers, a girls' precision dance team from Hinds Junior College, carrying signs spelling out W-A-L-L-A-C-E, A-L-A-B-A-M-A, and dancing to the tune of the "Alabama Bounce." In the middle of their performance, the emcee christened the High-Steppers the "good-will ambassadors of the sovereign state of Mississippi." The band broke into "Dixie" and the 10.000 stood and gave a rebel yell. "DO YOU LOVE your Southern gals?" the emcee asked. "Yes!" velled the audience. Jerry Lane and his eight-piece swing band took over and gave the premier performance of "Good Ol' George," played to the tune of "When the Saints Go Marching In." "When good ol' George goes marchin' in, when good ol' George goes marchin' in, I'll march up to the White House, when good ol' George goes marchin' in . . . We'll all be free, like we used to be," etc., plus two more verses—one dedicated to Robert F. Kennedy and one to Dick Gregory. The emcee* announced that the rally was sponsored by SCHENPOUS -Southern Committee to Help Elect the Next President of the United States. GOV. PAUL Johnson introduced Wallace: "Our cause here tonight is the cause of our American forefathers who came to this country seeking liberty and justice under God. Remember it is not a lost cause. . . The recent decisions of the Supreme Court do not 1 repeat, do not—represent the views of America." Johnson was interrupted with hearty applause from the audience, and he repeated the statement about the executive branch of the federal government, then the legislative branch. "The trend toward appeasing the black voter minorities does not have the approval of the majority. . . This country does not want help the Communists by outlawing prayer in school. These decisions were not made by right-thinking, hard-working Americans." THE SOUTH has every right. Gov Johnson said, to hold the Supreme Court of the United States in contempt. "This is the last time we can turn this nation back to honest-to-goodness government." Johnson then called on the governor of his sister state, "the man who has shown that he will do well in any office for the white majorities to restore constitutional government to this blessed land." The squarely built Alabaman took the podium and surveyed his audience. "Give 'em hell, boy!" someone yelled, and Wallace flashed a victory sign with each hand. nor called for the South to vote for him in a bloc so he could take the 112 electoral votes of the Old Confederacy to the electoral college and bargain. Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans, "both of which have deserted the South," would have a majority. "THEN I ASSURE you that the man who gets the South's votes will pledge above the table to restore to the people state's rights and constitutional government and get off their backs!" in essence, the 44-year-old gover- The history of failures in the Dixiecrat bolts did not dim enthusiasm for the idea in Jackson. "During Reconstruction." Wallace said, "the South used its electoral votes in the switch from Tilden to Hayes (Samuel Tilden, Rutherford B. Hayes—1876 election) to get Reconstruction off our shoulders. I propose now to shake the liberals off our backs with our electoral votes." The governor reached his conclusion after an hour or oration. He got to it after treading through many of the favorite political themes of the Deep South. Wallace started with some jokes on the "liberal press." THEY HAVE NOT seen fit to cover his campaign adequately and accurately, he said, and he recalled that after a recent speech to the Washington Press Club he was not recommended for the usual certificate of appreciation. "Castro and Khrushchev both got it when they spoke and they have caused more human misery than any two people alive. I was glad I didn't get it. I told them they could take that certificate and they know what they can do with it!" When he talked about the press he was not talking about the "local press, which gets things straight. I'm talking about 'Time' made for those who can't think and 'Life' and the 'Saturday Evening Post' for those who can't read." WALLACE HAD a confidential remark for the audience on the Maryland primary: "In Maryland we got a hell of a lot of votes, 44 per cent. That was with them doing the counting. I don't know how many I would have gotten if I had been in on the counting," he said, and the crowd roared. In a serious mood, he recounted his nation-wide protest campaign against the civil rights bill and said he believed there are people of southern thought all over the country. "The South is no longer a geographic term—it is a philosophy of constitutional government, state's rights, and sound local government." Wallace recalled the Poles in South Milwaukee singing "Dixie" to him in their native tongue, and then the theme of his speech: "I am running for president because I was born free. I do not deny the existence of social, economic, and political problems in this land, but change by coercion amounts to tyranny." IN THE NEXT 20 minutes the governor skipped through several reflections on what he called "the awesome trends which beset us." - He had never, he said, made a statement reflecting on the race, creed, or color of any man. "Unlike the liberals, I believe in God; I can despise no man nor stir up hatred." - In the North, there is more Negro unemployment than in the Old Confederacy, "even in states with strong civil rights bills." - Because of the Supreme Court, school children cannot say "God is great. God is good. God we thank You for our food." "There are orphans in state-supported institutions." Wallace declared, "who cannot say 'Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep' because of the Supreme Court." WALLACE PREDICTED that if the present trend in government continues, Communist-inspired forces would outlaw God in all phases of public life, scuttle the Constitution "as we know it," and abolish the right to hold private property. "The liberals say that human rights are above property rights. I say that human rights do not exist where property rights have been abolished because in Russia and Red China property rights have been denied, and so have human rights." Wallace commented briefly on the international situation, saying, "I. like you, am sick and tired and fed up with a government which tramples down its own people and kow-tows to its enemies, a government which makes it unfashionable to wave the American flag yet sends it boys to an unknown land to be killed in a war without victory." THEN RETURNING to domestic politics, Wallace stated that "JFK and LBJ" could not have won in 1960 if seven southern states had not given their electoral votes. The South, he said, must seek ways to be represented since both parties have deserted them. "There is a great deal of talk today about being in the mainstream. The mainstream of American politics is leading down the road to state socialism, and I assure you I've gotten out of the mainstream long ago." He then called for the unpledged electorate. "I assure you that the man who gets the South's votes will pledge above the table . . . to get off our backs." The Alabama governor closed by saying, "As I said in my Inaugural Address, I pray to God for the freedom of all men, both white and black. Afterward, with the band swinging out on "Dear Ol' George" the crowd surged around the stand to shake his hand. Wallace was their man, a real Deep South Dixie man. Sister's Defection Is 'Painful' to Castro HAVANA — (UPI) — Cuban Premier Fidel Castro says the defection of his sister, Juana, to Mexico was "very bitter and profoundly painful" to him. It was Castro's first comment on his sister's flight from the island which she described as "an immense prison." At a reception in the Canadian Embassy, Castro said Miss Castro's charges against the Cuban government were "edited in the United States Embassy in Mexico." He accused American Embassy officials of using Miss Castro as a tool against Cuba. Danielle Yes, we still have a good selection of bare-foot sandals. Most wanted colors and sizes. Sensibly priced 4.99 to 6.99 McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 Danielle Sandal SANDALS MIDDLE HEEL SANDAL SLIPPER SANDAL SHOE WITH STRAP SHINE SHOE SANDAL WITH STRAPS SANDAL SANDAL Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 3, 1964 Engineering By Karen Haney Summer research work commenced June 1 for nine KU undergraduate students who are from various departments of the School of Engineering and Architecture. These students are select individuals from the top 10 per cent of their classes. They are components of a project sponsored by the National Science Foundation. This program's purpose is to allow the undergraduate student to receive a taste of research work and give him a better background on which to prepare himself for the future. WHEN A SCHOOL wishes to undertake such an endeavor, an outline of the intended projects which would be offered the students and the estimated cost are submitted to the National Science Foundation. After careful consideration of all the entries grants are appropriated as to the merit of the projects presented. KU received $5,600 with which to operate its program. Of this, $4,800 will be given to the students as stipends, and the rest will be paid out as overhead. This program is under the direction of George W. Swift, assistant professor of chemical engineering. EACH STUDENT is assigned to a particular professor and given a specific problem to work on which contributes to a definite area of research. Participants may receive up to six credits for their efforts. In addition to the laboratory work, two one-to-two-hour seminars are held every week in which students discuss topics stemming from their individual studies which they deem of importance to the overall conduct of research. In the first meetings of the seminars the various professors will give lectures pertaining to the entire research in the general areas. Student conducting of the groups will not begin until July. 4th Is Near Fireworks Worry Ahead NEW YORK —(UPI)— Mention the Fourth of July. A child's eyes twinkle about the colorful flashes, thunderous booms and roaring of rockets sending fireworks skyward. And a child thinks, too, of firecrackers—wonderful things, supervised. Often tragic—unsupervised. The National Society for the Prevention of Blindness cautions that fireworks still linger as a menace to the nation's youth. "The country is well rid of those so-called celebrations of three decades ago that left thousands blinded and maimed every Fourth of July," said Dr. John W. Ferree, executive director. "Nevertheless, there still are many youngsters hurt by firecrackers and rockets every year. Even one fireworks victim is too much." THE GREATEST number of victims last year fell within the 10 to 14 year age group. Two were tots under five. Dr. Feree also warned against the holiday hazards of homemade rockets, blasting caps and "harmless" sparklers that burn at more than 1600 degrees and present a fire threat. To parents. Dr. Ferree suggested: DO NOT PERMIT your child to purchase fireworks through the mail or from illicit dealers. Bootleg fireworks may be poorly constructed and even more dangerous than the old legal type. If your child has obtained fireworks or gunpowder confiscate them. Make him understand they are dangerous and probably illegal. Assist authorities in locating dealers in bootleg fireworks. These persons are profiting in blindness and suffering. Research Launched Individual projects vary, as do the fields of specialization. Robert M. Anderson, a senior in mechanical and aerospace engineering, is working on direct mass determination at cryogenic temperatures under the supervision of Prof. Swift. ALSO UNDER Prof. Swift is William J. Weisenborn Jr., a sophomore studying chemical engineering, who is trying to measure the viscosities of liquid binary hydrocarbon systems. Prof. Swift is also collaborating with Norris Nahman, professor of electrical engineering, on the direction of Frank E. Salber, a senior in electrical engineering, who is using doppler radar to measure the velocity of a falling body. Wiwcho B. Tjokronegro, senior from Indonesia, is studying the use of auto and cross correlation to techniques to describe the heterogeneity of naturally occurring porous media. Tjokronegro is majoring in petroleum engineering. His advisor is Floyd W. Preston, associate professor of petroleum engineering. HAROLD ROSSON, associate professor of chemical engineering, is overseeing the work of Roger T. Baker and Colen C. Case, juniors Baker is experimenting on thin film thermocouples, and Case is studying numerical methods for integration of local heat flux during condensation. Gregs G. Thomopolus, junior in civil engineering, is working under Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering. He is measuring the density of cryogenic fluids. Experiments in measuring the film thickness of the surface layer beneath a bubble in nucleate bowling are being conducted by Donald D. Williams, a senior in mechanical engineering. His supervisor is Prof. Russell B. Mesler, professor of chemical engineering. REACTION OF KINETICS experiments is being developed by Harry E. Collins under the direction of James O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering. Collins is a chemical engineering sophomore. SUA PRESENTS: Billiards & Table Tennis Tournament Prof. Swift, director of the program, stated, "We feel that this type of program is of great value to outstanding undergraduate students in that it gives them a great deal of insight into the research problems with which they will be faced in the future." July 7----6:00 p.m. Sign up at the Jay Bowl in the Union (Trophies Given) Bridge Tournament July 8----7:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Union (Prizes Given) Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Get SMART students Q ©SCWJING Graduate to the best.. for the only answer to the best professional laundry and dry cleaning in Lawrence, Kansas, it's "ACME." Come in today or phone for free pick up and delivery — VI 3-5155 - 10% discount on dry cleaning for cash and carry service. Acme < 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE HILLCREST — 1111 MASS. — THE MALLS - 10 % discount on dry cleaning for cash and carry service. Co O Acc should thank Cong As troop and Kwil The versa the C revolve shows parte IN keep appr ing peac are 1 So Belgig free coun bitte slav "The that noon Neg Friday, July 3, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Congo Is Still Torn Nation On Its Fourth Anniversary By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst According to the blueprint, this should be a week of celebration and thanksgiving for the Republic of the Congo. The fact that on this fourth anniversary of Congolese independence the Congo finds itself in the grip of revolt and chaos, anxiety and fear shows how far the builders have departed from the blueprint. IN FOUR YEARS, U.N. peacekeeping efforts cost $408 million, with approximately $171 million of it coming from the United States. And peace and stability in the Congo still are measured in terms of years away. As the last of 20,000 United Nations troops depart the Congo, revolt large and small tears at the provinces of Kwilu, Kivu and North Katanga. Independence in the Congo did not have an auspicious beginning. Scarceely had King Baudouin of Belgium proclaimed the Congolese free than Patrice Lumumba, the country's first premier, launched a bitter attack against the "humiliating slavery" of Belgian colonialism. . . "The ironies, the insults, the blows that we had to submit to morning, noon and night because we were Negroes." The history of the Congo has indeed been full of ironies, of promises made and broken, of a tremendous United Nations effort and a withdrawal today with peace not yet secure, and, at the beginning, of a huge and strategic territory whose economic base had been established without the necessary accompaniment of education and political responsibility. ry gathering now in Leopoldville, the capital, of names familiar in the first days of independence when first the new republic seemed destined to fly apart by its own violence. Moise Tshombe, who in the early moments of Congolese independence decided he wanted no part of it and established himself as President of the mineral-rich secessionist province of Katanta. He fought three wars against the United Nations and Congolese troops, and lost. ... And finally, Antoline Gizenga, once the favorite African son of the Soviets and former leftist president of Orientale Province. or other LUMUMBA, whose mantle Gizenga has attempted to take over. Of the early ones, Lumumba is the important one not present. He died while imprisoned under the care of Tshombe. It was no great loss to the west, only the way of his dying which came about allegedly while trying to escape. The former self-styled King Albert Kalonji who declared himself king, emperor and god of the "independent Diamond state" of Kasai Province. Their aid is sought now by the Leopoldville government of Premier Cyrille Adoula and President Joseph Kasavubu only in the desperate need for help against communist-supported revolts in both east and west and mounting unrest among disillusioned tribesmen. NOT THE LEAST ironic is the And from this may come the final irony. For Tshomeb may emerge the new premier. The sophisticated Tshomeb has this advantage: "I have," he says, "no inferiority complex toward the white man as do some of my Congolese colleagues." BUSINESS DIRECTORY NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Balfour CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ...right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday Fraternity Jewelry Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c STUDENTS Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd CLASSIFIED ADS Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking REAL PET FOR RENT GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75; Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re- Close to campus, very nice air-conditioned apartment—Santee Apartments—VI 3- 2116 or inquire at office—1123 Indiana. tf Extra nice bachelor apartment, Cool and friendly. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to city center. Washer for. App尔力 VI 3-8354. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day Two bedroom duplex—Stove and refrigerator—except elec trity furniture—V1 M 3-2281. LOST BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY One Handbook for High School Newspaper Staff and class notes. Contact Tommy Fisher, KU senior, at UN 4-3198. Reward given. 7-3 FOR SALE Hot Rodders! at 1490 Ford Cstock. Body Hot Rodders! at VI 2-3623 or see Rhode Island. 7-10 Two spiral notebooks and reading cards. In room to 116 Bailley 'or reward. GERMAN MAJOR will tutor students of 3-8 years old. After 1, p.m. for appointment, 7-14 MISCELLANEOUS New 35mm Nikon F Camera. 1.4f lens meter included $300.00. CCD VT 3-3281. 1961 Coronado Red Corvette Roadster, 3-speed floor shift, positive traction, like new, 283 engine. Good paint. $2500. See afternoons at 2417 Ohio. 7-10 must sell (chip) Motorcycle 1964 further information call VI 2-0006, -700 further information call VI 2-0006, -700 1961 Coronado Red Corvette Roadster. 3-speed floor shift. Positive traction. Like new 283 engine. Good paint. $2500, if afterternoons. 2417 Ohio. 7-6 TYPING Expert typing on thesis, dissertations, term papers. Electric typewriter. Stand- ard rates. Call Mrs. Mishler at VI 3-1029. 7-28 Accurate expert typist would like typos, Prompt prompt, Call V1-3-2681, and these Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of 1963-64 readings, lecture notes and book publications. Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. Continuing Book Sale. Books on dozens of subjects. Come In and browse. 2-10, 8-1, Saturdays. 1538 Tennessee Red Carriage House. (Behind Towers) 7-3 1949 Plymouth 4 dr. Fair condition, runs Cali VI 3-9078. See at 432% M₂. Experienced typist. Former secretary will type, typeset, and design artwork. Requires work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 1868. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 1868. Accurate expert typist would in her service. Cali VI 3-2651. Prompt service. Cali VI 3-2651. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS 100% TURKISH HAIR Is THE place to find the latest swimwear fashions from Cole of California. The finest swimsuits designed to look right and fit even better! Stop in today and try on one of these terrific suits—you won't want to take it off terrill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 terri LAWRENCE. terriills LAWRENCE BANKS 1 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 3, 1964 Picnics Bring Danger Of Food Contamination NEW YORK—(UPI)—Food poisoning usually is brought on by eating food which has been contaminated by toxic bacteria. Cleanliness and refrigeration are the combined solution to food contamination. Foods most likely to be poisoned are picnic favorites—eggs, fish, fowl, and dairy products. THE SYMPTOMS of food poisoning are nausea, vomiting, cramps, diarrhea, headache, chills, and fever, appearing from six to 48 hours after eating the contaminated food. When symptoms signal, call a doctor. Attacks usually last 24 to 48 hours and very rarely can cause death. IN THE PREPARATION of summer foods in the home, remember that the cleanest-looking hands ordinarily carry millions of staphylococcii which thrive in the foods named above. To guard against food poisoning, watch eggs, fish and chicken salads or sandwiches. Mayonnaise dressing alone can become unfit for use if not properly refrigerated. Dried eggs may cause epidemics of diarrhea. Nowadays housewives are learning, as are restaurant workers, that washing with a new anti-bacterial skin detergent (Phisohex), removes staph and counters their regrowth. Doctors use the detergent before surgery. Nurses use it before handling newborn babies. Its use in home and restaurant keeps and helps staph contamination down and helps prevent food poisoning. KEEP THE susceptible picnic food refrigerated until you leave for the picnic site. Use insulated bags and ice to keep the food cool in travel and before you eat. Watch out, too, for things that like to feast on humans at picnics, camps, or in the backyard. At best, insects are an annoyance, even when they don't bite or sting. At worst, they are life threatening when they are vectors of disease. Sometimes their stings can cause fatal allergic reactions. If your druggist cannot recommend a mosquito repellent to keep you relatively free of these pesky creatures, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) can. IF YOUR PROBLEM is fire ants or black widow spiders or any other anti-human creatures, the USDA research service can help you also. The common sense approach to these and other summer health hazards is best described by the following: Thresher Inquiry Ends—No Solution WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Congress has completed its inquiry into the Thresher tragedy. One investigator said no one knows why the nuclear submarine went down with all 129 crew members. After a three-hour closed meeting, the Joint Atomic Energy Committee finished its exhaustive investigation of the world's worst submarine disaster. Intensive efforts have failed to locate the Thresher, which sank in deep Atlantic waters 220 miles east of Boston on April 10.1963. Sen. John O. Pastore, D-R.I., committee chairman, said, "No one knows exactly what happened" because the wreckage was not located. But numerous possible causes have been mentioned, including structural failure. The committee will issue a report on the disaster which "will spell out what might have been the cause," Pastore said. Jerry K. Barland, a University of Kansas alumnus, has been appointed assistant track and field coach at Stanford University. He is a high school coach at La Puente, Calif. Barland Is Named Stanford Coach After graduation, Barland was assistant freshman football and head varsity soccer coach at KU. He also taught physical education at KU. He has taught physical education at various high schools in Kansas and Missouri. Common sense, relatively uncommon, is the kind of sense you realize afterward you should have used beforehand. ENDS TONITE Walt Disney's "THOMASINA" Granada THEATRE...Telephone NO. 3-459 Graxada THEATRE... Telahbayi P 3-4088 Starts SATURDAY! FRANK DEAN SAMMY SINATRA·MARTIN·DAVIS,JR. ROBIN and THE 7 HOODS and BING CROSBY Mat. 2:00 Eve. 7:00-9:00 SUNDAY CONT. FROM 2:30 Fri. - Sat. - Sun. Eve. only Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts TONITE! Here comes Flipper, the fearless... M.C.M. presents AN IYAN FIORS PRODUCTION "flipper's new adventure" in METROCOLOR Shows 7:00 & 9:00 TONITE! 4 BIG UNITS! 8:10 — "13 Frightened Girls" 10:00 — FIREWORKS! 10:25 — "Drums of Africa" 12:05 — "Road to Hong Kong" Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Sunset DOVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 SATURDAY ONLY! John Wayne in 2 Big Hits "Wings of Eagles" "North to Alaska" rius "Jack The Giant Killer" SUN. - MON. James Stewart Sandra Dee "Take Her, She's Mine" Plus "The Dream Maker" FRIDAY FLICKS presents Alfred Hitchcock's "PSYCHO" starring Janet Leigh & Tony Perkins TONITE...JULY 3rd 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. DYCHE AUDITORIUM 35c PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS ROUND CORNER DRUGS ROUND CORNER OLD WORLD HOSPITALITY ... MODERN CONVENIENCE! The Round Corner Drug has been serving Lawrence since 1855, providing Lawrence and, later, the Campus with every pharmaceutical need and sundry item with Quality and complete service our constant goal. We have based our Reputation on Quality and Service and we strive to keep that Fine Reputation. 801 MASS. Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1964 Lawrence, Kansas 52nd Year, No.9 Ike's Brother To Place Scranton Bid CHICAGO—(UPI)—Gov. William W. Scranton announced yesterday that Dr. Milton Eisenhower, brother of former President Eisenhower, will nominate him for the presidency at the Republican national convention. Scranton said ex-President Eisenhower "knows about this and is equally pleased. He said he was delighted to hear it." THE PENNSYLVANIA governor said he talked by telephone with the ex-President a few minutes before making the announcement to a news conference. Scranton was at the start of his last grass roots drive in his "blitz" campaign to pry enough delegates away from Sen. Barry M. Goldwater to prevent a first-ballot victory for the Arizonian at the Republican convention in San Francisco. He staked much of his hopes on two days of whistle-stop campaigning through Illinois, where the GOP delegation has registered itself as heavily in Goldwater's favor. The leader of the Illinois delegation, Sen Everett M. Dirksen, has been announced as the man who will put Goldwater's name into nomination at San Francisco. SCRANTON STARTED off his news conference with the statement: "I'm pleased and delighted to announce to you that Dr. Milton Eisenhower will nominate me at the convention in San Francisco . . . and, yes, Gen. Eisenhower knows about this and is equally pleased. He said he was delighted to hear it." Gen. Eisenhower has been scrupulously neutral in the Scranton-Goldwater struggle, although Scranton's leaders have ardently wooed his support. Dr. Eisenhower, the president of Johns Hopkins University in Maryland, has been an avowed Scranton backer. Scranton's Illinois appeal to the people in Illinois will range from hand-shaking stands on crowded Chicago streets to a whistle-stop train tour through the downstate prairie country. ___ NEW YORK — ( UPI ) — Don Drysdale of the Los Angeles Dodgers will be the starting pitcher for the favored National League, and Dean Chance of the Los Angeles Angels to start for the American League in today's 35th All-Star game at Shea Stadium. Drysdale, Chance Will Pitch Today Starting Lineups NEW YORK—(BUI) The starting lineups and batting order for today's major-league All-Star game at Shea Stadium; American League Fregosi, Angels, ss Oliva, Twins, twi cf, Killebrew, ef Killebrew, Twif IfAllison, Twib Robinson, Orl'les, 3b Howard, Yankees, Howard, Yankees, Chance, Angels, p Umpires—Ed Sudol (NL), college; Joe Paparella (AL), 1b; Frank Seckey (NL), Paperie Chylak, AL), 3b, Doug Harvey (NL) and Al Salatera (NL), foul lines. Chance's nomination to start came as a surprise inasmuch as the Angel's righthander pitched against the Boston Red Sox Sunday, but American League Manager Al Lopez pointed out that Chance had worked only $1\frac{3}{4}$ innings against Boston. Chance, who has a 5-5 record this season with the Angels along with a 2.19 earned run average will be making his first All-Star appearance. The 27-year-old Drysdale will be appearing for the sixth time. ROBERTA BROWN "I HOPE THESE WILL FIT"—These might be the words of Mrs. Ida Conroy, costume executrix of the KU Theatre Department, who is preparing costumes for the next production in the theatre. (See related story on Page 3.) Skill of Music Campers Belies Brief Practicing By Rose Marsha Resnick By Rose Marsha Resnick Opening the third week of concerts for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, James S. Ralston, general director of the camp choirs, introduced Daniel Moe from the State University of Iowa, as guest conductor for the two choirs. Performing as though they had been together for three years instead of three weeks, the music campers presented their first number of the afternoon, "Gloria" by Vivaldi. Accepting the audience's warm applause the group proceeded into the "Almighty and Everlasting God" by Gibbons, which proved to be a song well done and well prepared for. USING ONE of his own compositions, "Blessed Be the Lord," conductor Moe formed the group's voices as only the composer of the piece could. Following each breath and measure exactly, this fine group concluded its third of the program with an off-set composition, "Every Night When the Sun Goes In," arranged by Owens, and "Symphony of Psalms," Part I, by Stravinsky. WINNING HIS way into the hearts of the students, Vilem Sokol, guest conductor from Seattle, led the camp orchestra in the theme song, "Trish Tune from County Derry" by Percy Grainger. Creating an atmosphere of fright and enchantment, "The Planets" by Holst brought the audience into outerspace. The Chamber Choir continued the afternoon performances with an opening number by Liebold, "Commit Thy Way." Another piece by conductor Moe, "Hosanna to the Son of David," added just enough spice to the program to prepare the audience for the wonderful finale, "Marches of Peace," by Frackenpohl. Fighting to conquer the hazards of nature, the evening concerts made a wonderful showing in the Outdoor Theatre. The Symphonic Band, conducted by Cmdr. Charles Brendler, retired director of the United States Navy Band and Orchestra, brought the beauty of selections by Stravinsky, Coats, Friedemann, and Chopin into the night. To add a touch of the holiday week-end to the program, Sokel took over the symphonic band and conducted the "Royal Fireworks Music" by Handel. THE FINAL division of a full day of inspiring entertainment was performed by the Concert Band. Russell L. Wiley, camp director, introduced the group with "Celebration Overture" by Creston. LAMP POSTS swayed, sheet music flew into the wind, and notes were carried out of the instruments as though they were fine threads of rare material being woven into a mist. The closing brought out by Mr. Sokol had the right effect for a patriotic atmosphere."American Salute" by Gould said good night to the satisfied listeners of a full day of concerts. Lawrence Proposed For Pollution Center Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Gov, John Anderson and Ross E. McKinney, chairman of the department of civil engineering, requested the establishment by the federal government of a water pollution control research laboratory at KU to deal with problems in the Missouri basin. The request, made to Anthony Celebrezze, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, stated that the ideal location and excellent research facilities for the center were in Lawrence. Gov. Anderson said the secretary made no commitment but said he would study the application carefully. THE THREE men told the secretary that the University is prepared to make land available for the center free. The ground would be part of a 600-acre tract owned by the KU Endowment Association. It is only a few minutes walk from the C. L. Burt Environmental Health Laboratory on the west side of the campus. The group pointed out to the secretary that the Lawrence campus is only a 30-minute drive from the Kansas City Municipal Airport and the Missouri Basin regional office of the United States Public Health Service in Kansas City. Dr. Wescoe pointed out the educational value of such a center for training qualified people in the field of water pollution while doing active research in the field. IN ADDITION, KU is near the largest single source of municipal and industrial wastes in the Missouri River Basin and also close to other typical pollution problems. Congress has indicated the desire to establish water pollution centers "near institutions of higher learning in which graduate training in such research might be carried out." The committee stressed, too, that KU has active graduate programs in engineering, medicine, and physical, social and biological sciences. FEW SCHOOLS, they said, are as qualified as KU to have such a center. The control problems of the Missouri River basin range from the questions of water quality, effect of irrigation in the West, the complicated industrial processes in the East to salt pollution and disposal for oilfield wastes. The committee said the University recognizes that the Public Health Service may have to limit initial efforts in the Missouri Basin to field laboratory status until it has completed construction of the several regional research facilities already established. IF THIS is the case, the KU Endowment Association will consider the possibility of constructing facilities for such a laboratory for a long-term lease to the Federal government. Rep. Laird Says Scranton Wants Rights Plank Fight Dr. Wesco returned to Lawrence on Sunday. SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI)—The chairman of the Republican Platform Committee says that Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton has instructed his supporters to fight for a plank declaring that the new civil rights law is constitutional. The official, Rep. Melvin R. Lairo of Wisconsin, told a news conference that Scranton had served notice he will instruct his delegates to insist on such a controversial plank. SCRANTON, UNDERDOG contender against Sen. Barry Goldwater for the GOP presidential nomination, apparently hoped to dramatize the Arizona senator's contention that two provisions of the law are unconstitutional. Laird, a neutral in the Scranton-Goldwater battle, said he was against such a step. He feels the 100-member platform body should leave that judgment to the Supreme Court. GOLDWATER'S supporters, who comprise about 60 per cent of the committee, made clear they were willing to adopt a civil rights plank calling on the party's nominee to give the new law prompt and effective enforcement. Rep. John J. Rhodes, R-Ariz.. Goldwater's spokesman on the committee, already has described the effort to endorse the law's constitutionality as a "meaningless" gesture. University Theatre Presents Third Play Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office for $1.50. KU students may present their certificates of registration for a single free admission. There are no reserved seats. The third production of the University Theatre's summer series, "The Private Ear—The Public Eye" by Peter Shaffer, will be presented at 8:15 p.m. today. Performances will be given through Friday night. Women Lead Men in KU Scholarship And, of course, the women far outdistanced the men in the scholarship race. The good students did even better, the others were a bit off, and the profs as a whole seem to be grading the same, the 1963-64 scholarship report for the University of Kansas shows. For the first time, all four women's scholarship halls topped the "magic" 2.00 or straight B average for the year. Headed by Miller Hall's 2.15, the four averaged 2.10, for significant improvement over the 2.04 in 1962-63. All "A" is 3.00, C is 1.00. The five men's scholarship halls averaged 1.95, headed by Pearson Hall's 2.01. The average was up from 1.93 the previous year. The all-University average was 1.47, with no meaningful change from 1.46 a year ago. But the all-women's mark of 1.63 was up from 1.60, while the all-men's figure fell to 1.25 from 1.39. The all-fraternity average was down 3 points to 1.43, and the all-men's residence hall mark was up 2 to 1.26. the freshman class did better, 1.23 compared to 1.19. But the improvement came from the women, up to 1.42 compared with 1.30. Freshmen men averaged 1.10. Pi Beta Phi led the 12 sororities with 1.98, with Kappa Alpha Theta second at 1.92. Beta Theta Pi led the 27 fraternities with 1.94. Delta Tau Delta was second at 1.77. Carruth-O'Leary, housing senior women, led women's residence halls with 1.72, and Templin topped men's residence halls with 1.29. Kansas Hottest Place in Nation Rv United Press International For the second time this year Kansas had the uncomfortable honor of being the hottest place in the nation. Beloit logged a sizzling 113 Sunday to claim the national heat mark. Russell and Belleville had 110 each, Hill City had 108, Goodland had 106, and Topeka and Emporia each had 100-degree readings . The coolest reading in the state was Olathe's 93. The day was made even more uncomfortable by winds gusting to 40-50 mph. Clouds were expected to increase, bringing cooler weather to much of the state today. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1964 The Man in the Wings With all eyes focused on the senator from Arizona for the GOP nomination it looks as though Gov. Scranton is running an uphill race. This may be true, but there is one candidate who is not running but instead is waiting in the wings for the call to battle. Who else but Richard M. Nixon would wait for such a call, and surprisingly enough, who else has a chance to score in this game of political Russian roulette? HE WRITES articles in the Saturday Evening Post cutting down President Johnson's attitudes toward TV debates. He slams Bobby and the rest of the clan but still he does not campaign. He writes as a loser, not as a contender for the GOP nomination. He still seems to be licking the wounds inflicted in 1960 and 1962. It does little for him in 1964. Nixon is obviously disappointed in the lack of support he has received so far for the nomination, but he is not finished. Not yet. He will sit in at the convention in San Francisco and wait for the delegates either to take the bull by the horns and nominate Goldwater or make a line drive for Scranton. Nixon hopes neither is the case. It is his hope that the convention will become deadlocked and that he will be the only one left to carry the banner. He is what could be called a "stand-by candidate," or maybe the "candidate in a pinch." IT SEEMS that Nixon, always the poor loser, is ready to take another stab at the presidency. He does not come on strong as a candidate but does come on as an anti-man. He is against everything and for nothing. He blames (in one Saturday Evening Post article) many things for his defeat in 1960: makeup, poor health, and the most telling thing of all, the famous TV debates. He would never consider the fact that John F. Kennedy was what the people wanted. He, again, accuses and explains away his defeat with a line as old as the hills. He was "robbed" of the presidency because (he says) Kennedy used too many professional tricks. What did he expect, the Original Amateur Hour? It now seems that the Republicans cannot win in the fall, anyway, yet Nixon still contends that he is the man for the job. If losing is the job then Nixon certainly is the man for it. Linda Ellis Commentators Ought to Treat Him Fairly Even Though Goldwater Is Not Their Man By John S. Knight (In Detroit Free Press) To avoid any misunderstanding of what I am about to say, let me declare that Barry Goldwater is not my candidate and I have done nothing to promote his Presidential aspirations. But I do think the Arizona senator is getting shabby treatment from most of the news media. Day after day, there are loud lamentations from the newspaper columnists to the effect that a Gold-water nomination will destroy the Republican party. Their deep concern for the GOP's future would be more persuasive if any considerable number of them had ever voted for a Republican nominee, or perhaps, ever voted at all. IN LIFE'S current issue, Walter Lippmann opines that, "There is only one man who at this 11th hour can save the Republican party from what may be an irreparable disaster, and that man is Gen. Eisenhower." Poor old Ike. He has sought to stay above what Lippmann calls "the sordid and sweaty battle of the politicians." But they never let him alone, and try to use the Eisenhower prestige for their own selfish ends. LAST SUMMER, Walter Lippmann said on "CBS Reports" that Barry Goldwater was the logical Republican Presidential candidate for 1964 if the Republicans really wanted to test the issues and give the voters a real choice. It was not long before Lippmann had a change of heart and declared Goldwater to be a "radical reactionary." He said Goldwater's views "are a vast confusion and a recipe for panic . . . the Republican party would be a shambles after a Gold-water nomination." LIPPMANN NOW declares that the Goldwater "adventurers" want "to seize and use the old historic name and the political assets of the Republican party . . . to take over and make over the party." This is an idle charge since Goldwater's Republican colleagues in the Senate selected him as chairman of their campaign committee for five years. In 1960, Goldwater made 200 speeches for the Nixon-Lodge ticket. Raymond Moley reminds us that when Goldwater resigned from this post last year, his fellow Republican senators gave him a glowing resolution of appreciation. THE RECORD would indicate that Barry Goldwater is less of an "adventurer" than the gutless wonders who were willing to let Nelson Rockefeller take him on single-handed while they stood by hoping to pick up the marbles. Of the syndicated columnists, I can think of only a few who are not savagely cutting down Sen. Goldwater day after day. Some of the television commentators discuss Goldwater with evident disdain and contempt. Editorial cartoonists portray him as belonging to the Neanderthal age, or as a relic of the 19th Century. IT IS THE FASHION of editorial writers to persuade themselves that Goldwater's followers are either "kooks" or Birchers. This simply is not so. The Goldwater movement represents a mass protest by conservatively minded people against foreign aid, excessive welfare, high taxes, foreign policy and the concentration of power in the federal government. These people are, as Don Shoemaker of the Miami Herald has said, those many Americans who are "weary with the present, fearsome of the future and enamored of the past." THEY ARE ALSO those Americans who yearn for solutions to what are actually insoluble problems. They are those Americans who tend to over-simplify issues and demand an end to our ever recurring crises. Senator Goldwater's adherents may fail to understand the nature of world change and the significance of our social revolution at home. AND SO IT IS with Goldwater. His vote against the civil bills bill and his public attitudes on TVA, the United Nations, relations with Russia and the war in South Viet Nam may give us pause but he has the right to be heard on these questions. Yet their love of country and patriotism cannot be impugnified. If they are mistaken in their concepts of modern times and like not what they see, this is their undeniable right. As Columnist Robert G. Spivack has said: "Whether or not Gold-water should be President, he is entitled, as spokesman for one segment of American political thought, to a fair hearing. Fair play is an inherent party of the American political tradition, and those who violate that tradition do so at their own peril." THE SUPERIOR attitude displayed toward Goldwater by so many columnists and commentators is already resulting in a backlash of sympathy toward the man from Arizona. When these "opinion makers" refer disfaintly to "the kind of people" who were for Goldwater in California, they insult the intelligence of more than a million voters who said with their ballots that they didn't want Gov. Rockefeller as the Republican candidate. The pundits who are presently proclaiming that a Goldwater nomination will hopelessly divide the Republican Party should be fair enough to concede that precisely the same division will occur if he is not nominated. And they couldn't care less. He holds this advantage because he fought for it and won. The other candidates, excluding Rockefeller, meekly declined the issue. THE FACT that Senator Goldwater enjoys such a long lead over his rivals in delegate strength would indicate that some people must like him. Gov. William Scranton's challenge to Goldwater is to be welcomed. His belated bid for the nomination insures discussion of all issues prior to the convention. This can be informative and useful. BUT I FAIL to understand why the hesitant gentleman from Harrisburg is suddenly the hero of the hour in most of the press, and Goldwater the party leper. There was certainly nothing in Gov. Scranton's performance at the recent governors conference which would suggest that he is the strong, decisive character now being portrayed in the public prints. Some editors are disturbed because Barry Goldwater is teeing off on the newspapers and other news media for failing to present the news of his candidacy fairly and objectively. I can't say that I blame him He hasn't had a fair shake. '64 Graduates Are Change from Past MEDFORD, Mass. — (UPI)— If Tufts University graduates are typical of the year's half-million college graduates, young men and women with their new sheepskins are a far cry from their parents. They expect to make more money, are less religious and more impatient with the unsettled state of the world, according to a survey of Tufts' grads. Summer Session Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegeate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS THE TIN DRUM, by Gunter Grass (Crest, 95 cents). Wide critical praise has greeted this recent novel from Germany, and it was on the New York Times best seller list for three months. It is a big book, and one likely to shock many readers. Gunter Grass tells herein the story of a child-monster who chooses to remain at the age of 3 forever, beating on his tin drum. The parallel Grass draws is with Nazi Germany's self-absorption and cruelty in the thirties and forties. The book is not likely to be read on the level of straight literary entertainment, and it will not be to the taste of all readers. Critics point to it as a fantasy, a farce, a wild extravaganza. It will be absorbing to most, even those who find it ultimately distasteful. $$ ***** $$ THE MOONFLOWER VINE, by Jetta Carleton (Crest, 75 cents). There aren't many books like this in the sophisticated sixties. It is a simple story, even sentimental, a tale of a Missouri family whose members come from widespread parts of the country to be caught up in a life that is elementary and different from the hectic life of the cities. The moonflower vine is the basis of a ritual for the Soames family, which hurries home on summer evenings to sit in the dusk and watch the flowers open. The novel has a pronounced feeling for human emotions—in the mood of novels of a quieter age, say the twenties or thirties—and will attract the kind of audience that has found appeal recently in "The Reivers" and "To Kill a Mockingbird." $$ ** $$ THE DIXIE FRONTIER, by Everett Dick (Capricorn, $1.95). Everett Dick has written extensively about the American frontier, and this book is a particularly important contribution, for it gives a picture of the southern frontier before the Civil War. It is well-documented, but it is not stuffily so, and should be of interest to many readers. Dick offers a picture of the settlers themselves, where they came from, how they traveled to the frontier, their homes, their work, their play and their customs, their schools and churches, their relationships with the Negro and the Indian. The book is an excellent social history in an area that has needed treatment. $$ *** $$ PROMETHEUS BOUND, by Aeschylus, translated by Paul Roche (Mentor Classics, 60 cents). Here is a new translation of the great play, a translation already labeled by one critic as the best she has read. Production notes, background information on the period, and a commentary by Roche are included. Roche formerly taught at Smith College in Northampton, Mass., and left there on a fellowship to translate Greek tragedy. The play deals with Prometheus, condemned to suffering because he stole fire from the gods and gave it to man. It is generally considered one of the greatest of classic tragedies. $$ * * * * $$ THE CRUSADES, by Henry Treece (Mentor, 75 cents). This is a comparatively recent history of the Crusades, a book much more likely to be read by today's readers than the massive work by Harold Lamb. Henry Treece sets the stage for the great treks of the Middle Ages by describing life in the Mediterranean areas and in Europe, Constantinople and the Holy Land. He then describes the four Crusades from 1095 to 1204 and the Children's Crusade in 1212. The latter episode is one of the best known stories in history, and one of the grimmest. Of the 30,000 children from France who went on the crusade, only one returned, the rest being auctioned off in Algiers or sold into slavery in Cairo. Only one-tenth of the 20,000 German children returned. ** THE PIONEERS, by James Fenimore Cooper (Signet Classics, 60 cents). In the Leatherstocking series this novel was written first but comes next to last chronologically. Its appearance early in the 1820s heralded the coming American novel, and it remains a significant book in our literary tradition. Though Natty Bumppo is an old man in "The Pioneers," his forests are still full of deer and passenger pigeons still darken the sky (providing one of the most powerful descriptions in the novel). But the city is encroaching on Natty's beloved wilderness, and the old woodsman is about to move again. Cooper gave us both an entertaining story of adventure and a novel full of meaning in a country already yielding to industrial civilization. * * * McTEAGUE, by Frank Norris (Signet Classics, 60 cents). This is a dark, gloomy, sometimes brutal and always penetrating story of San Francisco. It also is a critical book in literary naturalism, the young writer Frank Norris offering a story of a dentist, trapped by his heredity and environment, his wife and the lust for gold that commands both of them. "McTeague" became the classic silent film, "Greed." Its climactic scene in Death Valley has great power, and its pictures of grim urban life were shocking to readers 64 years ago. Though the novel is slightly dated it remains one that will prove absorbing to many readers. $$ $$ OUR EMERGING UNIVERSE, by Allan Broms (Dell Laurel, 50 cents). This book is by a scientist who endeavors to explain to the layman (and it gets pretty complex at times) the story of the creation of the universe, and the solar system. Broms considers the story of Genesis and comes right down to a modern hypothesis known as "continuous creation." He describes the evolution of the earth, from swirling gases to solid and liquid substances, and considers theories of the birth of the planets, the making of oceans and the movement of continents. Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Costuming, Millinery, Knitting and Rocks Are 'First Loves' of Theatre Seamstress Rv Margaret Ogilvie By Margaret Ogilvie There used to be a sign on the door which read "Ye Olde Costume Shoppe," but now you know you've found the right place when a little white-haired lady wearing a white smock and a big smile greets you from behind a counter inside that door. She is Mrs. Ida Conroy, costume executrix of KU's Theater department. Evidence of this seamstress' skill and contentment in her work is apparent in the way her hands move deftly over the cloth pieces, forming one of the costumes which she estimates require from approximately two hours to four days for completion. The vital capacity she fills consumes the weekdays all year round, yet she "doesn't mind at all" when it is necessary for her to work on Saturdays and Sundays. During this summer season she will make 28 new ensembles. For all the rest she will draw on the brimming drawersful of costumes used in past productions, restlying them to suit different roles. Mrs. Conroy commented that there are to be 127 changes in "Bye Bye Birdie," while the cast includes only about 69 characters. PEOPLE OFTEN request that Mrs. Conroy do costuming for them on a private basis, having taken notice of her handiwork during a production, but she finds this impossible to fit into her schedule. "The Tempest" was produced last winter with all-new costuming. Although the costumes for "The Man of Destiny" were rented, the style of the hats provided inspiration for several Mrs. Conroy has just completed. She thinks they may "come in handy" next year, but primarily the six hours she devoted to each was "just for fun." IT WAS FUN for the executrix because millinery is another field of sewing in which she is adept. Relating that she had often fashioned hats for herself, she mentioned that her aunt had been a dressmaker and milliner who had taught her "lots," from the age of about 3. Recalling those experiences, Mrs. Conroy mused, "I tried to embroider and do everything that little old ladies did." "From the time I was six, I made all my dolls' clothes—patterns and all—and my own from the time I was 11," Mrs. Conroy continued. Now she sometimes uses commercial patterns when sewing for herself, but she commented that, particularly in constructing costumes, "It takes me longer to take a pattern from a package and study it to see where it goes that it does to cut the article." THOUGH HER present occupation did grow out of early exposure to the field, Mrs. Conroy confesses now that she didn't really know exactly what she intended to do at that time. "All I wanted to know was to learn how to do all of this," she said, her voice radiating the same enthusiasm she must have felt then. And then thoughtfully she added, "... I think it's better to train for several different things" Her first formal training in dressmaking, millinery, tailoring, drafting of dress patterns, and working with furs was during the autumn of her 17th or 18th year. It was then she was apprenticed at an establishment called "Lynn's Millinery Shop" in Atchison, Kan., where she was born. She spent her childhood in Kansas towns, except for four years when her father owned and operated a pharmacy in Kansas City. Mo THE FIRST costume sewing Mrs. Conroy can remember doing was when she and a girl friend dressed as Egyptians for a masked ball at the "Chin Chin Club" in Atchison. She was first employed in that capacity in 1920, when she was called upon to make Indian garb for a pantomime, "Mexico, Yesterday and Today," in Las Vegas, N.M. Mrs. Conroy contented herself for a period after that by sewing for her five children as they were going through school. During that time she also did costuming for the YMCA Little Theatre and for the University of Wichita, when the family was living there—which was until she moved to Lawrence. Mrs. Conroy became affiliated with KU through one of her daughter Barbara's friends, Herbert Camburn, who was costumer at that time and who brought her into the shop. She began working with Mr. Camburn in 1958, when he had just moved operations from Fraser Hall to the present location under the Experimental Theatre and just off the Green Room in Murphy Hall. HAVING ASSISTED Mr. Camburn until March 1959, she returned in the fall of that year to aid Caroline Kriesel, who succeeded him. Mrs. Conroy remained to begin working with Chez Haehl, who became costumer in the summer of 1963. Rounding out the staff in the shop this summer is Mary Lynn Speer, Merriam senior, a student assistant. There will be three such assistants during the coming school year. Mrs. Conroy is planning to abandon her career with KU next February to operate a lapidary in cooperation with a son, Frank, at his family's home in Aurora, Colo. The family's establishment, "Conroy's Capricious Capers," consists of a two-room area and a display room. In the future Mrs. Conroy plans to display her wares at rock shows and rock and mineral clubs each week. Because rock cutting, grinding, and polishing is a favorite pastime for Mrs. Conroy, she attends monthly meetings of a group of enthusiasts in Lawrence. KNITTING, ANOTHER "first love" also fits into the prospects for busy years ahead. "I plan to do plenty when I'm cutting rocks," she predicted. It seems that she will be all set up, whichever of her children's homes she chooses to establish as her own. She has been provided with her own room in three of them, although Colorado will be her address. She reasons that "the galloping grandma," as she referred to herself, will be moving around when she "feels like roving." DONNA LEMMER A SAFETY CHECK of your car IS JUST PLAIN "COMMON SENSE" IT'S FREE—TOO! YOU GET A CHECK-SHEET REPORT ON LIGHTS — HORN — BRAKES TIRES — BATTERY — ALIGNMENT FAN BELT — MUFFLER — SHOCKS Know the facts about the condition of your car—for Safety Sake! Δ FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything We cash your checks — mail your letters — invite your account When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified Your Shirts Keep Fresher When Extra Care Is Given! Your shirts are given the finest care at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaning. Every extra step is taken to insure your satisfaction. Every part of the shirt is quality ironed and finished to preserve its beauty and to protect it, each shirt is wrapped individually as positive dust protection, or hung conveniently on a hanger. For Finest Quality, Always Visit Us. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 Call VI3-3711 For Fast, Free Pick-up & Delivery Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1964 Machine Instructs College Students OKLAHOMA CITY—(UPI) —The student steps into his private, glass-walled study booth, arranges his notes and paper and dials a number. The electronic device responds with a lecture in history, speech or zoology. The student is a pioneer in a new concept of electronic learning soon to be tried on a broad scale at Oklahoma Christian College. THE PRIVATE study booth concept, utilizing tape-recorded lectures, will be tested on 150 students next fall. It will be used on a wider scale later when the college completes its $600,000 learning center, with a private, electronically-equipped study booth for each student. Dr. Stafford North, dean of instruction and professor of speech, will try the taped instruction method on speech students this fall. HE WILL COMPARE its effectiveness with conventional methods in a research project financed by a $5,475 grant from the U.S. Office of Education. Use of sound-tape instruction devices is not new. But this will be the first controlled and analyzed use of the technique on such a large scale. tested simultaneously each semester. One will receive the conventional "in-person" instruction only. The other will use tapes and workbook materials solely during every third class meeting. Two experimental groups will b THE GROUPS will be carefully matched according to ability. Examination scores from both groups will be compared at the beginning and end of the semester and will be judged by a three-member faculty panel. The taped lectures were prepared by Dr. North last summer along with Dr. Waldo Braden, speech department chairman at Louisiana State University, who is past president of the Speech Association of America. Summer Finds KU Coaches Preparing for Coming Year By Dale Schroeder Although athletic competition reaches its peak during the winter months, a lot still goes on in the summer. At Allen Field House, various coaches work to strengthen the different teams for competition during the school term. Don Pierce, sports publicity director, said this about what happens at the field house in the summer: "All the different coaches have to finish their respective recruiting jobs. Football and basketball coaches have to see about all the prospects, both signed and unsigned." PIERCE ALSO mentioned that some track coaches travel to the various summer meets across the country. For instance, head track Coach Bill Easton is going to different meets and eventually will go to the Olympics in Tokyo. Fierce personally is responsible for putting together football and basketball brochures. He also is finishing track work and is in charge of publicizing the coming football and basketball schedules. THE FRONT office is in charge of the processing and mailing of football ticket orders for the fall schedule. KU plays a tough schedule and, as a result, there is a great demand for tickets. Water Safety Measures Will Prevent Accidents As for the athletes themselves, the department supplies them with jobs for the summer that will help them with conditioning. CHICAGO — (UPI)— The theme of a summer tragedy: man, woman or child takes a refreshing dip in pool, lake or ocean. Something happens. Man. woman or child drowns. The tragedy, according to estimates, will happen to 6.000 Americans this summer—unless all who go near the water bone up on water safety. The American Medical Association (AMA) cautions that the basic rules of water safety should be well known to everyone old enough to read. THE RULES are repeated each season by health and safety organizations. Yet most drownings occur when someone has violated one of the safety rules. Fundamentals cited by the AMA: —Don't swim just after eating or when overly-tired. —Don't overestimate your ability and endurance. -Swim at protected pools or beaches under the supervision of a trained lifeguard. —If your boat overturns, stay with it and don't try to swim a long distance to shore. —Never dive into unknown waters. THE AMA also said everyone ought to know about artificial respiration and how to apply it. The mouth-to-mouth method is not difficult. "Start immediately," the AMA said. "The victim can survive without oxygen to the brain for only a few minutes. "Put the victim on his back, pull the chin well up, make certain the windpipe is clear. Put your mouth over the victim's mouth, pinch shut his nose, and blow hard. Repeat 12 to 15 times per minute. Keep it up until medical help arrives." On another subject, skin diving and scuba diving, the AMA observed: "BOTH ARE fine sports, drawing more enthusiasts each season. Both require special training and knowledge and good physical condition. "If you plan to be a diver, take a course in underwater survival. And get yourself into good physical training for strong swimming." SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN I am a Scotsman. I love my country and its people. I am proud of my heritage. I am a Scot. I am a Scotsman. I love my country and its people. I am proud of my heritage. I am a Scot. HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? IRELAND ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Shin 8 with a KU sealing 3.00 to 4.25 Kansas union BOOKSTORE Pc N (E in a Sout by th In of Co Choi politi Tuesday, July 7, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Political Undercurrent Is Noted by Choir on Ceylon (Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles about the Southeast Asia tour taken recently by the KU Brass Choir). Even with the political and economic crisis in Ceylon, choir members found the U.S. well-represented. Their host, the U.S. Information Service, worked hard to make their stay in Ceylon enjoyable. The American ambassador, one of the two top female diplomats in U.S. Foreign Service, also insured the choir members a pleasant visit. CHOIR MEMBERS noticed, however, that the Ceylon president was a known sympathizer with Peking. The president, a woman, had inherited the presidency when her husband, the former president, died. Local governments, run often by native Indians, did not have the pink tint of the national government. When the choir members arrived there Feb. 24, Ceylon newspaper headlines told of national strikes in the medical profession, among electrical workers and by Ceylon postal workers. Even the ports—so valuable to an island country—were closed down. By Emery Goad and Dan Austin In the ostensibly quiet island state of Ceylon, members of the KU Brass Choir discovered an undercurrent of political chaos. After Ceylon, the choir took a three-day "vacation" in the comparatively uncomplicated city of Bangkok. Thailand. Since no concerts were scheduled, the KU'ers visited the tourist attractions and boasted on Thai canals. IN CONVERSATIONS with University of Ceylon students, choir OUTSIDE OF visiting with native students and experimenting with local foods, the choir did manage to give 15 separate concerts to more than 100,000 Ceylonese. To do this, the group traveled 500 miles over Ceylon's varying terrain. The whole tour of the island took 17 days. The next concert stop for the choir was Vientiane, Laos, where, as any Southeast Asian diplomat will tell you, the action gets hot. members found that students did not question American politics nor diplomacy but were most interested in our campus social life. Discussions ranged in topic from dating customs to marriage trends in the U.S. Diarrhea and dysentery, the unwanted bedfellows of the tropics, also plagued the group. One choir member, Roger Rundle, tired of the group's diet of beer, tea and rice and attempted to eat a local delicacy called "stringhoppers." Rundle was sick for several days. A taste of the jungle was the "motif" of the choir member's nightly accommodations. Creeping lizards and braying elephants became commonplace on Ceylon. Made in France We feature all popular styles from Cole of California designed for your summer swimming fun. Swimwear styles from Cole are the finest beautifully styled and attractively priced. Enjoy the sun this summer—in a suit from terri LAWRENCE, terriill's LAWRENCE, KANSAS 803 Mass. VI 3-2241 S KANSAS 'S KANSAS Open a convenient charge account today KU Librarians on Duty at Fair sisting of 10,000 square feet in the U.S. government exhibit. Known as "Library/USA," the project will be staffed at all times by six reference and two children's librarians. They are Robert Gaylor, government documents librarian, and Mrs. Ramona Ford, assistant acquisitions librarian, Mrs. Ford is also taking a month's leave without pay so she can serve two full months. Two KU librarians are giving their vacations and more to show New York World's Fair visitors a glimpse of the computer-equipped reference library of the future. The two will be on duty in the reference center sponsored by the American Library Association, con- THE INFORMATION center will offer ready reference service from more than 2,000 standard reference books supplemented by an electronic information retrieval system. The computer will be programmed with reading lists, essays in several languages, and lists of periodical articles from current publications. A collection of 2,500 children's books as well as a theater for storytelling and audio-visual presentations will introduce young people to the world of books. THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas will be represented in another browsing section of the exhibit—the Presidential library of more than 1,700 titles. Among them are at least 16 books by 10 authors who are or were on the faculty of KU or are alumni. @SCW.ING. Keep cool this summer with suits dry cleaned often to keep their freshness and crispness. Our service is designed with students and cam p ers in mind; fast service with pick up and delivery available to keep your clothes clean and handy. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. SHOULDER BEEF Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 196' Classical History Viewed At Museum in Fraser By Paula Myers A fragment of the history of ancient Greece and Rome may be seen on the KU campus: Wilcox Museum, on the second floor of Fraser. The blue, shadowy, wide hall that leads to the main room contains four showcases and white plaster busts of those never-to-be-forgotten Romans and Greeks. The dim lights cast shadows on their faces giving them the expression of deep concentration or whatever frame of mind in which they have been captured. AT THE ENTRANCE of the museum there is a small statue of the Nike (Victory) of the Paionios. It originally stood on a pedestal 19 feet high at Olympia in 420 B.C. The hall is lined with white busts of the headless Dancing Faun, Eros of Centocelle, Modusod, Julius Caesar, Vergil, Hadrian, Homer, Plato, Trajan, Socrates, So-called Clytie, Roman Woman, and the helmeted Pericles. Previews Foretell Higher Enrollment A sharp increase in new student totals in September is indicated by attendance at five of the 11 "KU Previews" scheduled this summer. Last year, 1,698 new students attended previews, at which they took placement tests, conferred with advisers and made housing arrangements. The first five previews this year drew 1,054 prospective students, and 249 have registered for the sixth session. KU Pulls One-Fifth Of National Scholars More than a fifth of the holders of National Merit Scholarships attending members schools of the Big Eight conference last year were at the University of Kansas. The annual report of the National Merit Scholarship Corp. shows that 22 scholars were at KU and 22 at Iowa State University, or 22.5 per cent of the total at each. However, the 14 scholars at Oklahoma and 12 at Oklahoma State gave the Sooner state the highest number at member schools within a state. One of the four showcases contains Roman lamps of terra cotta chiefly from Porta Salaria, Rome. A vegetable oil was burned in them by means of a wick, and holes for the filling may be seen in the bowls of the lamps. They must have given off very feeble light. These lamps belong to the first century B.C. and the first century A.D. for the most part. ACROSS THE WAY another showcase contains ancient Roman bronzes: keys and locks, nail, arrowheads, handle of a bronze vessel, furniture decorations with a gold leaf, shoulder brooches, ring, buttons, half of a belt buckle, tweezers, hair pin, and ear pick. Another shelf contains five pieces of Etruscan pottery, and on the lower shelf are terra cotta antifixes. In the third showcase are fragments of a Roman Wall painting from Pompeii-ca. 63-70 A.D. The case also contains glassware. Some of the glassware has the rainbow-like effect visible on the surface of many glass objects. It's termed "iridescence" and is highly prized by collectors. It is due to the action of moisture and oxidation from the earth in which such objects have been buried for centuries. IN THE GREAT museums of the world, one may see impressive displays of vases which, through some trick of chance, are beautifully preserved. In Wilcox Museum there is only a representative selection of these invaluable fragments found in the fourth showcase. Such fragments, or "sherds," as they are called, are nonetheless of inestimable value to the archaeologist as a means of dating the various levels in which they are found. When one walks into the large room he will find impressive white plaster statues. The largeness and the brilliance of the statues make the room shrink in size and make one glance about in awe. There are glass cases containing Roman funeral inscription, Pre-Christian coinage, most of them being Greek or from Greek colonies, and a gift showcase from Alice Rohe, representing the class of 1896. If you haven't been to Wileox Museum, take a break and wander through and enjoy the relics and statues. SUA Presents Billiards & Table Tennis Tournament July 7 - 6 p.m. Sign up at the Jay Bowl in the Union (Trophies Given) Bridge Tournament July 8-7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Union (Prizes Given) SAN FRANCISCO —(UPI)— A news story bearing the code letters "HW" moved out of this Republican national convention city yesterday on the trunk wires of United Press International. UPI Getting Set For Work at GOP Meetings The code letters were a signal to editors that the vanguard of UPTs 1964 convention team was on the job. "HW" stands for UPI's hotel work-room which will be home base for more than 100 reporters, editors, photographers, cameramen and technicians who will cover the convention for UPI's newspaper, radio and television subscribers. In the interval, they will appear over millions of words dealing with high political drama, secret backstage maneuvering and emotional moments of individual triumph and defeat. Before the letters are used for the last time 13 days later, the Republicans will have decided between Sen. Barry Goldwater and Gov. William W. Scranton or some dark horse, picked a vice-presidential nominee and hammered out a platform on which their choices will stand in the November election. The sights and sounds of the politicking will be carried to UPI radio and television subscribers by separate crews of specialists. UPI photos will be on the scene with more than 50 men. SUA's Silent Film Series presents— Rudolph Valentino in “Blood & Sand” plus Stan Laurel’s “Mud & Sand” Thurs., July 9th FORUM RM. 50c --- 50c Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers ROUND CORNER DRUGS ROUND CORNER OLD WORLD HOSPITALITY ... MODERN CONVENIENCE! The Round Corner Drug has been serving Lawrence since 1855, providing Lawrence and, later, the Campus with every pharmaceutical need and sundry item with Quality and complete service our constant goal. Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER Pa Dc U PAR Vionno first moder of the signers "High the 8 early femini MM salon She c as the bias corser era o But interv joke!* said, signer make client for b Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Paris Designer Mourns Demise of High Fashion By Aline Mosby United Press International PARIS — (UPI) — Madeleine Vionnet, credited with being the first designer to put woman in modern dress, doesn't think much of the current crop of Paris designers. "High fashion today is dead," said the 88-year-old designer who as early as 1908 was revolutionizing feminine fashion. MME. VIONNET, who closed her salon in 1940, still lives in Paris. She can look to the past with pride as the coutourier who invented the bias cut that freed women from corsets and launched the modern era of clothes. But the designer reflected in an interview that "high fashion is a joke!" The white-haired designer said. "There are no more real designers. Balenciaga, Givenchy, they make beautiful dresses for personal clients but mainly they make models for buysers. "IT COSTS SO much now to Fund 'Strings' Provide KU Slight Problem How do you spend $91,640 with no strings attached? Well, almost no strings. This is a problem KU faces. It has just received an institutional grant in that amount from the National Science Foundation. The main "string" on the grant that its use must be limited to science areas as defined by the foundation. William J. Argersinger Jr., associate dean of faculties for research, said these areas are the engineering physical and biological sciences; history and philosophy of science; and parts of anthropology, sociology economics and political science. QUANTITATIVE research in political science was added to NSF support only recently, he said. Size of the 1964 grant is almost double that of last year. It was based on NSF research support at KU of about $1.3 million over a year's period. Institutional grants to KU have increased consistently in past years. In 1962, $27,822 was received, and the grant in 1963 was $52,915. Argersinger said the University administrative committee will determine exact use of the grant. The increases represent both an enlargement in NSF-supported research at KU and in the federal government's allocation of a greater proportion of science funds with provision for flexible expenditure. CONCEIVABLY, part of the money will go for special research equipment. This could include partial support of the Computation Center, which this year is acquiring a new 7040-1401 IBM computer. Other uses may be for short-term summer appointments for science faculty; supplementary aid for Watkins summer faculty fellowships; science accessions and staff expenditures in the KU libraries, and faculty travel in science-related work. Argersinger said a further possibility is to expend part of the grant on undergraduate tuition scholarships to science majors. About $8,000 of last year's grant was used in this manner for the first time, he said. Professor, Student Co-Write Report Christopher P. Sword, associate professor of microbiology, and Alan S. Armstrong Sr., a graduate student from Neenah, Wis., are the authors of an article published in a national professional quarterly. Their research report, "Cellular Resistance in Listeriosis," appears in the June 1964 issue of Journal of Infectious Diseases. Armstrong conducted the research as part of his program leading to the master's degree. The over-all research project directed by Sword is receiving support from the U.S. Public Health Service. make high fashion. You need rich clientele. But there is not much money around now to buy such dresses. The French clientele is not enough; the houses must make models for American buyers. "I did not make collections for the Americans, who take back one idea but don't buy more. I made a dress when I felt like it. Now designers have to show collections, 150 models each time, twice a year." STILL HANDSOME and alert, Mme. Vionnet is recognized by the Paris fashion world as the lady who really started it all, even before the great Gabrielle Chanel burst onto the scene. As the late Christian Dior said, "No one ever has carried the art of dressmaking farther than Vionnet." Madeleine Vionnet was an apprentice in a Paris salon at the age of 11 and later designed in the house of Kate Reilly on Dover Street in London for five years. She returned to Paris to work in the Callot salon. Then she moved to the house of Doucet and began to make "what I wanted to make." IN THOSE DAYS women wore boned corsets, skirts to the floor, cinched in waistlines and long hair. Vionnet started a revolution by cutting dresses on the bias. They fell from the shoulders in an almost Grecian style. The free, easy line fitted in with the mood of women campaigning for equal political and moral rights with men. "People were astonished but young women loved the dresses," she recalled. VIONNET OPENED her own sailor in 1912, first on the rue de Rivoli. She closed during World War I but later reopened and by 1923 she had a big salon on the avenue Montaigne with 1200 employees — and the world's rich women as her clientele. Later Jacques Griffe, now a big Paris couturier, was her tailor. Many of her dresses look like the grandmother of today's sack dress. She invented the halter neckline and the cowl neckline and claims to have been the first to lower the waistline in the 1920's. HER CREATIONS were timeless and many can be worn today. Recently a New York society matron donned a black suit and told admiring friends that Vionnet made it 30 years ago. In her Paris town house in a fashionable district, Mme. Vionnet, wearing one of her own floor-length white wool sheaths, led this visitor up three flights to her private sitting room filled with mementos. Like the rest of her mansion it is decorated in the style of the 1930's—silvered fireplace edged with mirrors, red lacquered Chinese furniture, a fur rug thrown over a sofa. In drawers and on shelves are photographs of her late husband, a White Russian army general, and various celebrities wearing Vionnet designs. "I did not follow 'la mode,'" said Mme. Vionnet. "I created harmony. Look! You could wear these dresses today." ___ There's more than one way to learn about American government, as an Ethiopian student at KU soon will find out. Ethiopian Attends Political Meeting Shibru Siefu, a graduate student in political science from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, will halt work temporarily on his master's thesis to attend the Republican National Convention July 12-18. A grant from the U.S. State Department, through the Institute of International Education, is making the San Francisco trip possible. Seifu, who is emphasizing international relations in his master's program, was selected for membership this spring in Pi Sigma Alpha, national honorary political science fraternity. boss. Such grants are given to students from abroad to acquaint them first-hand with some of the political processes in the United States. After the convention, he expects to return to KU to complete work on his master's thesis. "Pan-Africanism from 1958 to the African Charter." His adviser is Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science. Reprint Plan Brings Aid To Collectors Dr. Melville Bell Grosvenor, society president and editor, said early editions beginning with volume I, number 1, of October, 1888, would be made available at modest cost. WASHINGTON — (UPI)— Collectors who haunt used book and magazine stores in search of rare National Geographic issues got a helping hand recently when the society announced it will reprint some early issues. DETAILS OF reproductions will be in the October National Geographic issue, the approximate date the reprints will be generally available. "The new program will enable libraries, schools and collectormembers of the Society to fill out their sets from the very first issue," Grosvenor said. The decision was made, he added, in response to thousands of requests from institutions and individuals for copies of National Geographic long out of print. GOING PRICE on the used market for issues of general interest range from a nickel to 25 cents, with some issues of unusual interest selling for much more. The newstand price of current issues is 75 cents. From 205 members in 1888, the Society has grown to four million at present. The value of its publication has increased proportionately, with some complete sets of original issues selling for $18,000. COLLECTORS COME from all social levels and occupations, according to the Society, and represent widely varied interests. Requests have been received from a Californian who sought a 1906 issue on the San Francisco earthquake; an Iowan who lost a favorite 1920 issue featuring an article on mushrooms; a Kentueky minister searching for an article on Bible lands that appeared 30 years ago, and many others. A REPORT from an El Paso, Texas, collector revealed he had bound his collection in such rare materials as mink, original paintings, and Pancho Villa's saddle blanket. The new reprints will not diminish the value of the originals, the society said, since they will be clearly marked as reprints. To insure clear distinction from the originals, they will be off-set printed on present-day paper. Catholic Hams Keep in Touch By Short Wave Church fathers as far apart as 500 miles gossip and discuss common church problems through use of the "clergy network," a chain of 16 "ham" priests. SANTA FE, N.M. — (UPI)—Catholic priests in New Mexico's farflung parishes take a coffee break each morning . . . by shortwave radio. THE CLERICAL radio hams got their start when Father Elmer Neimeyer, formerly in Albuquerque, talked another priest into building a radio set. The two priests began an early morning get-together by radio, and soon other priests throughout the state were interested. The "network" now includes 16 members who speak to each other daily in a roundtable discussion. The two farthest points are at Tobatch on the Navajo Apache Indian Reservation in the northwest corner of the state and at Roswell in the southeast corner. corner. Midway in the network is Father James Rabbit at Santa Fe. A priest of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, Father Rabbit also is the U.S. Military Affiliate Radio Service officer for New Mexico. He built a teletype machine with surplus materials and, at other times, spearheads the clergy network. The network is used primarily to pass on the much-needed information from parish to parish that is so hard to come by in New Mexico's remote areas. New methods of teaching and other data are the coffee break meat of the clergy network. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (UPI) - The personal papers, memorabilia and the famed rocking chair of the late President John F. Kennedy went on display in Municipal Auditorium yesterday. The three-day exhibit, sponsored by the John F. Kennedy Library, included 70 photographs, a hand-written draft of Kennedy's famed inaugural address and other historic documents. Kennedy Mementos Shown in Kansas City Visitors saw Kennedy's notes on CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT the Cuban missile crisis, the test ban treaty discussions, civil rights and many speeches. Close to campus, very nice air-conditioned apartment--Santee Apartments VI 3-2116 or inquire at office—1123 Indiana. tf Two bedroom duplex~Stove and refrig- ture~bedroom~except accept elpt- trity furniture~V1 3-2281 TYPING Extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned room. Close to KU. Private parking -automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8534. tt Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-3568. tf Accurate expert typist would like typing in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf Accurate expert typist would in her service. Call VI 3-2681. Promote if needed. Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any kind—Very reasonable rates—Contact Mrs Jacque Kaufman (Mrs. Robt). VI M-3-7493 at 5:00 p.m. tf Also included were notes scribbed on dinner menus, envelopes and other scraps of paper. One invitation list drawn up when he was serving in the Senate, shows his handwritten addition of the name "Jackie Bouvier" to the guest list. Patronize Kansan Advertisers BUSINESS DIRECTORY Patronize Kansan Advertisert NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 513 Vt. VI 3-4141 tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Cran. VI 3-2921 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 MISCELLANEOUS LOST Two Spiral notebooks and reading cards. Please turn in to room 116 Bailey Hall for reward. 7-14 FOR SALE GERMAN MAJOR will tutor students of German I. $1.50 an hour. Call VI 3-8342 after 1 p.m. for appointment. 7-14 New 35mm Nikon F Camera. 14f lens Via 3-32mm filter米 included. $300.00. 7-7 1961 Coronado Red Corvette Roadster, 3-speed floor shift, positive traction, like new, 283 engine. Good paint. $2500. See afternoons at 2417 Ohio. 7-10 Must sell (cheap) Motorcycle 1964 Yamaha 250 cc. YDS-1 2 months old. For further information call VI 2-0006. 7-10 GB Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering on the major aspects of ancient Greek Reference Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. 1961 Coronado Red Corvette Roadster. 3-speed floor shift. Positive traction. Like new 283 engine. Good paint. $2500, see afternoons. 2417 Ohio. 7-6 Recording Service and Party Music Hot Rodders! 1940 Ford Cpe. Stock. Body in stock at! 1 V-2-9652 or see at Rhode Island. 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c STUDENTS Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Balfour Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Fraternity Jewelry CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ... right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 7, 1964 Grumm Will Take Leave To Aid Governor Brown Mission: Democratic politics. Place: State, California. Time: August 1964 through July 1965. John G. Grumm, KU associate professor of political science, will fulfill this assignment when he takes a leave of absence from KU and reports to Gov. Pat Brown in Sacramento next month. As recipient of a Ford Foundation faculty fellowship, Grumm will take a look from the governor's chair at phenomena he has been talking about since 1956 in the KU classroom. These include the inner workings of political parties, pressure groups and the electorate. GRUNM'S FELLOWSHIP, administered by the National Center for Education in Politics (formerly Citizenship Clearing House), is similar to one held in 1961 by Earl Nehring, assistant professor of political science. Nehring's appointment was with the Republican National Committee in Washington, D.C. Grumm is one of five college and university teachers named this year to positions in state and local politics. Another appointment is being held by John E. Wickman, assistant professor of history at Northwest Missouri State College, who joins the staff of Rep. William Avery (R-Kansas) this month. Since receiving notice of the appointment, Grumm has talked twice with Gov. Brown. His specific duties have not been assigned, but the KU political scientist expects his role to be that of an executive assistant. Springer Is Appointed At Indiana University George Springer, professor of mathematics and member of the KU mathematics faculty for nine years, has been appointed professor at Indiana University. Dr. Springer, author of two books on mathematics, has been visiting lecturer for the Mathematical Association of America and as chairman of the MAA's film committee made a series of 31 films for the U.S. Army's mathematics courses. NOW! Ends Friday Frank Dean sammy SinaTra Martin Davis, Jr. ROBiN and THE 7 HOODS ROBIN AND THE 7 HOODS Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5728 Coming...SATURDAY! Marlon David Brando Niven Shirley Jones "Bedtime Story" COLOR "Bedtime Story" COLOR OPEN 7:00 STARTS DUSK ENDS TONITE James Stewart - Sandra Dee "TAKE HER, SHE'S MINE" PLUS "THE DREAM MAKER" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 10 TOMORROW! Not For Children! "GOD'S LITTLE ACRE" —and— Robert Mitchum "MAN WITH THE GUN" "I PROBABLY will be involved in Pierre Salinger's campaign for the U.S. Senate and will assist the governor's office in the congressional races," Grumm said. Grumm said Brown also spoke to him about working with California's proposed "war on poverty" program, to be coordinated with President Johnson's anti-poverty drive. Gov. Brown himself will not be campaigning for office, since he is midway in his four-year term of office. The KU teacher said that because of his interest in higher education he expects to be assigned work in the area of university and college relationships with the California state government. One of the outstanding attractions of the Dyche Museum of Natural History is the world's largest panorama of North American mammals and birds. Panorama Shows Continent Life Bv Pamela Peck The panorama, located on the main floor of Dyche Hall, consists of more than 200 mammals and numerous birds displayed in their life-size surroundings from as far north as the Arctic region to as far south as southern Mexico. First specimens for the collection were mounted in the 1880's. The collection was exhibited in Snow Hall until the present museum was constructed in 1901. THE WALLES of the 550-foot exhibit were left bare until 1939, when S. T. Dickinson, a staff artist, began an oil painting background that would blend with the animals and colorfully depict their environment. When finished, the painting covered about 11,000 square feet. Some of the specimens were obtained for the panorama by Prof. Lewis L. Dyche, after whom the museum is named. Other contributions have been made by interested persons. Assembled altogether, the specimens present a viewers' wonderland. Upon first entering the area set aside for the exhibit, one may hear a recorded voice describe the panorama about to be seen. A map depicts in colors the separate North American "life-zones." THE PANORAMA proper begins with scenes from the Arctic "life-zone." Walruses and seals bask along an Arctic shore. A short distance away, polar bears frolic and play. There is very little vegetation along this shore, so the animals that live in the Arctic zone must go to the sea for food. The Hudsonian "life-zone" that follows contains numerous mammals. Some of these are the wolverine, dall's sheep, caribou, lemming, muskox, and lynx. This zone erupts with more trees and wild flowers than does the previous zone. The Canadian "life-zone" is the home of animals such as the cross fox, fisher, grizzly bear, and mountain goat. Two male moose engage in an antler crashing battle. Near by, a trickling waterfall ends in a pond. The ceiling above is a painting of wild ducks and geese. tional and Canadian "life-zone," where many of the same mammals from the Canadian "life-zone" live. Other new characters are the wapiti, mink, and otter. THE NEXT ZONE is the Transi- The Upper Austral (Sonoran Province) and the Upper Austral (Austral Province) "life-zones" emerge into sight. Kansas is located in much of these two areas. Well-known mammal inhabitants include the coyote, bison, prairie dog, jack rabbit, skunk, squirrel, fox opossum, raccoon, and turtle. A prairie dog pops his head out of a hole in the ground at short intervals. The Lower Austral "life-zone" (Sonoran Province) is a desert reregion covered with many cacti. Some of the animals are the ocelot, mule deer, tarantula, gila monster, collared peccary, and Western diamond-backed rattlesnake. THE EIGHTH and final region of the North American panorama is the humid Tropical "life-zone". Colorful birds like the squirrel, cuckoo, purplish guan, keel-billed toucan, blue crowned parrot, and crimson-collared tanager perch on tropical branches. Mammals include the deppe squirrel, baird tapir, three-toed anteater, and spider monkey. This is It!! CASH & CARRY DAYS FINAL REDUCTIONS at the university shop's ANNUAL SUMMER SALE These prices are rock bottom and will last until the sale ends Saturday. This is the last week. Sale positively ends 5 p.m. Saturday — when we will close for the summer. One Group SPORTSHIRTS Now $3 One Group Short-Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS Now $3 One Group WASH SLACKS Now $3 One Group SHOES Now 50% Off Entire Stock DRESS SLACKS Now 1/3 Off (Cuffs Free) One Group SWIMWEAR Now $3 One Group SHOES Now 25% Off $1.00 BARGAIN TABLE (Values to 5.95) Hats - Caps - Cummerbund Sets One Group SUITS Now 1/3 Off Reg.29.95 Now 19.95 Reg.59.50 Now 39.50 Reg.65.00 Now 43.95 (Cuffs Free) ALL SALES FINAL ALTERATIONS EXTRA NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES SHOES Now 10% Off One Group On the Hill One Group SPORTCOATS Now 1/3 Off Reg.25.00 Now 16.65 Reg.35.00 Now 23.95 Reg.39.50 Now 26.95 Reg.42.50 Now 28.95 the university shop 1420 Crescent Road Al Hack Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Lawrence, Kansas 52nd Year, No.10 HIS AUNT "ILL TAKE THIS ONE," says John Gurnett, a Latin teacher from Bellevue, Neb., attending a Latin workshop at KU. On the right is Lyle Watson Bookstore Offers 1,200 Quality Paperbacks Hampton, clerk in the bookstore in the basement of Watson Library. (Kansan photo by Dan Austin.) Bv Christopher Gunn After three months of existence, "the branch bookstore" in the base-ment of Watson Library appears to be thriving. The store, which still has no official name (although "Bookeeller" and "Booklet" have been suggested), was opened March 26 to offer paperbacks to people using the library. (Watson Library proper has no paperbacks.) The store, managed and run by Lyle Hampton, graduate student, carries mainly "quality" paperbacks, many of which come from university presses. However, the complete Modern Library hard-cover series, library duplications, literary quarterlies, and paper and writing supplies can also be found there. A majority of the books stocked are "quality" paperbacks. These books are printed on better paper, in larger type, have more durable bindings, and are about the size of regular hard-cover editions. They range in price from under $1 to nearly $3. FEW BOOKS of contemporary fiction are published in the "quality" paperback format, so several racks of standard paperbacks consisting of high-quality contemporary fiction, all of which comes from commercial publishing houses, are in the store. Certain reference works, such as Webster's New World Dictionary, Roget's Thesaurus, and the like also are available. ALL OF THE 1500 or so titles are in a scholarly vein. However, no textbooks are sold. Consisting mainly of non-fictional works, the books sold can best be described as "recommended" reading rather than required reading for classes. are available. In addition to selling paperbacks, the bookstore also stocks the complete Modern Library, although certain titles may at times be sold out. The Modern Library is a series of about 350 low-cost, hard-backed books, both classics and contemporary books of merit. A Modern Library Giants series consists of larger volumes, anthologies, and collections. ANOTHER INTERESTING feature of the bookstore is that it sells "library duplications." These are books of which Watson Library has too many copies. Many unusual books can be found in this manner, in addition to common ones such as Beowulf, and Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities. All of these books are sold at reduced prices. Eight various literary quarterlies are available at the store, including one published at KU, the Midcontinent American Studies Journal. Several racks of paper and writing supplies can be bought at the bookstore, although not too wide a selection is offered. In any event, this store is open when the Union Bookstore is not, and is closer to the center of the campus. Another series is that of the University of Minnesota Press—criticisms of American authors. These books are rather small and cost only 65 cents. Spectrum Books puts out a similar series of collections of critical essays about famous authors, which retails at $1.95. BOOKS FROM YALE, Cambridge, Notre Dame, Minnesota University, California University, and Chicago University can be found. Nearly all of the university press books would be classified as "quality" paperbacks. In addition to the Modern Library series, several other series are also carried: The College Outline Series is one of the several factual outline series sold, containing the basic facts on the many subjects its volumes are published about. THE COOL, QUIET, fluorescent-lighted bookstore room is located just inside the basement door under the main entrance, on the same level as the Undergraduate Library. At present it is impossible to reach the bookstore from the Undergraduate Library, as several large magazine racks block the passage. The hours of the Watson bookstore are 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.-10 p.m. Monday through Friday, during the summer session. During the regular school year the store also is open Sunday. Purchases from the bookstore qualify for percentage refunds, as do those from the Union Bookstore. Weiss to Advise Foreign Students A specialist to evaluate credits brought by foreign students entering KU has been named assistant dean in the Graduate School and assistant director of admissions on a part-time basis. Arnold H. Weiss, associate professor of romance languages, will devote approximately half time to this work and to advising foreign students in academic matters while they are here. He will continue to teach courses in Spanish language and literatures. KU's foreign student attendance has risen rapidly—from 301 representing 61 nations in 1961 to 423 from 73 nations last year. The difficulties of evaluating credits from so many diverse educational systems posed one set of problems. Other problems arose in the guiding of foreign students academically in the various KU curricula which would be most useful later in their homelands. Foreign Students Orientation Begins By Jolan Csukas More than 55 foreign students, representing 24 different countries are taking part in the Foreign Student Orientation held on the campus until Sept. 2 in order to improve their English proficiency before entering a university this fall. The program began Tuesday. Three Films Tonight Three films will be shown at 8 p.m. today on the lawn east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "America's Natural Wonders," "Spain, Land of Tradition and Promise," and "Come Camping in Alaska." 4 Scientists Go to London Four biological scientists from KU are attending the 12th International Congress for Entomology in London, where they are giving papers on their research. The professors giving papers are Charles A. Leone, zoology; George W. Byers and Frank Sonleitner, entomology, and Robert R. Sokal, statistical biology. LEONE IS discussing uses of molecular taxonomy in his paper, "Systematic Serology of Insects." He is emphasizing classification according to immunological reactions, a technique he has developed. Byers is describing his progress in classifying the Mecoptera, a group of insects that includes scorpion flies. His comparative research among all living groups has revealed that some of these insects have not been classified properly in the past. Soneitner's paper, "Application and Comparisons of Mark-Recapture Models," deals with his computer tests of formulas used to determine the population of organisms. He collected data for the project while studying the fruit fly in Australia as a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow. THE CLASSIFICATION of organisms by computer is described in Sokal's paper on numerical taxonomy. Sokal, who was on leave last year to lecture on ecology and biometry at Tel-Aviv and Hebrew universities in Israel, was a developer of the method, which has aroused controversy among scientists. Sokal and Sonleitner also are presenting a joint report on their work on the Tribolium, the red flour beetle. Their studies deal with the natural selection and genetics of mutants. The Foreign Student Orientation, which is in its 14th year at the University, is the longest continuing center of its kind in the United States. The students are sponsored either by the United States State Department or the Institute of International Education. ALTHOUGH NO university credit is given to them, these students are enrolled in this program so that they may become better acquainted with the English language and the customs of the American people. A minimum of five hours' English instruction each day is required in addition to the lectures on American civilization, politics, and social problems given each day. Instruction is mainly by KU professors and political figures. Included in the list of guest speakers for the group are Rep. Robert Ellsworth and Sam Jackson from the NAACP in Topeka. Dr. J. A. Burzle, professor of German, has been directing the activities of the group since the beginning of the Foreign Student Orientation program 14 years ago. SEVERAL FIELD trips have been planned for the students, including home stays in Abilene and Kansas City. Throughout this eight-week period, they will be taken to see several industrial plants and museums in the area. The weekend of July 31-Aug. 2, the group will be taken to Abilene to visit the Eisenhower Museum and live with an American family during that time. Accommodations for them are being made by the Women's Chamber of Commerce in Abilene. A similar trip will be taken to Kansas City on the weekend of Aug. 21-23. During the instruction period, the students are being housed in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall and are taking their meals at the Union. Classes have been set up for them in Watson Library. Kamper Kansan Today Inserted in this issue of the Summer Session Kansan is the second edition of the Kamper Kansan. It is published bi-weekly during the six-week session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp by the journalism division. KU Awards 9 Building Contracts By Emery Goad Summertime, with its good weather, affords the best time for the University to award contracts for needed work on campus and clean-up work on larger construction jobs. According to Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, three contracts have been awarded for work on Watson Library during the summer. Under contract, new shelving and book stacks in the study rooms and new facilities for the special collections in the basement will be provided. UNDER ANOTHER, the deteriorated stone doorway at the front of the library, which has stood the "wear and tear" of students and weather for the last 40 years, will be replaced. Another library contract will provide for the filling-in of a hole in the stone work in the left tower aton the library building. Along with the new lighting being installed in the building a new high speed book lift will be added. It will connect the main call desk with the main central stack in the basement. THE WATER MAIN now serving the campus has reached its capacity and will be replaced later this month. The new line will be laid between the power plant and the Lawrence city main at Sunflower Road and Sunnyside Avenue. The asphalt and gravel sidewalks in Marvin Grove, beyond Strong Hall, soon will be replaced by cement walkways joining the steps behind Strong Hall to the steps in the rear of the Student Union. A connecting walk to the parking lot also will be paved, and new low level lighting will be placed along the new walks through the grove. A contract has been awarded to re-do the east section of the first floor of Summerfield Hall. The area will be expanded to house a new computer center and new IBM equipment which the University has purchased. The statistical service from Bailey Hall will be moved into the new facility. The new office and equipment will enable the accounting department, which handles the University payroll and other duties, to provide more adequate service. NEW ALUMINUM and glass doors soon will be installed in the design wing on the third floor of Strong Hall. The new doors and glass dividers will provide more area for displays of the art department. Plans and specifications for a new service drive from the parking lot at the north of the field house to Ellsworth and Lewis Halls are being studied by the state architect. The new drive and sidewalks will be placed approximately where the gravel walkways now used by Daisy Hill residents are located. Lawton said it is hoped that the new drive will alleviate some of the traffic problems on Engel Road. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Portrait of Agitation in Dixie By Tom Coffman Special to The Kansan Bill Hansen may be the most-hated man in the Arkansas part of the Mississippi River delta. He is one of the "movement" people — the Pine Bluff Movement, a part of the nation-wide Negro protest. Worse, Hansen is a white northerner, an outsider. He crossed the Mason-Dixon line in May, 1961, as one of the Freedom Riders and was thrown in jail in Mississippi for walking into the white part of a bus station with a Negro. The charge was inciting to riot. A FEW MONTHS later he joined SNCC (pronounced "Snick") — the Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee, a national civil rights organization based in Atlanta. With SNCC he worked in such news-making places as Albany, Ga., and Cambridge, Md. With his work came a chain of arrests, 24 in all, on charges ranging from trespassing and vagrancy to disturbing the peace and making an illegal left turn in a car. Eighteen months ago SNCC sent a two-man team into Pine Bluff, Ark. Bill Hansen was one of them. Pine Bluff was chosen as the most centrally located city in the plantation area of Arkansas. A town of 53,000, it is the county seat of Jefferson County, 45 per cent of which is Neigro. For 100 miles east to the levee the land is as flat as the Great Plains, a lowland on which the river has deposited sand and clay—soil ideally suited to grow cotton and rice. In some of the levee counties, Negro population runs as high as 60 per cent. It is a population situation where the Caucasian race has historically relied determinedly on the enforcement of white supremacy. THE MEDIAN yearly income of non-whiteis in most of these counties is around one-tenth of the average national income. In Lincoln County the figure dips to $571 median yearly income for the non-white farm hand, according to the 1960 census reports. At this time of the year the cotton needs to be hoed. A Negro is paid three dollars for 10 hours work in the field. If he lives in one of the towns, he may pay "Charlie," the white man, 50c for a bus ride to the fields. A comparison of the 1950 and 1960 census statistics for the entire state shows that the Negro is losing ground economically rather than gaining it in relation to the whites. Fourteen years ago non-whites made 43.6 per cent as much as whites; four years ago the figure had dropped to 39.7, a little more than one-third. The average Negro has less than a sixth grade education, usually at a segregated school, as compared to the Caucasian's average nine to ten years of education. It is here that Bill Hansen agitates Negroes to demand an end to what one Dixiecrat senator called "the South's cherished custom." HANSEN DRIVES the highways in a beat-up Nash Rambler, talks to Negroes in the field, in Negro stores, night clubs, restaurants, talks to civic and church leaders. In some towns he ducks the police. Now 24, he is 6'3" and lean with close-cut brown hair and a wide grin. The first lines of age are appearing around his eyes and on his forehead. "You sure ain't goin' to have no freedom unless you do somethin' about it," he tells a Negro garbage collector in the levee town of Helena. The illiterate or semi-literate likely would not understand the words—let alone their meaning—if Hansen held to the speech pattern afforded him by his three and one-half years at Xavier University in Cincinnati as a philosophy major. "Now you come to the mass meetin' tomorrow night. We're gonna' have a man there talk about getting together for some freedom work." THE NEXT NIGHT the mass meeting opened with freedom songs. People came in slowly. Two police cars drove up and circled the church. The singing dragged and Hansen stood and paced the aisles, booming out the words. The people sang back: "This little light of mine . . . I'm gonna' let it shine . . . Gonna' shine for integration . . . I'm gonna' let it shine." The tempo of the meeting picked up. Clapping and foot tapping started. Many there were fundamentalist believers in the Biblical promise, and they appeared to rechannel their Christian zeal into a passion for equality. A Negro SNCC worker, Joe Wright, formerly a Methodist student minister, called on the people to test the civil rights bill when it becomes final, implored them to unify and hold their heads up. Joe ended his talk with a paraphrase from Frederick Douglass, famous Negro editor of 100 years ago. The men who want to be equal but who will not work for it are like "men who want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the roar of its many waters. It must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without demand." The way would be hard. THEN A NEGRO minister spoke. The Christian religion they had been taught as slaves was not the true gospel, he said. It was taught in such a way as to make them passive, and he reminded them that in slave days a Christianized Negro brought more money than a heathen because he was a "good slave." The true gospel of Christianity was one which made all men free. Occasionally a murmur passed over the audience. "Amen, brother, that's right, that's right," and foot-tapping would begin again. "We shall overcome," they sang, "... somead. Deep in my heart, I do believe," then "we are not afraid, "we shall not turn back," "black and white together . . we shall over- come some day." The element of emotion does not end at a mass meeting. The Pine Bluff Movement goes into the streets with demonstrations when integration negotiations break down. It is then that interest in the movement and unity among the Negro community is at its peak, Hansen says. Last February Pine Bluff drew the attention of national news media when Dick Gregory, Negro comedian, was here to speak. He and Hansen walked into Ray's Truckers Inn to buy a sandwich. They were refused, then arrested for trespassing. Ben Grinage, SNCC field secretary and formerly the chairman of the Pine Bluff Movement, organized a picket at the truck stop. GRINAGE, also a Negro Methodist minister, was shot and later jailed along with 40 Negroes ranging from the ages of 14 to 45. Out of jail, Gregory made a speech and 700 gathered to hear him, according to newspaper accounts. Hansen estimates there were 1,000. "After Gregory spoke we sang 'We Shall Overcome.'" Hansen said, and when he recalled the time his voice reverted to the higher-pitched sing-song of the delta. "You ain't never heard sing'in like that!" The starting point of the Pine Bluf Movement was a sit-in at the lunch counter of Woolworth's Dime Store. Movement people sat for six weeks eight hours a day while the counter was closed down. Finally they were served. "To work against segregation," Hansen says, "there has to be a 'bogey man' at times, a focus point, a symbol to work against." In a sense, the bogey man idea involves a bit of humbuggery for the focal point has usually been on an obvious symptom of segregation. The movement works more quietly on deeper issues—voter registration, repeal of the state poll tax, job opportunities for Negroes, candidates for office. GAINING SUPPORT from any quarter is a struggle. Eleven Negro students were expelled from the Negro college in Pine Bluff—Arkansas Agricultural, Normal, and Mechanical—for taking part in a demonstration. School policy comes down from the Arkansas government, which means the state legislature, the board of regents, and Gov. Orval Fauus, who is running for his sixth consecutive term of office this year. SINCE THEN, five eating places, two drive-in movies, two theaters, the public library and a public park have been integrated. Beginning the 1963 school year a policy was started to integrate two grades a year, beginning with the lower grades and working up. At the present speed, the public school system will be totally integrated in five years unless action is taken under the civil rights bill to speed up the process. A public demonstration is necessary to gain popular support. When things are quiet, sentiment wanes. The Interdenominational Ministers Alliance, composed entirely of Negro preachers, is reluctant to lend a hand. A reporter at the local paper made this analysis: "They (the Negro preachers) for the most part have little education. Still, because religion has been about the only thing the Negroes have had since reconstruction, they are tremendously powerful in their community. Integration means they will lose their leadership ... at least that's the way they see it." JAMES "DOC" BAGSBY, Negro pharmacist, says the Negro preachers are the established leadership of the community. "If they come our way (to the movement), then everyone will come." Rev. S. D. Scott, an educated minister with a Pine Bluff congregation of 1100, recently agreed to be on the executive committee of the Pine Bluff Movement. One of his congregation described Rev. Scott's attitude this way: "He believes the old men are for counseling and the young men are for war." In an interview the Rev. Scott expressed admiration for the movement, then went on to talk of his own work for the betterment of his race. Most of his references were to establishing scholarship funds and securing jobs for people in his congregation. EVEN AMONG the young there is a lack of unanimity. Last February the Negro Youth Organization, a combine of assorted little leagues and athletic clubs, presented a John F. Kennedy Freedom plaque to the Pine Bluff Movement. According to a newspaper account, Mrs. Edna Mays, the chairman, said at the presentation that the NYO did not approve of the movement's methods but was in sympathy with its goals. Among themselves, SNCC workers refer to unwilling Negroes as "Tom's," black men who do the white man's bidding. Hansen says the Uncle Toms generally favor the movement, but, for one reason or other, are afraid to act. Despite his close relation with the Negroes of Pine Bluff, the Ohio white man watches his behavior closely to prevent alienating members of the Negro community. He is white, they are colored. He has been in jail, "but I will never feel the prison of a black man's skin." Nevertheless, he imposes on himself the hardships of a Negro. "I can never allow myself to use the advantages accrued to my being white. I don't eat in segregated restaurants, I don't go into a segregated public toilet. I don't go to white-only night spots. Breaking that self-discipline at home would mean losing the faith of the Negroes. "You can't talk about integration and freedom, then take advantage of what is denied Negroes because of their skin color." "ON A DRIVE to the home office in Atlanta I've been tempted to live like a white. I couldn't do it — it would be breaking my self-discipline." The historic relationship between the Negro and white here are a constant source of trouble to Hansen, given his goals. The high school boys who gravitate to the movement look to Bill for leadership, partly because Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646, newsroom Summer Session (Continued on page 3) 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesday and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE CIVIL WAR, by Lt. Col. Joseph B. Mitchell (Premier, 75 cents); THE NATION DIVIDED, edited by Paul M. Angle (Premier, 60 cents). The Civil War centennial ends next year, so the publishers are moving rapidly to capitalize on the possibly waning interest. Here are two interesting paperbacks to help perpetuate the interest. Col. Mitchell in "Decisive Battles" has provided descriptions and maps of the great battles of Bull Run, Shiloh, the Seven Days, Second Bull Run (or Second Manassas, if you prefer), Antietam, Fredericksburg, Murfreesboro, Chancecellorsville, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, Chickamauga, Chattanooga, Atlanta and Petersburg. "The Nation Divided" consists of important eventuall reports of the Civil War period, as well as years before and later, selected from the American Reader." Documents go back to the 1830s, and include writings of Davy Crockett, Emily Dickinson, Hawthorne, Irving, Sir Charles Lyell, Stephen A. Douglas, Lincoln and others right up to the turn of the century. THUNDER ON THE RIGHT, by Mary Stewart (Crest. 50 cents). No, this is not another of those endless books about the rebirth of American conservatism. It's a suspense story by the author of "The Moon-Spinners," though it goes back a few years before that. The setting of this one is the French Pyrenees, and the heroine is a girl who comes to a mysterious and frightening convent, where she gets in all kinds of trouble. There's nothing more fun to read than "a damsel in distress," and here's another. SWORD AT SUNSET, by Rosemary Sutcliffe (Crest, 95 cents). Something, probably Broadway's "Camelot." has kicked off an Arthurian revival. We're getting all kinds of treatments of the legends, and here is another, a long novel that has received respectable critical praise. There's probably more depth to this Arthur than we get in most Hollywood epics. Miss Sutcliff has given us a hero more, let's say, in the Richard Burton mold than the Cornel Wilde (that will help clarify things for some readers). The tale is dashing and exciting, as, of course, it should be. WISDOM OF THE WEST, by Bertrand Russell (Premier, 95 cents) Of all living philosophers Bertrand Russell probably is the most influential. Even those who don't grasp all he's getting at find him entertaining, and KU students of Western Civilization all read his challenging views. "Wisdom of the West" is a comparatively recent book now available in paperback. Russell writes that "The sum total of what a man knows is vanishingly small. What seems in the end more important is that one should pursue knowledge." This book is a survey of philosophy, but it is also an analysis of the figures who have helped to shape what we view as western civilization. It also is an examination of the important ideas of the West. Russell discusses pre-Socrates philosophy, the writings and ideas of Athens and of Hellenism, early Christianity, Scholasticism, modern philosophy, British empiricism, the Enlightenment and Romanticism, utilitarianism, and contemporary philosophy. THE EDUCATION OF A GOLFER, by Sam Snead, with Al Stump (Crest, 50 cents)—an entertaining book by one of the popular figures of American sports. Sam Snead tells anecdotes and gives golf lessons in a delightful way. THE PAINLESS WAY TO STOP SMOKING, by Jack G. Heise (Crest, 50 cents)—a book designed for those impressed by the report of the surgeon-general. The idea is that you'll quit smoking within 10 days after reading this book. Next time you walk out into the hall by the Hawk's Nest and realize the cigarette machines have been removed, go get a copy of this book instead—if you're interested. THE NEW NATION GROWS, edited by Paul M. Angle (Premier, 60 cents). from The American Reader that present eyewitness reports of the American expansion. Years encompassed are 1769-1852. This is Volume 2 of selections Such volumes are becoming more and more helpful to the student of American history. Paul Angle includes writings of such people as Franklin, Mrs. John Adams, Manasseh cutter, Daniel Boone, Mamisewetter Lewis and William Clark, Zebulon Pike, Oliver H. Perry, Daniel Webster, the Donner party, Josiah Gregg and many others. F F THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, by Edward Gibbon, abridged by Moses Hadas (Premier, 75 cents). Most of us will never read "The Decline and Fall" in its original version, so perhaps an abridgment is the best answer. This is perhaps fortunate, but there are so many good books... There is scarcely a better-known book of history. Had a says the theme "is the most overwhelming phenomenon in recorded history—the disintegration not of a nation, but of an old and rich and apparently indestructible civilization." Hadas has tried to preserve the heart of the classic work in this abridgment. The editor has taught at Columbia University since 1930 and is Jay professor of Greek. He has written histories of Greek and Latin literature and other works. SEVEN TEARS FOR APOLLO, by Phyllis A. Whitney (Crest, 50 cents). Some books are made for lazy summer days—the works of Dorothy Macardle, Daphne du Maurier and books like this one. The setting is Greece and the island of Rhodes, where a damsel in distress is involved in such matters as the death of her husband, an accident that strikes a close friend, warnings on the mirror, and ransacking of her room. The stuff of mystery, in short. Crest is turning out several such volumes that call for little concentration and absolutely no literary training. The bookshelves are crowded these days with political novels, and the peculiar characteristic of "The Gay Place" is that its hero bears certain resemblances to the man currently in the White House. It's a novel about Texas and Gov. Arthur Goddam Fenstermaker (sounds like a good Texas name). It won the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship Award. Critics have praised the style, the characterizations, the sympathy of the writer, and, of course, the link to President Johnson. THE GAY PLACE, by William Brammer (Crest, 95 cents). And what's more fun than a literary dissection of the Lone Star State? In the present pious mood of America, as congressmen try to write a prayer amendment, what more timely than a paperback copy of the sensational best-seller of several years ago? "A Man Called Peter" appeared in 1951, and sold more than a million copies. It's the biography of a minister who became chaplain of the U.S. Senate. Peter Marshall was a Scottsman who came to this country in 1927 and achieved fame and great popularity. A MAN CALLED PETER, by Catherine Marshall (Crest, 75 cents). Mrs. Marshall gives the flavor of the powerful sermons of Marshall. It should be noted that for the most part the author avoids what could have been an oversaccharine approach to biographical writing. MARY, MARY, AND OTHER PLAYS, by Jean Kerr (Crest, 50 cents). Jean Kerr is the wife of Walter Kerr, theater critic of the New York Herald Tribune. She has had a rather spectacular success with light comedy like "Please Don't Eat the Daisies," and with three plays, one written by herself, the other two in collaboration. "Mary, Mary" is the best-known one of the most successful nonmusicals in recent theatrical history. The others are the comedy, "King of Hearts," written with Eleanor Brooke, and the musical, "Goldilocks," written with her husband. The touch is light and consistently entertaining. Friday, July 10, 1964 Kamper Kansan Page 3 that the en- more nt of in- e as Ma- deri- lark, berry, arty. "The original rhaps many nown s the imming story—ation, appar-n." e the n this aught 1930 k. He k and arks. LO, by st, 50 OF wardadas lazy Doro- aurier setting hodes, is in- death it that agons on of her short. al such onceciterary William owded novels, stic of s hero to the House. ad Gov. maker name). Liter have teriza- writer, resident a liter- the Star y Cath- nts). mood of try to t, what ck copy eller of Fourth Celebration Ends With Dance appeared a mil- ly of a plain of marshall to this faded fame flavor of farshall. the most at could vine aping. Walter the New has had withs with ie Don't three yourself, the OTHER Crest, 50 Hooting and hollering filled the air as the Midwestern Music and Art Camp held its annual Sadie Hawkin's Dance. All was a part of the Fourth of July festivities that overtook the camp. While some campers danced to the popular records in Lewis Hall, others sat on the hill enjoying the display of fireworks that flashed across the blackened sky. -known, ful- nical his- comedy, en with music, her hus- and con- At 9 p.m. the judging for the best and most original costumes began. The male counselors chose the couples and individuals they thought deserved recognition. After the finalists were chosen the winners were announced. Some of the campers took the idea of the dance very seriously and worked hard thinking up an original costume. Others came dressed as they normally would except for a small addition of some type to their attire. One boy went as far as to shave his head for the sake of conversation. After the judging was over the records once again began to blare as the winning couple started off the next dance. Soon the floor was crowded with campers and counselors dancing. campers dressed as a Playboy Bunny, tail and all. The best looking male costume prize went to the Jolly Green Giant, attired in real leaves and looking very much like a tree. An Arabian knight and a member of his harem won the prize for the most original couple. The girl wore a striking yellow costume and a hair piece and her partner was dressed as a sheik. The best and most original female costume was won by one of the When the clock struck 10 p.m. the counselors organized into a little group around the piano and a small stage was cleared in the middle of the dance floor. The program which the counselors had prepared as a part of the festivities began. There were songs and skits mimicking the camp and the advisers, along with an advertisement for Neiderhiser beer. At the end of the presentation there was a finale with the counselors singing their own words to a popular song. The evening's events began at 8 p.m., when the girls did a turnabout and called for their dates at Olin Templin Hall. One by one, in their colorful array of costumes, the couples left for an evening of merry-making. The time seemed to fly and soon the records stopped and the evening was ended. Reluctantly the campers left, couple by couple, with memories of an unforgettable evening. BONNEY MAYER Each Friday the art division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp provides a new display of work for the Exhibition Hall on the main floor of Murphy Hall. Shown studying a piece of modern are included in this week's collection is Ron Loch, a KU graduate student. History Discovered In Kansas Room Watson Library. Walk right in. Sit right down. Feel the sensation of a "house-of-books" overcome you. Concentrate on the variety of book covers. Notice the name-tags on the aisles. See the bulletin board. Spot the directions toward "the" room. The Kansas Room. Enter. All around you are memoirs of Kansas. Beautiful books of maps explain the routes of historic treks. Old newspapers that date back to the year 1856, such as the "Kansas Free State" paper and the "Herald of Freedom," are bound for observation on the visitor table. There are books by famous people who at one time lived in Kansas. General Dwight D. Eisenhower's works are located in this Kansas Room. Traditions of KU are found here. William Inge, author of "Picnic," gave pre-copies of his writings before the final publication to this priceless habitat of history. Although attention has already been drawn to the baseball activity of Camp Supervisor C. Herbert Duncan's family, we feel that the children should receive particular recognition. Books about the Wild Western Era are located in the Kansas Room. One book in particular, published in 1844, was the "Shawnee Baptist Mission Book." It was printed by the Meeker Press which is no longer in existence, but which is still remembered by all Kansas historians. Stephen, Jill, and Susan are grooming themselves for what could become the first co-educational, little league outfield in the history of modern baseball. It is remarkable that the threesome finds an opportunity to have fun even though their house has about 650 people in it. From the J. J. Pennell Collection of 1895-1909, there is an exhibition of photographs. As Robert Taft stated, "One of the most striking features of the exhibit displayed is the picture record showing the transformation of the horse age to the auto age—the first locally owned automobile in Junction City appearing on the city streets in 1905." Duncans Find Time To Engage in Sports In all seriousness, one could profit by watching the children play because it could serve as a lesson on how to have fun without really trying. On another note, one could probably learn something on the line of baseball fundamentals. Stephen, the youngest boy, shows signs of possibly becoming tomor- the camp routine. Usually the trip is taken during the fifth week of camp. This also allows the campers to see Kansas City and the large outdoor theater. There are only two of this type of theater in this area—the one visited by the camp, and an outdoor theater in St. Louis. w's Mickey Mantle. In recent years field trips have been taken on the same day to avoid too much confusion. As Mr. Duncan says, "Just take one day and foul the whole works up." It is easier to have mass confusion on one day than have separate field trips taken. Starlight Trips Are Enjoyed By Campers "With A Little Bit of Luck," there haven't been too many serious accidents delaying the trip and they have never been rained out. The most serious accident occurred four years ago when a bus broke down Excited busloads of teens invaded the Starlight Theater last week as they went on their annual trip to the immense outdoor theater in Kansas City. This year there were fifteen busloads of campers, three less than last year. Since bus transportation was the biggest problem the number of seats available had to be limited. The camp was one of the biggest groups to buy a block of tickets. The fun-filled trips to Starlight began 10 years ago to give campers from all over the nation a chance to see an outdoor company production. This year "My Fair Lady" was presented and last year the campers viewed "Carnival" with Al Hirt. from an overheated radiator on the road between Lawrence and Kansas City. The bus never came and Mr. Duncan stayed up until 2 a.m. waiting for it. Finally he went out to find it. It was necessary for another bus to come from the garage in Kansas City and the campers didn't arrive back at the dorms until 5:30 a.m. There was little sleep lost because the campers made their beds on the bus. The trip to Starlight was originally organized as an ice breaker to spark This year there was just one incident when the wheel bearings went bad on one of the buses and it was necessary to replace it with a double-decked Golden Eagle bus. Mr. Duncan commented on the trips, "It's been a real wholesome activity for the camp and we hope the kids enjoy it." Bicycles Subject to Campus Regulations Bicycles on the KU campus are common, and almost necessary—especially for the camper who is easily tired by the steep hills he must otherwise climb to classes every day. But before you mount that trusty bike, check to see that you are prepared for whatever situations may arise. For instance, there are basic requirements for bikes and bike riders that come in handy—more so before they are violated. These are according to the "Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas 1957-Article X. Bicycles," which is a little document approximately 4 pages long. It can be found in the files at the traffic office in Hoch Auditorium, where license stickers—the first basic requirement—and are also available at 25c each. There is a procedure for obtaining these stickers that should be carried out before one is discovered "licenseless" by a member of the campus police force. The procedure consists of obtaining the frame number of the bike, to be registered along with the owner's name, the date issued, and the fee collected. Should the bike be a model on which the frame number is nowhere to be seen, the owner's birth date—the numbers of the day, month and year—preceded and succeeded by his first and last initials, respectively, are recorded. Incidentally, such license must be attached to the bike "in such manner that it shall be plainly visible." Procedure for License Before the licence is issued, the police department may inspect the bike and the owner's knowledge of traffic ordinances and laws, as well as qualifications on handling the bike. Speaking of traffic ordinances and laws, the bike rider is not likely to appear qualified by violating any applicable also to the driver of an Rules for Cycling 4. It) is unlawful for any person to operate the bike while carrying any other person upon the handle bars, frame, or tank of the bike. It is also unlawful for any person so to ride on another's bike. 1. One must ride on the right-hand side of the street within 5 feet of the curbing except when passing vehicles. automobiles, with few exceptions whereby there can be no comparison. Some of these, which may come as a jolt to some of you are as follows: 3) It is unlawful for anyone riding to fail to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians. It is also unlawful to fail to do so when emerging from an alley, driveway, or other places into and upon streets and alleys. 2. ) One must observe the proper arm signals for all turns. 5. ) The bike must not exceed a greater rate of speed than is reasonable and prudent under existing conditions. Junior High Music campers will present the only concert of the two-week session tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. Junior High Campers In Concert Tomorrow 7. ) It is unlawful to cling to, or attach oneself or one's bike to any other moving vehicle upon the roadway. 6. ) It is unlawful to ride abreast of any other person riding upon another bicycle. The program will consist of compositions by the orchestra, under the direction of Loren Crawford, and by the band, led by Don Corbett and Richard Brummett. James Hardy will conduct the chorus, student accompanists for which are Pat Holstegge and Dixie Gossett. 10. It is unlawful to park upon streets, alleys, or sidewalks in an obstructing manner, or one which endangers pedestrians or vehicular traffic. 8. ) It is unlawful to ride on sidewalks within a business district or within 100 feet of any store or business or place of assembly. 9. ) It is unlawful to carry packages, bundles, or other articles which prevent riding safely and carefully. 11. ) It is the duty of any rider, and those having knowledge thereof, to make a report to police within 24 hours when a bike is involved in an accident resulting in physical injury or damage to property in excess of $10. For Bike Only Now, as far as the bike is concerned, the following apply: 1. When in use from $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour after sunset until $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour before sunrise, shall be equipped with a headlight showing a white light visible for 300 feet from the front and a red light or reflector visible for 300 feet from the rear. 2. ) Siren or whistle prohibited. And one final bit of information, to be passed on for what it may be worth: "Any person violating any of the provisions of the article shall upon conviction be punished by a fine not exceeding the sum of $25, or by revocation of such bicycle license, or both." Happy bike riding! 2.) Siren or whistle prohibited. 3.) Every bike must be equipped with a brake which will enable the operator to make the braked wheel skid on dry, level, clean pavement. Students Occupy Supervisers' Time All Year Around Of all the people connected with the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, the supervisors perhaps are the most directly responsible for the smooth running of the camp. These six supervise most of the details that keep the approximately 1,250 campers fed, housed, and occupied. The head supervisor is C. Herbert Duncan, now completing his twelfth year in the camp. He began as a percussion instructor, and worked his way up to camp supervisor. He is also serving as editor of the "Tempo," the camp yearbook. During the school year he is director of instrumental music for the Normandy school district. GEORGE NEADERHISER'S duties include the supervision of the boys' dormitory. He is also assistant camp supervisor. This is his sixth summer with the camp. He attained his position as a result of his becoming known to Prof. Wiley through some of his students. As the camp expanded, Mr. Neaderhiser was hired. He teaches music at Topeka High School during the school year. Richard Brummett teaches junior high and elementary school music in Winfield, Kan., during most of the year. During the summer months, however, he is assistant camp supervisor. He also directs the Junior High division band during the two weeks that division meets. The manner in which he attained his current position is rather matter of fact, as he was telephoned and asked if he wanted to do the job. He did. This is his fourth summer with the camp, This summer is Darrell Nelson's second year as assistant camp supervisor. However, previously he has been both a counselor and a camper himself. During the regular school year he is a guidance counselor and a music teacher at Overbrook; Kan, High School. Mr. Nelson is in charge of the Sunday chapel services, in addition to all social events and recreation for the campers. While the Junior High division is in session he is supervisor for the junior high boys' dorm. He also attends summer school at the University. MRS. RALPH PARK has been housemother at Gamma Pbeta Beta sorority for 17 years. However, for the last two years she has spent her summer as assistant supervisor at Lewis Hall. She became interested in the job when she heard about it from girls at the sorority who had been campers. Her major duties include counseling and taking care of the mail . Mrs. Frank Spurrier is now completing her third year with the camp. During the year she is housemother at Stevenson Scholarship Hall, as head supervisor at Lewis, her duties are much the same as Mrs. Parks. Another Swim For Campers Will Be Under the Moon A moonlight swim, slated for tomorrow night at Holiday Park Country Club, is to be the second such outing for campers this summer. A minimum of 250 must purchase tickets for the event, which are on sale at 75c each. Chartered buses will leave Lewis Hall at 9 p.m. and arrive at the private pool at 11 p.m. for the return to the dorms. C. Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor, who attended the first moonlight swim with his family and those of George Neiderhiser and Richard Brummett, associate supervisors, commented that because of its success, arrangements for the second trip have been made in the same manner. Six camp counselors accompanied the supervisor and the 300 campers June 27. The counselors have the most trouble at camp! Here are some of the tricks which have been pulled on the counselors in boys' dorm: counselor's bed pulled into the john and trash cans put in place of it, and wheaties put in the air blowing hand dryers in the john so they would blow all over the place. Page 4 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Sports 'N' Shorts By Dale Schroeder During the last few weeks, many incidents have taken place concerning the activities involving campers. Some have been humorous, some serious, and some just fun to talk about. These are some of the happenings. $$ * * * * $$ During an intramural basketball game between 5 North and 5 North II, Dwayne Tiesen, of 5 North II, suffered a minor injury. In the course of play, he went up for a shot, came down, lost his balance, and fell with his right foot wedged under him. As play stopped, he called attention to his right foot which was already swelling badly. He was immediately taken by some of the players to his counselor, Jim Nichols, and in turn taken to the hospital. Dwayne spent the night at the hospital and returned the next morning sporting an ankle wrap, a noticeable limp, and last but not least, a cane. The injury had amounted to only a few severed blood vessels and a cracked bone, but it was enough to give the floor something to talk about. * * * The campers aren't the only ones who are having fun in the form of recreation these days. The Duncan family is actively participating in the late President Kennedy's physical fitness program. Many times they can be seen on the lawn of Templin Hall enjoying America's national pastime on a small scale. This shows that almost anyone can enjoy baseball, and one doesn't have to play in Yankee Stadium to get the fun out of it. Credit should be given to Mr. and Mrs. Duncan in that they find time for their own children along with taking care of over 1,000 other "children." Our advice to Mr. and Mrs. Duncan is to keep up the good work Remember, "today's Duncan may be tomorrow's Mantle." * * * Along with the organized sports going on during the camp, many "unofficial" activities that give everyone except those involved a good laugh have been invented. For instance, it is a great challenge to attempt an entry into Templin Hall after 9:30 at night. Steve Reed accepted this challenge bravely one Friday night. When he was late, his roommate, Steve Sirredge, tried to let him in the side door. Unfortunately, they were caught and now can be found joyously sweeping the halls of 5 North early each morning. The moral of this story is that coming in late at night is a great experience—your friends will look upon you as the one directly responsible for keeping the halls clean. *** Jim Nichols, a widely controversial counselor in the eyes of his "family" on 5 North Templin, has been fighting the campers on the floor single-handedly the last two weeks. His partner in crime, Bill Toalson, has been devoting his services to the junior high campers. Although Jim's job has been rather easy because the boys on 5 North are so cooperative, it is a great experience to watch him try to get both ends of the hall quiet at night. Now that Bill has gallantly returned from his mission of mercy, there will be no more joy in Mudville. moon Dave Newbery, instrumental music camper, takes time out for another type of practice. He is shown here warming up for a future intramural tennis match. Dave is one of the 32 boys who advanced to the second round of competition in the tournament C Bruce Francis goes up for a shot while practicing for a future game. Keglers Show Well In Weekly Matches Bv Karen Haney Each year as the Midwestern Music and Art Camp begins, the Jay Bowl opens its doors to the campers for a bowling league with special prices. The fee is $5.00 per each individual wishing to participate. This covers the cost of renting the lane, bowling ball, and shoes over a five week period. Boys and girls are divided into separate leagues. Each team within the league is comprised of five individuals. This year there are four girls' teams and eight boys' teams. THE INDIVIDUAL teams are arbitrarily numbered and then bowl each other by a standardized method of matching these numbers. This method is set up so that each team competes against the other an equal number of times. Meeting every Friday night at 6:30 p.m., each team then bowls three lines against another. At the end of each line the winning team receives a point. At the conclusion of the entire evening's play the team with the highest number of pins between the two in contention receives a point. This makes it possible for a team to accumulate up to four points each evening it bowls At the termination of the league at the end of camp, the team which has acquired the highest number of points receives a trophy. Separate awards are made to the boys' and girls' divisions since it is considered unfair competition to pit boys against girls. In the event of a tie double awards are made, unless the two teams can find time before their departure for a play off. Each league elects a secretary who is in charge of tabulating all the points within that league. The right team within the hour's The eight teams within the boys' league are "The Untouchables," "The High Five," "The King Pins," "The Ball Busters," "The Goofballs," "The Unknows," "The Psychos," and "The Spastics." Those comprising "The Untouchables" are Jim Hall, Glen Weiien, Pete Castiglione, James Dietrich, and Tom James. Members of "The High Five" are David Greene, Steve Bennington, Fred Goble, Durley Grace, and Harvey Thompson. "The King Pins" include Steve Wilmoth, Wayne Erck, Tony Kelly, Robert Burden, and Wayne Northcutte. Rocky Ray, John Zimmerman, Andy Simmons, Bert Meisenbach, and Tom Tschappat constitute "The Goofballs." "The Ball Busters" are Rod Seeman, Larry Yeager, Jim Aldendifer, Bob Gabaldon and Clark Hall. Members of "The Unknowns" are Bill O'Meara, Phil Hooper, Fred Hurst, Jim Baxter, and Walter Anderson. Jack Tracy, Denny Raymond, Charles Simmons, Ronnie Grattopp, and Art Auetenrieth comprise "The Psychos." "The Spastics" are Joe Weigand, Tom McCready, Bill Lewis, Hal Boston, and Steve Hedden. Members of the girls' league are the "Strikettes": Jeannette Skeen, Nancy Jenkins, Barb Russell, Donna Robinson, and Pam Hasting; "Bowlrettes": Kathy Ferris, Jacquie Glaser, Bobbi Wirtz, Lorraine Johnson, and Donna Cobb; "Jayettes": Mary Ellen Butler, Candy Root, Alice Koehler, Sheila Sacks, and Karen Ellerman; and "Keglettes": Linda Liles, Kathi Kahl, Gayle Gallagher, Cathie Wilke, and Jane Heighen. Campers Exchange Volley In Local Recreation Test By Chin Rouse Thirty-two of 53 boys advanced into the second round of action as the camp tennis tourney met its first big test of activity during the week of June 28. A regular match is decided by two of three sets with the winner of each set being the first individual to capture six games. However, a participant must win each set by two games. As a result, some contests extend past the six limit. Tennis rackets and balls came flocking out of the closets for what proved to be a very exciting and thrill-ridden round of play. Second round action will be completed by Monday, the third round by Saturday, July 18; the quarterfinals by Tuesday, July 21; the semifinals by Thursday, July 23; and the finals on Friday, July 24. Action is being staged at one of two places. The courts south of Malott Hall and the area west of Allen Field House are the main facilities available for the enduring sport. Some of the early first round action included Dave Hill over Keith Dougherty (6-2) (6-3), Dan Curry over Benny Richardson (6-1) (6-4), and Pete Hairitas defeated John Fox in one set (6-2). Eleven boys drew first round byes and in so doing moved into the second round of activity. Results If Posted and Scores Where Available As Of 7.30 p.m. Wayne Erck—Bye Larry Walton—Eye Larry Watson—Bye John Zimmerman—Bye L. C. Lacy—Bye Roh Dukelow—Bye Bryan Anderson—By Tim Robinson—Bye Tim Robinson—Bye Bill Rhodes—Bye Bill Rhodes—Bye Larry Liby—Bye Larry Liby—Bye Mike Creamer—Bye Mike Creamer—Bye Smith Bye Dave Hill def. Keith Dougherty (6-2) (6-3) Pete Hairitas def. John Fox (6-2) Dan Hartley def. Benny Richardson (6-1) 1-4 Bruce Helander def. Steve Rock (6-0) (6-1) [6-1] Newbery def. John Tate (forfelt Bob Ronnan def. Mike Cline (6-1) (6-0) Lance Lindeman def. Harold Magnus (6-1) (6-4) (6-8) Scott Bridges def. Gary Trammell (6-0) (6-0) Cagers Rip As Contests Get Started Vol.1 One of the major tournaments now going on in the boys dorm is the basketball tournament. A great interest has been displayed by the boys so far and it looks as though the tournament will yield a deserving champion. The tournament is set up in what is called a single-elimination bracket. If a team loses once, it is thereby eliminated. There are three rounds to be played. The first round had been played and completed by June 28. the second round finished by July 5, and the third round is to be played by July 12. Three of the third round participants, 3 North II, 3 South II, and 5 North I, have also been determined. The remainder of the results will be published at a later date. At the time this paper went to press, it was known that 2 North I, 4 South, 5 North I, 5 North II, 3 North II, 3 South I, 3 South II, and 3 South III had all survived the first round. Action Runs Heavy As Campers Ping First round matches were completed last Sunday, with second round activity scheduled to be staged by this coming Monday. The third round will be finished by Saturday, July 18; the quarterfinals by Tuesday, July 21; the semifinals by Thursday, July 23; and the finals on Friday, the following day. Ping Pong Like Tennis Tension and anxiety began to mount as the annual boys' ping pong tournament, sponsored by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, got under way. A ping pong match may range from the best four out of seven, to a single contest with the first individual to reach 21 declared as the winner of the game. As in tennis, a player must win each contest by at least two points. This also is true for sets. Action has run hot and heavy on floors three, five, and seven with individual participants either limbering up in unheralded competition against their floormates or following the tournament trail in head to head battle with their scheduled opponents. Due to the enormous wake of individual styles, one is able to observe many different variations in play. Every shot from a "sinking liner" to a sparkling power shot has been present thus far through the tournament. Deadlines Necessary The remaining entries are responsible for connecting their opponents and completing the match by the desired deadline set forth. If an individual or individuals fail to meet this requirement both are disqualified by virtue of forfeit. pung ping results if posted and scores where available as of Sunday, June 5, 7:30 p.m. posterertur def. Carl du Th Fathi Keith Dougherty def. Carl Krehbiel (19) (14-21) (21-16) Steve Shull def. Dennis Norton Burt Meisenbach def. Oscar Silicon Bill Bunn def. John Fox (1-8) (21-9) Ron Wachholtz def. John Geis (21-11) Brent Waldron def. Dave Dittmerone Tony Kelly def. Dorian Meyer (21-15) Larry Yeager def. Chip House (21-7) Marvin Chandler def. Terry Howard Tom Tschaapbat def. Burt Stucker (21-18) (21-15) de France, Ford (21-14) def. Bruce Ford (21-13) Jim Kakoura def. Robert Bardone Tobias Schmidt def. Burt Stucker (21) Ton Tschappatz def. Burt Stucker (2) Don Grantham def. Bruce Ford (21-14) (21-19) (21-19) Steve Reed def. Harold Magnus (21-6) (21-20) F F (21-12) Dennis Hope def. Wayne Srek (7-0) (21- Harlan Geiser def. Nell Shapiro Dick Burns def. Ron Hathorn Bob Dukelow def. Doug Hensley Harlan Geiser def. Neil Shapiro Richard Stone def. Steve Sirridge (21-9) (21-7) Jim Viney def. Harold Keen (7-0) (21- 16) Mike Hausman def. Steve Carlson (21-13) (21-16) (21-16) Bill Mills def. Steve Franse (11-1) (21-15) (Millis) Bob Colwell def. Bruce Francis (21-19) (21-19) (21-14) Later and more complete results of ping pong, tennis and basketball activities as well as softball and volleyball competition will appear in the next issue of the Kamper Kansan. Watch for it. Kamper Kansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS ults of ill ac- bolley- on the ansan. Friday, July 10, 1964 Vol. II, No. 2 JOHN ROMAN Journalists view Kansas City Star "backshop" during a field trip before a night at the Starlight Theater. The students are Rose Marsha Resnick, Ron Blacklock, Pamela Peek, and Dave Adams. They are busy examining the page mats before they are sent to be cast into metal. Engineering Campers Explore TWA Plant The midcontinental overhaul base for Trans World Airlines provided a field trip to Kansas City for engineering campers. The overhaul base for TWA is where the multi-million dollar airplanes are completely dismantled after so many flying hours. The young engineers toured the two main divisions of the plant, the engine overhaul and the airframe repair divisions. The group left early Thursday morning, July 2, for Kansas City by bus and first toured the engine overhaul building. Here the visitors observed the jet and piston engines being tested, taken apart, cleaned, repaired, and put back together again—an operation much like a big puzzle. The entire cost of reconstructing a single engine is approximately $20,000. After a box lunch, prepared by the Templin cooks, the group went through the airframe division where the complete body, including the interior, flight system and frame, are redone. After the entire plane passes through with a new paint job, its electrical system replaced, and with a new interior, it joins the rebuilt engine. Then another plane emerges, ready for the runway. Modern and up-to-date equipment, developed by the TWA research scientists, is also added to the planes when they come to the base. After the tour the group joined the other campers at the Starlight Theatre to see "My Fair Lady." Camp To Hold Final Recital Thirty-six advanced music students will be featured in the second and final camp recital to be held Wednesday, July 15, at 8:00 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. There will be no admission charged for the recital. The first student recital this year was presented by thirteen students on Wednesday. July 8. The students who participated were Janet Reyburn, piano; James Willmoth, voice; Selina Davis, cello; Caryne Dockery, French horn; Betty Packard, flute; Mike Smith and Ken Alexander, trumpet duet; Jeanette Skeen, marimba; Steve Franse, bassoon; Marti Larkin, voice; Dave Murrow, clarinet; Michael Latimer, trumpet, and Bill Cosby, oboe. Those students to participate in the coming recital are Diana Perry, piano; C. Ann Richards, voice; Mary Ellen Butler and John Glassman, violin duet; Alvin Walker, baritone horn; Susan Sandow, Jennifer Nilsson, Charles Lawson, Caryne Dockery, and Tom Johnson, woodwind quintet; Cherry Halstead, voice; Marcia Foster, Steve Meyer, Susie Telfer, Steve Hickerson, Eleanor Higa, and Kathleen Kennedy, string sextet; Marsha Garwin, Katie Good, Suzy Checkett, Jackie Garland, Mary Nowlin, and Laura Resnick, ballet; Ar was presented by thirteen stute students who participated were Kenneth Heath, trumpet; and Jeanette Skeen, James Aldendifer, Wayne Erck, Robert Rush, Robert Laushman, Gary Vylupeluck, Dora Hoskins, David Hensleigh, John Hanen, James Medlock, Evan Johnson, and Suzanne Mattingly, percussion ensemble. Each student participating in the recitals auditioned on July 1 in Murphy Hall. The students chose the piece of music which they would play for the auditions and were judged by various musical instructors. "The camp recitals provide an opportunity for advanced students to exhibit the results of their hard work and practice, and it also provides an excellent evening's entertainment for the camp students," commented Mr. George Neaderhiser, assistant camp supervisor and correlator of the programs. Excerpts Presented By Drama Campers Students in the Drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp presented excerpts from four plays Friday evening, July 3. in the Murphy Hall Experimental Theater. The four scenes were chosen from a group of plays which were presented on Thursday and Friday mornings, July 2 and 3. The excerpts were taken from the following plays: "A Midsummer Night's Dream," Shakespeare; "West Side Story," Arthur Laurents; "Kind Lady," Edward Chodorov; and "Most Happy Fella." George Loesser. Camp students enacting roles in the play excerpts were "West Side Story": A-Rab, Myla Jean Hodges; Riff, Marianne Fowler; Baby John, Barbara Kahn; Action, Linda Marriott; Krupke, Woody Wright; Snowboy, Nancy Caston; and Diesel, Woody Wright; "Kind Lady": Mary Harries, Connie Villon; Henry Abbott, Charles Armantrout; Mr. Foster, Penny Rich; Mrs. Edwards, Tommy Collier; Aggie Edwards, Rose Sidler; andMr. Rosenburg, Penny Rich; "Most Happy Fellow": Cleo, Heidi Schuttle; Rosabella, Roxie Clark; and the cashier, John Haworth; and "Mid Summer Night's Dream": Bottom, Johanna Branson; Peter Quince, Bob Brown; Francis Flute, Yolanda Dozier; Sung, Gina Bikales; and Starveling, Bob Flanery. Starlight "Pygmalion" Seen on MMAC Trip Fifteen bus loads of campers, counselors, and staff members enjoyed performances of "My Fair Lady" at the open-air Starlight Theater in Kansas City last Thursday and Friday. Thursday, July 2, 457 attended from Midwestern Music and Art Camp in 12 buses, including four bus loads taking field trips, one-hundred seventeen went in three buses Friday, July 3. The Starlight production stars Dorothy Coulter and Michael Allinson. "My Fair Lady," written by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Lowe, is the famous adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's play "Pygmalion." The play, a musical comedy, has had the longest run of any play on Broadway, and was heralded by many critics as the greatest musical comedy ever written. The story concerns a phonetics professor who takes a young Cockney flower girl off the streets and changes her into a "princess" by reforming her speech and manners. "Because there were not enough buses available for use in this area, we had to import some from Wichita, "Tempo" Breaks Previous Record Surpassing all prior records, this year's "Tempo" will feature 56 pages with over 120 photos of students, activities, and division work. Distribution of the 1964 "Tempo" will begin Tuesday, July 21, climaxing a month of preparation by a staff of advanced journalism campers. Those selected for the yearbook staff by Prof. John Knowles were Barbara Easterwood, Emery Goad, Jolan Csukas, and Jacquie Glaser. The photography was the work of volunteer Tom Tschappat of the music division. Another feature will be student cartoons selected by Mr. Arvid Jacobson of the art division. Mr. C. Herbert Duncan, who served as advisor again this year, commented that the book acts as a yearbook for the students, and as a permanent and official record for the camp as well as to publicize it. "We try to make it good," he added. The "Tempo," which originally was entirely a student effort, was composed in part this year by a professional establishment, "Photographic Arts." Printing was done on the University of Kansas press. In recent years, since the book has grown far beyond the first 12-page affair, this procedure has become necessary. "Since the camp is growing, the book should grow with it," remarked Prof. Russell L. Wiley of the four pages added this year. Copies will be available at the desk in Templin Hall. Campers may also purchase copies of the 1963 "Tempo." The $2 purchase price is about half of the production cost of each copy, but the camp defrays a slight portion of the expense. Backstage Tour Denver, and St. Louis," reported C. Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor, who also headed the Starlight trip. "Last year we sent 18 buses, but this year we could only locate 15." Four camp division groups took field trips in addition to seeing the production. The ballet, theater, and speech groups were allowed to tour the Starlight Theater backstage area. The tour was conducted by the Starlight stage manager who showed the campers and instructors where the scenery and flats are made and how they are moved, the dressing rooms, costumes, singers' and dancers' pavilions (practice rooms), and other backstage areas germane to the production of the play. After a question and answer period, all campers ate box dinners in Swope Park, where the theater is located. During intermission some of the ballet campers went backstage to meet the dancers. Besides taking the backstage tour with theater and ballet campers, speech division students, faculty, and guests had a guided tour of the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City. Several faculty members and campers chose to visit the zoo instead of touring the theater. Journalism Field Trip Journalism campers and guests, with Prof. John H. Knowles, journalism division director, left camp at 1:45 p.m., and toured the Kansas City Star and the KCMO radio-TV station. While touring the "Star," the students were shown the complete production of a large city daily paper. They were each given a replica of the first "Star" ever printed. At KCMO, which boasts the tallest free-standing tower in existence, campers were able to see the differences in preparation and production between a radio and a television station. Box dinners were then eaten in Swope Park. In years past, campers have attended Starlight Theater during their fifth week of camp. Mr. Duncan explained that it was moved up this year to the third week because "My Fair Lady" would not be playing later. When asked how he thought the trip went, Mr. Duncan replied, "I thought that it was a fine trip. The only disadvantage was that it ended so late. Most of the campers were asleep before the buses even pulled out of the parking lot." Fireworks Display Seen A fireworks display was presented at the University Stadium July 4 at 8:30 p.m. by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce. Admission was open to the public at 50 cents per person. The display lasted about an hour. Science Apprentices Do Lab Research Twenty-five apprentices, 18 boys and seven girls, were selected from those 72 campers who applied, having attended Science and Math Camp last year. These students work in laboratory research with the professors in that division. The apprentices' daily schedule is 8 p.m. to 5 p.m. They stay in the dorms with the rest of the campers, but they attend an eight week session. Arriving here one week before the Midwestern Music and Art Camp began, they will remain one week after it is over. Every Monday night after the camp meeting, they have a special meeting among themselves. It includes a five to ten minute talk by each student about his current project. Excellent grades in science and math subjects taken in their respective high schools were a basic requirement for application. They had to send in with their application an essay on why they wanted to return, how the research program would help them, and in what research program they wanted to enroll. Costs of the program range up to $60, and scholarships were offered by the National Science Foundation. The following is a list of the students, and the programs in which they are working: Richard Burns, microbiology; Mark Creamer, physics; Elaine Cunningham, biochemistry and physiology; Loutitia Denison, microbiology; Charles Dickson, chemistry; David Erickson, mathematics; Robert Fisher, mathematics; Frederic Marini, microbiology; Robert Nelson, radiation biophysics; Barbara Padgett, mathematics; Allen Powell, psychology; Steven Rock, radiation biophysics; John Roberts, sociology; James Forstner, mathematics; Myra Gotch, physiology and biochemistry; Larry Kennedy, mathematics; Charles Levy, mathematics; John La Salle, physics; Judy Merer, zoology; Thomas Miller, mathematics; James Schreiber, biochemistry and physiology; Lois Tomek, microbiology; Kent Van Zant, zoology; John Wilson, biochemistry and physiology; and Stanley Yates, physics. Page 2 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Dyche Hall Is Setting For Courses In Anthropology On the fifth floor of Dyche Hall a section of the Science and Math Camp is located. This is the anthropology department, for the study of the science of man. It embraces comparative sociology and the study of culture in time and space. Twenty-six campers are taking the course directed by Prof. Charles E. Snow, a visiting professor from Kentucky University. TIME IN YEARS CAUCASIO ANTRALOID 2,5000 HUMING MAR HE ANTERNOIL MAR 1004.000 During the course of the week two lectures are heard and two laboratories are held. Each Wednesday is set apart for films and discussions. There are ten hours of class work a week in which the students use the European text, "Anthropology, A to Z." Prof. Charles E. Snow remarked that he is impressed with the amount of equipment that the laboratories contain. The laboratories are fully equipped with bone specimens, skulls, skeletons and measuremental instruments. He said that Dr. William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology and sociology, has done extremely well in outfitting the rooms. The student above is shown viewing an exhibit of skulls which depicts the ancestry of modern man and are to be found on the second floor of the Museum of Natural History in Dyche Hall. in the laboratories the campers discuss the making of primitive tools, ecology of human beings (what sort of life they had to lead), primate skulls, fossil man, and the human skeleton in scientific description. Short courses are held in physical anthropology, the nature of man, and prehistoric archaeology (a description of human life before history). Cultural realms, human relation to environment and people, are also studied. This includes glottochronology, a study of languages, and anthropography, a branch of anthropology. Films related to the subject show a wide variety in the field of anthropology. Recently a movie was shown explaining environmental setting between the land of plenty (the Northwest Pacific) and the poor Australian Aborgines in the deserts of Australia. This week, a film was shown on the Maya and Polynesian Indians. The chapters of the textbook being studied deal with a concept of race, formation of races, history of races, cultural anthropology, constitution, taxonomy of the primates, demography, and paleoanthropology—a study of fossil hominids. Your Reward-Pride "Don't worry about it, Honey, you're not being graded. Listen, Sybil Baby, we're up here to have fun and do a little work on the sideline." Maybe you have heard similar statements while around camp this summer. Letter grades or report cards may not be presented at camp, but this does not mean that one should not work to his capacity. In the music division, a merit of advancement to the next chair may be obtained by the ones who work hardest for it. The science division holds 25 scholarships to an eight-week apprenticeship at camp next summer. Students showing the most talent and dependability in the different sections of the science division will receive the grants. Art exhibits displayed in Murphy Hall throughout each week reveal talent and hard work from the art division. Special awards are given at the closing camp meeting to the students who have displayed their talents, accomplished the most and worked the hardest in their respective divisions. Even the prize of one ice cream bar is given to each person on the cleanest wing of his dorm each week. Much recognition and many awards may be achieved at camp this summer, but there is one merit far more superior to any other. Work to achieve the reward of self-satisfaction. Campers Use Union Book Store Facilities The book store located in the sub-basement of the Kansas Union is a boon not only to University students, but to campers as well. This store contains just about every article that a student would need for classroom work, and many other articles besides. Its main floor contains the usual school supplies such as paper, pens, stationary, and art supplies. It is also the headquarters for the official University of Kansas sweatshirts in just about every color from lavender to green. GIFT ITEMS include KU mugs, jewelry, and stuffed animals. Midwestern Music and Art camp pins, and math-science division pins, both in sterling silver, are also available to campers. Kamper Kansa Published bi-weekly by first- year students of the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Staff Editor-in-chief Margaret Ogilvie News editor ... Charles Potter Reporters ... John Sullivan Laurie Lankin Rose Marsha Resnick Lynn Liles Editorial and Feature editor ... Pamela Peck Reporters ... Janie Choice Paula Myers Dave Adams Secondary News editor ... Sheryl Dreifuss Reporters ... Christopher Gunn Nancy Trabon Maxine Cohen Linda Barham Sports editor ... Dale Schroeder Reporters ... Chip Rouse Karen Haney Photographer ... John Sullivan An addition to the Union store is a branch shop located in Watson Library. The new store, opened officially March 26, carries many "scholarly" paperbacks which are published by university presses. The "Modern Library" series, a small stock of quality hardbacks, and a small inventory of school supplies may also be found in the branch store, which is open from 1:30-5 p.m., and 6:30-10 p.m. Monday through Friday during the summer session. The store's lower level is composed solely of books, which are shelved according to subject. The many basic fields of study represented are categorized separately. Every type of reading material from light humor through the specialized sciences are on display. Orders for special books are taken and usually filled within two weeks. Three issues of the "Kamper Kansan" will be published during the 1964 session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Last year there was only one "Kamper," an eight-page edition printed during the last week of camp. New staff positions are assigned at two-week intervals, giving each of the first-year journalism students the experience of working in the different capacities of editing and reporting. New Policy Adopted For Kamper Kansan The counselors in the girls' dorm really have problems! When the counselors of one room returned their mattresses were hanging on a water pipe, records were scattered all over the room, the mirror was written on with lipstick, and all of their clothes were taken out of the closets and put under the beds. As camp progresses, there are those students who break rules and regulations. They are sure to be punished in some way. Discipline Prescribed The most widely used punishment is the "campus," which means evening room confinement—no dates, movies, tennis, or swimming. Usually the broken rule drawing this punishment is arriving at the dorms a few minutes after closing. Sometimes early bed hours are the prescribed discipline. it is rumored that several campers were given "campus" for carrying their counselor's bed into the restroom. When room inspection time rolls around and untidy rooms are found, two other penalties are used. Students can be seen on floor duty or yard duty. They pick up trash and sweep halls. It's easier sometimes to just keep one's room clean. Camping on Campus By Margaret Ogilvie Life on the hill has become an isolated affair consisting of a scarcity of newspapers and all that sort of thing. Once in a while you (or more likely the counselor on room check) will run across a pile of dusty books over in the corner, if not a paperback under the bed. They're what has become of the volumes you had stored in one of the dusty corners of your room at home, plus a few irresistible juicy little tidbits and other expensive pieces of intellectual junk that they sell on college campuses to help you grow up. Or at least they should fill your "leisure hours" and fulfill the image you once had of your more literate self, i.e., all those books you put off reading until the "lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer" rolled around. *** Speaking of room checks, or leisure hours, or whatever we were discussing, some interesting observations come to mind. Lately in the mornings, while "coming lately" to classes, some things around the dorm that had been overlooked came to attention. One of these was the fact that the poor sleepy room-checkers, while scouring the premises for all visible signs of disarray, noticed a closet door ajar (much to their delight). But (much to ours) the patrol failed to notice the stuffings within which gave all but themselves away. Now, we've hit the favorite topic. Speaking of stuffings, the food around here is too much. But I suppose we'll keep on taking advantage of that opportunity, and of all the other little opportunities that keep popping up. It's not too far to the nearest snack bar or to the nearest empty machine. If the situation ever gets really desperate, you could probably live off those care packages from home. We are deviating again from the topic, which happens to be machines. You'd never know, by the debris that ornaments the edges of the Lewis Hall patio, that cigarettes are no longer sold on the KU campus. It looks as though the industry is still thriving. And that's a lot of precious pennies, and otherwise precious girls, up in smoke. $$ * * * * $$ * * * Air-conditioning has a way of keeping things cooled off. Have you ever gone to bed with a head of wet hair, which has been thrown up into rollers in the dark, only to awaken the next morning even more in the dark about the whole mess? It usually does everything but refrigerate overnight, which is to say that it's in about the same shape as the musty towel you had hung up to dry the night before. Try getting up earlier(!) and using the hair dryer—burning up under one of them is better than freezing out. $$ **** $$ (They may have stumbled on an even more effective method for cure of wet scalp over at Templin, and that is bald scalp!) But remember, air-conditioning is a luxury, and it does feel especially good after you've been outside awhile—or for a few hours—baking in the sun. You may think there's no place like the pool back home for relaxation, but all you really need is a swimsuit, a beach towel, and a radio. It's been as crowded on the lawn behind Lewis (where girls only congregate), as it's been in the laundry room on Saturdays. F F Because the book stacks would be too crowded if all students were allowed to browse through them, students copy the complete call number, author, and title on a half-slip of paper, and present it to the assistant at the desk, and, upon receiving it, complete a three-part form. Graduate students and some undergraduates may secure stack privileges. Indexes Aid Selection Besides book indexes containing more than three million cards, a periodical index is useful to many. After looking up his article in the "Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature" or "International Index," the student can find information in the Half the books are shelved in Watson Library and the other half spread throughout the campus in various buildings and at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. "A million books!" This was the cry of the fifty professional librarians of Watson Library and the many branches across the campus as they added KU's millionth book to the shelves recently. KU's Library System Houses a Million Books bound magazines. For quick reference, he may use one of the many subject indexes found in the library. A revolving file on the desk tells what magazines and issues are in the library. Contained in the reference rooms are encyclopedias and hundreds of reference books from other countries as well as the United States. Much biographical material can be found with many biographical dictionaries and reference books. A pamphlet file and many college catalogues may be of interest and use to the student. Cubicles for typing may be facilitated at no cost. In the Microtext Room, microfilms of the London Times, New York Times, Kansas City Star, Topeka Daily Capital, Lawrence Journal-World, and Christian Scientist Daily Monitor are available for finding information. The Undergraduate library can be found in the basement where students may browse and choose books, magazines, and newspapers as they please. Artists Visit Swope, Nelson Gallery Two-hundred forty art campers visited Swope Park Zoo and the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art Wednesday, June 8, on their annual field trip. Accompanying the students on the chartered buses, which left Lewis Hall at 8 a.m. to return at about 5 p.m. were Prof. Arvid Jacobson, assistant director of the Art Camp, and fourteen other instructors. This session's trip marks the thirteenth annual outing for the campers, during which they first sketched animals in the zoo, before stopping for a box lunch in the park. A conducted tour of the gallery, during which the artists made sketches of various exhibits, concluded the afternoon. No Gravel Paths! Next year's campers may walk to class on nice new cement sidewalks. The University is currently planning to add a service driveway and sidewalks to replace the gravel paths from Ellsworth and Lewis Halls to the parking lot at the north of the field house. As many campers have probably noticed by the stakes and red flags, the future sidewalk is being surveyed and "staked-out." 520 Friday, July 10, 1964 Kamper Kansan Page 3 Fourth Celebration Ends With Dance Hooting and hollering filled the air as the Midwestern Music and Art Camp held its annual Sadie Hawkin's Dance. All was a part of the Fourth of July festivities that overtook the camp. While some campers danced to the popular records in Lewis Hall, others sat on the hill enjoying the display of fireworks that flashed across the blackened sky. having. Some of the campers took the idea of the dance very seriously and worked hard thinking up an original costume. Others came dressed as they normally would except for a small addition of some type to their attire. One boy went as far as to shave his head for the sake of conversation. At 9 p.m. the judging for the best and most original costumes began. The male counselors chose the couples and individuals they thought deserved recognition. After the finalists were chosen the winners were announced. The evening's events began at 8 p.m., when the girls did a turnabout and called for their dates at Olin Templin Hall. One by one, in their colorful array of costumes, the couples left for an evening of merry-making. When the clock struck 10 p.m the counselors organized into a little group around the piano and a small stage was cleared in the middle of the dance floor. The program which the counselors had prepared as a part of the festivities began. There were songs and skits mimicking the camp and the advisors, along with an advertisement for Neiderhiser beer. At the end of the presentation there was a finale with the counselors singing their own words to a popular song. The best and most original female costume was won by one of the campers dressed as a Playboy Bunny, tail and all. The best looking male costume prize went to the Jolly Green Giant, attired in real leaves and looking very much like a tree. An Arabian knight and a member of his harem v on the prize for the most original couple. The girl wore a striking yellow costume and a hair piece and her partner was dressed as a sheik. After the judging was over the records once again began to blare as the winning couple started off the next dance. Soon the floor was crowded with campers and counselors dancing. The time seemed to fly and soon the records stopped and the evening was ended. Reluctantly the campers left, couple by couple, with memories of an unforgettable evening. A man looking at paintings in an art gallery. Each Friday the art division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp provides a new display of work for the Exhibition Hall on the main floor of Murphy Hall. Shown studying a piece of modern are included in this week's collection is Ron Loch, a KU graduate student. History Discovered In Kansas Room Watson Library. Walk right in. Sit right down. Feel the sensation of a "house-of-books" overcome you. Concentrate on the variety of book covers. Notice the name-tags on the aisles. See the bulletin board. Spot the directions toward "the" room. The Kansas Room. Enter. All around you are memoirs of Kansas. Beautiful books of maps explain the routes of historic treks. Old newspapers that date back to the year 1856, such as the "Kansas Free State" paper and the "Herald of Freedom," are bound for observation on the visitor table. There are books by famous people who at one time lived in Kansas. General Dwight D. Eisenhower's works are located in this Kansas Room. Traditions of KU are found here. William Inge, author of "Picnic," gave pre-copies of his writings before the final publication to this priceless habitat of history. Books about the Wild Western Era are located in the Kansas Room. One book in particular, published in 1844, was the "Shawnee Baptist Mission Book." It was printed by the Meeker Press which is no longer in existence, but which is still remembered by all Kansas historians. From the J. J. Pennell Collection of 1895-1909, there is an exhibition of photographs. As Robert Taft stated, "One of the most striking features of the exhibit displayed is the picture record showing the transformation of the horse age to the auto age—the first locally owned automobile in Junction City appearing on the city streets in 1905." Duncans Find Time To Engage in Sports Although attention has already been drawn to the baseball activity of Camp Supervisor C. Herbert Duncan's family, we feel that the children should receive particular recognition. Stephen, Jill, and Susan are grooming themselves for what could become the first co-educational, little league outfield in the history of modern baseball. It is remarkable that the threesome finds an opportunity to have fun even though their house has about 650 people in it. In all seriousness, one could profit by watching the children play because it could serve as a lesson on how to have fun without really trying. On another note, one could probably learn something on the line of baseball fundamentals. Stephen, the youngest boy, shows signs of possibly becoming tomor- w's Mickey Mantle. Starlight Trips Are Enjoyed By Campers Excited busloads of teens invaded the Starlight Theater last week as they went on their annual trip to the immense outdoor theater in Kansas City. This year there were fifteen busloads of campers, three less than last year. Since bus transportation was the biggest problem the number of seats available had to be limited. The camp was one of the biggest groups to buy a block of tickets. The fun-filled trips to Starlight began 10 years ago to give campers from all over the nation a chance to see an outdoor company production. This year "My Fair Lady" was presented and last year the campers viewed "Carnival" with Al Hirt, The trip to Starlight was originally organized as an ice breaker to spark In recent years field trips have been taken on the same day to avoid too much confusion. As Mr. Duncan says, "Just take one day and foul the whole works up." It is easier to have mass confusion on one day than have separate field trips taken. the camp routine. Usually the trip is taken during the fifth week of camp. This also allows the campers to see Kansas City and the large outdoor theater. There are only two of this type of theater in this area—the one visited by the camp, and an outdoor theater in St. Louis. "With A Little Bit of Luck," there haven't been too many serious accidents delaying the trip and they have never been rained out. The most serious accident occurred four years ago when a bus broke down from an overheated radiator on the road between Lawrence and Kansas City. The bus never came and Mr. Duncan stayed up until 2 a.m. waiting for it. Finally he went out to find it. It was necessary for another bus to come from the garage in Kansas City and the campers didn't arrive back at the dorms until 5:30 a.m. There was little sleep lost because the campers made their beds on the bus. This year there was just one incident when the wheel bearings went bad on one of the buses and it was necessary to replace it with a double-decked Golden Eagle bus. Mr. Duncan commented on the trips, "It's been a real wholesome activity for the camp and we hope the kids enjoy it." Bicycles Subject to Campus Regulations Bicycles on the KU campus are common, and almost necessary—especially for the camper who is easily tired by the steep hills he must otherwise climb to classes every day. But before you mount that trusty bike, check to see that you are prepared for whatever situations may arise. For instance, there are basic requirements for bikes and bike riders that come in handy—more so before they are violated. These are according to the "Code of the City of Lawrence, Kansas 1957—Article X. Bicycles," which is a little document approximately 4 pages long. It can be found in the files at the traffic office in Hoch Auditorium, where license stickers—the first basic requirement—are also available at 25c each. There is a procedure for obtaining these stickers that should be carried out before one is discovered "licenseless" by a member of the campus police force. The procedure consists of obtaining the frame number of the bike, to be registered along with the owner's name, the date issued, and the fee collected. Should the bike be a model on which the frame number is nowhere to be seen, the owner's birth date—the numbers of the day, month and year—preceded and succeeded by his first and last initials, respectively, are recorded. Incidentally, such license must be attached to the bike "in such manner that it shall be plainly visible." Procedure for License Before the licence is issued, the police department may inspect the bike and the owner's knowledge of traffic ordinances and laws, as well as qualifications on handling the bike. Speaking of traffic ordinances and laws, the bike rider is not likely to appear qualified by violating any applicable also to the driver of an Rules for Cycling automobiles, with few exceptions whereby there can be no comparison. Some of these, which may come as a jolt to some of you are as follows: 1. One must ride on the right-hand side of the street within 5 feet of the curbing except when passing vehicles. 2. ) One must observe the proper arm signals for all turns. 4. It) is unlawful for any person to operate the bike while carrying any other person upon the handle bars, frame, or tank of the bike. It is also unlawful for any person so to ride on another's bike. 3) It is uniawful for anyone riding to fail to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians. It is also unlawful to fail to do so when emerging from an alley, driveway, or other places into and upon streets and alleys. 5. ) The bike must not exceed a greater rate of speed than is reasonable and prudent under existing conditions. Junior High Campers In Concert Tomorrow Junior High Music campers will present the only concert of the two-week session tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre, Murphy Hall. The program will consist of compositions by the orchestra, under the direction of Loren Crawford, and by the band, led by Don Corbett and Richard Brummett. James Hardy will conduct the chorus, student accompanists for which are Pat Holstegge and Dixie Gossett. 7. ) It is unlawful to cling to, or attach oneself or one's bike to any other moving vehicle upon the road-way. 6. ) It is unlawful to ride abreast of any other person riding upon another bicycle. 8. ) It is unlawful to ride on sidewalks within a business district or within 100 feet of any store or business or place of assembly. 10. ) It is unlawful to park upon streets, alleys, or sidewalks in an obstructing manner, or one which endangers pedestrians or vehicular traffic. 9. ) It is unlawful to carry packages, bundles, or other articles which prevent riding safely and carefully. 11. It is the duty of any rider, and those having knowledge thereof, to make a report to police within 24 hours when a bike is involved in an accident resulting in physical injury or damage to property in excess of $10. For Bike Only Now, as far as the bike is concerned, the following apply: 1. ) When in use from $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour after sunset until $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour before sunrise, shall be equipped with a headlight showing a white light visible for 300 feet from the front and a red light or reflector visible for 300 feet from the rear. 2) Siren or whistle prohibited. 3. ) Every bike must be equipped with a brake which will enable the operator to make the braked wheel skid on dry, level, clean pavement. And one final bit of information, to be passed on for what it may be worth: "Any person violating any of the provisions of the article shall upon conviction be punished by a fine not exceeding the sum of $25, or by revocation of such bicycle license, or both." Happy bike riding! Students Occupy Supervisers' Time All Year Around Of all the people connected with the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, the supervisors perhaps are the most directly responsible for the smooth running of the camp. These six supervise most of the details that keep the approximately 1,250 campers fed, housed, and occupied. The head supervisor is C. Herbert Duncan, now completing his twelfth year in the camp. He began as a percussion instructor, and worked his way up to camp supervisor. He is also serving as editor of the "Tempo," the camp yearbook. During the school year he is director of instrumental music for the Normandy school district. GEORGE NEADERHISER'S duties include the supervision of the boys' dormitory. He is also assistant camp supervisor. This is his sixth summer with the camp. He attained his position as a result of his becoming known to Prof. Wiley through some of his students. As the camp expanded, Mr. Neaderhiser was hired. He teaches music at Topeka High School during the school year. Richard Brummett teaches junior high and elementary school music in Winfield, Kan., during most of the year. During the summer months, however, he is assistant camp supervisor. He also directs the Junior High division band during the two weeks that division meets. The manner in which he attained his current position is rather matter of fact, as he was telephoned and asked if he wanted to do the job. He did. This is his fourth summer with the camp. This summer is Darrell Nelson's second year as assistant camp supervisor. However, previously he has been both a counselor and a camper himself. During the regular school year he is a guidance counselor and a music teacher at Overbrook, Kan. High School. Mr. Nelson is in charge of the Sunday chapel services, in addition to all social events and recreation for the campers. While the Junior High division is in session he is supervisor for the junior high boys' dorm. He also attends summer school at the University. MRS. RALPH PARK has been housemother at Gamma Phi Beta sorority for 17 years. However, for the last two years she has spent her summer as assistant supervisor at Lewis Hall. She became interested in the job when she heard about it from girls at the sorority who had been campers. Her major duties include counseling and taking care of the mail . Mrs. Frank Spurrier is now completing her third year with the camp. During the year she is housemother at Stevenson Scholarship Hall, as head supervisor at Lewis, her duties are much the same as Mrs. Parks. Another Swim For Campers Will Be Under the Moon A moonlight swim, slated for tomorrow night at Holiday Park Country Club, is to be the second such outing for campers this summer. A minimum of 250 must purchase tickets for the event, which are on sale at 75c each. Chartered buses will leave Lewis Hall at 9 p.m. and arrive at the private pool at 11 p.m. for the return to the dorms. C. Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor, who attended the first moonlight swim with his family and those of George Neiderhiser and Richard Brummett, associate supervisors, commented that because of its success, arrangements for the second trip have been made in the same manner. Six camp counselors accompanied the supervisor and the 300 campers June 27. The counselors have the most trouble at camp! Here are some of the tricks which have been pulled on the counselors in boys' dorm: counselor's bed pulled into the john and trash cans put in place of it, and wheaties put in the air blowing hand dryers in the john so they would blow all over the place. Page 4 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Sports 'N' Shorts By Dale Schroeder During the last few weeks, many incidents have taken place concerning the activities involving campers. Some have been humorous, some serious, and some just fun to talk about. These are some of the happenings. $$ * * * * $$ During an intramural basketball game between 5 North and 5 North II, Dwayne Tieszen, of 5 North II, suffered a minor injury. In the course of play, he went up for a shot, came down, lost his balance, and fell with his right foot wedged under him. As play stopped, he called attention to his right foot which was already swelling badly. He was immediately taken by some of the players to his counselor, Jim Nichols, and in turn taken to the hospital. Dwayne spent the night at the hospital and returned the next morning sporting an ankle wrap, a noticeable limp, and last but not least, a cane. The injury had amounted to only a few severed blood vessels and a cracked bone, but it was enough to give the floor something to talk about. $$ *** $$ The campers aren't the only ones who are having fun in the form of recreation these days. The Duncan family is actively participating in the late President Kennedy's physical fitness program. Many times they can be seen on the lawn of Templin Hall enjoying America's national pastime on a small scale. This shows that almost anyone can enjoy baseball, and one doesn't have to play in Yankee Stadium to get the fun out of it. Credit should be given to Mr. and Mrs. Duncan in that they find time for their own children along with taking care of over 1,000 other "children." Our advice to Mr. and Mrs. Duncan is to keep up the good work Remember, "today's Duncan may be tomorrow's Mantle." * * * Along with the organized sports going on during the camp, many "unofficial" activities that give everyone except those involved a good laugh have been invented. For instance, it is a great challenge to attempt an entry into Templin Hall after 9:30 at night. Steve Reed accepted this challenge bravely one Friday night. When he was late, his roommate, Steve Sirredge, tried to let him in the side door. Unfortunately, they were caught and now can be found joyously sweeping the halls of 5 North early each morning. The moral of this story is that coming in late at night is a great experience—your friends will look upon you as the one directly responsible for keeping the halls clean. $$ * * * * $$ Jim Nichols, a widely controversial counselor in the eyes of his "family" on 5 North Templin, has been fighting the campers on the floor single-handedly the last two weeks. His partner in crime, Bill Toalson, has been devoting his services to the junior high campers. Although Jim's job has been rather easy because the boys on 5 North are so cooperative, it is a great experience to watch him try to get both ends of the hall quiet at night. Now that Bill has gallantly returned from his mission of mercy, there will be no more joy in Mudville. BROOKLYN, N.Y. — BOGARTS, NJ. — TENNIS. A man in a white shirt plays tennis on a grass court. He is holding a tennis racket and preparing to hit the ball. The background shows a green hedge. Dave Newbery, instrumental music camper, takes time out for another type of practice. He is shown here warming up for a future intramural tennis match. Dave is one of the 32 boys who advanced to the second round of competition in the tournament. Omana Bruce Francis goes up for a shot while practicing for a future game. Keglers Show Well In Weekly Matches By Karen Haney Each year as the Midwestern Music and Art Camp begins, the Jay Bowl opens its doors to the campers for a bowling league with special prices. The fee is $5.00 per each individual wishing to participate. This covers the cost of renting the lane, bowling ball, and shoes over a five week period. Boys and girls are divided into separate leagues. Each team within the league is comprised of five individuals. This year there are four girls' teams and eight boys' teams. Meeting every Friday night at 6:30 p.m., each team then bowls three lines against another. At the end of each line the winning team receives a point. At the conclusion of the entire evening's play the team with the highest number of pins between the two in contention receives a point. This makes it possible for a team to accumulate up to four points each evening it bowls. THE INDIVIDUAL teams are arbitrarily numbered and then bowl each other by a standardized method of matching these numbers. This method is set up so that each team competes against the other an equal number of times. At the termination of the league at the end of camp, the team which has acquired the highest number of points receives a trophy. Separate awards are made to the boys' and girls' divisions since it is considered unfair competition to pit boys against girls. In the event of a tie double awards are made, unless the two teams can find time before their departure for a play off. Each league elects a secretary who is in charge of tabulating all the points within that league. The eight teams within the boys' league are "The Untouchables," "The High Five," "The King Pins," "The Ball Busters," "The Goofballs," "The Unknowns," "The Psychos," and "The Spastics." Members of "The High Five" are David Greene, Steve Bennington, Fred Goble, Durley Grace, and Harvey Thompson. "The King Pins" include Steve Wilmoth, Wayne Erck, Tony Kelly, Robert Burden, and Wayne Northcutte. Rocky Ray, John Zimmerman, Andy Simmons, Bert Meisenbach, and Tom Tschappat constitute "The Goofballs." "The Ball Busters" are Rod Seeman, Larry Yeager, Jim Aldendifer, Bob Gabaldon and Clark Hall. Members of "The Unknowns" are Bill O'Meara, Finil Hooper, Fred Hurst, Jim Baxter, and Walter Anderson. Jack Tracy, Denny Raymond, Charles Simmons, Ronnie Grattopp, and Art Auetenrieth comprise "The Psvchos." "The Spastics" are Joe Weigand, Tom McCready, Bill Lewis, Hal Boston, and Steve Hedden. Members of the girls' league are the "Strikettes": Jeannette Skeen, Nancy Jenkins, Barb Russell, Donna Robinson, and Pam Hasting; "Bowlerettes": Kathy Ferris, Jacquie Glaser, Bobbi Wirtz, Lorraine Johnson, and Donna Cobb; "Jayettes": Mary Ellen Butler, Candy Root, Alice Koehler, Sheila Sacks, and Karen Ellerman; and "Keglerettes": Linda Liles, Kathi Kahl, Gayle Gallagher, Cathie Wilke, and Jane Henseigh. Campers Exchange Volley In Local Recreation Test Bv Chin Rouse Tennis rackets and balls came flocking out of the closets for what proved to be a very exciting and thrill-ridden round of play. Thirty-two of 53 boys advanced into the second round of action as the camp tennis tourney met its first big test of activity during the week of June 28. A regular match is decided by two of three sets with the winner of each set being the first individual to capture six games. However, a participant must win each set by two games. As a result, some contests extend past the six limit. Second round action will be completed by Monday, the third round by Saturday, July 18; the quarterfinals by Tuesday, July 21; the semifinals by Thursday, July 23; and the finals on Friday, July 24. Action is being staged at one of two places. The courts south of Malott Hall and the area west of Allen Field House are the main facilities available for the enduring sport. Some of the early first round action included Dave Hill over Keith Dougherty (6-2) (6-3), Dan Curry over Benny Richardson (6-1) (6-4), and Pete Hairitas defeated John Fox in one set (6-2). Eleven boys drew first round byes and in so doing moved into the second round of activity. results If Posted and Scores Where Available As Of 7:30 p.m. Wayne Erick—Bye Larry Walton—Eye Sunday, June 5 John Zimmerman—Bye L. C. Lacy—Bye Bob Dakolo, Rye Bryan Anderson—By Tim Robinson—Bye Bob Dukelow—Bye Bryan Anderson—Bye Tim Robinson—Bye Bill Rhodes—Bye Mike Creamer—Bye Randy Smith Rue Dave Hill def. Keith Dougherty (6-2) (6-3) Pete Haritas def. John Fox (6-2) Dan Curry def. Benny Richardson (6-1) (6-4) Bruce Helander def. Steve Rock (6-0) (6-1) Dave Newbery def. John Taber (forfelt) Bane詹寅 def. Mike Cline (6-1) (6-0) Lorge Lindeman def. Harold Magnus (6-0) (6-1) (6-8) Scott Bridges def. Gary Trammell (6-0) (6-0) Cagers Rip As Contests Get Started The tournament is set up in what is called a single-elimination bracket. If a team loses once, it is thereby eliminated. There are three rounds to be played. One of the major tournaments now going on in the boys dorm is the basketball tournament. A great interest has been displayed by the boys so far and it looks as though the tournament will yield a deserving champion. The first round had been played and completed by June 28, the second round finished by July 5, and the third round is to be played by July 12. Three of the third round participants, 3 North II, 3 South II, and 5 North I, have also been determined. The remainder of the results will be published at a later date. At the time this paper went to press, it was known that 2 North I, 4 South, 5 North I, 5 North II, 3 North II, 3 South I, 3 South II, and 3 South III had all survived the first round. Action Runs Heavy As Campers Ping First round matches were completed last Sunday, with second round activity scheduled to be staged by this coming Monday. The third round will be finished by Saturday, July 18; the quarterfinals by Tuesday, July 21; the semifinals by Thursday, July 23; and the finals on Friday, the following day. Tension and anxiety began to mount as the annual boys' ping pong tournament, sponsored by the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, got under way. Ping Pong Like Tennis A ping pong match may range from the best four out of seven, to a single contest with the first individual to reach 21 declared as the winner of the game. As in tennis, a player must win each contest by at least two points. This also is true for sets. Action has run hot and heavy on floors three, five, and seven with individual participants either limbering up in unheralded competition against their floormates or following the tournament trail in head to head battle with their scheduled opponents. Due to the enormous wake of individual styles, one is able to observe many different variations in play. Every shot from a "sinking liner" to a sparkling power shot has been present thus far through the tournament. Deadlines Necessary The remaining entries are responsible for connecting their opponents and completing the match by the desired deadline set forth. If an individual or individuals fail to meet this requirement both are disqualified by virtue of forfeit. Ping pong results if posted and scores were available as on Sunday 7:30 p.m. 7:38 p.m. Kevin B. Dougherty def. Carl Krehbiel (19-11) (14-21) (21-16) Steve Shull def. Dennis Norton Matt Mintzberg def. Oscar Nixon urt Mielsenbauer Jim Schwartz John Fox (21-8) (21-9) Ron Wachholtz def. John Giesi (21-11) Brent Waldron def. Dave Dittmerone Tony Kelly def. Dorian Meyer (21-15) Larry Yeager def. Chip Rouse (21-7) Jim Zakoura def. Robert Bardone Marvin Chandler def. Terry Howard Tom Fennan def. Tom Tschappant def. Burt Stuerker (21- 18) (21-15) 18) (21-15) Don Grantham def. Bruce Ford (21-14) (21-19) Stars. Reed def. Harold Magnus (21-6) (21-19) Steve Reed def. Harold Magnus (21-6) (9) (21-12) Dennis Hope def. Wayne Srek (7-0) (21-1 Bob Dukelow def. Doug Hensley Harlan Geiser def. Neil Shapiro Richard Stone def. Steve Sirlridge (21-9) (21-7) Jim Viney def. Harold Keen (7-0) (21- 15) 16) Mike Hausman def. Steve Carlson (21- Mike Hausman def. Steve Carlson (21-13) (21-16) (21-6) Bill Mills def. Steve Franse (11-1) (21- 15) Bob Colwell def. Bruce Francis (21-19) (21-19) (21-14) Later and more complete results of ping pong, tennis and basketball activities as well as softball and volleyball competition will appear in the next issue of the Kamper Kansan. Watch for it. Friday, July 10, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 For complete dry cleaning and laundry service for your summer school needs visit one of our nearby locations. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi A K For occasions both formal and informal this summer, you'll want to look your best. Your sport coat or dress receives the finest care possible and looks as fresh and new as the day you brought it home. Our service is designed with students and campers in mind, fast service with pick-up and delivery available to keep your fashions crisp and fresh. With results you can measure and convenience so easy, the Independent Laundry solves your every Dry Cleaning and Laundry problem. SINGLE BREASTED DRESS WITH STRIPE PATTERN. THE DRESS IS SUMMER FASHION, AND IT IS DESIGNED TO BE WORTH AT LEAST $100. IT IS MADE FROM LINEN, COTTON, AND POLYESTER. THE DRESS IS SUPPLIED WITH A HAT AND A WATCH. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Heavy Drinking Seen Likely Cancer Cause NEW YORK—(UPI)—Statistical science now has added heavy drinking to cigarette smoking as a possible cause of cancer. It was done in part through sex ratios in a formidable statistical base, that is, almost 65,000 cancer cases. If men and women were truly equal in all respects you'd expect cancer to attack those organs they have in common in more or less equal proportions. It is well known in cancer science that males have more cancers in those organs than females do. But the new statistics turned up astonishing differences. For the main part of the throat, there were 28 male cancers for each female cancer. For the voice-box alone, the larynx, the proportion was 27.4 to 1. For the food tube, the esophagus, it was 16.6 to 1. THE STATISTICIANS then figured in the personal habits of all these people with cancers. They found a "very strong relationship" between cancers of the throat and the voice box with both heavy smoking and heavy drinking. By and large the men had these habits and the women didn't. For the esophagus cancer the relationship with smoking was merely "strong" whereas it was "very strong" with drinking. That was plausible anatomically but "strong" and "very strong" relationships with cancers of the tongue and of the mouth in general were not plausible statistically. That was so because of drastic drops in the sex ratios. For each female tongue cancer there were only 9.3 male ones; for each female mouth cancer, there were 8.6 male. Since these organs can have as much contact with smoke and/or strong drink as the throat and larynx one would expect the sex ratio to be similar. The ratios became similar when the statisticians broke tongue and mouth cancers down into sub-sites. For the floor of the mouth, where both smoke and drink linger, the ration was 24.5 male to 1 female; for the base of the tongue, where exposure is at the maximum, it was 15.3 to 1. For the middle portion of the esophagus it was 20.4 to 1. THE STOMACH was a telling organ for comparing. Taken as a whole the sex ratio of stomach cancers was a mere 2.3 to 1 which is not statistically significant. But when only cancers of that portion of the stomach which connects with the esophagus were compared, the ratio jumped to 5 to 1, which is significant. The study was reported to the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Md., by a team of statisticians of the French National Hygiene Institute of Paris. The statistical base were patients of the French National Cancer hospitals Kennedy Transferred To Boston Hospital NORTHAMPTON, Mass.—(UPI)—Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, strapped in a metal frame to keep his broken back in place, was transferred in a drizzling rain yesterday to New England Baptist Hospital at Boston. Kennedy, whose back was broken in a plane crash June 19, was wheeled out of Cooley Dickinson Hospital to an ambulance for the 100-mile trip to Boston. The 32-year-old Massachusetts Democrat managed a smile and wave for the 50 persons, mostly newsmen, who gathered in the hospital's ambulance area. '36 Election Marked Farley as Jokester WASHINGTON—(UPI)—James A. Farley is a fast man with a quip. In 1936 Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Alfred M. Landon, who carried only Maine and Vermont for a total of eight electoral votes. The day after the election Farley appeared at a news conference and was asked to comment on the landslide. "My comment," Farley said, "is that as Maine goes so goes Vermont." between 1943 and 1960. The team was led by Robert Flamant. "For many of these organs, this theory coincides with the usual clinical findings or with some logical conclusions that can be drawn from anatomical and physiological observations," they said. "It is often noted that patients with cancers of the base of the tongue or floor of the mouth are usually heavy smokers and drinkers." "Gastric cancer is especially interesting. First, the sex-ratio data are particularly reliable. Second, tobacco and alcohol are quite likely to act on the fundus cardia region because it is next to the esophagus." New Computer To Be Installed By Chip Rouse A new computer is scheduled to be installed the week of July 20 at the Computation Center in Summerfield Hall. The new IBM 7040 computer will leave Minneapolis on Friday July 17, and will travel to Lawrence by truck. It is currently at the IBM Data Center in Minneapolis. The 7040 is a binary machine and is able to add up to 66,000 five digit numbers per second, whereas the older IBM 1620 adds at the rate of 1100 five digit numbers per second. THE NEW MODEL is an increase in overall capability of approximately 5 to 10 times greater than the current computer. Richard G. Hetherington, director of the Computation Center, states that there are three prime requisites in considering a computer. Number one is gross size, two is maximum speed and third, but far from least, is the cost involved. A 1401 computer will accompany the 7040 on its trip from the Land of Sky Blue Waters. The added model will be used to prepare magnetic tapes to be used in the bigger machine. THE 7040-1401 combination will take up approximately twice as much space as is now required for the 1620. However, in a computer, physical dimensions are not as important as overall capacity. The difference in cost between the 7040 and the 1620 has been announced as a factor of three, with the 7040 listing at the greatest expense. The 1620 will be placed in the High Energy laboratory of the Physics department but is scheduled to be used solely as research apparatus and not in any way as a computer. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Antic fun and bloody horror are on tap in Stratford, Conn., where the American Shakespeare Festival Theater is embarked on its 10th season in this 400th anniversary year of the birth of The Bard. Festival Honors Shakespeare's 400th Birthday The organization has come up with productions of "Much Ado About Nothing" and "The Tragedy of King Richard the Third" that, despite certain shortcomings here and there, have enough merit to warrant recommendation. "HAMLET," THE THIRD and final addition to the repertoire, will be introduced early in July. If it turns out to be good, there will be something for everyone at Stratford this summer. A lot of people can't stand Shakespeare's comedies, and some of them do try patience. "Much Ado," in spite of its two-headed plot line, is one of the better ones, and I think that even the antagonistic will enjoy much of this Stratford production. The production is weak in its Claudio, played by handsome Frank G. Converse, whose work could be corrected easily by director Allen Fletcher. The conception and casting of the role of the villainous Don John is an error. IF NOTHING ELSE, they can relish the fine counterpoint provided by confirmed bachelor Benedick and man-contemptuous Beatrice as interpreted by Philip Bosco and Jacqueline Brookes. These two do a beautiful job. There is good material in these roles, and the two players make the most of it in a rollicking manner. BUT THERE IS good stuff in the Leonato of excellent Patrick Hines, the Don Pedro of Douglas Watson and, especially, in the Dogberry as played by Rex Everhart, who makes his malapropic, bumbling arm of the law a joy. Director Fletcher has pulled out all the horror stops in staging "Richard III," which is fairly gruesome no matter how it is played. BUT THE RICHARD, in the person of handsome Douglas Watson, is the most physically repulsive I've ever seen, with more deformatives than usually are assigned to the monarch whose defeat by Henry Tudor ended the War of the Roses. the play, no matter who does it, is one of action and little poetry, and Fletcher has concentrated on making it move. Watson does his job well, and there are good contributions by Jacqueline Brookes, David Byrd, Rex Everhart, Patricia Peardon, Tom Sawyer, Margaret Phillips, Anne Draper and John Devlin. In Zanzibar, black African nationalists are waging a dramatic struggle to turn back a Soviet and Red Chinese bid to make of the tiny spice island a Communist bridgehead to the whole of East Africa. By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst Zanzibar Sees Battle To Block Reds' March It is a struggle largely lost in the din of noisier battles for Cyprus and South Viet Nam or Indonesia's confrontation with Malaysia. But it is significant and becomes the more so because Africans themselves have recognized communism's threat to new-found freedoms. IT IS BEING led by mild-mannered Tanganyika President Julius K. Nyerere, who on April 23 engineered the merger of Zanzibar with Tanganyika for the beginning of what he hopes will be an East African federation composed of Tanganyika, Zanzibar. Kenya and, finally, Uganda. At the start, not much would have been given for the chances of the merger's ultimate success, and even now the issue remains in doubt. Zanzibar obtained its independence from Britain last December and was in existence scarcely a month before its government fell to armed revolt. PROMINENT AMONG the revolutionaries were fighters trained in Communist Cuba. High up in their leadership were Abdullah Kassim Hanga, Moscow-trained, and Abdul Rahman Mohammed, a fire-brand known as Babu, trained in Peking and a devoted admirer of Red China's Mao Tse-tung and Cuba's "Che" Guevara. In the new "People's Republic of Zanzibar," Babu became minister of external affairs and defense and Hanga a vice-president under President Abedi Amani Karume. Karume, it was widely held, was but a figurehead. BUT WITH BABU out of the country on a shopping mission to Peking, it was with Karume that Nyerere engineered the surprise coup that linked Zanzibar with Tanganyika and undertook the first step to block Communist influence. Success for Nyerere would constitute a major defeat for communism in Africa. In Zanzibar, the Chinese and the Russians have pushed their own quarrel into the background. The Russians have been running the port and harbor and training the army. THE CHINESE have been in charge of agriculture, and from their heavily guarded embassy the Communist East Germans have taken over direction of finance, education and information. For the East Germans, Zanzibar was of particular importance. Their embassy there was the first to be Gradually the changes are being made. established outside the Communist bloc, and for them it constituted a measure of international recognition. Babu has been removed from his important post as minister of external affairs. Marxists also have been removed from other subsidiary posts. A PARTICULAR blow to the Communists was Nyerere's action downgrading all Zanzibar embassies to the status of consulates. ENDS TODAY... "ROBIN AND THE 7 HOODS" Granada TREATURE...Telefone PZ-3-GO Funniest story ever put Between covers! starring Leslie Caron & Maurice Chevalier TONITE...JULY10th 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. DYCHE AUDITORIUM 35c Starts SATURDAY! "GIGI" Funniest story ever put Between covers! Marlon David Brando Niven Shirley Jones FRIDAY FLICKS - presents - "Bedtime Story" in Eastman COLOR Mat. 2:00 Eve. 7:00 & 9:00 Sunday Cont. from 2:30 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts TONITE! Open Fri. - Sat. - Sun. Eve. Open 6:45 — Starts 7:00 Step into the wacky and hilarious world of Henry Orient and meet two delightful youngsters! --- PETER SELLERS PAULA PRENTISS & ANGELA LANSBURY The WORLD OF HENRY ORIENT CAMPAIGNING • COLOR by BELAKE • UNITED ARTISTS Plus "BEAUTY AND THE BEAST" Open 7:00 — Starts Dusk TONITE & SAT. "CAPTAIN SINBAD" and "YOUNG AND THE BRAVE" 2 Bonus Hits Sat. "JOHNNY COOL" and "THEN THERE WERE THREE" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40 SUN. - MON... "COURTSHIP OF EDDIE'S FATHER" and "The MAN FROM THE DINER'S CLUB" Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Junior High Concert Orchestra-Band-Chorus Saturday, July 11 University Theatre Orchestra Prelude and Cebell from "Suite in C" Purcell-Brown String Section Overture, Rosamunde Schubert-Weaver March Hongoise Berlioz-Reibold Plunkin Peter ... Barnard ... Studies Series ... Full Orchestra Russian Sailor's Dance ... Gliere-Isaac Full Orchestra Mr. Crawford, conducting String Section Band Suite in F ... Holst March Pageant ... Persichetti American Folk Rhapsody ... Grundman Mr. Corbett, conducting Brass Aflame ... Cacavas Toccata for Band ... Erickson Variations on a Theme by Paganini ... Gardner Themes from Symphony No. 6 (Pathetique) ... Tschaikovsky-Johnson Mr. Brummett, conducting **Chorus** Accompanists Pat Holstege, Goddard, Kan. Dixie Gossett, Carthage, Mo. Six Brahms Folk Songs ... Brahms I'd Enter Your Garden How Sad Flow the Streams Mass in F ... Schubert Introit Gloria Credo Offertory Sanctus After the Transubstantiation Agnus Dei Finale Man Is as Grass ... Davenport Bye Bye Blues ... Arr. Simeone Pick-a-Little, Talk-a-Little and Goodnight Ladies Pick-a-Little, Talk-a-Little and Goodnight Ladies from "The Music Man" ... Willson Two Join Microbiology Staff A man who has engaged in the practice of veterinary medicine and one who recently completed a scientific tour of the Far East have been named faculty members in the department of microbiology. M. James Freeman, a specialist in certain diseases of swine, will teach and conduct research in the fields of immunology and immunochemistry. Donald Dusanic, who will join the faculty Sept. 1, returned early this summer from a three-month tour of the Far East, where he studied infections related to elephantiasis. Both faculty members will hold the position of assistant professor. Freeman, who did undergraduate work at the University of Florida, practiced veterinary medicine for several months in Nashville, Ill. Dusanic completed his undergraduate work at the University of Chicago and was granted a Ph.D. by the same institution in 1963. Each year coaches are faced with the task of signing new recruits. This year was no exception, as both football and basketball coaches rounded up many promising prospects at the University. KU Coaches List Several As Recruits MANY FINE YOUNG football and basketball players come from here in the state. Two of the most outstanding high school graduates who have decided to come to KU are John Carter of Norton and Bill Trull of Lawrence. By Dale Schroeder Carter stands 6 feet 6 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds. He was an all-stater in both football and basketball. Friday. July 10, 1964 The other double all-stater is Bill Trull from Lawrence. He stands 6 feet 1 inch and weighs 180 pounds. He was a quarterback on the football team at Lawrence High School. AMONG THE OTHER outstanding prospects to play basketball here are Wandy Williams of Long Island, N.Y., and Rodger Bohnenstiel of Collinsville, Ill. Williams was a highly sought prospect in both basketball and football. All of the Big Ten schools were after him and many major universities. He is 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 190 pounds. Bohnestiel is a 6-foot 6-inch, 200-pound basketball player. During his career as a forward in high school, he scored a total of 1,780 points. He was chosen as a Prep All- America. ANOTHER OUTSTANDING basketball player who has signed a letter of intent to play here at KU is Al Lopes, who played for Coffeyville Junior College. The 6-foot 5-inch 185-pound forward-guard is originally from Providence, R.I. He was a junior college All-American at Coffeyville. Some of the other football signees are quarterbacks David Bouda from Omaha Creighton Prep and Mike Cochrane from Magnolia High of Anaheim, Calif. They will be joined by halfback Warren Gillette of Boulder, Colo., and end Roger White of Aurora, Kan. Two high school graduates who will compete in track are miler Gene McClain of Salina, who owns a 4:10 mile and a 1:53.6 half, and Drue Jennings of Argentine, who has run a 10.0-100-yard dash and has a state record of 48.3 in the 440. Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Experienced typist. Former secretary with experience in data entry, Computer Accuracy work, Reasonable rates, Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McEldowney. 2621 Ala. Ph.-VI. 9868. Experienced typist would like to do typing in her home. Call VI 3-5139. tff Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in Accurate expert typist would in her service call call VI 3-2651. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. FOR RENT Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any kind--Very reasonable rates—Contact Mrs. Jacque Kaufman (Mrs. Robl.) Vt. 3-7493 after 5:00 p.m. pff ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY HILLCREST BOWL HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Streets Accurate expert typist would like typing prompt service, Call VI 3-2641, these Prompt service. Call VI 3-2641, ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER Very nice apartment for 2 men. Fall semester. Private entrance. Walking distance to campus. See at 1102 West 19th Terrace. 7-24 Close to campus, very nice air-condition- tion. Free wifi. Free Wi-Fi. Free 2118 or inquire at office -1123 Indiana tf Two bedroom duplex—Stove and refrigerator—except electri tility-covered VI 3-2281f Extra nice bachelor apartment Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Private parking—automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8354. tf One bedroom, private $ \frac{1}{2} $ bath with shower. Private kitchen available. Call VI 3-2402 or see at 516 Louisiana from 12.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m. 7-24 LOST Two Spiral notebooks and reading cards in to room 116 Bailey for reward. 7-14 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers $60.00 monthly and $1,000 down buys nicely landscaped 3 bedroom home with glass enclosed shower-bath, refrigerator and stove. Call VI 1-2353. 7-24. Economy minded, 1952 Rambler 2-dr. extra clean, std. trans. with Overdrive, Good transportation. Benson's trans. Good transportation. Benson's sales. 1952 Harper, VI 3-1626. 7-17 BUSINESS DIRECTORY MISCELLANEOUS HOT RODDERS) 1940 Ford Coupe—Stock on VI at TI 2-9853 at 1133 Rhode Island. . . . . Must sell (cheap) Motorcycle 1964 Motorcycle 1972 Further information call VI 2-080-7-100 Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3844. tf. Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of the history of Hawk Reference Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Hot Rodders 1940 Ford Cpe. Stock. Body Hot Rodder 192-268 or see 7-166 Rhode Island. 1961 Coronado Red Corvette Roadster, 3-speed floor shift, positive traction, like- new, 283 engine. Good paint. $2500. See afternoons at 2417 Ohio. 7-10 Have you tried the Hillerest Bowl from his son's restaurant? 9th and sonable prices. 9th and 7-24 Hillerest Bowl maintains the finest lanes in Kansas. All time high scores rolled on our lanes last year in Kansas State Men's Tournament and in 1963 American Legion Tournament. Come in for a FREE line before 6 p.m. or after 9 p.m. any GERMAN MAJOR will tutor students of English. After 1, p.m. for appointment. 7-14 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 619 W. 19th St. VI 2-378 Recording Service and Party Music GB 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER GRANT'S DRIVE-IN 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Upe, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd Fraternity Jewelry STUDENTS Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ... right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday Balfour JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 10, 1964 Democratic Delegates Voted for Change in History in 1932 WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The 1932 Democratic National Convention towers tall in history because the delegates—unknown to themselves at the time—were voting for a revolutionary change in the American way of life. There never was much suspense in the balloting, and there never was much doubt that Franklin D. Roosevelt would win the nomination. His forces had firm control of the convention machinery. He led by a wide margin on the first ballot, increased his strength on the second and third and won on the fourth. In those days it required a two-thirds vote, instead of a simple majority, for a candidate to win. Otherwise Roosevelt would have won on the first ballot. GOV. FRANKLIN D. Roosevelt of New York generally was known as an amiable man and a good votegetter in his native state. He was admired because of the spirit he displayed in partly overcoming crippling polio. But around the nation there were thoughtful men, including columnist Walter Lippmann, who doubted he was of the stature to be President of the United States. Convention delegates on that hot June evening in Chicago could not possibly have had any inkling of the force they were setting in motion when they sent Roosevelt over the top on the fourth ballot with 945 out of 1154 votes. He seemed to most of them to be a middle-road man, possibly more conservative than liberal, and it was known that he favored cutting federal expenditures by 25 per cent, or so he said. THE WHIRLWIND struck the day after Roosevelt moved into the White House; for 100 days it raged unabated and it really never quieted down for more than two decades. Born in the agony of the nation's worst depression, the New Deal of Roosevelt and Truman also spanned the world's worst war. As soon as he took office President Roosevelt veered the nation sharply to the left and hurried it a good distance down the road that ends in the welfare state. Old ideas were born: fireside chats, the five-day week, "there is nothing to fear but fear itself," social security, "tax and tax and spend and spend," lend lease, Bundles for Britain, Iwo Jima, G.I. Joe, Jeep, United Nations and "traitor to his class." With the possible exception of Abraham Lincoln, Roosevelt was the best-loved and most-hated man ever to occupy the White House. HE GOT INVOLVED in all of this because of the energy of a smart Irishman named James A. Farley, who stands an excellent chance of going down in history as the best political technician of our time. A year and a half before the 1932 convention convened Farley began working to get the nomination for Roosevelt. He stormed up and down and across the country. In his story of those days called "Behind the Ballots," Farley does not sav so but it is obvious that he never made a strategic or tactical error. When the time came, he made some expert maneuvers that put Roosevelt men into such key jobs as temporary and permanent chairman of the convention. HIS MEN controlled the important committees and he kept a firm but friendly rein on an exuberant Roosevelt supporter who wanted to tear the convention to pieces with his bare hands—Huey Long of Louisiana. The drama at Chicago in 1932 was supplied by Alfred E. Smith. Four years earlier he had taken the political licking of his life when he ran for President against Herbert Hoover and had announced he never would run for anything again. But as the 1929 depression deepened it became apparent that Hoover would be a sitting duck for anybody who ran against him. The Happy Warrior suddenly marched back to the wars, bringing with him the entire Massachusetts delegation, a good bloc from New York state and scattered strength from other sections of the Eastern seaboard. IT WAS THE END of a long friendship between Roosevelt and Smith. A weary night of balloting began. First: Roosevelt 666. Smith 201. Scattered among John N. Garner, Harry F. Byrd and others 268. Second: Roosevelt 677. Smith 194. Third: Roosevelt 682. Smith 190. Those ballots had taken all night and the convention adjourned at 9:15 a.m. Farley splashed some cold water on his face, waved aside the idea of sleep and went to work to win the California and Texas delegations to Roosevelt. His persuasion prevailed. When the convention reconvened for the fourth ballot, William Gibbs McAdoo of California gave his votes to Roosevelt, Texas followed. Fourth and final ballot: Roosevelt 945, Smith $100\frac{1}{2}$, Others $18\frac{1}{2}$, John N. Garner was nominated for Vice-President, but Smith didn't wait for that. As soon as Roosevelt had won, the Happy Warrior got on a train for New York and, if you will pardon a paradox, rode into both the sunrise and sunset, the sunrise of the solar system and the sunset of his exciting career. AIR-CONDITIONED C GAS LIGHT 65c PITCHER 8:30 to 10:30 AIR-CONDITIONED EVERY TUESDAY & THURSDAY C Open Daily 11 a.m. to 12 p.m.Serving Delicious King Size Sandwiches & Pizza AIR-CONDITIONED GAS LIGHT 1241 Oread AIR-CONDITIONED new shipment of PARKER pens models 45, 51 and 61 kansas union BOOKSTORE Summer Session Kansan 52nd Year, No.11 Tuesday, July 14, 1964 Lawrence, Kansas "The director of the Theatrical School in Warsaw, several directors, many actors, dozens of students, and virtually every American in Warsaw found it difficult to stop praising the group. The thing that appealed to the Poles most was the versatility of the members of the group plus, of course, their youth and vitality. U.S. Official in Poland Praises KU Troupe A member of the U.S. Embassy staff in Warsaw has written lavish praise of the KU 7-student theatre demonstration team that made a 2-month tour of Europe with the sponsorship of the State Department. In a letter to Lewin A. Goff, director of the University Theatre, John D. Scanlan said: THE TEAM PERFORMED at professional theater schools in several countries. Their counterparts at those schools with whom they exchanged productions were generally much more experienced and older. "...but I don't believe it's possible to exaggerate an honest, objective appraisal of the group and the quality of their performances in Poland," the letter said. "I don't know where you obtain your professional players, but I can't convince the Poles that they are amateurs." He referred to the impression created by the group as they toured Europe. "THE STAFF at the Theatrical School was particularly impressed by the democratic spirit of the group. They set their own stages, moved their own scenery, handled their own lighting, and packed up afterwards— without waiting for extended applause. "The Poles commented that their students would never do this and yet the Americans, whom the Poles insisted were much better actors than the Polish students, modestly engaged in every facet of theatrical activity without false insistence on a 'star's prerogatives.'" "Send us more, anytime," Scanlan concluded. The seven students, chosen in competitive trvouts, were in Europe in April and May. THEY WERE Mimi Frank, Lawrence sophomore; Karin Gold, Overland Park senior; Richard Friesen. Prairie Village junior; Sharon Scoville, Kansas City special student; Vincent L. Angotti, Independence, Mo., graduate student, and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis L. Dalen, Minneapolis graduate students. The group presented one-act plays and scenes from longer representative American drama. They performed in English, Goff explained, "and the plays they observed were in other languages, but it is amazing how well skilled actors can follow the action of well presented drama in a second language." Staff members with them at various times were Jack Brooking, assistant director of University Theatre, and Jed Davis, associate professor of speech and drama. The idea of the touring demonstration team in the cultural exchange program resulted from contacts made by Goff during a year's study of the European theater he made under a Fulbright grant. Camp Concerts Provide Sunday of Entertainment By Rose Marsha Resnick By Rose Marsha Resnick With the first downbeat of the conductor's baton, the fourth of six Midwestern Music and Art Camp concerts began Sunday afternoon in Murphy Hall. Guest conductor Dr. Warner Lawson, from Howard University in Washington, presented a moving selection by the Concert Choir, "Tryptch" by Hovhaness. The religious effect of the next two works by Burleigh and Gilum created an atmosphere of softness and tranquility. The orchestral division of the concert, conducted by three directors, had one of its best performances of the season. Gerald M. Carney, associate director, opened the program with the camp theme song. "Irish Tune From County Derry." He then turned the group over to Russell L. Wiley, camp director, who presented "Harry Janos Suite," by Kodaly. The closing piece by the Concert Choir, "Song of the Open Road" by Dello Joio, was a great number that pleased the attentive audience. EACH PIECE SEEMED to follow in line of the previous one, keeping the steady flow of rhythm going. The finale of the choir, "A Free Song," was an effective production for the fine group of voices. Dr. Lawson continued his fine showing with the next group on the program, the Chamber Choir. The music of Dieterich, Tschaikovsky and Schuman were among his beautiful selections. ADDING A TOUCH of dignity was the mystifying work of Charmane Asher Wiley on the cimbalon, a rare instrument for high school orchestras. Guy Taylor of the Phoenix Symphony concluded the program for the afternoon with the fourth movement from Brahm's Symphony No. 4. The evening concerts, held in the KU Outdoor Theatre, were conducted by Cmdr. Charles Brendler, retired director of the United States Navy Band and Orchestra, Taylor and Carney. THE SYMPHONIC band performed numbers by various composers such as Grieg, Dvorak and Stieberitz. As the evening progressed the novel tunes created a sensation. Perhaps the most memorable number of this band's program was Mr. Taylor's presentation of "Symphonic Suite" by Williams. Carl Fahrbach, assistant director of admissions at KU, soon will take a similar position at Wichita State University and in 1965 will become director of admissions there upon the retirement of the current holder of that office. The audience welcomed the last group of the evening, the concert band, as Prof. Carney began the performance with "Coat of Arms, March" by Kenny, Two movements from Mendelsohn's "Symphony No. 4" was the second selection. Captivating the patrons for this night was the finale, conducted by Taylor, Giannini's "Symphony No. 3 For Band." Highs ranged from 84 at Salina, Russell, Abilene, Manhattan and Chanute at 78 at Goodland. Overnight nails ranged from 51 at Hutchinson to 59 at Salina and Wichita. By United Press International Cool and clear weather prevailed over the central plains and Kansas yesterday and more of the same is in store. A slow warming trend and fair weather was expected through today. Today's highs were expected to range in the 80s again. Cool Days Likely For Plains States Carl Fahrbach Named To Position at Wichita By United Press International Fahrbach, who has served at KU since 1955, is making arrangements to move to Wichita. GOP Convention Begins; Goldwater in Command - * * * Four of "The Men Who"... JOHN E. RUBER M. R. C. SALMON S. S. W. MARSHALL CROSS THE CIRCLE'S WORLD ATHLETICS CHAMPIONSHIP Playing key roles at the Republican National Convention in San Francisco are these GOP kings and king-makers—Richard M. Nixon, vice-president from 1953 to 1961 and presidential candidate in 1960; Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the likely choice for 1964; Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, who withdrew from the race after the California primary, and Gov. William Scranton of Pennsylvania, who has been engaged in a late effort to keep the nomination from Sen. Goldwater. Reading Teaching Center To Be Set Up Under Grant The University of Kansas will be one of 28 research centers participating in a nationwide coordinated attack on problems related to the teaching of reading in public schools. Nita Wyatt, associate professor in the School of Education, is the principal investigator under a $30,451 grant awarded through the United States Office of Education, coordinator of the program. KU was chosen as a research center after about 75 proposals had been evaluated by the U.S. Office of Education. THE STUDY will seek to clear some of the current confusion and controversy over theory and methods in the teaching of reading, Dr. Wyatt said. Each participating center will conduct independent research that will complement investigations of other centers and contribute to a whole picture, she said. Some 30,000 children in the United States will be involved in the project. KU's role will be to cooperate with area schools in investigating the reading achievements of first-grade pupils. Work will be undertaken and completed in 1964-65. Ten classrooms in the area will use experimental approaches with "differentiated methods" in the teaching of reading, she said. For example, an effort might be made to teach boys and girls separately, using materials that have special appeal to each group. Another 10 classrooms will use a "linguistic" approach, which Dr. Wyatt described as emphasizing sounds and regular spelling patterns, rather than frequency of word usage. A CONTROL GROUP of another 10 classrooms will use standard readers, based on frequency of word usage. At the research program's conclusion, pupils will be tested on their achievement. Testing procedures will be like those used across the nation. Dr. Wwatt said a workshop would be held later this summer for area participants in the program. "There will be no national control over the research." Dr. Wyatt emphasized. Directors met in Minneapolis early in June to design the study and to agree upon standard procedures so that data can be coordinated. Participating research centers are either universities or state departments of education, working in cooperation with public schools. COW PALACE San Francisco COW PALACE, San Francisco —(UPI) The Republican Party began its 28th national convention yesterday with Sen. Barry Goldwater apparently assured of a first-ballot nomination for President. But his only major challenger, Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, was not giving up his attempts to bring off the miracle it will take to upset the Arizonan's bandwagon. He challenged Goldwater to a television debate before the delegates begin the balloting Wednesday. He also promised a floor fight on the party platform which, in draft form, echoed closely the views of the front-running senator. TO THE CHALLENGE Goldwater retorted "ridiculous" and to the threat of a platform floor fight Gold-water aides shrugged. The Scranton challenge, in the form of a letter denouncing "Gold-waterism", provided practically the only excitement as the convention got under way. One Republican took a look around and called this year's meeting "one of the dullest of all times." The man who said that was Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts, and he should know. Martin, just another delegate this year, was permanent chairman and unquestioned major domo of every GOP convention from 1940 through 1956. GOLDWATER'S MANAGERS regarded Scranton's unprecedented debate challenge as a last desperate effort to break their candidate's headlock on the delegates. They announced that they had sent the governor's letter back to him. First, however, they had 4,000 copies made for distribution among delegates—in the hope it would make them angry at Scranton. Barring the political miracle Scranton must bring about to win, Goldwater already was assured of the nomination as the 1,308 delegates assembled in the Cow Palace for the opening session. After hearing a batch of welcoming speeches and other remarks, and transacting routine convention business, the meeting was to recess. The keynote address of Gov. Mark O. Haffield of Oregon was given last night. ON THE EVE of the convention, Goldwater expressed hope that Gov. George Wallace of Alabama would cancel plans to run for president. Blaze Strikes Workers' Shack Fire of unknown origin swept through a deserted house early Sunday afternoon on the west end of the KU campus. The house, used as a construction shed by builders of a nearby dormitory, was damaged extensively in its interior. KU police said someone apparently had broken into the house the day before, but officers were not sure if the break-in was related to the fire. Lawrence firemen said the blaze began in an upstairs bedroom and spread throughout the upper story of the house. Several pieces of furniture were destroyed. The abandoned dwelling, owned by the Clarence E. Vollmer Construction Co. of Wichita, contained construction materials and was used often as a resting place for company workmen. A construction company official said after the fire that nothing of value was missing but that certain equipment in the house had been moved around. Scheduled to be razed upon completion of the adjacent dormitory, the building will remain in limited use. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1964 No Utopias, Mr. Fowler Elsewhere on this page there appears a letter from John E. Fowler of the Labor Party of Kansas, who questions this newspaper's recent assertion that "a certain amount of frustration will always be present—and necessary—under our system of government." Mr. Fowler's letter appears to be largely an attack on Laird M. Wilcox of the Kansas Free Press. For that reason there was some hesitation about running a letter that smacked of esoteric personal arguments, but the letter is down there at the bottom of the page. Mr. Fowler's letter appears at a time when one group (probably the liberals, this time) is due for frustration at the Republican National Convention. Despite all kinds of polls (which may be as worthless as those of 1936 and 1948) that show Sen. Goldwater as likely to be far behind President Johnson in a presidential race, the long-frustrated right of the Republican Party appears to be about to nominate the gentleman from Arizona. AND THE LIBERALS (or at least those persons right now grouped behind Gov. Seranton) appear to have offered, in words scarcely new but often pertinent, too little too late. Those who have been buoyed up by the Kuchels, Keatings, Javiteses and Scotts of the Republican Party will be disheartened. These are the people who, if Goldwater is nominated, will be in the political wilderness, even if the Arizonaan loses the election in November. They will see the party leadership and machinery in the hands of the people who worked to get control of it, and they'll be frustrated, just as the more conservative gentlemen have been frustrated in recent years. JUST AS, WE SUBMIT, some people will always be frustrated. It takes a powerful shot of idealism, or naivete, to believe that the golden days will come even if "the vast productive power of modern society" is put to work. We may achieve what the Marxists call the withering away of the state, but even in a 1984, or a Brave New World, we have the misplaced, the malcontents, the frustrated. It would be grand if it were otherwise. We wish, with Mr. Fowler, that like Edward Bellamy we could look backward and marvel at the primitive civilization of the past world. Do away with our unproductive government, Mr. Fowler, and what will you have? Cuba? China? The Soviet Union? Utopia? It's a lovely dream. We believe that even the aims of the Labor Party of Kansas would leave a large frustrated group of citizens, as embittered as the old ladies in tennis shoes who are about to make Sen. Goldwater their standard-bearer for 1960. Apathy or Duty of Citizenship ITEM: ROCK ISLAND, Ill.—(UPI)—A man suffering from an apparent heart attack lay for two or three days on the banks of the Mississippi River in downtown Rock Island while passersby ignored his pleas for help. Before he died, he told police that several people walked by while he lay half in the water and half on the rocky shore. He cried out for help but the people walked on, he said. By Carter Van Lopik Detroit Free Press There. 28-year-old Catherine Genovese died of stab wounds while This story last week was born before it happened. It was born last March 13 about 3 a.m. on Austin Street in that section of New York's Queens known as Kew Gardens. Editor: Letters... In the editorial "Politics and Frustration" in UDK, June 30, 1644, the writer suggests "that a certain amount of frustration will always be present—and necessary — under our system of government." But how much is a "certain amount" and what kind of frustration is the writer talking about? Earlier in the article the author asks, "What could be more frustrating than the life of the economically deprived, or the socially deprived?" What indeed? But is this deprivation necessary? Given the vast productive power of modern society I say that it is not. Furthermore, I say that the government or economic system that makes such deprivation necessary should be done away with. The Socialist Labor Party, recently the victim of a smear attack by Mr. Laird M. Wilcox, editor of the Kansas Free Press, offers an alternative to the present system, one in which all the means of production, distribution and social services will be socially owned and democratically controlled and administered in the interest of all society. Rather than engage in polemics as Mr. Wilcox has done, I would suggest that everyone acquaint themselves with the program of the Socialist Labor Party. The presidential and vice-presidential candidates for the SLP, Eric Hass and Henning Blomen, respectively, will be on the ballot in Kansas this year. However, due to Kansas law permitting a political party to use a name containing only two words, one of which must be Party, the Socialist Labor Party will appear on the ballot as the Labor Party of Kansas. John E. Fowler, Secretary Kansas State Committee Labor Party of Kansas her neighbors invoked their right of non-involvement. The press has agonized editorially since this and a spate of similar incidents happened, and a state of mind known as apathy has been all but branded as a crime. In Detroit, the most heinous case was that of Mrs. Virginia Nixon, dragged between houses and raped by four youths after collapsing of a stroke in a phone booth. THE HORROR of the New York case was that not two or four persons heard her cries and saw the stabbings, but 38. The first attack, to which the attention of neighbors was drawn, came 35 minutes before the first call to police. Police Commissioner Ray Girardin "cleared" Detroiters of the charge of apathy in Mrs. Nixon's death because, he said, those who saw her fall, and the woman onto whose porch she was first taken, thought she was merely drunk Some of those who watched Miss Genovese's death struggles on a New York street thought "It was a lover's quarrel . . . and went back to bed," the New York Times reported. IT WAS NOT the murder, but the massive indifference that shocked. "Nobody can say why the 38 did not lift the phone while Miss Genovese was being attacked, since they cannot say themselves," wrote A. M. Rosenthal of the Times staff. "It can be assumed, however, that their apathy was indeed of the big city variety. It is almost a matter of psychological survival, if one is surrounded and pressed by millions of people, to prevent them from constantly impinging on you and the only way to do this is to ignore them as often as possible. Though this "big city apathy" shocks sensibilities, it is not a crime. In Michigan, a citizen is under no legal obligation to give any assistance or involve himself in any way. The body of law defends his right of reluctance. "THE SELF-PROTECTIVE shells in which we live are determined not only by the difference between big cities and small. They are determined by economics and social class, by caste and by color, by religion and by politics." But why this reluctance? Why this spate of incidents on streets and on subways in big cities? Why, as the New York police said after a recent beating case on Broadway which 50 people witnessed without doing anything, "That's about average." RECORDER'S JUDGE Frank G. Schemanske, who frequently uses bench warrants to get the reluctant on the witness stand, says people are simply afraid. - Afraid of the police. - Afraid of reprisals. "So far as street incidents go, people are very much aware through publicity that many carry knives and other weapons." Judge Schemanske said. "They don't want to be cut or hurt; they'd rather look the other way." Nor do they want to be involved with the police. The Times, after interviewing as many of the 38 witnesses to Miss Genovese's death as it could locate, said not one refused to act because he had had an unpleasant experience with the police. But they are aware that statements must be taken, appearances made in court, time lost from jobs. "THERE IS ALSO an element of risk," said Circuit Judge Benjamin D. Burdick. "Everybody can be a police officer. He has the right to make an arrest, and to use all necessary force. But what if you're wrong. You're taking action on what you see visibly. You have no time or opportunity to diagnose the situation. "That's one of the penalties you have to pay for being a citizen in a democracy such as this. This is the chance a responsible citizen has to take. "You have to think about it in these terms. If you become involved with the police or the courts as a result, you must remember that the accused man is entitled to his day in court." "But there is a common law where you, as a human being, come to the assistance of another human being," he said. WHAT IF YOU, intervening, use more than the "necessary" amount of force, and the culprit is killed or maimed as a result? Here, too, there is an element of risk. "You can be exonerated for doing an act of mercy," he said eliminate (Continued on page 3) Summer Session Kansan Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646, newsroom 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS THE PRAIRIE, by James Fenimore Cooper (Signet Classics, 60 cents). Though it appeared early among the Leatherstocking tales, "The Prairie" is chronologically the closing volume, and one which each year assumes more importance among American novels. In this one we find old Natty Bumppo on the American plains, Daniel Boone-like making the move westward. He comes into conflict with a party of emigrants led by Ishamael Bush, who represents to Cooper all the ugliness of civilization as eminently as Natty Bumppo represents the graces and beauty of nature. American literature folks put this one high on the list. To some readers it will seem old-fashioned and improbable, but in its symbolism it stands at the top of the five Leatherstocking tales. * * * THE MAJOR PLAYS, by Anton Chekhov (Signet Classics, 60 cents). Now comes another collection of Chekhov, and it is a real bargain that the reader gets in this one. The plays are "Ivanov," "The Sea Gull," "Uncle Vanya," "The Three Sisters" and "The Cherry Orchard." Some of these are among the most influential plays in the modern theater. Chekhov was a master of the tragic situation, told in such low-keyed drama that it almost seems plotless. *** THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA, by Shakespeare (Signet Classics, 50 cents)—This is a new edition in the Signet Classic Shakespeare series, with an introduction by Bertrand Evans of the University of California. There are commentaries by Samuel Johnson, Shaw, Mark Van Doren and others, and there is an extensive bibliography. Such an edition should prove of special service to students of Shakespeare. * * * More than most of Mark Twain's novels this one should be regarded as a children's book. It is a delightfully improbable tale, and except for some pretty brutal views of Merrie Olde England it should not offer nightmares to the small ones. THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER, by Mark Twain (Signet Classics, 50 cents). In case you don't know the story, it's about Tom Canty, slum boy, who trades places with Edward Tudor, heir to the throne of England. Kenneth S. Lynn gives us an afterword, in an effort to make this sound as important as "Huckleberry Finn," but, let's face it, Lynn or no, it just isn't. ** ** ** THE LAND GOD GAVE TO CAIN, by Hammond Innes (Dell, 50 cents). Here is an exciting adventure story set in the Far North. Hammond Innes, who wrote the popular "Wreck of the Mary Deare," made two trips to Labrador, and from these was inspired to write this novel. Basically entertainment, this book makes no pretensions to literary excellence, but it will be good summer reading for many. * * * CENTRAL PASSAGE, by Lawrence Schoonover (Dell, 50 cents). Here is a science fiction tale that is a little more than that, dealing with two people destined to destroy the whole human race. Schoonover's people are like those in some other recent science fiction tales endowed with super-intelligence but too smart, you might say, to live. * * * BOULE DE SUIF, AND SELECTED STORIES, by Guy de Maupassant (Signet Classics. 50 cents). Students of the short story place de Maupassant at the top of the list of significant pioneers in that form. Here is a new translation of de Maupassant's "Boule de Suif and Other Stories," by Andrew MacAndrew, whose name has been represented on many recent paperback volumes. De Maupassant was a master of realism and economy of style. His stories take place in most French settings, and characters are broad. The point of view frequently is savage and shocking to the reader who expects light entertainment. "Boule de Suif" was published in 1880 and helped to make de Maupassant's reputation. * * * One of the towering works of 18th century literature is this picaresque novel by Smollett. This is the story of the career of Roderick Random, who journeys through the lusty century and meets up with sailors, soldiers, ladies and prostitutes. The stage, as in other great works of the century, is broad—from Glasgow to Guinea, from Paris to Paraguay. RODERICK RANDOM, by Tobias Smollett (Signet Classics, 75 cents). "Roderick Random" also is regarded as one of the first great works of the sea. Its characters, like those in "Tom Jones," are quite different from those which came along in the more efface 19th century. The book was written when Smollett was only 26. AN OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS, by Joseph Conrad (Signet Classics, 50 cents). A slighter tale than many he wrote is this story of tropical river and jungle by the master of realistic mood. Conrad here depicts the gradual degeneration of Willems, his progression through treachery to self-betrayal. Like "Lord Jim" and "Victory," this book describes civilized man in a primitive setting and provides deep psychological insights into the condition of man. Tuesday, July 14, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 re and it slum face of it to face amare," write tenen for nts). aling noon- tales say, (Continued from page 2) upas- op of lation drew ecent style. Are are to the ke de cs, 75 Apathy- s this Rod-meets other , from (Continued from page 2) the possibility of a civil suit for damages. "You can always be sued, but that does not mean that you will lose. The common law would mitigate the lawsuit circumstances." great quite cen- Signet I river acts the achery ed man uts into NOR WOULD the holder be considered a bad risk as a result of getting involved. Companies seem to operate on the theory that someone who does get involved could well be coming to the aid of a policy-holder. ANOTHER EXCUSE frequently given is the financial stake of involvement. Aside from the loss of time and a possible doctor's bill, some people have said they feared what their insurance companies would do. If they "stuck their noses in other people's business," would the insurance company cancel their policy? "Don't generalize," warns Dr. John M. Dorssey, a psychiatrist at Wayne State University. But most people don't think in these terms. They seem to react instinctively, and are instinctively reluctant to get involved. "The same people at a different time wouldn't react the same way, and you can't assume a general response. The background or experience for each makes the reaction of each. "SIGHT IS involvement. Then the question is what the individual can do to help himself in a given situation. Why is he already overwhelmed?" Not a chance, says Edward Toti of the Equitable Life Assurance Society. Under the law, a contract is a contract. If it is a life insurance policy, "once the contract has been issued and the two-year contestable period over, it cannot be canceled for anything but fraud so long as the premiums are paid." A disability income or a major medical policy cannot be canceled, he said, for any reason other than failure to meet the premiums. Some would be physically sick at being involved with violence, some would faint, some with ungovernable tempers have to avoid such conflict. Dorsey noted. "All of man's inhumanity to man is traceable to our mental immaturity and illness," he said. "Both conditions are characterized essentially by the common shortcoming: inaccurate comprehension of the meaning of the individual human being." "TO DEVOTE our attention 'to anyone' or 'to anything' is to demonstrate our caring in terms of it by representing it in terms of our own life," he said. "Our observation of what is advantageous and disadvantageous to us is instinctive, as pain is, as pleasure is. We do not get side-tracked as to what helps and hurts. We do get side-tracked as to who we are." The law of self-preservation, said Dorsey, is the manifestation of self love, and because for every individual it includes all other life claims, it is rightly called the first law of nature. "This is one of the penalties you have to pay for our society." BUT THERE is a limit, Deputy Police Superintendent James Lunton said. It is not the police's idea that people should grab clubs and rush in to defend honor, break up a street fight, or stop an armed robbery. The citizen should do what he obviously can do, but no more. What he can do depends on the circumstances. At the least, Lupton said, the police ask for just one step above apathy—a phone call. Had someone called the police, Mrs. Nixon might have died anyway, but she would not have been raped. Kitty Genovese, stabbed for 35 minutes, most likely would have lived. "We are our brother's keeper," said Judge Burdick. THE VERY knowledge that big city apathy exists gives a criminal daring that he would not otherwise have. He is impervious to the law because the law will not be called. In normal circumstances, Lupton said, police can be on a scene within three minutes. "We don't expect people to go into combat. But we have to rely on the public. There are more of them than there are of us." KU Marketing Institute Hosts 130 Life Insurance Men The 18th annual Life Insurance Marketing Institute is meeting on the KU campus this week to provide further instruction and to create a willingness in insurance salesmen to call on people. "How to Call on People Who Don't Want to See You" is the theme of the institute, which is presented in cooperation with the Life Insurance Marketing Institute of Purdue University. The Purdue staff again will moderate the Kansas Institute. Staff members are Hal L. Nutt, Phillip L. Sherrier, and Thomas W. Underhill. About 130 persons have taken the courses. The basic course is for those who have never before attended a Life Insurance Marketing Institute here, for those in the business two months to 20 years who seek improvement in selling skills, and for those progressive men who can be inspired to work in more productive ways. The advanced course is for salesmen that have had at least two years' experience and especially for those who have attended previous institutes at KU. This course is mandatory for men in management who want a new concept of selling to be used in sales leadership. Salesmen will have opportunities to exchange ideas and to pick up tips and techniques of invaluable aid in future work. After the week's session is over, a 10-weeks' reporting program will begin. Maximum profit can be assured only if there is some follow-through supervision; therefore, weekly reports on forms will be mailed to the Life Insurance Marketing Institute at Purdue University for group analysis and comment. This reporting program includes a weekly sales bulletin showing the leaders in each class and, finally, a comparison with production prior to the course. A banquet for conferees and guests will be held Thursday. Other evenings each class will be assigned special projects coordinated with the day's discussion. diebolt's men's – summer clearance starts Thursday at 9:00 a.m. straw hats – 50% off! One Group slacks – 50% off! One Group suits and sport coats 50% off! suits – were now $39.95 $30 $50 $38 $55 $41 $60 $45 $65 $49 $69.95 $53 sport coats – were now $19.95 $15 $25 $19 $30 $23 $35 $27 $37.50 $29 $40 $31 $45 $34 sport shirts – entire stock 25% off! dress slacks – 25% off! Sorry! no refunds, layaways, approvals or exchanges. small alteration charge. diebolt's 843 Mass. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1964 HOTEL GOLDWATER HQ "Well, That About Sews It Up—Now, Let's Get On To The Convention" Europeans Visit Drama Groups Two actors from Yugoslavia visited the KU theater last week and a pair of directors from Poland will arrive Wednesday for a two-week visit. Mr. and Mrs. Mladja Vesselinovic of the Yugoslavia Drama Theater in Belgrade were here Saturday through Monday and spoke to several theater classes. Conference to which KU will be host. Jan Wilkowski and Adam Killian of the Lakka Children's Theater in Warsaw, Poland, will arrive Wednesday for a two-week stay. They also will return Aug. 18-22 to the Children's Theater Workshop and the National Children's Theater Dr. and Mrs. Lewin A. Goff of the KU drama faculty visited the Vesselnovics when they last were in Europe. The latter also were hosts this spring to the 7-student international theater demonstration team from KU. They are in the United States with a Yugoslav theater group that came to the New York World's Fair. The Poles had contacts with the KU demonstration team and with Jed Davis, children's theater director, who was with the team. Get Down To The BARE FACTS! G Get Down To The BARE FACTS! Try the Big Gallon Drive up to the bright red premium pump and fill up with the famous "Big Gallon" FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything We cash your checks — mail your letters — invite your account ATM FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE △ CITIES SERVICE 'Moon Shooting' Interests Choir By Emery Goad and Dan Austin (Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles about the KU Brass Choir's recent tour of the Far East.) VIENTIANE, Laos—When there is a full moon in this capital city of Laos, it is best to stay inside. The reason for such precaution is not menacing guerrillas but local residents shooting at the moon. Kansas Teachers At KU Workshop Moon shooting was one of the many different Laotian customs noticed by Brass Choir members in their four-day concert tour of Laos, the diplomatic hang-nail of our State Department. The Core Teachers Workshop, which has been meeting here since June 22, will end Friday. The workshop is good for four hours of graduate work in education. in Vientiane, they were not able to talk with natives or local students. They did say, though, that the concert audiences were very enthusiastic about their performances. BECAUSE TRAVEL is limited for all Americans in Laos to a 10-mile radius of Vientiane, choir members were able to see a lot of the city. One thing they saw was the construction of a replica of the famous Arc de Triomphe in the downtown area. The Laotians, who have a French heritage, are striving to bring culture to their capital. In the hot, unpaved streets of Vientiane, soldiers, armed with automatic weapons and light artillery, marched day and night. Also, bicycles were the only transportation that choir members could see in use when they toured two of the city's open markets. Mike Berger, a choir member, remembered that, to him, the open markets seemed to be a "big rummage sale." The next stop for the Brass Choir was Malaysia, about which the KU students will relate their observations and experiences in the next article. WHILE IN VIENTIANE, the choir gave three public concerts to about 5,000 people. The turnout at the Laotian concerts was poor compared to previous stops, but at the last public concert Prince Souvanna Phouma, Laotian leader, appeared to hear the group. The choir also gave a private concert in the luxurious back yard of U.S. Ambassador Unger for American Foreign Service personnel. Laos has the largest number of American diplomats in Southeast Asia. ACCOMMODATIONS for the group were exceptionally good, because they stayed in the homes of American embassy staff members. After spending the last month in native quarters on Ceylon and Okinawa the KU students welcomed the comfortable change. Because the group was closely supervised by their sponsors and hosts Most of the 36 teachers enrolled in the course were from this area. The Lyman school district and the Washburn rural school district in Topeka, two junior high schools in the Turner school district near Kansas City, and Lawrence school teachers attended. The workshop, established to help teachers who teach classes combining two or more subjects in junior high, allows teachers to work on a plan for core teaching during the next school year. --the sale you have waited for ladies' - summer clearance 25% OFF! sale includes: dresses shorts skirts shifts coordinates slacks knit shirts blouses beach coats The Alley Shop The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass. F F diebolt's Tuesday, July 14, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Pay Family Finance Workshop Ends Friday on Campus The second annual Education in Family Finance Workshop, dealing with ways in which educators can help prepare young people to adequately manage their financial resources in adult life, will end Friday. It started June 22. Participants have developed an understanding of facts and concepts of family finance, have produced materials and teaching plans suitable for use in local school situations and HOUSTON —(UPI)— American space hero John Glenn, steadily winning a four-month fight to get his feet back on the ground, is thinking about going to work—at least on a part-time basis. "A part-time job at MSC—that probably would be the first step," said the freckle-faced astronaut who, slightly more than two years ago, rode a bell-shaped Mercury capsule three times around the world and into the history books as the nation's first orbiting space man. John Glenn Job-Hunting The question is, when, where, and with whom. Glenn is still recuperating at his Seabrook, Tex., home from the bathroom fall that damaged his sense of balance and coordination and ended his bid for a U.S. Senate seat from his native Ohio last February. The 43-year-old space veteran can again walk straight and steady and is now "getting around pretty good." He is still awaiting the all-clear sign from his doctors, but that could come before the end of the year. Meanwhile, he told United Press International, he is looking into a number of job possibilities. Returning to the Space Agency, probably in the capacity as an adviser or consultant, is one that seems to interest him considerably. have gained leadership skills needed to improve and to expand present programs of family-finance education. Students completing the workshop are able to earn four semester hours of credit. Scholarships were awarded so that the only cost to the participants were for food and for personal expense. Each morning was devoted to lectures and audio-visual presentations In the afternoons, participants worked on individual and group work on curriculum projects. The workshop, which is being held in Joseph R. Pearson Hall, has had numerous specialists in education and business as discussion leaders and consultants in their areas of competence. Newcomers to the consumer credit industry are offered an opportunity to become "professionals," and veterans in the business are challenged to improve their management skills at the 15th Annual Credit Bureau and Collection Service Management Institute which will end Friday. Credit Bureau Session Is Held The institute provides economical instruction designed especially for the credit bureau or collection service manager, thereby enabling him to give more effective service and to raise his professional status. Participants receive specialized training in courses of study taught by University faculty members and experienced industry instructors. This year a post-graduate course was added to the regular four-year program of past years. Although a certificate of graduation is given after the completion of the fourth year with a minimum of 100 hours of class work, this is not an accredited college course. The commencement banquet will be held Friday. Microbiology Professor Learns Caffeine Is Dangerous-Especially for Bacteria Coffee drinking a dangerous habit? Indeed, for certain bacteria. When some of these microscopic organisms are exposed to small doses of radiation and then consume caffeine, they do so only at a risk, Delbert M. Shankel, KU associate professor of microbiology, has discovered. SUCH CHANGES, called mutations, may be either good or bad for the bacteria. They may either prolong or cut short the life of the cell. Caffeine, the coffee ingredient that perks up humans and even keeps them awake, does stranger things to bacteria that have been exposed to nonlethal amounts of ultraviolet rays. With the stimulant, the bacteria are induced to change their basic genetic make-up at a rate 10 times faster than without the stimulant. Shankel, however, is not interested primarily in the kinds of changes that result. What he is seeking is an understanding of the way genetic changes occur. He is conducting his experiments on bacterial cells, since they behave similarly to other cells. In human beings and other organisms, genetic changes take place in the primary matter in the cell that controls heredity. Shankel explained. This material is known by its abbreviated name, DNA, which stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. SHANKEL SAID he is giving caffeine to radiation-exposed bacterial cells, because the chemical make-up of the molecule of caffeine resembles that of parts of the DNA molecule. He also is studying similar molecules found in high concentrations in tea and cocoa. The study was begun in hopes of finding some chemical that might inhibit genetic changes. This is important for human beings, since many diseases in man appear to be genetically caused or hereditary in nature, he said. But so far, the chemicals Shankel has been feeding the bacteria do just the opposite of inhibiting mutations. SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Dancing We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? ACROSS FROM HILLCREST DANCE I For Finest Quality, Always Visit Lawrence Launderers and Dry Cleaners Your summer cottons should be dry cleaned to preserve and protect their delicate colors and fabrics; our service is known for its thorough cleaning and its fine care. For Fast, Free Call VI3-3711 Pick-up & Delivery LAWRENCE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. - VI 3-371 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1964 NSF Science Grants Excite Sociology, Anthropology Bv Karen Haney Exploration and research endeavors are being spurred on campuses by National Science Foundation Grants. One of the several NFS-supported projects at KU is the undergraduate research participation program in anthropology and sociology. The KU program received a grant of $24,500 from the National Science Foundation April 8. The project will terminate May 31, 1966. Its director is James Clifton, assistant professor of anthropology. This Negro Has Direct Interest In Segregation By Tom Coffman The successful young businessman -Lugene Jasper, age 25. A Negro,Jasper has a direct financial interest in segregation. On the side, he invests himself in the Negro movement. Three years ago he was graduated from college. Three years ago he laid out a five-year plan to be making $50,000 annually. So far, he's running ahead of schedule. Each year his income has tripled. Jasper is a photographer. He has a studio above Doe Bagsby's drug store, which sits on the railroad tracks in the downtown Negro district of Pine Bluff. Ark. JASPER DOES portraits, but the bulk of his work is with school kids—class pictures, identification cards, yearbooks. With the integration of Arkansas schools, much of his work could dry up. Several schools in northeast Arkansas, for instance, have gone together in a plan to take bids on a $60,000 photography contract. If Jasper gets it, he believes he will keep up with his five-year financial ambitions. The problem is that the schools he is attempting to negotiate with are no longer all Negro. It is a strike against him in getting the contract and he talks now of finding a white photographer to hire as an assistant. In spite of this worry, he works indirectly in the Negro movement. When demonstrators are in jail he goes in with friends to find them a lawyer and go their bail, which is often fantastically high. He talks with the movement people, sometimes feeds them—either just to be sociable or because he knows they are hungry. AT 25 HE IS comfortable and confident, already identified with success as Americans usually think of it. Jasper has a pretty wife and two children. He drives a blue Thunderbird and lives in an air-conditioned house with hardwood floors. At home he listens to the hi-fi set for relaxation—Percy Faith, Harry Belfalo, the Norman Luboff Choir, and for flavor a country westerner, Marty Robbins. He is short and squarely built, a sharp dresser. His skin is light, and if the sociologists are correct, this gives him an added prestige in the Negro community. WHEN FRIENDS are in he is breezy and entertaining and tells jokes like a natural; he can pull out the drabbest old stand-by stories and get a roar. He tells one on his friend Claude King, a high school teacher, then the cigar-puffing Doc Bagsby, then on to Mildred Jones about the time she was in jail for demonstrating in the streets. For diversion he goes to Grice's—the town's best Negro club—and sips Champale at 50 cents a bottle. Unlike many Negroes, he does not doubt himself or his ability. He does not pander to the white man for a living, and he can laugh at the attempts of the majority race to segregate him and his family, to make them untouchable. The schools are integrating, slowly but inevitably. He worries a little, but not often. He's busy planning. Next year he plans to enter the ice cream business, and he's looking for a white photographer to work for him. SIX STUDENTS are involved in the summer phase of this project. Their investigations into scientific problems take some only as far as KU laboratories, while others are led to remote places in such distant areas as Iran. One of the participants whose research has taken him into the field is Gary Gossen, Wichita senior, who is aiding Robert M. Squier, assistant professor of anthropology, in an archeological survey near Vera Cruz, Mexico. They are searching for specimens and information pertaining to the pre-history of the Olmec culture. This is a continuation of prior work done by Prof Squier. It is hoped that the answers to many questions concerning the development of this culture may be concluded. WHEN ARTIFACTS are uncovered they are sent back to the University, where they receive further attention from another NSF grant participant, Bobby M. Gilbert, Lawrence senior. Gilbert is also doing research work under William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology. In this portion of his program he is determining the age, race and sex of skeletal material found in Illinois by the Skelly Oil Co. This is accomplished primarily through knowledge of the structure of peoples of different races and the development of bones at different age levels. In the division of sociology Janice L. Jones, Kabul, Afghanistan, senior, is working on a study of comparative organizations. This involves the collection of systematic comparative data on large number groups and associations. INTERVIEWS are conducted with various people affiliated with organizations within communities, and information is collected relating to the problems of leadership continuity, forms of leadership, and activities in different kinds of groups. The data are then compiled and analyzed. Several years ago excavations were started at a mound in Hasanlu, Iran, by the University of Pennsylvania. This mound consists of ancient cities which were built on the ruins of others combined with the refuse of their inhabitants. In a building which had been destroyed during an invasion of one of these cities was found an elaborate gold bowl and beside it the skeletons of two men. It has not been determined whether the men were invaders trying to steal the bowl or townspeople attempting to save it. Prof. Bass and research participant Ted Rathbun, Lorraine senior, are in Hasanlu hoping to obtain skeletons from the grave sites of the townspeople so that the racial type of the persons living in the area can be established. Once this is done the origin of the two men beside the bowl can be concluded by comparison. BILLIE ANN Searcy, Cupertino, Calif., junior, another member of the NSF program, is assisting Clifton in a study of the sociat structure of the Potawatomi Indians near Holton, Kan. This study involves the collection of information regarding the attitudes of different people of different personalities and backgrounds toward sex. This material is then fed into programming machines and then transferred to graphs and charts for analysis. An investigation into the attitudes of different people toward different codes of sex ethics and sex practices is being conducted by Lawrence Bee. professor of sociology and home economics. Assisting him in his research is Marcilee Wilson Bierlein, recently graduated. They are living among the tribe, participating in the Indians' social life, and observing their religious practices. These people live much as small farmers, but their social structure still retains much of the original Indian system of values. KU Graduate Works For Maytag Company NEWTON. Iowa-Larry Hickman, KU graduate, has joined the Maytag Company as a market analyst in the market research department. Kade Grant Draws German Professor Material for neither a quiz program nor a mystery, the question nevertheless fascinates many persons at KU because Max Kade, through the Max Kade Foundation, will provide more than $4,000 next year to help bring to KU a distinguished visiting professor in German. Who is Max Kade? The grant will be added to the regular salary of a professor and make possible the presence of an outstanding German scholar on the KU campus for a year or a semester. Kade (pronounced Kah-day, in the German fashion), the founder and president of the Max Kade Foundation, Inc., came to this country in 1905 at the age of 22 as an immigrant from Germany. But he was no ordinary immigrant, and his success story was not typical Horatio Alger material. tion in the German "gymnasium" at his birthplace in Hall, Wuertemberg, and apprenticeship in his father's machinery and structural steel business there. These personal qualifications and a valuable German formula for relieving coughs, which was acquired later by Mr. Kade, provided the basis for the business he started in 1911, and the cough remedy, "Pertussin," became the foundation of a flourishing pharmaceutical company, Seeck & Kade, Inc. HE ARRIVED in New York with two major assets: a classical educa- In 1944 Mr. Kade and his wife established the Max Kade Foundation as the culmination of his program to serve humanity by encouraging the mutual exchange of knowledge across national boundaries and by promoting better relations between the people of Central Europe and the United States. At the age of 75, still youthful and energetic, he retired, donated his company to the foundation, and turned his full attention SUA's Silent Film Series presents— triple treat! ● ELMO LINCOLN — the original Tarzan — in "TARZAN OF THE APES" ● LAUREL & HARDY'S "FLYING ELEPHANTS" ● CHARLIE CHAPLIN in "PREHISTORIC PAST" Thurs., 7 p.m. - July 16 FORUM RM. 50c --- 50c from business to philanthropy. One of the foundation's major concerns has been the encouragement of university residence halls for students in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. A provision reserving a preference of quarters for U.S. students is part of every grant for such dormitories. Funniest story ever put Between covers! NOW! 2:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 Funniest story ever put Between covers! Marlon David Brando Niven Shirley Jones "Bedtime Story" in Eastman COLOR Granada TREATHE...Milton W.3-61 NOW! 2:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 Funniest story ever put Between covers! Marlon David Brando * Niven Shirley Jones "Bedtime Story" in Eastman COLOR Granada THEATRE • Telephone NO. 3-6500 Next — Walt Disney's "THE MOON-SPINNERS" Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Northway 90 Starts TONITE! Academy Award Winner! BEST PICTURE! "LAWRENCE of ARABIA" Extra! 4 Road Runner Cartoons Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 Starts TONITE! Academy Award Winner! BEST PICTURE! "LAWRENCE of ARABIA" Extra! 4 Road Runner Cartoons Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in HILLCREST BOWL HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Streets ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER Page 7 Newsman John Daly's Way of Living Suits His Heart of New York Address By Vernon Scott UPI Hollywood Correspondent NEW YORK—(UPI)—John Daly, debonair interlocutor of the ancient "What's My Line" panel show, is so downright urbane he'd be out of place anywhere but in the heart of New York City. Happily, that's precisely where he lives. His address is fashionable Gracie Square, right on the East River and a stone's throw from Mayor Wagner's mansion. Living on the river has proved a mixed blessing to the sophisticated Daly. Sand and gravel barges and 20,000-ton oil tankers ply by the windows of his duplex, creating exciting images during the day. But at night when they blast their bullhorns going through Hell Gate he jumps six feet, straight up. DALY AND his wife, Virginia — daughter of Chief Justice Earl Warren — have lived in the 11-room, 4-bath house for almost a year. The premises are shared by a pair of Daly toddlers, John Warren, $17\frac{1}{2}$ months, and Jamie, 7 months. They are taken almost daily to a park that surrounds the Mayor's mansion for fresh air and sunshine—and, doubtless, to escape the bullhorns. The house itself is one of New York's ancients. In addition to the bedrooms, dining room, kitchen and other standard rooms, Daly has a paneled den-office crowded with books and memorabilia. Because he does much of his writing and correspondence at home, Daly spends a great deal of time in this room. An inspection of his books reveals a strong preference for biography and history. DALY'S TELEVISION activities are limited to CBS-TV's "What's My Line," a relaxing schedule compared to the old days when he also headed ABC-TV's news department and did a daily Daly news display. Still, he has an office. It's located in the Plaza Hotel, more than 30 long blocks from his home. But Daly, who gets little exercise, tries to walk it as often as possible. It takes him about 40 minutes, which is a fast pace even for New York walkers. Daly's penchant for shanks mare transport makes his ownership of a 1957 Lincoln sedan a luxury. "It its in the garage most of the time," he admits with that famed grin. "I have no business owning a car, but I haven't the heart to get rid of it." Because he believes it's unfair to keep a dog in the city the Dalys do not have any pets. THEIR BUSTLING household is managed by a housekeeper-cook and a nurse for the babies. Daly says Virginia is an excellent cook who prepares occasional meals with her husband's trick stomach in mind. He prefers plain food and has a real leaning to calves' liver and bacon. "We go out too often to official functions where the food is not too good," he says. "When we dine out we like Toots Shor's steaks and chicken pot pie." Daly continues to consider himself a newsman; therefore most of his friends are in the news business. Few are show business personalities, saving, of course, panelists Arlene Francis, Bennett Cerf, and Dorothy Kilgallen, who have become fast friends in the 15 years they've been on the air together. When entertaining at home—about once a month—the Dalys pile things up and throw a wingding buffet for 35 or 40 acquaintances. Summer Session Kansan OUR DANIELLE Barefoot sandals NOW REDUCED TO CLEAR!! A wide range of colors and styles to choose from Slipper 1 Were $5 to $9 Now $3^{90} to $6^{90} 813 Mass. McCoy's SHOES McCoy's VI 3-2091 Tuesday, July 14, 1964 CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Experienced typist would like to 3-5189. tf typing in her home. Call VI 3-5189. Experienced typist. Former secretary will assess paperwork. Requires accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McMeldoney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 8368. Accurate expert typist would in her service. Call VI 3-2661. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2661. Accurate expert typist would like typing the prompt, Call VI 3-286 and the thesis. Prompt service. Call VI 3-286. Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any kind—Very reasonable for general office duties, such as Mrs. Robt.) V1-3-7493 after 5:00. Ttypist experienced with term papers, thesis and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric devices with special symbols. Mrs. Marlene Higley . . . 408 West 13th . . . 1T 3-6048 Expert typing on thesis, dissertation and term papers. Electric typewriter. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Mrs. Mishler at VI 3-1029. 7-17 FOR RENT One bedroom, private $ \frac{1}{4} $ bath with shower. Private kitchen available. Call 3 I-2402 or see at 516 Louisiana from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. 7-24 Very nice apartment for 2 men. Fall semester. Private entrance. Walking distance to campus. See at 1102 West 19th Terrace. Close to campus, very nice air-condition- ion. Available office at 2116 or inquire at office -1123 Indiana. tf Extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable apartment to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Washer waser. For appointment VI 3-8354. Two bedroom duplex-Stove and refrigerator with except eleptriity trifamily -VI 3-2281 BUSINESS DIRECTORY NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 RISK'S Wash & Fluff Dry Shirt Finishing Laundry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 Recording Service and Party Music GB tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 9 W 19th St VI 2-3 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 HOT RODDERS! 1940 Ford Coupe—Stock. —Body fair—Call Jim at VI 2-9263 or see at 1133 Rhode Island. *7-17* $60,00 monthly and $1,000 down buys nicely landscaped 3 bedroom home with glass enclosed shower-bath, refrigerator and stove. Call VI 2-1353. **7-24** FOR SALE Economy minded, 1952 Rambler 2-dr. extra clean, std. trans., with Oydrive- ing, good fuel efficiency. Good transportation. Benson's Auto Sales, 1952 Harper, VI 3-1626. 7-17 Two Spiral notebooks and reading cards. In to room 116 Bailey 7-14 for reward. Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electronics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St., VI I 3-3644. tf Cute Kittens. Free to good home. Three male and one female. Six weeks, weaned. Also Polaroid camera with some accessory. 45 Baby Carriage. $7.50. #3-8352. T-7-21 Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of books on New York Reference Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. Fraternity Jewelry Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER MISCELLANEOUS day. Have you tried the Hillcrest Bowl? Restaurant? Always good food at reasonable prices . . . 9th and Iowa. 7-24 Hillerest Bowl maintains the finest lanes in Kansas. All time high scores rolled on our lanes last year in Kansas State Men's Tournament and in 1963 American Legion Tournament. Come in for a FREE line before 6 p.m., or after 9 p.m., any GERMAN MAJOR WILL tutor students of German for 15 hours. VI-3 after 1 a.m. for appointment. 7-14 GRANT'S DRIVE-1 Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 218 Conn. VI 3-29 Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking REAL PET GRANT'S DRIVE-IN STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP .right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 14, 1964 VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY And DRY CLEANERS We feature fine service and best results from our downtown plant at 740 Vermont. Extra care is given to every garment to assure your complete satisfaction. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY And DRY CLEANERS The Independent Drive-in center, located on the corner of 9th & Mississippi, features the finest washing & dry cleaning self-service equipment and a convenient station for professional dry cleaning pick-up and delivery. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY And DRY CLEANERS All in all, the Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners feature complete service — either professionally done or self-service. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today. Independent Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi Summer Session Kansan Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 17, 1964 52nd Year, No. 12 Minutemen Defend Stand Rap KU Man By Dan Austin Robert DePugh, the leader of a right wing militant group called the Minutemen, believes his cause, that of combating Communists is a righteous and successful one. Wilcox was quoted as saying in the Post-Dispatch article that he was not surprised by DePugh's statements but "I feel that it is only a matter of time before it becomes apparent to their (DePugh's) mislead supporters that they are not truly patriotic..." "THE BOYS KEEP ME advised on Laird's actions from time to time," he said. In a telephone interview, this reporter asked DePugh about his accusation in a St. Louis Post-Dispatch article that Laird Wilcox, 1963-1964 chairman of the KU Minority Opinions Forum, was a "professional . . leftist agitator." DePugh said he had seen Wilcox before but that most of his information came from student Minutemen on the KU campus. "WE HAVE MEMBERS in Washburn University in Topeka, in Kansas State at Manhattan and in some of the teachers' colleges. We are . . strongest in Lawrence." DePugh said. The Minutemen, organized by private citizens in 1959 to combat any Communist take-over of the U.S. with force, is, according to DePugh, growing stronger — especially on Kansas college campuses. This summer about 100 college students are being trained by Minutemen in "Americanism and tactics of the ultra-liberals." Last year, only 15 collegians attended the training camp. DePugh, who is a manufacturer of pharmaceuticals in Norborne, Mo., says he is not a member of the John Birch Society. "We often find that where the Birch Society is strong, we are weak, and vice versa. Actually we only would want about five per cent of the so-called conservative element in our organization." ACCORDING TO DEPUGH, the Minutemen do not accept "just anybody." Students in training this summer have had at least one year of college and maintain a "B" average. Often they are the sons and daughters of regular Minutemen. Minutemen have placed the number of members as more than 25,000. However, in 1962 federal officials, who keep tabs on such groups, reported that the Minutemen probably number around 2,000. When asked why the Minutemen keep such a cloak of secrecy around their organization, DePugh answered. "We are 'underground' just like the Communist Party because you have to fight fire with fire. In the Communist Party, though, the only way you can get out is 'dead.' Our organization is a very independent one based on the individual." DePugh also said the Minutemen are very weak in Wichita, the center of Birch activities. "The object of this program is to acquaint the students with the way Communist sympathizers spread their doctrine . . . it is part of the softening-up process used on unaware students by the Communists," he said. Students Tour Cuba AS TO THE RECENT interest De-Pugh feels students have in the Minuteumen, he stated, "Liberalism is old hat . . . it is the philosophy of old people. Students now tend to rebel and be more conservative . . . they are politically aware." HAVANA —(UPI)— A group of American students who defied State Department orders and came to this country at Fidel Castro's invitation toured Camaguey Province this week. Triumphant Goldwater Chooses Rep. Miller as '64 Running Mate 101 "PUT ON A HAPPY FACE"—Running through a scene during rehearsals for their production of "Bye Bye Birdie," students in the Drama Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are shown above. 'Bye Bye Birdie' Last Play In Summer Side Door '64 The musical "Bye Bye Birdie" will be presented by the Drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp July 20-24, to conclude the summer season Side Door '64 series. ACTING COACHES are Dennis Dalen, Lawrence graduate student, and Stouffer graduate student Vincent Angotti. S. Helene Scheff, a local dance instructor, is choreographer for the production. A cast of approximately 50 campers will stage "Birdie" in the round in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall, presenting a matinee at 3 p.m. every day as well as the evening performances at 8:15. Directing the two-act comedy is Jed Davis of the theatre department, assisted by Hoite Caston. Independence graduate student who is stage manager and assistant director. Davis selected the play for presentation by the students because he sees it as "an ideal vehicle for teenage talent." Critics of the New York show agreed that its impact did not demand polished professional treatment. The Michael Stewart-Charles Strouse-Lee Adams musical comedy, which played 607 smash performances on Broadway in 1960 and 1961, also was acclaimed "the best film musical of the year" in 1963. THE STORY of a Presley-like image, characterized in Conrad Birdie—who is constantly hounded by the female teen-age population of Ameri- ica who are after his "One Last Kiss"—is complicated by the nominal plot which involves Birdie's campaign manager and his secretary. Their romance is further complicated by the manager's mother who dramatizes miserably at crucial moments. Its setting is the little Ohio town of Sweet Apple, where one particular teen-ager is particularly jubilent — despite her boyfriend — and where her father, who turns out to be very self-asserting, is both obstinate and desperate. NONE OF THIS satirical tale, which is intended to spoof the contemporary scene in a good-natured, somewhat detached, way, is omitted in this interpretation, although some of the longer solos from the original musical score have been deleted. The off-again, on-again plot culminates in a satisfactory situation where both boys keep both girls, Birdie departs after an Ed Sullivan-style farewell, and there is an opportunity for everyone to relax for the first time. Tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall box office at $1.50 each. There will be no reserved seats, and the capacity for each production is only approximately 300. KU students may present certificates of registration for free tickets, and students enrolled in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp may obtain tickets upon presentation of ID cards. Arizonan Vows Vigorous Fight As Party Ends Convention SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—Barry Goldwater pointed the Republican Party along a conservative road and promised a strong campaign against the Democrats with Rep. William E. Miller of New York as his vice-presidential running mate. Goldwater, 55-year-old senator from Arizona, captured the GOP presidential nomination in a first-ballot victory at the party's national convention after routing his disorganized inept opposition at every turn. Miller, a tough campaigner who has been serving as Republican national chairman, responded to Gold-water's bid by saying he would be delighted to accept the No. 2 spot on the 1964 ticket. THAT MILLER was Goldwater's choice was learned unofficially Wednesday. Goldwater ed Edward K. Nellor made it official yesterday. The Republican delegates ratified their new leader's selection of his campaign partner in vice-presidential balloting at the Cow Palace last night. Goldwater meanwhile pledged himself to wage "a vigorous campaign" against President Johnson before the November election. He promised to conduct his fight for the White House on issues, not personalities, and said he expected Johnson to do the same. Gov. William W. Scranton of Pennsylvania, Goldwater's only active competitor, was waiting outside the Cow Palace for the inevitable. He took his defeat graciously, went inside to give the delegates a unity speech and pledged his support of the ticket. THE CONVENTION ended with acceptance speeches from the presidential and vice-presidential nominees. Their speeches in effect kicked off the 1964 Republican political campaign and set the tone for a true conservative vs. liberal battle in the months ahead. Miller, 50-year-old congressman from upstate New York and retiring GOP national chairman, is cut from the same conservative cloth as Gold-water. He is known as a "gut fighter" and is expected by fellow Republicans to perform in that role during the campaign. GOLDWATER'S VICTORY statement came shortly before midnight and less than an hour after he had been acclaimed winner of the nomination for which he fought doggedly since last Jan. 3 when he said the GOP should offer the voters "a choice, not an echo" in the contest against President Johnson this year. His nomination was a foregone conclusion, but his real and token opponents went through the motions of letting their names be placed before the convention during a session that lasted almost nine hours. Besides Goldwater, seven candidates were placed in nomination, but only Scranton was trying. Before the customary switching at the end of the first ballot, the vote stood: SCRANTON 214. Scattered votes went to six other candidates. SCRANTON, WAITING outside, then entered the Cow Palace and made his way to the front of the rostrum to offer a motion to make the nomination unanimous. He offered it as part of a unity speech. "The Republican Party . . . must now emphasize its unity, not its differences," he said. "We must now be about the business of defeating the Democrats. As I have always pledged to do, I shall work for and fully support the ticket chosen by this convention." Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, who fought a lonely campaign against Goldwater in the presidential primaries before giving up, also promised to support the ticket and went to Goldwater's headquarters to congratulate the nominee. Scranton arrived later to add his congratulations. OTHERS PLACED in nomination were Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of Maine, Gov. George Romney of Michigan, Sen. Hiram L. Fong of Hawaii, and former Rep. Walter Judd of Minnesota. Mrs. Smith was the first woman ever placed in nomination for the presidency at a major party convention, and Fong the first of Asiatic descent. 1234567890 Sen. Barry Goldwater COREY Z. Rep. William E. Miller Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 The Old Pro Keeps Busy All eyes of late have been turned on that dramatic GOP battle out San Francisco way. Before that, public attention was focused on the even more dramatic — and certainly more emotional — conflict over civil rights on Capitol Hill. Meanwhile, that old pro in the White House has been making political hay. Many tons of it. WE BRING the subject up with no raised eyebrows at the political activities of a President who occupies an essentially political job. Moreover, Mr. Johnson is a skillful political animal. We don't fault him for that. Nor do we intend to pass judgment either on the merits or the demerits of the various measures that have fallen, one after another, out of that Capitol Hill hay baler. Instead, we contend only that there has been nothing like it in recent history. And while Congress itself is more and more getting that glazed look of the campaigner in a campaign situation, there undoubtedly will be even more to come before the 88th Congress calls it quits. Briefly, look at some of the administration's legislative doings — remembering that some had their genesis in the Kennedy era and one or two, in fact, were passed in that desultory first session of this Congress: - THE TAX CUT that Mr. Kennedy had in the works became reality early in this session. Virtually every taxpayer at every level of income got something out of that one. Business has responded, there's no doubt about that. You can't say that there is a boom, but nevertheless — and partly because of that tax reduction — the economy seems made to order for an incumbent seeking re-election. - The tax bill was an overdue present for both the consumer and for business. For business, there had been, under President Kennedy, another break in the liberalized depreciation allowance. It, too, has had an effect on the economy. Obviously it helped put the business community in a generally happy mood. Summer Session - Nor can it be said that any federal employee will be less than happy with that pay raise bill that will affect virtually all civilian employees, including members of Congress, after the first of the year. It can be argued convincingly that this measure is overdue, and we see every justification for the increase in all Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1304, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesday and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas three branches of the government. But let's be frank about it: Such things never hurt a party in power. Mr. Johnson is aware of that, we imagine. - THEN, IN AN INHERITANCE from the Kennedy administration, this administration has seen the military enjoying the benefits of the pay increase that was effective last October. And another military pay bill has started through the works this year. Last year's action was a belated recognition of the economic plight of service people, that's for sure. However, let us be practical: Many military men do not vote, but the establishment, including dependents, children, relatives and the like, can add up to quite a few ballots. You don't hear any of the service people grousing. - Then there was the farm program that reaches heavily into the Midwest and South and into wheat and tobacco. A makeshift program, yes. But it is a program when it seemed, after the wheat referendum last year, that the wheat farmers just might be permitted to simmer in their own juice. The Johnson administration, even with a jerry-built program, has given proof that it recognizes the plight of the farmer. - SOCIAL SECURITY is a legislative topic that seems always to be brought up in an election year. This year there is a good chance for an across-the-board increase in benefits of 5 per cent. The Senate wants to include a substantial pension for large numbers of the aged not covered by social security. The pension plan is not expected to go very far. But the social security increase very probably will go as far as the President's desk, which is far enough. Again, we do not pass judgment on the merits of the increase. We merely suggest that future recipients of higher benefits may be of a mind to remember Mr. Johnson, come next November. There is nothing final yet on the President's war on poverty. It has received favorable if party-line—action in committees and undoubtedly a start will be made on this large welfare program that carries the special LBJ brand. Shades of the late Franklin D. Roosevelt. He was Mr. Johnson's political hero. But in a sense, FDR was a piker compared to Lyndon Johnson when it comes to doing something for large groups of people. Even the big cities. The Kennedy administration got a sharp setback when it proposed a department of urban ALL THIS HAS BEEN achieved even while federal spending has actually been held down. Thus the administration has made a record that must impress at least some of the economizers. Largely, economy has come through Defense Department economies. There has been some juggling of the books, we suppose, as there usually is. But it cannot account for all the millions in economies. Nor can turning out lights in the White House. But it means something when the Treasury announces, as it did the other day that it will not have to borrow as much in the next three months as it had expected. attains and the mass transit bill. Mr. Johnson signed the 375-million-dollar mass transit bill just this week. It's not the most politically exciting act in the world. But it is something for the boys in the cities to talk about in the campaign to come. It goes to show that LBJ overlooks practically no one. NOR DO WE HAVE to confine the point to domestic and economic matters. The nuclear test ban treaty, a limited first step toward control of the atom, was signed last year. In the election, the Johnson administration is bound to reap some benefit from it. And on the matter of foreign aid: In the House, the administration scored quite a victory, which might make some people say cynically that there are even constituents in Pakistan. Others would say that it is proof of the Johnson leadership in foreign policy, and that is quite a campaigning point, too. Outside the immediate context of the Capitol Hill struggle, there is the evidence of Mr. Johnson's political skill in the manner in which he has held the support (if not the deep affection) of labor and the liberals, and at the same time become something of a hero to rather large segments of the business community. HE HAS SIGNED the historic civil rights law but nevertheless remains relatively popular in the South, for, after all, LBJ too can speak in magnolia tones. But the continuing allegiance of the South (shaken here and there, to be sure) has not meant a loss of popularity in the North. In all charity, we say that few Presidents of modern times have so skillfully worked both sides of every road. No criticism is intended. Mr. Johnson has in scarcely more than six months written the record of the Johnson administration — and polished up the record of the Kennedy administration. No small achievement. All of which suggests that there may be a special interest in the outcome of the GOP platform struggle, even out of the Scranton-Goldwater contest. For it will be instructive to see how the Republicans go about assailing the administration's record as they, of course, will do. That is part of the game. And, being of a somewhat cynical turn of mind in matters political, we think it fair to outline this wide spectrum of voter groups that the old pro has been buttering up. Speaking politically—and politically only—it can all be assessed as an amazing performance by one of the masters of the business. It is not unkind to say that Lyndon B. Johnson doesn't miss many bets. GOP Usually Is First -Kansas City Times } WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Nobody knows why exactly, but it is traditional for the Republican Convention to precede the Democratic. The only exceptions were in 1888, 1956 and 1960. This year, the Democrats convene in Atlantic City, N.J., Aug. 24. The 1964 GOP conclave marked the 108th anniversary of the party's first nominating convention, held at Philadelphia in 1856. Despite that longevity, the first Democratic convention occurred 24 years earlier. BOOK REVIEWS THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM. by Nelson Algren (Crest, 75 cents). This is one of the finest American novels in the last decade or so, and many will hail its availability in paperback. It appeared first in 1949, and attained considerable notoriety, especially when it was adapted into an excellent film in 1955. "The Man with the Golden Arm" is a blunt, brutal and sensational story of dope addiction, sensational because there seems no other way to tell such a story. The hero is a young man who has become depressingly dependent on the relief from dope, and he lives in a world of gamblers, thieves and other junkies. Nelson Algen has the unique capability of telling a violent and frequently sordid story with touches of poetry. This is a better book than "A Walk on the Wild Side," and it is quite likely a modern classic. OUR MUTUAL FRIEND, by Charles Dickens (Signet Classics, 95 cents). One of the most fascinating yet frequently confusing novels Dickens wrote is this huge blockbuster of a book. Its theme is money and what money can make of life; its plot is an involved mystery about inheritance, romance and murder; its satire is of the commercial society of England. The book came late in Dickens' career, and young readers should be advised that it is heavier going than "David Copperfield" or "A Tale of Two Cities." Perhaps, for that reason, it is ultimately more rewarding. Maugham's absorbing autobiography appeared in 1938, before he had written some of his good novels. But it still can be taken for what the title suggests: a summing up of an important life. Maughan is an old man, and has not written for years, but he has brought good reading to us for many years. THE SUMMING UP, by W. Somerset Maugham (Signet Classics, 60 cents). His notable books include "Of Human Bondage" and "The Moon and Sixpence." But Maugham has been more than popular novelist: he learned how to live and to tell others how to live. His long life is the subject of this book. THE AGE OF REVOLUTION: 1789-1848, by E. J. Hobsbawm (Mentor, 95 cents). With excellent photographs that put this book in a class with cloth-bound books, E. J. Hobsbawm has framed a history that should be of enduring significance. Its scope is the French Revolution to the revolutions of 48, a time when ideologies were changing much of Europe and the Americas. Along with political revolution came the industrial revolution, which also is part of the author's theme. Hobsbawm his thesis is that the revolution he describes was the revolution of capitalist industry, of middle class society. He notes that the revolutions gave us a new vocabulary — working class, capitalism, socialism, industrialist, nationality and communism. Hobsbawm is a reader in history at Birbeck College, University of London. A MILLION YEARS OF MAN, by Richard Carrington (Mentor 75 cents). The reader gets an absorbing and edifying combination of history and anthropology in this one. Richard Carrington is a scientific fellow of the Zoological Society of London, of the Royal Anthropology Institute and the Royal Geographical Society. His concern is man, but not just man in a historical sense. Carrington goes beyond physical and biological terms in studying evolution. He includes mental and spiritual events, and divides the story into five parts: the earth's place in the universe, man's place on earth, and laws of evolution; how man-like creatures began to evolve at the dawn of the Pleistocene Age; the evolution of homo sapiens from hunter to food-gatherer; contributions of major civilizations, and speculations on the relationship of the human adventure to the whole of nature. THE AMERICAN WAY OF DEATH. by Jessica Mitford (Crest, 75 cents). "There were no flowers by request of the Kennedy family. At no point did a Cadillac hearse intrude; the coffin was transported by gun carriage. Although a bronze coffin was supplied in Dallas, according to Mortuary Management the President was actually buried in a wooden coffin, an aspect that other news media seem to have missed. The coffin was closed throughout the ceremonies... " The book is an attack on the funeral industry—directors, cemetery promoters, florists, coffin manufacturers, monument makers, vault salesmen, the works. Those who missed it in its hardcover edition should have a look now. You wave the red flag in the undertaker's face when you mention this book, one that stirred up readers in the same way as "Silent Spring," Jessica Mitford gives us a special bargain in this reprint: a discussion of the Kennedy funeral: ANTI- SUPREME COURT POLITICIANS CLERGYMEN OF ALL FAITHS TESTIFY AGAINST PROPOSED "SCHOOL PRAYER" AMENDMENT 1964 HERBLOCK "What Are You Guys----A Bunch Of Atheistic Communists Or Something?" B T M poor licit ice tour cont Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 Page 3 INTERNATIONAL KINAW WELCOME TO OKINAWA—That's the message of Miss Riko Yonahara to Kenneth Bloomquist, director, as the KU Brass Choir arrives in Naha, the first stop on its three-month goodwill tour. Mrs.Bloomquist is in the background. Brass Choir Tours Theaters, Universities Tourist Attractions, During Free Time (Editor's note: This is the fourth in a series of articles concerning the KU Brass Choir's recent tour of the Far East.) By Emery Goad and Dan Austin Malaysia — High admission prices, poor scheduling and inadequate publicity by the U.S. Information Service hampered the KU Brass Choir's tour of Malaysia, two choir members contend. Although the choir was in Kuala Lumpur, the capital of Malaysia, for a full week, they only gave two concerts. Some choir members felt that admission prices discouraged attendance by Malaysian natives. They also blamed the U.S. Information Service for poor scheduling. In countries previously visited, the choir gave as many as two concerts a day to enthusiastic local citizens. DURING THEIR FREE time, choir members were at liberty to enjoy local theatres, universities and tourist attractions. Transportation around the cities was by Mercedes-Benz taxis. Since most of the time spent by the choir was touring the cities, the two towns of Singapore and Penang were especially interesting since they were free ports. In these two cities, goods and souvenirs could be acquired cheaply. The choir was housed in the most modern hotels in the Malaysian cities. Their hotels with swimming pools and large restaurants were quite a change from the accommodations in the previous stops on the goodwill tour. "WE DIDN'T WORK very hard, but we had a lot of fun" reported Roger Rundle, pianist and French horn player for the brass choir. Nationwide elections were being held during the stay of the KU Brass Choir in Malaysia and this was very interesting to some of the KU'ers. The United Front party under the current Prime Minister gained many votes as well as an additional percentage of seats in the governmental system than they had previously. THE GOVERNMENT in Malaysia is patterned after the British system due to the fact that Malaysia was under the influence and recently gained their independence from Great Britain. It also was noticed that there were several leftist political organizations working in the country and trying to get a foothold One interesting fact about the country of Malaysia is that more than 50 per cent of the population is under 21 years of age and in Singapore, where the group stayed for several days, 80 per cent of the people are Chinese. AS PART of the goodwill tour the choir visited several of the country's universities, including the Malaya Teachers College. Here the KU students taught the local students how to do the twist and other dancing fads. In personal conversations with these college students, choir members found that the question most often asked of them was about the American culture and more definitely about dating practices in the United States. AT THE UNIVERSITY of Malaysia the council of National Study Organization was holding a three-day conference and they were hosts for the KU Choir at a dance. The Brass Choir was given briefings by the USIS or the U.S. Embassy as they entered each country as to what to expect and what they should do and what they should not do. At Nanyang University, known for its leftist demonstrators, the choir played jazz at the request of students. AT THE BRIEFING prior to their stay in Malaysia they were told that Communist agitators might possibly ask "loaded" questions at Nanyang University. Far East Settlement Heads African Summit The majority of the KU students were not faced with this problem in Malaysia, but one choir did find this CAIRO, U.A.R.—(UPI)—The Middle East News Agency (MENA) reports that Algeria and Morocco have reached a final settlement on their border dispute. to be true during a stop at a university in Australia. "This is the one place on the tour we visited that I would like to return to," commented Mike Berger, Brass Choir member, as he referred to Malaysia. Mena said a joint communique on the settlement will be issued before the African summit meeting today. IBM Computer Becomes Major Campus Transition A major campus transition is scheduled to take place at the University of Kansas sometime next week in the form of a computer. The new computer, an IBM 7040, is expected to leave the IBM Data Center in Minneapolis today and be transported to the University by truck. It appears rather amusing that the new machine fails to possess a Recent Surge Boosts Grants To $4 Million A last quarter surge of nearly $11_2 million in grants for sponsored research and associated training projects at KU and its Center for Research in Engineering Science brought the total for the fiscal year to nearly $4 million, William J. Argersinger Jr., associate dean of faculties for research, has announced. The total does not include research performed at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, which receives almost as much support as the Lawrence campus from federal agencies and private sources. Grants to KU in the quarter ending June 30 were received for projects in 25 schools, departments, and divisions, ranging from anthropology to zoology. They include botany, chemical engineering, chemistry, child research, civil engineering, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, comparative biochemistry and physiology, the School of Education, electrical engineering, entomology, geology, Guidance Service, the School of Law, mechanics and aerospace engineering, microbiology, music education, natural history, nuclear engineering, physics, psychology, social work, sociology, and speech and drama. The total of $3,932,787 in grants received for research and associated training projects in the fiscal year 1963-64 at the Lawrence campus is a new record, Dean Argersinger said. name such as Novak III or Mr. Genius, however, things continue to change rapidly in this current world of ours. Numbers have taken over, and as a result one might wake up to find one of his future generation referred to as 76043201, or possibly 119764372. The difference between the new IBM model and the older 1620 IBM computer is simply this: the 7040 will be a binary machine whereas the 1620 computed decimal notations. Another fact of interest is that the present computer is able to add up to 1,100 five digit numbers per second while the one on the way will be able to add at the rate of 66,000 five digit numerals per second. Gross size, maximum speed and cost are the three prime requisites in considering a computer, according to Richard G. Hetherington, director of the Computation Center at Summerfield Hall. The cost difference between the two models shows the 7040 at three times the price of the present computer. However, the new computer provides an increase in overall capability of approximately 5 to 10 times greater than the 1620. The old IBM computer will be placed in the High Energy laboratory of the physics department. It is scheduled to be used solely as research apparatus and not in any form as a computer. This replacement is part of a recent drive in expansion going on here at the University. Wichita Boys Held After Wild Chase MEADE, Kan. — (UPI)— Three Wichita, Kan., boys were being held yesterday in the Meade County jail after they led officers from two states on a wild chase. Meade County Sheriff Arlie Johnson said the chase originated Wednesday at Forgan, Okla., after the boys left a gas station without paying for gasoline. The boys, ranging in ages from 16 to 18, allegedly stole the car at Wichita. Two of the boys were held as parole violators. Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL at Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in HILLCREST BOWL HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Streets ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 Doctorate Degrees Earn Appointments for Many The University of Kansas is having its greatest year in production of new faculty members for the colleges and universities of Kansas and the nation. At least 50 members of the class of 1964 have accepted faculty appointments at the collegiate level and 35 recent graduates have new positions. The totals include only those who have registered with the Teachers' Appointment Bureau and who have reported assignments, Herold Regier, director, emphasized. Class of 1964 members with doctorate degrees, their fields and new schools: Microbiology Research Given Boost Training and research in microbiology at the University of Kansas will be boosted next year with four renewal grants totalling $86,000 from the United States Public Health Service. Profs. David Paretsky, department chairman, and Delbert M. Shankel are co-directors of the largest grant, $42,000, for a training project in microbiology beginning its fourth year. The grant will provide stipends for nine graduate trainees next year. Six additional trainees are receiving stipends this summer. ANOTHER GRANT, also co-directed by Profs. Paretsky and Shankel, totals $17,917. It will support the fifth year of a training program in allergy and immunology. Four graduate students will receive stipends for one year and one is holding a summer appointment. Trainees under both projects are assigned to research work with senior faculty members in the department. Dr. Christopher P. Sword, associate professor, will continue research for a third year of "Host-parasite interaction of 'Listeria monocytogenes'" under a $16,306 renewal grant. THE RESEARCH is an immunological and biochemical investigation of Listeria, being recognized increasingly as an important cause of disease in humans and in domestic and wild animals. Dr. Shankel is using nonlethal ultraviolet doses to induce mutations of certain bacteria in another research project financed by the Public Health Service. He has just received a $9,692 renewal grant for the project's second year. Those appointed trainees and assistants on the respective projects are: Training project in microbiology (one-year appointments): Martin Wilder, Brooklyn; Louis Mallavia, Shoshone, Idaho; Alan Armstrong, Neenah, Wis.; Fred Jones Jr., Eutaw, Ala.; Barbara Joyce, Lawrence; Harvey Schlissel, Brooklyn; Richard Kimes, Lubbock, Tex.; William Arnold, Lawrence, and LeRoy Jackson, Lawrence. Training project in microbiology (summer appointments): Gloria Carrillo, Gainesville, Fla.; Charles Aldrich, Osborne, Kan.; Johanna Stueckemann, Ellinwood, Kan.; Lovelle Lattimore, Ulysses, Kan.; Mickey Brown, St. Joseph, Mo., and Sue Bailey, Cynthiana, Ky. Training project in allergy and immunology (one-year appointments): Gale Wagner, Plainview, Tex.: Thomas Scheidt, Tulare, Calif. Leo Phillips, Phoenix, Ariz., and Ian Alan Holder, Lawrence. Training project in allergy and immunology (summer appointment): Rajalakshmi Ayengar, Bangalore. India. Dr. Swords Listeria project (graduate assistants): Alan Armstrong, Neenah, Wis.; Barbara Armstrong, Omaha, Neb.; Ian Alan Holder, Lawrence, and Martin Wilder. Brooklyn. Dr. Shankel's mutations project: (Mrs.) Nancy McCormick, Lawrence (full-time research assistant); Aris Sideropoulos, Thes s alon i c a, Greece, (graduate assistant). Charles W. Bassett, English, University of Pennsylvania; Sidney L. Berger, speech and drama, Michigan State College, University of Tampa; Jae Feist, psychology, McNeese State College, Lake Charles, La.; Kenneth D. George, education, Kansas City; Roy Robinson, botany, Western New Mexico University, Silver City; Robert LaForte, history, C. Nichols, Enrollment, Kansas State University; Katherine F. Nutt, political science, Arizona State College, flagstaff; William O'Regan, F.N.M., Elbert Overhott, director, laboratory school, Kansas State College, Pittsburg; Claude Owen, German, and Allen I. Welch history and politics, Drury College, Springfield, Mo. Doctoral degree candidates: Russell W. Annis, educational psychology and guidance, Panama Canal Zone Junior College, Balboa, Bernard University, New York; O. Lexton Buchan, mathematics education, University of South Carolina; George L. Duerksen, music education, University of Pennsylvania; Nomics, Milliken University, Decatur, Ill.; William Lieurance, education, University of Wyoming; Joseph McKenna University, History, Oakway University; Ninn Mishin, mathematics Cloud State College, Minnesota; Otis Mitchell, history, University of Cincinnati; Robert Rowlette, English, Butler University; Svoboda, education, University of Missouri; Bascom Wallis, Engligh, Colorado State University; Jerry Weis, biology, University of Minnesota at Duluth; and Major Wilson, history, Memphis State University. Those earning master's degrees in 1964: John Bernthal, speech education, Northwestern State College, Natehtoches, La.; William Birner, technical education, Northwestern State College, Washington State College, Bellingham; John Finger, history, University of Washington, Seattle; Carol Anne French, English, Northwestern State College, Thousand Oaks; John H. Heidke, English, University of Kansas Extension; Eleanor Davis, sociology, Fort Hays Kansas State College; David Higdon, English, Northwestern State College, Springfield; James Hinkhouse art, Northwest Missouri State College, Maryville; Robert Keifler, English, Ball State Teachers College, Muncie, Ind.; Richard Locke, Virginia State College, Springfield; Virginia McCready, Spanish, Pasadena City College, Pasadena, Calif.; James Maag, history, Dodge City Junior College; Diane Morey, Spanish, University of Chicago; Lung Pei, English, Kansas State Teachers College, Emporia; Richard Scharine, speech and drama, Muscatine Junior College, Muscatine, Ia.; Harold Sylvester, Concordia College, Omaha; Eddie Nebt, Eddie Wheat, English, Concordia College, Mohrhead, Minn. Master's degree candidates: Michael K. Buesek, French, LaSalle College, Philadelphia, Pa.; Kenneth Rothrock, sociology, Wisconsin State College. Eau Clair; Amnette Ruder, Englewood; Beverly; Carolyn; Mo.; and James Salsberry, English, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces. Those earning bachelor's degrees in 1964: Marla Hefty, English, University of Kansas; James Tamer, music, University of Kansas; and Mary Ann Warburton, "sidence hall direction, University of Kansas" Dr. Regier reported these new college appointments of earlier KU graduates; Vernon Acker, '62, art. Eastern New Mexico University, Portales; Richard Hancock, University of Texas at San Antonio; St. Louis, Thomas A Barlow, '60, education, University of Colorado; Louis J. Blecha, '58, English, Valbarsoal, '60, biology, Cal Poly; JoAnna Challman, '61, psychology, Sacred College, Wichita; Marjorie W. Coombs, '60, residence hall direction, University of Illinois James Pelo Coulis, '58, catholic school, Cornell Coil B. Currey, '59, history, Nebraska Wesleyan College, Lincoln; Patricia Duncan, '57, physical education, Fort Wayne High School, Dunne, '63, English, St. Louis County Junior College, Meramec Campus; Harold Edgar, '57, physical education, Louisiana State University, Psychology, Pennsylvania State University, Mont Alto Campus; Solomon Flores, '63, Spanish, Chicago Teachers College; Cornell University, guidance Bethany College, James Hawes, '62, speech, University of Kansas. Gerof Homan, '58, history, Kansas State College, Pittsburgh; Robert Lee Kenneth Jinnis, '54, English, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington Kang, '63, political science Brooklyn University, King City (Cal), Brooklyn University, San Antonio Tex.; Louise Leonard, '62, counseling, University of Wisconsin; Michael Alan Miller, '63, Gaps Lake City (Ca), Gaps Lake University; Robert Ohlan special education, Arkansas State College; Manoucheir Pedam, education, '63, Washburn University; Harold刊 (Col), biology, Gap Lake University; James Polson, '63, speech, Gonzaqia University, Sookane, Wash.; Erwin Schmidt, '63, Elmhurst College, Elmhurst; Ul Ruth College, Cleveland, O.; Mary B Botha, '58, music, Moberly Junior College, Mo.; Tal Streeter, '61, sculpture, Bennett College, Cleveland, O.; Mary Two programs that train students who are in top demand as clinical and social psychologists have received renewal support of more than $120,000 at KU. Grants to Aid Psychology Work M. Erik Wright and Anthony J. Smith, both professors of psychology, are directors of the training grants from the United States Public Health Service. Both report they are receiving more requests for trained psychologists than "we can fill." Wright will direct a $75,022 renewal grant for a 16-year-old training program in clinical psychology. Twelve of the department's 80 graduate students in clinical psychology will hold stipends under the grant. The award also will finance teaching and administration connected with the training. SMITH'S RENEWAL grant of $45,-784 will support eight trainees in a social psychology program entering its seventh year. Assistance for teaching and research also is provided. Both directors noted an increase in federal support over past years. The grant for Wright's program jumped $4,000 this year over last year's award. Smith said in 1958, when the social psychology program was started, that only $15,000 was received from the U.S. Public Health Service. Wright said trainees in clinical psychology prepare for work in mental health centers, hospitals, clinics, schools and industry. Besides taking classwork, they are receiving training in the KU Psychological Clinic and in off-campus field work. TEN OF THE 12 students who will hold traineeships next year have been appointed. First-year appointees are Mrs. Barbara Smith, Lawrence; John Funk, Wichita; David Schulman, New York, and Miss Jane Finn, Wichita. Second-year trainees are Mrs. Marjorie Meers, Topeka; Mrs. Rachel Streib, Lawrence, and Miss Frances Garner, Pensacola, Fla. Third-year appointees are Bernard Klappersack, New Haven, Conn.; Miss Lila Lou Beisern, Natoma, and Mrs. Helen Bontrager, Kansas City. Trainees in social psychology will take positions in research, in hospitals and in university teaching. Need for teachers is increasing, with an expanding number of students in colleges and universities, Dr. Smith said. KU training in social psychology consists of classwork, research projects that are rotated each semester and laboratory experience. Seven of the eight U.S. Public Health Service trainees in social psychology have been appointed. They are Paul D. Ackerman, Colby; Dan J. Lettieri, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Steven D. Heeren, Rialto, Calif.; Dennis Nauman, Gettysburg, S.D.; Laurence Plant, Derry, N.H.; Allan Wicker, Independence, and Robert Bechtel, Potsdown, Pa. Truman Sure Party Will Conquer GOP INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — (UPI)— Harry S. Truman promised yesterday that the Democrats will "take care" of Sen. Barry Goldwater in the November election. The peppery 80-year-old former President said he was "very happy they (the Republicans) had a successful convention. He said he did not watch proceedings on television, "but I heard about it." Truman declined to express an opinion on whether Goldwater would be easier or harder to beat than Gov. William Scranton would have been. 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In place of a large project in the Natehez area, several veteran organizers of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) have been sent in to lay the groundwork. James Foreman, national director of SNCC, said the large-scale south delta program was canceled because of "terrorist activities" of segregation extremists. The original plan set out by COFO the Council of Federated Organizations—called for 2,000 student volunteers to the integrationist project. The figure was lowered to 1,000 during the spring. FOUR MAJOR work areas remain: Greenwood, on the northeast edge of the delta; Meridian, near the Alabama border (located near Philadelphia, where three civil rights workers are missing and are now feared dead); Hattiesburg, near the Gulf of Mexico, and Columbus, in the northeast corner of the state. The final total of volunteers now in Mississippi comes to around 450, and COFO no longer is considering applicants for the summer work. In other words, it has as many volunteers as it wants—or, at least, as many as it thinks wise to bring into the state at this time. IN ADDITION, the work area has been restricted to eliminate the southwestern part of the state along the delta in and around Natchez. He probably was referring to the Ku Klux Klan and the Americans for the Preservation of the White Race—a newly formed semi-secret segregationist group which has flourished lately. The project is sponsored by the National Council of Churches and a coalition of civil rights organizations —SNCC, Congress of Racial Equality, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (spearheaded by Dr Martin Luther King Jr.). THE PROJECT design called for a three-part program—(1) a drive to urge Negroes to register to vote, (2) community centers for the teaching of home economics, and (3) Freedom Schools for seminars at an elementary level in history, politics, and current affairs. current nature. Here in Greenwood, after two and one-half weeks, part two and part three of the project—the community center and educational seminars — have not yet begun to function. Although no accurate statistics are available, the number of Negroes who go to the courthouse to take the voter registration test has been less than a floodstream—5 to 10 a day on big days; Some days there have been none. THE NAME of the voter applicant, under Mississippi law, must appear in the community newspaper three times during a two-week period. The editor of the Greenwood paper, the Greenwood Commonwealth, said that, if anything, the number of applicants has declined in recent weeks. One reason he gave for the decline is that to vote in the 1964 election, a citizen must have paid his poll tax and been accepted as a registrant by July 3. One of the student volunteers assigned to voter registration, a junior from John Hopkins University, said that of the first 17 days he had been in Mississippi only four had been spent canvassing the Negro district for potential voters. Hoover Sends Wire To Winning Candidate NEW YORK — (UPI)— Former President Herbert Hoover, who was unable to attend the Republican National Convention this year, yesterday wired Sen. Barry Goldwater congratulations on winning the presidential nomination and urged party unity. The telegram read: "Congratulations on your nomination. My best wishes to you and our party for success in November. I know all loyal Republicans will unite behind you." The rest of the time, he said, "we've been busy getting organized and promoting mass meetings." ("Mass meetings," as described in other parts of this series, are semireligious affairs to stimulate Negro interest in the cause of racial equality.) "Added up," he said, "this means they will have trouble gaining the confidence of the Negro community, they won't have much comprehension of the actual situation down here, and they won't have the background necessary to carry them through a tight spot." THE STUDENT has had only four persons whom he himself solicited go to the courthouse to take the voter test. A veteran SNCC organizer, who did not wish to be identified, said the volunteers have three factors working against them. One, they are generally inexperienced. Two, they are from the North. Three, they are white (only about 15 per cent of the volunteers are Negroes). When this viewpoint was repeated in the form of a question to several of the Greenwood volunteers, they disagreed heatedly, saying they had been well-accepted in the Negro community. The volunteers live in Negro homes which were secured in advance by the project planners. They receive no salary and generally are fed by local people. "HEY!" a girl shouted up the office stairs one day, "a farmer just brought in a bucket of greens and some watermelons." Such kindnesses are frequent. One point on which almost all Negro-movement people are agreed upon is that police protection has increased and police harassment has declined since the infusion of the volunteers. "It is sad, it is ironic," commented the Greenwood project director in a national television broadcast, "but we had to have outside white folks in here before anyone gave a damn about what happened to us." So far, no one from the Greenwood project has been arrested—an about-face from the previous experiences of civil rights workers. This pattern has not held true in other parts of the state, particularly in the more rural areas. Anthropology Gives Adventure Into Actual Ancient Replicas By Paula Myers An anthropology lab is an adventure in the feeling and the actual examining of ancient replicas of skulls, jaws, skeletons, and primitive tools. These ancient replicas found in the laboratory are the real bone structures, plaster structures, or casts made of bronze. Two true fist axes—biface tools—also are examples shown in the laboratory. The laboratory is a teaching device to better acquaint anthropology campers with the actual seeing, believing, and understanding. Charles E. Snow, visiting professor from the University of Kentucky, stands at the front of the laboratory discussing and showing the campers the main things to look for in each item that is passed. He tells them to check the dental structure, whether there are canine teeth or not, if there is a projection of the jaw, whether there is a prominence of the cheek bone, and whether the head was carried erect or not. In the beginning all the animals were small creatures, he says, and we now have the larger beasts from the results of primate evolution. The Proconsul Africanist, found in the eastern part of Lake Victoria; Australopithecus (australo meaning south), found in 1924 in a limestone quarry near Taung, South Africa; Neandertal jaws, Howler monkey skull, and bronze casts of the Homo Neandertalensis were some of the relics shown in the laboratory. The Homo Neandertalensis were the first to burv their dead. The best fossils are preserved best beneath the soil in dry areas -plains, deserts, and in the bottom of dry river beds, covered through the years by the fine silt left behind after the rains. He says that today we have tremendous bone and skull structures of the Homo Neanderthalensis because its dead were buried, thus they were well preserved. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers do you want to look your best? ...then call VI 3-5155 - same day service on request - courteous uniformed routemen - bachelor or family laundry - shirts starched to your taste (No starch light medium heavy) - everything returned in complete repair 3 convenient locations: Downtown-Hillcrest Shopping Center-Malls acme laundry and dry cleaners 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 Money Mounts to Further Engineering Research Money for university engineering research is flowing into Kansas in steadily increasing amounts. the support isn't coming as fast as some authorities believe it should ---Kansas needs far more new scientific and engineering knowledge. But support for engineering teaching and research is on a healthy upswing. Almost $1½ million in such research has been attracted to the state in the past five years by the University of Kansas Center for Research in Engineering Science. Some of it has led directly to area industrial development. Some has contributed to more basic engineering knowledge. But all of the research has been part of a threefold service to the state by the KU school of Engineering and Architecture. TEACHING YOUNG engineers and architects is the first part of the schools' task. But equally important are consulting services to Kansas industry and the school's own growing research capability. For instance, the internationally famous studies of low-temperature helium by Fred Kurata, professor of chemical engineering, contributed to the development of three new helium extraction plants in western Kansas. Helium was first identified in natural gas at the University of Kansas in 1905, and KU long has been considered the home of helium research. Kurata is completing the second of two $50,000-plus studies of the basic properties of low-temperature liquids for the National Science Foundation. In one of the most active cooperative programs between the school and private industry, the Vendo Co. of Kansas City has given generously to support KU research. THE VENDING machine company's confidence has paid off, both in practical results and in better educational opportunity at KU. John N. Warfield, professor of electrical engineering, recently completed work on a magnetic memory unit which will enable Vendo's machines to make change for a dollar bill. He also has done research on digital computer technology for the company. Vendo's research support has totaled more than $44,000 in the last three years. Norris Nahman, professor of electrical engineering, employs students from high school as well as postdoctoral fellows to aid in studying high-speed electronic circuitry in a research project for the U. S. Army. Students aren't the only ones who receive new challenges from KU engineering research. Sixteen engineers from Northern Natural Gas Co., a major Kansas pipeline firm, are taking turns living on the campus for a few weeks and studying electronic computers with Floyd W. Preston, associate professor of petroleum engineering. They hope to develop improved methods for computing pipeline flow rates and petroleum reservoir data. Northern Natural Gas contributed $16,600 for the project, plus the time of its engineers. This is one of the largest single-company grants made to the Center for Research, Inc. THE CENTER for Research is a clearinghouse for ideas--a unique enterprise in Kansas. It is a nonprofit corporation, associated with the University, which receives industry and government requests for research, proposes new research projects, and administers projects once they are underway. One of the center's main purposes is to give outstanding engineers and scientists great freedom to think and work at their own pace and in their own way. By doing so, these investigators make the greatest possible contribution to knowledge. Dean John S. McNown is the director of the Engineering Science Division of the center in addition to his duties as dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture. In five years the center has brought $1,380,000 worth of research to the University from original gifts of about $362,000 by firms and individuals. More than $315,000 of these original gifts remain in capital facilities which will contribute to further research. Knowledge gained from the re- London Remains the Paris Of Men's Wear Industry LONDON — (UPI) — London, if you'll pardon the expression, is still the Paris of the men's wear industry. American manufacturers occasionally poke fun at some of the advanced styling ideas introduced in London but in a year or two the better designs make their way across the Atlantic, especially in the field of suits, outer coats, shirts and shoes. A CASE IN point is the popularity of the striped shirt which was the rage in London two years ago and now is one of the biggest sellers in America. Another is the slightly fitted hacking jacket with deep vents and slashed pockets which is being promoted in many U.S. stores for Fall. D. A. ROBINSON, continental promotion manager for the National Wool Textile Export Corporation, reports the big European trend now is for a twist fabric in which two different colored yarns are twisted together to give variations in color. There is a heavy emphasis on new fashion designs in British woolen textiles to meet the competition of lower priced textiles from Japan and to create a demand in countries with high tariffs. with blue or red overchecks will be worn by bolder spirits. "I COULDN'T think of anything more different than Italian or German tastes but in each case they like the gray effect from black and white, twist or checks, small stripes, checks or hounds tooth," he said. "Black and white is the single most outstanding thing on the continent both in business and sports wear." Robinson reports a general leveling out of men's fashions in Europe, probably because of the Common Market influence, with Italians and Germans now dressing much alike and quite often reflecting London's Savile Row influence in styles. ANTHONY HOLLAND of Holland and Sherry Ltd., London woolen merchants, reported a trend toward lighter shades and weights with colors introduced to brighten the lighter, grays. The Savile Row tailors also are emphasizing new textile designs. One, Louis Stanbury, reports red and blue blends popular for fall with the younger clients and says light brown Graham Donald, senior partner of a Savile Row woolen firm, reports lighter weights and colors and said: "Designs, too, tend to be classical and simple of sma11 checks and stripes. The fashion for complicated designs has finished." Also new from Savile Row was a "tonal suit" in three shades of gray. The jacket and trousers were both in double twill woolweave but the jacket was dark gray and the trousers medium gray. The double-breasted vest was in pearl gray twill. search is important, but research serves other purposes, too. THE INNOVATION most likely to catch on with Americans was from Chester Barrie—a completely natural shoulder suit. Ivy League styles have a minimum of padding, his had none at all. The suit had a slight body tracing. Some other trends: Teenagers were wearing collarless jackets, Beatle style. Some shops reported increased interest in belted Norfolk jackets. Other shops reported new interest in Sherlock Holmes-style tweed capes with red lining. "There's an excitement, a challenge, to a student who works with an experienced researcher," said Dean McNown. "It's a part of good teaching. The new ideas stir students' imaginations and inspire them to learn—to choose a career in that branch of engineering." Some of the youngsters were wearing Eton type collars with their collarless jackets but the main emphasis on shirts was a very wide spread collar both in pastel colors and in medium dark tones, some with fly fronts, some with a rolling spread collar. In shoes there was a return to a squared off toe in many lines with teen-agers going in for what look like old-fashioned gaiters or brushed pigskin boots. Some shops showed go-to-hell hats which had a sharply upturned brim at the back and a rakih slant in front. And almost everyone showed James Bond type trenchcoats. McKinney came to KU four years ago from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and immediately began building Kansas research in sanitary engineering. ONE SUCH program is the civil engineering studies of Ross E. McKinney, professor of civil engineering. Sanitary engineering, the building and maintenance of sewage plants, sounds like a mundane, unglamorous kind of engineering, but McKinney has some new ideas. He set graduate students to work on a project involving oxygen-producing algae and their use in space capsules. Sanitary engineers use such algae in sewage treatment. The students are using their engineering knowledge to study an algae-oxygen system which may sustain the first manned flight to the moon. There also are several student research projects involving more typical sanitary engineering. The department operates a pilot sewage plant near Kansas City, Kan. ENGINEERING students and faculty researchers work together on projects ranging from nuclear engineering to measuring the stresses on grain storage tanks; from satellite radar studies to undersea sound measurement. Two of the newest major projects are by R. K. Moore, professor of electrical engineering, high-altitude radar studies and the study of floods in the major Kansas river valleys by Robert Smith, professor of civil engineering. nology which now provides $100,000 annually. The programs helps young faculty members to develop research programs and is one of many areas where students get a chance to work on current engineering problems. Construction of several new federal reservoirs has radically changed the flow rates of major Kansas streams. Smith's study, financed by a $12,250 grant from the Army Corps of Engineers, will measure the rainfall run-off in several areas and what effect this run-off will have on the storage capacities of reservoirs. Moore has been working closely with the U.S. and Canadian governments in interpreting radar data from the Canadian satellite, "Alouette." From transmissions sent back by this satellite, scientists are getting one of the first high-altitude radar views of the earth's surface. MOORE, a widely recognized authority on radar, is a consultant to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and is expected to do later radar studies of the moon's surface before the first manned landing there. NASA also has shown its interest in KU engineering and science by renewing for the third consecutive year a grant for interdisciplinary studies in space science and tech- A new Engineering Building occupied last year is the latest addition to what will be a complex of engineering-science facilities at the west edge of the KU campus. Nearby is the Nuclear Reactor Center building, which includes the University's 10-kilowatt nuclear reactor, environmental health laboratories, and a radiation biophysics study center. NOW ON the books of the Center for Research is a backlog of a half million dollars' worth of research to be done in the near future. If Kansas is to keep up in the race for industrial-scientific knowledge, however, this must be greatly increased. "The center should grow to perhaps five times its present research commitment if it is to keep up with its long-range goals," said B. G. Barr, associate director. "This means we will need increased support from private firms and individuals as well as government agencies. We feel certain the center's research can return many times over the value of an original investment." KU is striving for a balance between engineering research and engineering teaching. diebolt's 843 Mass. men's— summer clearance NOW! straw hats – 50% off! One Group slacks – 50% off! One Group suits and sport coats 50% off! suits – were now $39.95 $30 $50 $38 $55 $41 $60 $45 $65 $49 $69.95 $53 sport coats – were now $19.95 $15 $25 $19 $30 $23 $35 $27 $37.50 $29 $40 $31 $45 $34 sport shirts — entire stock 25% off! dress slacks — 25% off! Sorry! no refunds, layaways, approvals or exchanges. small alteration charge. diebolt's 843 Mass. diebolt's 843 Mass. Friday, July 17, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Here's Program for Two Sunday Concerts Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday, July 19 University Theatre 3 p.m. Combined Concert and Chamber Choirs Dettinger Te Deum ... G. F. Handel Richard Taylor, baritone Mr. Ralston, conducting Orchestra First Violin—Janice Kay Gray, Janet Crawford, Cynthia Tamer, Marcia Foster, Laurie Crocker; Second Violin—Alice Joy Lewis, Marian Scheid, Steve Meyer, Kathy Kunce; Viola—Kurt Meisenbach, Susan Teller, Steve Hickerson; Cello—Woodman Todd, Elizabeth Sterling, Eleanor Higa; Bass—Janice Campbell, George Puckett; Trumpet—Al Lowery, Dave Clark, Bill Toalson; Oboe—Malcolm Smith, Earle Dumler; Bassoon—Steve Franse; Organ—Carl Johnson; Piano—Diana Perry; Tympani—James Tamer. 12-Minute Intermission Orchestra Saul Caston, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Symphony No. 2 in D Major ... Beethoven Fourth movement: Allegro molto Die Fledermaus, Overture ... R. Strauss Mr. Carney, conducting Die Meistersinger, Vorsfiel ... Wagner Siegfried Idyll ... Wagner Introduction to Act III, "Lohengrin" ... Wagner The Ride of the Valkyries ... Wagner Concert Band and Symphonic Band Paul Caston, Guest Conductor Mr. Caston, conducting KU Outdoor Tent Symphonic Band Ballet Music from "Faust" ... Gounoc Waltz for the Corps de Ballet Pas Seul of Cleopatra Pas Seul of Helen Bachanale and Entry of Phryne Overture Orpheus ... Offenbach Cdr. Brendler, conducting Psalm for Band ... Persichetti La Fiesta Mexicana ... H . O. Reed Aztec Dance Prelude and Fugue ... Moehlman Overture to "Folk Suite" ... Gould Mr. Caston, conducting Concert Band Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger St. Michael Archangel from "The Church Windows" ... Respeghi arr. Fred Pendergraft Overture to "Rienzi" ... Wagner Citation ... C. Smith Mr. Wiley, conducting Fanfare for Brasses ... G. Lynn Symphony N. 2 (Romantic) ... Hansor Second Movement: Andante Tulsa ... Gilli Symphony for Band ... Persichetti Mr. Caston, conducting State Studies Gym Plans 'Modern Jazz Trio' to Play In Big Eight Room Tuesday Plans for a new gymnasium for KU are now in their final form at the office of the state architect in Topeka. Board Votes To Cancel Garnett Race British Postal Strike Might Be Extended LONDON—(UPI) Mountains o mail piled up in Britain's post offices yesterday as the Postmen's Union claimed success for its first officia strike since 1891. Regular appearances are on the trio's schedule this summer, with Wednesday and Friday evening shows at the Hideaway. In relation to these programs, Riley said of Gene Durham, the manager of the Hideaway, "He is giving jazz a chance in Lawrence." A union spokesman warned that the 24-hour walkout—scheduled to end last night—might be extended if the government did not meet demands for pay increases The concept of the group, said Riley, was not merely a piano with a bass and drums, but the boys listen to each other and try to make an ensemble. GARNETT, Kan. — (UPI) — The Lake Garnett Racing Association, Inc., has voted unanimously not to hold the Garnett Grand Prix races next year, the association's board president said. A general post office spokesman conceded that—both in London and in the Provinces—"Mail services are at a standstill with no dispatches on the move and no deliveries and collections being made." "We hope that bidding will begin sometime within the next 30 days and if all goes well construction should start early in the fall," reports Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for University operations. L. E. Warner, president of the board of directors, said the group issued the following statement: When asked about 1966, Warner said "We will make that decision when we come to it." "It was decided by a vote of the board of directors of the Lake Garrett Racing Association on July 15 to forego any racing event in 1965." The trio will present a live stereo radio show on KANU in the near future. The sixth annual Garnett Grand Prix July 4 was marked by the arrest of 55 college-age men as some 150 law enforcement officers sought to control 2,000 beer-drinking youths. The new gym will be located on the intramural fields, directly south of Summerfield Hall across Sunnyside Avenue. In 1963 a policeman suffered a heart attack during a riot by a similar group at the races. Crowds during both years were estimated at 20,000 to 50,000. An up and coming jazz trio, the Modern Jazz Trio or the MJT, will make a special evening appearance in the Big Eight Room in the Union Tuesday. July 21, for all jazz lovers The Garnett City Council had discussed stopping the races because of the rioting. The members of the trio, who are KU summer students, are Kent Riley, a piano and clarinet double major from Columbus; Clarence Awaya, a music education major from Hawaii, and Dave Boyd, a music education major from Leavenworth. The new building will house the complete physical education department, including a new swimming pool, which will be in a matatorium directly adjacent to the gym. This year youths threatened to storm the city water and light plant but were turned back by police. Policemen used dogs and electric prods to keep back the crowd. The building will have all physical education offices, intramural offices, dancing and special activity rooms, a weight room, and wrestling rooms, as well as locker and shower rooms. Youths also burned a park table and threw beer bottles and cherry bombs at a police car. One bottle broke the car's windows while four occupants were inside. The new facility will replace Robinson Gym, which will be torn down a short while after the new building is completed. A new building to house the science department in Haworth Hall will be built where the present Haworth and Robinson Gym are now located. The MJT, which plans to keep intact as long as possible, was first working together as the rhythm section of the Bill Booth quintet. Later, the three students worked together on the Brass Choir tour. Reds End Maneuvers VIENNA — (UPI) — Soviet and Czech Army and Air Force units have completed a series of maneuvers in Czechoslovakia, Radio Prague reports. A broadcast monitored here said Gen. Pavel I. Batoy, supreme commander of the Warsaw Pact military forces, took part in the military exercises. Dodge City Opens Three Days' Rodeo DODGE CITY, Kan.—(UPI)The third annual Dodge City Days celebration opened late yesterday with a performance by the Strategic Air Command Air Force band, followed by a parade. Features of the parade included a multiple hitch of Clydesdale horses and the 18-team mule train of a Colorado Springs, Colo., shrine temple. Ken Curtis, of television "western" fame was to serve as marshal in the parade, keyed to a theme of western and hill billy television shows. COLUMBUS, Ohio —(UPI)—Ariane Teebenjohanns, the German divorcee who announced her engagement to Dr. Sam Sheppard last year, said yesterday she would not be here when Sheppard is scheduled to be released from the Ohio Penitentiary The blonde from Dusseldorf, Germany, said she would remain in her Rocky River apartment, in suburban Cleveland, and await a telephone call from Sheppard. A rodeo was scheduled for each night of the three-day celebration. Waiting for Sheppard W. P. Smith, chairman of the electrical engineering department, has been elected to the board of directors of Eta Kappa Nu. national honorary society in electrical engineering. To Eta Kappa Nu Board Belgian Critics Praise Dallas Theater Group BRUSSELS — (UPI) — Belgian critics say that the Dallas Theater Center, giving performances here of the William Faulkner play "Journey to Jefferson," has provided one of the highlights of the theater season. The Brussels newspaper Le Soir, reviewing Tuesday's performance at the seaside resort of Ostend, said "the story acted out on the stage is at first sight the least apt to be given theatrical treatment . . . but despite the monotony of the theme the play has not one boring minute since the actors are endowed with power and humanity." "A play like this requires being produced and acted to perfection. The Dallas Theater Center has succeeded in doing this . . . no detail appeared too trivial and the human qualities of the characters shone through with an intensity rarely seen, thanks to the complete sincerity of the actors . . ." The newspaper added that the large cast succeeded in evoking the provincial climate in which the action takes place "with the precision and timing which characterize the American cinema." The play, an adaption by Robert Flynn of the Faukner novel, "As I Lay Dying," will be staged again today at the Royal Flemish Theater in Brussels. Japanese City Struck By Huge Landslide TOYAMA CITY, Japan—(UPI)—A huge landslide struck the mountain village of western Toyama yesterday, destroying 72 structures, including an elementary school, and leaving 332 persons homeless. One person was injured but no fatalities were reported in the slide area, located about 200 miles southwest of Tokyo near the Japan Sea. SUA PRESENTS - an evening with... THE MODERN JAZZ TRIO featuring Kent Riley - piano Clarence Awaya-bass David Boyd-drums TUESDAY JULY 21, 7:30 PM STUDENT UNION BLDG. BIG EIGHT ROOM ADMISSION FREE Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 Football Ticket Sales Indicate Record Crowds As the KU football season draws near, the advanced ticket sales begin to show promise of a fine season. The football program at KU has advanced greatly in the past few Leading Lady Recreates First Ladies By Jack Gaver UPI Drama Editor NEW YORK — (UPI) — Without intent to age her by so much as a minute, I'm quite prepared to believe that Helen Hayes occupied the White House for 120 years, off and on, as 10 of the first ladies of the land. That is the magic she is asked to work in A. E. Hotchner's "The White House," new tenant of Henry Miller's Theater. As always, the Hayes magic is potent. THIS IS AN ODD piece of theater. And an effective one in an honest, informative, humorous, nostalgic way. It is not a drama in the ordinary sense. It is a series of vignettes linked together by the piece of federal real estate that provides the play with its title. Using for dialogue, in the main, the actual private and public utterances of the persons involved, the play provides a candid look at most of the presidents of the United States, from Washington through Woodrow Wilson, and their ladies. This is not one of those "readings," with the performers on stools or at leeterns. There is much movement under the skilled direction of Henry Kaplan. There are no costume changes; the clothes have a sort of indeterminate nature that seems to fit all periods. Ed Wittstein's sets are spare but colorful. MISS HAYES does not try, through makeup, to look like any of the presidential wives. It is only by chance that a couple of the actors may give a fleeting impression of resembling an occasional male character. It is Hotchner's point that, for good or bad, the occupants of the White House have been human beings and that often the little personal things give the best insights into their characters and help explain their public images. All in all, he sums up, we have a proud heritage that the presidential couples have done much to help shape. Miss Hayes, gay and funny on occasion, sometimes making you want to weep with her, starts with Edigail Adams and winds up with Edith Wilson. Along the way she does a Mary Todd Lincoln that is an emotional gem. THE MAJOR presidential assignments are taken by Fritz Weaver and James Daly, two eminent actors whose versatility does much for the play. Weaver's Lincoln and Wilson are outstanding, as are Daly's Andrew Johnson and Grover Cleveland Sorrel Booke provides high moments as Daniel Webster, who lived through many administrations, and his Ulysses S. Grant is a highlight of the production. The other skilled performers, all playing several roles, are Eric Berry, Gene Wilder, Michael O'Sullivan, Bette Henritze, Eugene Roche and Nancy Franklin. Hotchner has done a good job with tricky material, and "The White House" is something that every American should see. years and the fans are showing a definite interest in the team, according to Monte Johnson, director of public relations for the athletic department. As the Big Eight overall competition steadily improves, each game reigns as significantly as the next. This is one clue to the success of the KU ticket sales. Johnson said the season ticket sales are going very well and show signs of exceeding the 16,000 mark. This will be a very valuable contribution to increasing the overall attendance average of 36,000 per game as in past years, he said. KU PLAYS FIVE home games during the regular season, and all of these promise to be great as far as attendance and overall excitement go. The opener is the traditional TCU game. It is expected that this game will sell out about a week ahead. The game is scheduled for Sept. 19 and constitutes a great traditional rivalry. Actually, fall semester classes do not start until the following Monday, as the game is played on Saturday. The second home game is Oct. 3, against Wyoming. This date is selected as Band Day and will pull from 4,000 to 6,000 band students and parents. A near-sellout is possible for the game. ON OCT. 17, KU meets Oklahoma in possibly its biggest regular season game. It is almost a certainty that the 44,900-seat stadium will be filled for the contest. Nebraska will follow OU Nov. 7 and be the opposition for the traditional Homecoming game. This game will constitute an almost sure sellout because of both the rivalry for the Big Eight crown and Homecoming festivities. The NU game probably will reign as great in importance as any other because of the possibility of a tight Big Eight race. MU, OU, NU, and KU are expected to put up a tough fight for the crown. THE FINAL GAME will be against Colorado University and is designated as Parents' Day. This no doubt will continue the string of sellouts. The season ticket sales are expected to cover the west side of the field from goal line to goal line. This, along with the increased number of students, faculty, and visitors plus the 4,000 or 5,000 visiting team tickets on the east side will combine to raise the average attendance per game to well above the previous highs. The KU team is expected to have a good year, and with the competition it will face at home it undoubtedly will set many attendance records. All of the games show sellout possibility. Games such as TCU, which will play KU for the last time under the present agreement, will draw well as sentimental value. Johnson expects this to be one of the finest seasons in KU history both in team merit and game attendance. Jacob Kleinberg, chairman of the department of chemistry, is doing special research work on inorganic chemistry at the University of Michigan. KU Chemistry Head Studying at Michigan Working with Kleinberg is C. N. McCarty, director of the institute for chemistry at the university. The work is being done over a three-week period starting July 9. Dr. Kleinberg will return July 28. Air-Conditioning Work Closes Union Bookstore Upper Level The entire upper level of the Union Bookstore will continue to be closed to customers until Monday because of work being done to replace the air-conditioning system. The north end of the upper store has been shut off with plastic sheeting for some time. ine work to replace the inadequate air-conditioning system was begun early in June. In addition, a new storeroom will be created and more floor space made available. The new air-conditioner weighs 1.700 pounds and has the cooling power of 50 tons of ice, about 17 times as much as the largest window air-conditioners. The job should be completed by July 31. The construction is financed by the bookstore's expansion and remodeling budget. THE Town Shop Annual Summer Sale "Complete clearance of all summer merchandise is now on" Annual Summer Sale Suits and Sport Coats Were Now Were Now $75.00 $56.25 $42.50 $31.95 55.00 41.95 35.00 26.95 29.95 23.95 19.95 15.95 Slacks and Wash Pants Were Now Were Now $21.50 $17.20 $7.95-6.95 $4.50 18.95 15.15 10.95 8.75 5.95-4.95 3.99 Sport Shirts and Dress Shirts Were Now Were Now $8.95 $6.75 $6.50 $4.85 5.50 4.15 5.00 3.75 4.50 3.35 4.50 3.35 Men's Robes and Pajamas Were Now Were Now $19.95 $13.30 $6.95 $5.25 12.95 8.65 5.00 3.75 8.95 5.95 4.50 3.35 Swim Wear and Bermudas Were Now Were Now $7.95 $5.95 $12.95 $9.75 6.95 5.25 8.95 6.75 4.50 3.35 5.95 4.45 Spring Jackets 25% OFF Spring Jackets 25% OFF Straw Hats 1/3OFF Straw Hats 1/3 OFF - ENTIRE STOCK NOT INCLUDED - ALTERATIONS AT COST THE Town Shop 839 Mass. Friday, July 17, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 9 I DON'T UNDER- STAND HOW IT HAPPENED BUT WHEN I WOKE UP YESTERDAY MORNING - I KNEW- SOMETHING HAD CHANGED! I DIDN'T LOOK LIKE ME ANY- MORE! I LOKED LIKE CARU GRANT. I LOOKED IN THE MIRROR AND SURE ENOUGH THERE IT WAS-CARU GRANT. I WALKED DOWN THE STREET AND I COULD SEE IT IN THE WAY PEOPLE STARED AT ME - CARU GRANT. I WENT TO THE OFICE AND EVERYBODY SEEMED SHY IN MY PRESENCE. GIRLS STARTED HANGING AROUND MY DESK. MY DESK. THE BOSS OFFERED ME A JOB IN THE PARIS OFFICE. CARU GRANT. I LOOKED LIKE CARU GRANT. I LOOKED IN THE MIRROR AND SURE ENOUGH- THERE IT WAS-CARY GRANT. I DON'T UNDER-STAND HOW IT HAPPENED BUT WHEN I WOKE UP YESTERDAY MORNING - I KNEW-SOMETHING HAD CHANGED! I DIDN'T LOOK LIKE ME ANYMORE! I LOOKED LIKE CARY GRANT. I LOOKED IN THE MIRROR AND SURE ENOUGH THERE IT WAS-CARY GRANT. I WALKED DOWN THE STREET AND I COULD SEE IT IN THE WAY PEOPLE STARED AT ME - CARY GRANT. I NENT TO THE OP FICE AND EVERYBODY SEEMED SHY IN MY PRESENCE. GIRLS STARTED HANGING AROUND MY DESK MY DESK. THE BOSS OFFERED ME A JOB IN THE PARIS OFFICE. CARY GRANT. I CALLED UP THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL I KNEW.SHE SAID SHE HAD A DATE BUT SHE DREAK IT. SHE SAID SHE D PICK UP TICKETS TO THE THEATER. CARY GRANT. WE WENT DANCING AFTER THE THEATER. I DIDN'T EVEN KNOW I KNEW HOW! PEOPLE FORMED A CIRCLE AROUND US AND APPLAUDED. I WENT HOME FLOATING. I WENT TO SLEEP DREAMING. THIS MORNING I WOKE UP AND KNEW SOME-THING HAD CHANGED. BACK TO BERNARD MERGEN-DEILER. FOR PLAIN PEOPLE THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A PERMANENT CARY GRANT. I WALKED DOWN THE STREET AND I COULD SEE IT IN THE WAY PEOPLE STARED AT ME - CARM GRANT. M A man playing the trumpet. I CALLED UP THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL I KNEW. SHE SAID SHE HAD A DATE BUT SHE BREAK IT. SHE SAID SHE'D PICK UP TICKETS TO THE THEATER. CARY GRANT. WE WENT DANCING AFTER THE THEATER. I DIDN'T EVEN KNOW I KNEW HOW! PEOPLE FORMED A CIRCLE AROUND US AND APPLAUDED. I WENT HOME FLOATING. I WENT TO SLEEP DREAMING. THIS MORNING I WOKE UP AND KNEW SOME-THING HAD CHANGED. BACK TO BERNARD MERGEN-DEILER. FOR PLAIN PEOPLE THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A PERMANENT CARY GRANT. BACK TO BERNARD MERGEN- DEILER. FOR PLAIN PEOPLE THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A PERMANENT CARY GRANT. A Lewis Hall counselor, Kathy Hutton, declared, "I cannot tell which ones are campers and which ones are counselors. On the other hand. Great Contrasts in Maturity Mark Members of Camp By Jacquie Glaser What is the difference between a KU student and a summer music camper? "THE OUTSTANDING difference between the college students and the campers," commented Carney, "is the amount of enthusiasm which is shown by the campers!" "Even the guest conductors, who are professional leaders, confirm this statement." Carney continued, "and the campers try to do their very best all of the time." "If you compare the campers to even freshman girls who have been here only a short time, you can see a great jump!" said Mrs. Betty Bowers, a snack bar official at Murphy. "Among the campers, you can see a huge range of maturity," continued Mrs. Bowers, who has the opportunity to see many Music Campers each day as they attend classes at Murphy. "Some of the students act like 9 and 10-year-olds; others act older than college students." IT SEEMS THAT different people who, often frequent Murphy have noticed a great change in the general atmosphere of Murphy since the high school campers came. "Before they come and after they leave, it is very quiet here at Murphy," said one Fine Arts secretary, who works in the building. "The place is much livier . . . and noisier!" she continued. "However, most of the campers whom we have met are very nice." Gerald Carney, associate camp director, pointed out that the KU students show their advanced maturity not only by their actions, but also by the amount of sound they produce from the instruments they might be playing. it seems that some of the girls have not brought any dresses to camp with them, because every time I see them, they have shorts on. For this reason, you can see one difference between the two groups of students," Kathy concluded. ONE STUDENT in the Science Division of the camp compared the campers to the older students by saying; "Some of the campers may be trying to act older by all their smoking, but it does not do the trick." However, probably the surest point of proof as to the identity of a camper or a KU student is the fact that one does not see campers riding in or driving cars! It is just one of those things. Clashes Frequent In Viet Nam War SAIGON, Viet Nam — (UPI) Communist Viet Cong guerrillas clashed with government soldiers in 15 new battles in South Vietnam in the past two days, official Vietnamese military reports said. Red attacks throughout the country kept government soldiers on the move so much, American military spokesmen sald, that American Air Force planes shuttled a near record 1,034 combat troops on Wednesday alone. The Viet Cong were especially active in normally peaceful Phu Yen province on the central coast. 225 miles northeast of Saigon. KU Professor Invited to Play Piano Recital in Capital Church Government forces struck by air and ground on the same day, killing 20 in air strikes eight miles southeast of Phu Yen's capital of coastal Tuy Hoa. The Communists poured 81 mm and 60 mm. mortar fire into the district headquarters Wednesday, and captured two militamen in raids on three neighboring hamlets. Roy Hamlin Johnson will give the recital after Evensong Oct. 11. He will play the Second Piano Sonata by Dr. John Pozrdz, head of KU's music theory department; Beethoven's "Waldstein Sonata," and Brahms' "Sonata, Op. 5." Sonata in a program Nov. 13 at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. A University of Kansas professor has been invited to play the first piano recital ever given at the large Washington Cathedral of the Episcopal Church in the capital city. NEW YORK—(UPI)—Three civil rights workers bungled an attempted citizen's arrest of Mayor Robert F. Wagner and ended up being arrested themselves. The invitation for the Washington recital was extended by the Rev. William G. workman, canon precentor of the cathedral. CORE Bungles on Wagner Arrest The cathedral earlier had included a composition by Johnson in the album of dedicatory music for the carillon in its new Gloria in Excelcis tower. Among the other composers represented are Samuel Barber, John La Montaine and Leo Sowerby. Prof. Johnson will play the same program at Bethany College, Lindsberg, Oct. 27 and include the Pozdro Herbert Callender, chairman of the Bronx chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), and two associates went to City Hall to arrest the mayor on charges that he permitted racial discrimination on city construction projects. Callender had warned earlier of the attempt and police and newsmen gathered in front of City Hall for the move. While waiting for the mayor to arrive, Callender and the two other The three tried to get by Burke and were arrested for blocking a passageway. Callender was sent to Bellevue Hospital for observation. CORE officials, Raymond Woodall and John Valentine, decided to talk to newsmen. His back turned from the entrance, Callender failed to notice Wagner's arrival until the mayor already was inside. Callender ran after Wagner, but Police Sgt. Dennis Burke, in charge of the City Hall security detail, stopped him. He said he had been advised that a citizen's arrest could not be made unless a crime had been committed. Wagner said later he had made no effort to avoid the "arrest." "I expected him," Wagner said. "However, he was so busy with you boys that he paid no attention to me." COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UPI)— An estimated 28,000 persons braved an early evening thunderstorm Wednesday night to hear Evangelist Billy Graham's sermon at Jet Stadium. The audience donned raincoats, umbrellas opened and large sheets of plastic were unfolded for protection from the thundershowers. Storm Fails to Daunt Graham or Audience A favorite, much read page am I I rent, I find, I sell, I buy His Sliderule Lost, A Student Beseeching- I'LL Help Him Out, With a Search Far-Reaching! For a sure, quick, inexpensive method to reach the KU market, put the Mighty Midget—classified ad to work for you—buying—selling—hiring renting—finding. The little man with the powerful punch that can carry your message to 3,500 readers daily. For further information telephone KU 376 Summer Session Kansan Page 10 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 Visit U.S.A.' Program Lures Foreign Visitors WASHINGTON, D.C. — (UPI) The international travel boom will reach new heights in 1964 with more Americans going abroad and more foreign visitors coming to the United States than ever before. That is the consensus of authoritative tourist industry circles here and abroad . BUT THE BIG story in international travel is the steady growth of the United States as a major attraction for foreign tourists, thanks in no small measure to the worldwide promotion program of the Department of Commerce's United States Travel Service (USTS)). S spurred by the tax cut, lower air fares and an easing of world tensions, about 2,750,000 Americans are expected to head overseas this year, according to the American Express Co. This would represent an increase of 10 per cent over 1963. The USTS expects about 880,000 foreign visitors to respond to its "Travel a New World . . . See the U.S.A." and come here in 1964. It would be a boost of about 20 per cent over last year and the third successive year in which gains have been chalked up. There were doubters when Congress created the USTS in June of 1961. Some skeptics felt that the United States didn't have the tourist facilities or the attractions to lure foreign travelers. Others just couldn't see Europeans, for instance, Latin Teachers Meeting at KU The first of two four-week sessions of the Latin Teachers Workshop, underway since June 29, ends July 24. The second will convene July 27 and last until Aug. 21. The workshop is held in conjunction with the classics department and is a credit course worth four hours' graduate work. The 50 teachers enrolled in the workshop may choose two classes in which to participate, but they may not exceed a total of four hours for the classes. The group is under the instruction of Robert Palmer, chairman of the department of classics at Scripps College; Malcolm Agnew, chairman of the department of classics at Boston University; Dr. Joan Madsen of Oak Park-River Forest High School, Oak Park, Ill., and Austin Lashbrook, associate professor of classics at KU. The other session will have a different set of instructors. The workshop is sponsored by the American Classical League, and the University of Kansas classics department. Arrangements for the group were made by University Extension. 444 Auschwitz Inmate Defends Assailant FRANKFURT, Germany — (UPI) — A former inmate-trusty in the Auschwitz extermination camp yesterday described defendant Stefan Baretziki as "a Samaritan" who saved his life but smashed his jaw. "He once smashed my jaw when I forgot an errand," said Budan, without looking at the man accused of killing prisoners with a single blow on their necks with the back of his hand. Peter Budan, 67, withdrew pretrial testimony against Baretzki, a Romanian spittoon cleaner. He told the court trying 21 men who helped run the world's biggest death camp that the 45-year-old Bartezki was "a wood man, a samaritan." "But he also saved my life," he added. "That was toward the end of the war when the Russians in my barracks mutinied, surrounded me and threatened to knock me dead." "Baretzki descended on the Russians and got me out of their midst—otherwise I would, not sit here today." He said Russian prisoners were "a crude bunch who had to be dealt with harshly." coming here with such world-famed playground areas as the Alps and Mediterranean on their own door-steps. "HOW WRONG THEY were," said Secretary of Commerce Luther H. Hodges recently after reviewing the latest reports on incoming travel. The 'Visit USA' program is turning out to be one of our government's wisest investments. It is not only adding dollars to our economy but it is winning friends for America." The reports showed an increase of more than 22 per cent during the first four months of 1964 compared to the same period in 1963. HODGES IS A firm believer in travel as a means of promoting international understanding. He feels Americans return home from abroad with a better understanding of the peoples and the countries they have visited. "By the same token," Hodges said, "we know from experience that an overseas visitor leaves this country with a much better understanding and truer picture of the American people and the American way of life than he had when he entered the country." Hodges noted that various surveys disclosed that the American people themselves are a major popular attraction for foreign visitors. "OVERSEAS VISITORS are practically unanimous in their praise for the hospitality and kindness of the American people with whom they come in contact," he said. Requests to meet more Americans and see how they lived prompted the USTS, with the cooperation of about 30 communities throughout the United States, to set up an informal "meet-the-people" program. The program gives the foreign traveler an opportunity to meet an American family, usually over a cup of coffee and perhaps a snack, in an American home. HODGES INDICATED he is particularly pleased with the cross-section of foreign tourists coming to the United States these days. He noted they included not only business executives but "postal clerks, secretaries, union members—just average income people who are dispelling the theory that the United States is an expensive place to visit." While Hodges would not predict that the number of incoming visitors will balance the number of Americans going overseas, he does think the United States eventually will get a more equal share of the international travel market. Two films will be shown at 8 p.m. today on the lawn east of Robinson Gymnasium. They are "Out of the North" and "Sunshine Islands." Admission is free, and seats will be available. Two Films Tonight Graduate and upperclass enrollment gains provide most of the 9 per cent jump to record high summer session on the Lawrence KU campus. Enrollment Hits Record Paid registrations at Lawrence were 3,839 as of June 25. The approximately 650 students at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City and other credit enrollments during the summer will push the final figure near 5,000, according to James K. Hitt, registrar and director of admissions. The Graduate School is the largest gainer, up 189 to 1,793, while the School of Law increased 36 to 84 for a 75 per cent gain. The 1,877 postgraduate students nearly equal the 1,962 undergraduates. At the undergraduate level the School of Business gained 60 percent to 144 and the School of Education, also junior-senior level, rose 55 to 423. The 1,188 juniors and seniors outnumbered freshmen and sophomores more than 2 to 1. The man-woman ratio is 1.6 to 1, significantly less than in the regular school year. The new student total of 761 was a gain of 22. Teachers Elect KU Musician The Music Teachers National Association and the Kansas Music Teachers Association have jointly commissioned John Pozdro, chairman of the University of Kansas department of music theory, to compose a work for high school string orchestra. The commissioned work is to be given its premiere in February 1955 at the state meeting. Podrod now is copying his Third Sonata for Piano, which was commissioned by Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sosland of Prairie Village. Pozdro's Second Sonata for piano will receive its 12th performance since its January premiere when Roy HAMLin Johnson of the KU faculty will play a recital Aug. 9 as part of the annual Matthay Festival at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass. The sonata also will be played by Dr. Johnson in a fall recital at the Washington, D.C., Cathedral of the Episcopal Church. Professor Is On His Way To Solo Fly By Jolan Csukas Many people enter contests, but only a few ever walk away with the prize. Karl Edwards, professor of education, is one of the lucky ones. Last May, KLWN, the Lawrence radio station, and the Lawrence airport sponsored a contest and announced that the prize would be a course in flying. Many residents of Lawrence and surrounding areas wrote in 50 words or less why they wanted to learn to fly, but Dr. Edwards' essay stole the show. Dr. Edwards takes flying lessons every Tuesday, Friday and Saturday at the Lawrence airport, and he has almost 10 hours' flying time. After the course is over, he will be able to solo, but will need from 35 to 40 extra hours before he can receive a pilot's license. Relating some of his flying experiences, Dr. Edwards said he was never affected by the height the first time up. He also reported that the very first time in the plane he was allowed to take over the controls. Before he went up, no ground instructions had been given. He feels that the taking-off and landing exercises are the hardest part of learning to fly. Since Dr. Edwards is almost ready to solo, he has considered taking more lessons and obtaining his pilot's license. He has developed a greater interest in flying and says he is really excited about it. StudentstoGive Play Excerpts Excerpts from 10 plays will be presented at 9 a.m. today in the Experimental Theatre in Murphy Hall by students in the drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. After these performances, four of these plays will be selected to be presented at 7 p.m. today, also in the Experimental Theatre. Admission is free. Excerpts from the following plays will be presented: "The World of Carl Sandburg," "A Thurber Carnival." "House of Bernaard Alba," "The King and I," "Time Remembered," "Reynard the Fox," "The Rainmaker," "The Skin of Our Teeth," "Peanuts" and "The Sandbox." The excerpts also were presented Thursday morning. --starring Robert Mitchum and George Peppard FRIDAY FLICKS — presents — 'HOME FROM THE HILL' TONITE...JULY 17th 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. DYCHE AUDITORIUM 35c Birth Pills Approved TOKYO — (UPI)— The Japanese government is expected to allow contraceptive pills to go on prescription sale this autumn. Tokyo newspaper say. Contraceptive methods are almost unknown in Japan although abortion is legal and widely practiced. The pills, because of their relatively high cost, are not expected to change this situation. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Ends Tonite! "BEDTIME STORY" Granada THEATRE...Telephone W 3-508 Granada THEATRE...Telephone W 3-5768 Ends Tonite! "BEDTIME STORY" Granada TREATRE...Telephone W3-5780 Starts SATURDAY! IT'S HAYLEY! WALT DISNEY'S surprise in suspense! The Moon- Spinners Technicolor Mat. 2:00 Eve. 7:00-9:00 Cont. Sunday from 2:30 IT'S HAYLEY! NOW! Fri. - Sat. - Sun. Eve. Only — Starts at 7:00 Varsitu THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 you've met the rat pack! now meet the mouse pack! M-6-H presents A RED RICHARD PRODUCTION ADVANCE TO THE REAR GLENN STELLA MELVYN FORD STEVENS DOUGLAS PLUS Bobs on the road to paternity. Bob Hope and The Global Girls in A Global Affair MGK Bob Hope and The Global Girls in A Global Affair Tonite & Saturday Dean Martin Jerry Lewis "At War with the Army" and Red Skelton "Yellow Cab Man" 2 Extra Bonus Hits Saturday Night! Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 Sun. - Mon. DORIS DAY "Move Over, Darling" and "Young and Willing" OPEN 7:00 STARTS DUSK Forgotten Stones May Give Clues to Fate Of Sir Walter Raleigh's Lost Colony of 1587 Page 11 Summer Session Kansan GAINESVILLE, Ga. — (UPI)— A pile of stones once thought to be the key to a fascinating historical mystery—the fate of Sir Walter Raleigh's Lost Colony—lies forgotten today in a storeroom at Brenau College. They are the Eleanor Dare Stones. In the late 1930's they made front page headlines across the country, only to sink into obscurity when doubt was cast on their authenticity. Twenty-six years after the first stone was found, most of the tablets on which crude Elizabethan English is crawled are in the dark basement of a Brenau College building. A PUBLIC RELATIONS specialist for the college said: "They're stacked up in a corner of an old storeroom." She said she had never heard of the stones until a newsman requested information about them. At least one of the stones, which some historians still say is authentic, is under the lock and key of Brenau College President Josiah Crudau. In 1937, a tourist from California noticed a small rock sticking out of the mud on the bank of the Chowan River in North Carolina—about 50 miles from the original site of the Lost Colony. A crude cross carved on the face of the rock drew his attention. Closer inspection revealed this inscription under the cross: "ANANIAS DARE and Virginia went hence unto heaven 1591—any Englishman shew John White govr Via." The inscription was signed "Fleeman Dare." That discovery was the beginning of an amazing and controversial chapter of American historical research. In the next three years 46 other inscribed stones, all purportedly dealing with the fate of the "Lost Colony" of Roanoke Island, were found in the Saluda River Valley of South Carolina and the Chattahoochee River Valley of Georgia. FOR MORE than three centuries, the fate of the colony Sir Walter Raleigh established on Roanoke Island in 1587 has been a mystery. After the settlers were housed and the colony rooted, Governor John White sailed back to England for supplies. His arrival coincided with a general mobilization of all English ships for protection against the Spanish Armada. It was four years before Queen Elizabeth would permit his return to the New World. When he returned to Roanoke Island, White found not a trace of the settlement he had left. The sole possible clue to the fate of the settlers was the word "Croatan" carved on a tree trunk. WHITE, AFTER a search of the area, returned to England and reported all members of the colony lost—including his daughter, Eleanor White Dare, her husband Ananias Dare, and their baby daughter, Virginia, the first English child born in America. The California tourist who found the stone in North Carolina took it to Atlanta and turned it over to Brenau College officials. Another inscription was found on the reverse side. It told of the escape of G1 colonists from Roanoke Island and their flight through the wilderness to escape marauding Indians, who finally killed all but seven. The dead were buried on a "small hill" the stone said, and their graves marked with similarly-carved stones. THE FOLLOWING spring, 1938, nine more stones were found in South Carolina. They told of hardship and Indian attacks, and said the surviving colonists had decided to travel inland toward the country of the friendly Cherokees. Months later, the trail was picked up again—this time in the Chattawahooche River Valley of North Georgia. Stones were found scattered along the valley down to the site of a big Cherokee village. The stones said Eleanor and the surviving colonists dwelt at peace. Eleanor married an Indian king and bore him a daughter, according to a message on one rock. All the stones were collected at Brenau College and a call was sent out to historians and scientists to verify their authenticity. EVEN AFTER this, Georgia Tech Professor Count Gibson, head of the school's geology department, examined three of the tablets in the collection and said that as far as he and his colleagues could tell they had not been tampered with for decades. DR. S. E. MORISON, president of the American Antiquarian Society, along with a group of historians, examined them. They gave them a qualified blessing and said "the preponderance of evidence points to the authenticity of the Dare Stones." But they recommended additional research before any "final, conclusive statement" was issued. The stones, however, were taken off display at Brenau College and ended up in a storeroom, neglected and half-forgotten, with the fate of the Lost Colony remaining the fascinating mystery it has always been. This final statement was never issued. Shortly afterward, published articles cast strong doubts as to the authenticity of the stones and they faded from public interest. Hills and Getting Up at 6 Are Shock to Camper from Guam By Jacquie Glaser Climbing hills was not what 15-year-old Shelby Shapiro from Guam thought he would be doing on the KU campus this summer as he first anticipated coming to the United States to participate in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. "I thought Kansas was as flat as this table," said Shelby, "but my mind was changed when I saw Lawrence!" The small-framed junior is enrolled in the Science Division of the camp. He is taking microbiology, zoology, and anthropology, and he says he likes these classes very much. IT HARDLY SEEMS possible, but Shelly said Guam is much more humid than Kansas! The tropical island has no industry at all, but there is much agriculture. Although the country is not as modern as the United States, almost all of Guam's people drive cars. There are also many trucks on the island, but no buses for public transportation. The only buses seen on the island are government- or military-owned buses. The Shapiro home is made of concrete block, in order to give the family protection from the frequent typhoons which hit the island. However, most of the homes on the island are merely quosset huts. SHELBY'S FATHER, who is a private attorney, moved his family to Guam from the United States eight years ago. Even though Shelby was born in San Francisco, he could not remember anything about the United States. Shelby is the oldest of the three Shapiro children. Asked if there was anything he did not particularly like about camp, he said, "Six o'clock is not the best time to get up. . ." Then a girl sitting nearby asked what time he got up in Guam and he answered, "Six! But, I still do not like it!" How will Shelby use the knowledge he gains at KU this summer? Well, he plans to attend college and will later become a psychiatrist. Perhaps we will hear about this black-haired boy again. Ford Blasts UAW Policy DETROIT — (UPI) — Ford Motor Co. has charged the United Auto Workers Union with regarding authorized strikes as a "convenient outlet for local militancy." The charge was lodged in a strongly worded statement that accompanied demands for changes in seven sections of the current UAW-Ford contract covering 124,000 workers. It marked the first time Ford laid demands on the bargaining table in this summer's round of negotiations to write a new three-year contract to replace the current pact which expires Aug. 31. Manton M. Cummins, director of Ford's labor affairs office, said "the company believes that the present Ford-UAW working agreement is generally acceptable. There are, nevertheless, some aspects of it which have proven highly unsatisfactory and it is only in these areas that we will propose modifications." SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? Friday, July 17, 1964 ACROSS FROM HILLCREST O CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Experienced typist would like to typing in her home. Call VI 3-5139. tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will be responsible for accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McEldowney 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. VI 8368. Accurate expert typist would in her service. Call VI 3-2651. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. accurate learner typist would like typing request service. Call VI 3-2651. prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any kind—Very reasonable text content. Kofman (Mrs. Robt.) V1 3-7493 after 5.00. Mrs.typist experienced with term papers, typing and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with special symbols. Mrs. typing immediately at Higley. 408 West 13th. VI 3-6048 Expert typing on thesis, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Mrs. Mishler at VI 3-1029. 7-17 Secretary would like typing for thesis and term papers. Call VI 3-9228. tt FOR RENT One bedroom, private 1/2 bath with shower. Private kitchen available. Call IV 3-2402 or see at 516 Louisiana from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. 7-24 Very nice apartment for 2 men. Fall semester. Private entrance. Walking distance to campus. See at 1102 West 19th Terrace. 7-24 Close to campus, very nice air-condition- lium. Call 2116 or inquire at office -1123 Indiana, tf Extra nice bachelor apartment, Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Private parking -automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8534. tt Two bedroom duplex -Slove and refriger- trity furnished-VI 3-2281 Extra large, newly decorated 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath. Also garage and basement storage. 2 blocks from campus. $100.00 a month. Bills paid including phone. VI 3-0298 or VI 3-7830. 7-31 Room with 15 bath. Edge of campus. Student in room. VI 3-125 between 5-7 p.m. 7-24 BUSINESS DIRECTORY RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed GB 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 FOR SALE Cute Kittens. Free to good home. Three- male and one female. Six weeks, weaned. Polaroid camera with some accessi- sories. 45. Baby Carriage. $7.50. T-21 3-8352. Economy minded. 1952 Rambler 2-dr. extra clean, std. trans., with Overdrive. Good transportation. 1952 Trans. Good transportation. Benson's Sales. 1902 Harper, VI 3-1626. 7-17 $60.00 monthly and $1,000 down buys nicely landscaped 3 bedroom home with glass enclosed shower-bath, refrigerator and stove. Call VI 2-1353. 7-24 1962 Ducati motorcycle. Perfect condition. $450. See at 981 Louisiana. 7-31 Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of 1963-64 read- line notes and classroom materials for Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. Typewriters, new and used portables, Typewriters, Royal and Smith Corona port- ables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and i Typewriter, Typewriter, 735 Mass St. SL, VI 3-3644 HOT RODDERS! 1940 Ford Coupe—Steoke at 1133 Rhode Island at 1133 Rhode Island T-7-17 Vespa 2-seater $150.00 motor scooter for sale. Has large utility basket on back and is in good condition. Call John, room 243, VI 2-1200. 7-31 MISCELLANEOUS 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Have you tried the Hillierest Bowl sonable prices ... 9th and 10th, 7-24 Hillcrest Bowl maintains the finest lanes in Kansas. All time high scores rolled on our lanes last year in Kansas State Men's Tournament and in 1963 American Legion Tournament. Come in for a FREE one before 6 p.m. or after 9 p.m., any day. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof — Free Parking Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Balfour 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 Fraternity Jewelry Brake Adj. . . . 98c Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd STUDENTS CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ...right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUB SPECIALTY Page 12 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 17, 1964 High Fashion Demands Extra Care! H Don't risk your fine fashions-trust the expert care that only Independent can assure you. Our convenient locations place fine laundry and dry-cleaning facilities at your finger-tips; our professional plant at 740 Vermont and the self-service plant at 9th & Mississippi can handle your every cleaning need. For results that you can count on—don't settle for less-insist on the Independent laundry and dry cleaners. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. TROPHY Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1964 52nd Year, No. 13 Lawrence, Kansas TURNER ART GROUP "IT'S INTERESTING, BUT WHAT IS IT?"—That's what Diki Weigand, science camper from Joplin, Mo., says to Bob Duklow, a math and science camper from Kansas City. The two are admiring a portrait by Ed King displayed along with others in Murphy Hall. Varied Mediums Featured In Campers' Art Exhibit By Laurie Lankin Providing a showcase for art division campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp is the art exhibit along the walls of Murphy Hall. The exhibit, which changes weekly, will come down tonight for the last time. Art instructors choose the best and most representative art work from their classes and hang, mount, and arrange the art work themselves. Neatly labeled yellow or white slips of paper for the pottery and jewelry contrasted with hasty but proud signatures on the paintings. Cries of "Hey, that's me!" "Isn't this wonderful?", and "I'd like to have some of these in my house" can be heard ringing throughout the hall by the hundreds of viewers as they see the exhibit. "EVERY WEEK the exhibit seems Civil Rights Money Asked by Johnson WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Johnson yesterday asked Congress to appropriate $13 million to carry out provisions of the new civil rights law. The money would enable the Justice Department to expand its staff of lawyers to handle the enforcement features of the act. Additionally, funds would be used to set up within the Commerce Department the Community Relations Service, a new agency designed to promote racial peace. Since the regular appropriations bills for the Justice and Commerce Departments were submitted many months ago, it was necessary for the President to request a supplemental appropriation for the civil rights funds. The money asked yesterday will finance activities through June 30, 1965. to get better," said Shirley Schopp, 16, music camper from Normandy, Mo. "You can easily see that the art students are really learning something from their courses." A tree blazing in the golden summer sun contrasts with a cool silent statue as one begins looking at the water colors. A sleepy farm scene is surrounded by green leafy landscapes in that section. Rich textured oil paintings are found in abundance as the campers used everything from fellow classmates to still life for subjects. MISTY PORTRAITS, elaborate lettering, sharp-featured high-fashioned sketches, soft pastels, and pungent cartoons line the walls, along with scratchboards and free-form paper and wood sculpture. Judy Alexander, 17, an art camper from Huntington Woods, Mich., likes the idea of the art exhibit "especially because I can compare my work with that of other campers." In glass cases along the other wall are found imaginative "animals" made of pine cones, fuzz, wood, and flowers. Colorful fabric and placemats are used as a background for freeform jewelry and odd-shaped pottery. "It ALSO GIVES other campers an idea of what art students are doing," added John Naughtin, 17, an art camper from Omaha, Neb. "It is an honor to have a piece selected for exhibition. We think that this makes the students strive for excellence," he said. Prof, Arvid Jacobson, assistant director of the camp art division, explains that the exhibit is useful because of several reasons. Law Officers To Attend Police School Improved law enforcement is a goal of the 18th annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School which started yesterday at KU. "This year we've been extremely pleased with our group of students," he continued. "They are the best-disciplined group we've ever had and have turned out a great deal of work. The water colors and figure sketches have been especially good." About 90 peace officers, most of them from Kansas, were expected to enroll in either a basic or advanced course offered at the six-day school. They will study search and seizure, preserving the crime scene, factors of mob violence, adolescent problems, information sources and other matters related to law enforcement. THE PROGRAM runs concurrently through Wednesday with a Correctional Officers Seminar to be attended by about 45 persons. Lt. Col. Allen Rush, assistant superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol, Topeka, gave the keynote address of the Peace Officers School yesterday morning. His topic was "The Police Role in American Society." Harold R. Fatzer, associate justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, will speak to the officers Saturday. Following his lecture, officers who have completed the courses will receive certificates, to be presented by Logan H. Sanford, director of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and president of the Kansas Peace Officers Association, Topcka. AMONG THE OTHER lecturers at the Peace Officers School are E. P. Moomau, chief of the University of Kansas traffic and security department, and James S. Kline, coordinator of police training at the KU Governmental Research Center. KU members of the school's planning committee are Kline; J. U. Adams, University Extension representative; and Ethan P. Allen, director, and William H. Cape, associate director, Governmental Research Center. The Kansas penal program and the correctional officer's role will be examined at the three-day Correctional Officers Seminar. Among the lecturers is Theodore L. Heim, training program coordinator, KU Governmental Research Center. Sponsors of the Peace Officers School and the related Correctional Seminar are the KU Governmental Research Center, University Extension, KU, and the Kansas Peace Officers Association. Twenty-five governmental and private agencies are cooperating with the programs. WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Senate returned to work yesterday and promptly called up a $202 million military pay raise bill in a determined attempt to set a pace that will clear key bills before the Democratic national convention Aug. 24. Senate Back on Job, Studies Military Raise The House returned to work also but scheduled only a token session. Group Organized For Social Service A group of KU students interested in Social and Public Services has established a committee to coordinate the activities of the proposed organization. Working with Lawrence Woodruff, dean of students, and Raymond Price, professor of social work, the group will be answering questions about the purposes of the organization at information tables on the first floor of Strong Hall and the Kansas Union, during this week. Forming of the committee followed current trends at campuses across the country in forming cooperative programs of community betterment. THE KU PROGRAM emulates the Phillips Brooks House Services at Harvard University, which for the last decade has placed 10-15 per cent of the Harvard student body in projects of hospital assistance, legal consultation, high school tutoring, work in mental hospitals and other areas. Similar organizations at Northwestern University and the University of North Carolina have involved up to 700 students in education and counseling. With the lead of the Peace Corps and the proposed national volunteer programs, other campuses around the country are setting up such groups. KU students involved in the program last spring and this summer have been working with the Lawrence Human Relations Commission to develop a survey and loan program for retraining of minority and low income group laborers under the Manpower Retraining Act and local extension courses. The group is outlining a program of counseling and recreational supervision with the Probate Court and local church groups. THE WHOLE ORGANIZATION is oriented toward broad student participation. Its programs are aimed at students going into or already enrolled in Law, Business or Medical School, as well as those in Social Studies and Education. The KU group needs students in the fields of physical education, law and pre-law for its present programs. Future projects discussed by the group involve recreational and therapeutic assistance at general and mental hospitals, organization of local action groups to implement informal codes, restoration and clean-up campaigns, provision of legal, architectural and financial guidance and counseling for young people leaving correctional institutions. Continued Heat Is State Prospect Rv United Press International By United Press International Continued hot temperatures and high humidity are in store for most of Kansas. Some variable cloudiness was expected in portions of north and east Kansas but not enough to keep down the high temperatures. Highs were expected to range from 95 to 102 with lows generally in the 70's. In addition to these plans the group has discussed cooperation with the KU and National Peace Corps and extension of projects to the Topeka area and Kansas City in conjunction with the Medical School and the University of Missouri campus. 'Bye Bye Birdie' Ends Side Door '64 Season "Bye Bye Birdie," a two-act comedy, is being presented each evening through Friday at 8:15 and Wednesday and Friday afternoon at 3 in the University Theatre. The play, which closes the Side Door '64 program for the theatre, will be presented by 50 members of the drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. KU students and campers may receive free tickets at the box office in Murphy Hall. Admission is $1.50 for others. Waggoner Now In Costa Rica Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has begun a two-month appointment as adviser to the Council of Central American Universities. He and his family are making their headquarters at the University of Costa Rica near San Jose. Last month Dean Waggoner was in charge of a week-long meeting here of the Commission for General Studies of the Council (CSUCA). Dean Waggoner has been active in other areas as a consultant to higher education in Latin America. The past two winters he has directed at KU the 6-week seminars on University Education in the Americas, each attended by about 25 top-level administrators from Latin American schools. Last month Dean Waggoner and U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas were the U.S. delegates to a seminar attended by about 50 Venezuelaan university student leaders. Unusual Music Marks Concerts By Rose Marsha Resnick Sunday afternoon opened a day of unusual entertainment for patrons of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp concerts. Under the direction of James S. Ralston, assistant instructor of choral music, the Concert and Chamber Choirs were combined into one dynamic group to present Handel's "Dettinger Te Deum." Accompanying this German production was a small orchestra made up of 11 pieces. Ralston vigorously worked the chorus in order to keep all sides together. He succeeded in making what normally would take one month's work come about in one week. THE PROGRAM listed more than 200 voices, and to create smooth and even tones and enunciations in a foreign language is indeed quite a feat for high school students. Congratulations are warranted by Mr. Ralston and his assemblage of voices. The orchestra members seemed to be relieved as they took their final bows, but they didn't realize that their performance was so much better than they had anticipated. Saul Caston, guest director from the Denver Symphony, had a busy week with the orchestra division of the program. A bit unsure of themselves, this group worked to perform four numbers by Wagner, "The Ride of the Valkyries" being the finale. THE EVENING concerts included many strange events for the unsuspecting audience. Rumored to be sight-reading fresh music during the actual performance, the Symphonic Band, conducted by both Cmdr. Brendler and Caston, displayed talent in giving of themselves to the music of Gounod, Offenbach, Persichetti, Reed, Moehlman, and Gould, which is a feat often difficult for even experienced musicians. The concert band, directed by Camp Director Russell L. Wiley, played "St. Michael Archangel" from "The Church Windows" by Respeghi for their first number. "Citation," by Claude Smith, closed Mr. Wiley's portion of the evening. Smith, a former student of Wiley's, was in the audience. Before descending the podium, Mr. Wiley turned to the audience and told them that the band had planned a surprise for Cmdr. Brendler. Wiley asked Brendler to return to the stage and direct "The Stars and Stripes Forever," the band's tribute to Brendler for his devotion to their group during the past weeks at camp. Caston closed the evening with "Symphony for Band" by Persi- chetti, and week number five was over. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1964 If It's Fun-Don't Do It An old friend is dead. It happened this morning when this writer picked up the Summer Session Kansan and discovered a story that came from the Associated Press concerning the harmful effects of the caffeine contained in coffee. As a cynical old college student, this writer has seen the demise of cigarettes, that old final week crutch. Cigarettes now have a place of dishonor on campus. You can't even buy them in the Kansas Union anymore. They are naughty, bad and sinful. Also, they wreck your health. Coffee has gone the way of cigarettes now, and it seems a shame that another friend of the frantic college student is being taken away. Another crutch of the campus is every students' favorite beverage—beer. The trouble with beer is that it is fattening. Too bad, because it's so much fun. NOW COFFEE, that stimulating stimulant, is under the watchful eyes of doctors all over the country to find out what harmful things IT does to the body. It makes you feel good, warms you up, gets you going in the morning and in general is enjoyable. Naturally it is not good for human consumption. SEEMS LIKE EVERYTHING that is fun, a crutch or just amusing is being analyzed, watched, tested and denounced. As an adult, I feel that people of this generation and the next one are becoming accustomed to being told what they can and cannot do in order to live a peaceful, well-ordered life. "Everything in moderation" is the password for the next 20 years. But the question is: What fun is it to live to be 100 if you never have any fun or raise any hell? Not that all health hazards should be ignored just for the sake of being foolhardy... not at all. But this credo of carefulness should be examined for the future. SHOULD THE CHILDREN I may have in 10 years be raised to fear everything, or should they be given a choice of the vices in which they wish to indulge? After all, every generation has had vices. Life would not be worth living if we all were the pure, sweet figments of the advertisers' imaginations. Perhaps, as a college student, this writer should not admit how much she dislikes being told how dangerous the world around her is. Perhaps she should submit to the warnings of her elders and give up all the amusements she has learned to enjoy. Perhaps just existing in a vacuum would be better. Linda Ellis State Schools Claim Majority Of American College Youth Almost two-thirds of the country's college and university full-time undergraduate students — 64 per cent or 1,727,849 — were enrolled in public institutions in fall 1963, according to an analysis of U.S. Office of Education figures made by the Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. Fifty-seven per cent, or 1,533,684 were attending public institutions in their home state, while 7 per cent -194,165 -were in out-of-state public institutions. The breakdown of in-state and out-of-state enrollment in public institutions has particular significance now, at a time when rising enrollments are forcing many state legislatures to ask state and land-grant institutions to consider limiting admission of out-of-state students in order to assure space to qualified residents. THE ASSOCIATION'S analysis indicates that almost 200,000 full-time undergraduate students now attend public colleges and universities in states other than their own. Presidents of these institutions believe students from other states provide a valuable educational ingredient on campus and help break down provincialism. President Frederick L. Hovde of Purdue University has stated: "Barriers erected around states, of any kind, academic or financial, will be in the long run bad policy for not only the states, but the nation as a whole . . . I consider the phenomenon of student migration one of the important elements in the structure of higher education." Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Faint Hall University of Kansas Student Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3644, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegeate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press, International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas PRESIDENT HOVDE points out that eliminating out-of-state students may increase costs rather than reduce them, because students paying non-resident tuition would be replaced by resident students who pay less tuition. The New York State Education Department recently inquired into out-of-state admissions policy in 17 states which have state-wide boards for coordinating higher education. Results showed that within the last five years eight of these states upgraded academic standards for the admission of non-resident students. In addition, seven of the eight and two other states had increased costs for non-residents over the past three to five years. At the bottom in total percentage of residents attending public institutions is Massachusetts. Thirty- ALTOUGH THE analysis shows a national figure of 64 per cent of all college students enrolled in public institutions, there is considerable state-by-state variation. At the top, for example, is Arizona, with 89 per cent of all current residents who are college students enrolled in public institutions-84 per cent in public institutions in Arizona and 5 per cent in public institutions elsewhere. four per cent of all its residents who are in colleges and universities are in public institutions — 27 per cent within the state, 6 per cent out of the state. In some states, the percentage of students in out-of-state public institutions is as low as 3 per cent; in one case, Alaska, it goes as high as 36 per cent. THE COMPARISON of 1962-63 high school graduates with the number of first-time students who enrolled in fall 1963 also shows considerable variation. The U.S. Office of Education doesn't give an exact percentage, but uses a "ratio" or number of first-time student residents attending college either in or out of the state, with the number of high school graduates. The ratio should be considered as an "indicator" of the percentage of high school graduates entering higher education, the study points out, but "undoubtedly this ratio and the percentage are highly related." The national ratio given by the study is .51 — which would mean that roughly half of all 1962-63 high school graduates went on to college in fall 1963. The range, however, is from California's ratio of .81 — or roughly 80 per cent — to Maine's .31, well under one-third. New Soviet President Rates As Expert in Political Survival By United Press International When he was appointed first deputy premier in 1955, he became the second-ranking man in the government after Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev. He is also one of Khrushchev's closest friends. By Catherine Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan, newly appointed Soviet president, is the foremost Soviet authority on how to survive Russian political roulette. The 68-year-old politician is a swarthy, book-nosed Armenian and one of the "old Bolsheviks." Most of the rest are dead or banished. HIS FLAIR for business is said to have led Khrushchev to remark that if Mikoyan had lived in the United States he probably would have become a millionaire. He admits Stalin died in the nick of time for him. Known for his ready humor and shrewdness, Mikoyan, with his sense of where to jump at the right time, has doggedly stayed atop the slippery Soviet political pyramid. "Stalin held us in his hand." Mikoyan once said. "Only one escape was left to us (suicide). At the end of Stalin's life, I was about to be executed." Mikoyan was born Nov. 25, 1895, the son of a carpenter in the Armenian village of Sanain. He was sent to an Armenian Catholic seminary but later said, "The more I studied religion, the less I believed in God." HE GRADUATED from the seminary in 1915 and in the same year joined the Bolsheviks as an underground revolutionary. In 1919 he was imprisoned three times for his activities in strikes and partisan warfare, escaping each time. His first high post with the Communist government after the revolution was as commisar of trade in 1826. For the next 11 years he had the task of feeding the vast country on a shoestring. In August 1936 he traveled to the United States to study food production there, announcing that "we must study America." During World War II he organized the conversion of factories to war production and negotiated multi-billion lend-lease war supply agreements with the United States and Britain. BOOK REVIEWS RABBLE IN ARMS. by Kenneth Roberts (Crest, 95 cents). In the early thirties, when the reading tastes of Americans were more romantically inclined than today, no one could beat Kenneth Roberts in the field of historical fiction. He pounded out eight novels, through the early fifties, all of them set in the early days of this country. The best, despite the greater reputation of "Northwest Passage," was "Rabble in Arms," and after all these years it's finally available in paperback. A good buy it is, too. It's an epic tale of the American Revolution, and the great incident is the battle of Saratoga, which according to Roberts belongs not to Gen. Gates, who usually gets the credit, but the much-maligned Gen. Benedict Arnold. credit, but the man himself Arnold, as in "Arundel," is the real hero of the story. Roberts makes quite a case for Arnold's defection being due to the shoddy treatment he received from the Continental Congress. As in his other novels, Roberts shows a tremendous flair for military description, for rough comedy, for long marches, and almost none for conventional love. *** HORIZON (Summer 1964, $5). The "new" Horizon, that is the Horizon appearing since the big hardback magazine went quarterly on us, seems to be striving for balance between the hot contemporary topic and the quiet look into the past. Tastes greatly vary, of course, as to what is best in something like the summer issue. Horizon pushes its article on the automobile vs. the city. One reader prefers the latest in a series on great painters, this one dealing with Albrecht Durer. TO START WITH the timely article-Horizon's writer, Victor Gruen, architect and city planner, contends that automobiles and trucks are killing urban areas through noise, danger to life and limb, and pollution of the air. His argument is a strong one; a magazine concerned with cultural matters is right to hit hard on this one. Gruen's word for the problem of the congested city is "autosis"—an excessive worship of the car by manufacturers and city governments. Here is some of the other reading—and viewing—in this glittering summer book: "SARAJEVO: THE END OF INNOCENCE," about the shot 50 years ago that ended the good years and plunged us into World War I—and the modern world; "The King's Trial," the story of the trial and execution of Charles I; "Albrecht Durer," with photographs and text by John Canaday, a fine article on the German genius of the Renaissance; "Rediscovering America," a piece by Alfred Kidder II on latest discoveries of the early Americas: "Mexico and Points East," drawings in surrealistic vein; "Rousseau: The Solitary Wanderer," a re-evaluation of the famous 18th century philosopher by J. Christopher Herold; "The Depot: A Terminal Case," a nostalgic piece on the decline of another American institution, and "God, Nell, Ain't It Grand?" an article by Cleveland Amory about the fantastic Diamond Jim Brady. *** THIS WAS CICERO, by Henry J. Haskell (Premier, 75 cents). The author of this biography is a well known editor of the Kansas City Star, and the book itself is a recreation of a statesman so great that his name is practically a symbol in politics. The Saturday Review said the book was "likely to be the best life of Cicero past, present, or to come." Haskell describes the Roman and his contemporaries—Pompey, Caesar, Brutus, Antony, Augustus. These figures that seem statue-like, in cold relief, emerge as exciting figures from history. CIVIL RIGHTS BILL © 1964 HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Safe!" Summer Session Kansan Page 3 AUTHORITY SING ALONG WITH SHIRLEY!-Shirley Williams, a KU freshman from Olathe, strums her guitar in front of Ellsworth Hall. Listening is David Johnson, a law student from Shawnee. Shirley provided a pleasant escape for Ellsworth residents from the convention furor last week with her instrumental-vocal rendition of American folk songs. Oddly enough, though, her nightly performances attracted only male students. Doty Says Birchers Rule GOP WICHITA —(UPI)— Jules Doty, Democratic gubernatorial candidate, has charged that Republicans, both nationally and in Kansas, have come under what he terms the iron-fisted intolerant control of the John Birch Society. Doty said that since the national Republican Party and its presidential candidate, Barry Goldwater, have espoused extremism, so must the Kansas Republican Party make a choice. The Democratic hopeful challenged the Republican gubernatorial candidates as to whether they endorse the views of Goldwater. Tuesday, July 21, 1964 TUESDAY 21 JULY 1964 - DENTAL APPOINTMENT - MOM'S BIRTHDAY GIFT - GET FREE CHECK UP HAVE TANK FILLED WITH "BIG GALLON" AT FRITZ! 7/21/64 203 TUE, JULY 21, 1964 163 FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everything We cash your checks — mail your letters — invite your account TUESDAY 21 JULY 1964 JULY 1964 G M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 8 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 28 27 28 29 30 31 - DENTAL APPOINTMENT - MOM'S BIRTHDAY GIFT - GET FREE CHECK UP HAVE TANK Filled WITH "BIG GALLON" AT FRITZ! 7/21/64 203 TUE., JULY 21, 1964 163 CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Another Negro Teacher Is Hired CITIES SERVICE ROCK HILL, S.C. — (UPI) - Winthrop College quietly enrolled a Negro school teacher yesterday to become the third state-supported institution to desegregate. She arrived by car early yesterday, was admitted through the guarded gates of the college, and went into the admissions office to await the arrival of school officials. Cynthia P. Roddey, formerly a Rock Hill High School teacher, enrolled in the women's college summer session as a graduate student. Her entry stirred little curiosity and attracted no spectators except for a few newsmen who arrived later. Winthrop officials had kept the woman's name a secret until yesterday morning. Mrs. Roddey declined to be interviewed or photographed. Three Receive Scholarships For Year of Foreign Study Scholarships toward a year of foreign study have been received by three KU students. with his appointment as KU's exchange scholar with the University of Kiel, Germany. He received the B.A. degree from Kansas last month with majors in mathematics and German. He will study mathematics in Germany. Mrs. Sharon Tebbenkamp Sooter of Salisbury, Mo., has been appointed a Fulbright-Hays scholar for the study of voice at the Hochschule fuer Musik at Hamburg, Germany. The scholarship, awarded through the State Department, covers travel, fees and subsistence costs. Mrs. Sooter, a mezzo soprano, has been in several musical productions at KU and twice has been a district winner in the Metropolitan Opera auditions. She holds the bachelor of music degree and is a candidate for the degree of master of music. Gary Alan Smith, Kansas City has received a Fulbright-Hays grant to cover travel costs in connection Kathryn Sue Campbell, Decatur, Ill., will receive the Maupintour Associates travel grant which annually goes to a KU exchange scholar to a British university. She is KU's exchange scholar to the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. Formerly of Parsons, she earned the B.A. degree from Kansas in 1962 and has been a graduate student in English the past two years. GOOD AS NEW only with PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING Cleaning with quality you can trust; results are consistently good with extra care given to your garments . . . always visit LAWRENCE LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.-VI 3-3711 --- Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1964 'Which Side?' Keynotes Conflict By Tom Coffman One of the many songs which has passed through the South with the Negro movement is "Which Side Are You On?" It is sung in tent meetings, church houses, in street demonstrations—sometimes in a low hum by a boy walking the darkened streets at night, sometimes it booms in a chorus passing from mouth to mouth. "Which side are you on, boy, which side are you on?" A clap of hands, a shuffle of feet—a hum or a roar which calls for the drawing of lines, "Which side are you on?" If one is not a right-thinking Negro, not supporting integration, that is, he may be called an Uncle Tom, a quisling, or a coward. ON THE WHITE side, the tune takes a different form but has a similar effect. If one is not a segregationist he may be black-listed by the White Citizens' Council, his job may be in jeopardy, or he may lose social status. A man whose position and tradition lay with the white community yet who favors integration doesn't talk loudly. One of these is the Rev. Ivan Burnett, student and assistant pastor of a Greenwood church. He is New Men's Suit Is Bottomless GREENWICH, Conn. —(UPI)— Men have found an answer to the toneless bathing suit for women. It's the bottomless sports suit for men. The innovation is being pioneered by Al Salamone, golf pro at the Green Hills Country Club. He said the outfit is an adaptation of men's sleepcoats and provides absolute freedom of movement for golfers. The bottomless suit is a knee-length, half-sleeved sport shirt with a button down collar. It is worn with knee-high socks. What's worn underneath is up to individual tastes in the manner of the Scottish kilt. Wichita Gymnast Is Signed by University The University of Kansas has signed its first gymnast to a national letter of intent in Roscoe "Stoney" Grisham of Wichita Southeast High. Coach Bob Lockwood described Grisham as "one of the best gymnasts in the midwest." Grisham won the Southwestern AAU individual all-round gymnast title last year at Dallas. He was runner-up for state high school titles in still-rings and high-bar in 1962 and 1963. from near-by Meridian, educated first at Mill Saps College in Jackson, then at Yale University. To him, the law of the land is integration and the law of his church is integration. What he calls his "witness" to these beliefs is, to say the least, oblique. One Sunday recently he preached from the Biblical text, "Love thine enemy," using the vocabulary of the white community in referring to the student civil rights workers here now. BURNETT WOULD like to go across town to the office of the civil rights movement. He is curious how the students live and work, but he has decided that such a move would be imprudent. "I thought of calling them (the project volunteers) on the telephone," Burnett said, "but the Citizens' Council may have their wire tapped. If I drove down, I would be cut from communication with the community right away, because the place is watched 24 hours a day." Burnett said that ultimately one had to decide where his ministry would be. "I can't have my foot in two communities or I do no one any good." "I WANT TO LEAD," he said. He likened his duty with some future congregation to that of a man with a huge rubber band binding him to his people. "You have to go far enough ahead so it pulls the people your way, but you can't go so far that the rubber band breaks and the people fall away from you." Next year Burnett will be graduated from Yale. He wants to return to Mississippi, and he does not want to make that return an impossibility by being too close to the wrong side on the race issue. A few days ago he told one of the boys of the church, in discussing the race issue, that he favored integration of the public schools. Now he worries whether the boy will keep the confidence. "MORE THAN HALF of the official board probably belong to the White Citizens' Council," Burnett said. Another fear is that the Circuit Riders, active in Mississippi as lay preachers, will turn their anti-Communist crusade on him and—through a logic which associates integration with world socialism—brand him as an unwitting servant of the Kremlin. A group of 28 young Methodist ministers in the Mississippi conference recently signed a statement which, in essence, said they favored compliance with federal laws concerning race. Throuh pressurest brought on them, mainly from their congregations, more than half have left the state. BRINGIN' HOME THE BARGAINS FROM... Ray Christian "THE COLLEGE JEWELER" 809 Mass. BURNETT WONDERS if pressures are not already building up against him. His name has been brought up before the White Citizens' Council, he has been told, but one of the Greenwood elders "stood up and talked for me." When he occasionally comments on the race situation from the pulpit he gets crank telephone calls. One day a woman member of the congregation overheard him refer to the Negro custodian's wife as a "lady." The white woman hauled out a dictionary and read Burnett the definition of the word, then informed him that no "nigra" woman falls into the "lady" category. With a small group of friends, Burnett discussed the possibility of establishing a bi-racial committee to open communication with the Negro community, which has been choked off since the 1954 Supreme Court decision on integration of schools. They talk behind closed doors. One of Burnett's friends, referring to Christ and the application of His teaching, commented ruefully, "I guess that we cater to the Man, but bury the cross." KRESS was $1.97 now $1.67 Blouse 'n Jamaica Set special 2-piece cotton sizes 10-18 aquanet was 88c now 67c KRESS 921 MASS Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers SIDEWALK BAZAAR SPECIALS THURS. JULY 23 All Summer Merchandise Dresses Sizes 3 thru 11; values were 9.98 to 29.98 Now $3 to $8 Sportswear Sizes 3 thru 14; values were $3 to $11.98 Includes Blouses, Culottes, Skirts, Slacks & Bermudas Now $1 to $3 Jewelry one-half price Sandals & Summer Slippers s.-m.-l. Values were 3.00 to 6.00 Now $1.50 to $3 All sales final please— No refunds or exchange on sale merchandise Ober's Junior Miss 821 Mass. VI 3-2057 RSN ELEVATOR FROM MEN'S STORE Tuesday, July 21, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Racial Strife Subject of N.Y.Meeting NEW YORK — (UPI)—City officials and civil rights leaders conferred urgently yesterday to seek a way to calm racial tensions in Harlem, America's largest Negro community, where hundreds of Negroes battled police in two days of bloody, destructive riots. While the meeting convened at City Hall, a 15-year-old Negro boy, whose slaying by an off-duty policeman last Thursday touched off the weekend of rampaging and blood-shed, was buried in a suburban cemetery. THE SIDEWALK WAR between inflamed Negroes and hundreds of steel-heLMETed riot police was controlled early yesterday after two nights of shootings, beatings and looting in which one man was killed and scores were injured. Three persons were wounded by police Sunday night and early yesterday as the Negroes, seething with anger, hurled rocks, bricks, bottles and even Molotov cocktail fire bombs at the police. The rioting in the ghetto community of more than 200,000-94 percent of them Negro—confirmed dire prophesies of civil rights leaders that Harlem was in for a "long hot summer" of strife. IT WAS IN HOPES of quieting the emotion-charged situation that city officials, headed by acting Mayor Paul V. Screvane, met in City Hall with leaders of the Negro community. As he walked into the meeting, James Farmer, national director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), was asked if anything could be done to pacify the angry, frustrated Harlem Negroes who have staged a series of anti-police demonstrations since James Powell, 15, was shot by the policeman in a sidewalk altercation last Thursday. "We hope so, of course," Farmer replied. Curator Leaves KU Next Month After four years at the University as art museum curator and instructor of art history, Gerald Bernstein will leave KU in early August to begin studies for his doctoral degree at the University of Pennsylvania under a Danforth Foundation Kent Fellowship. Kent Penshipwis- Among his other studies at the Pennsylvania school, Bernstein will do research on 19th century American architecture, which is his special interest. During his time here, he has written several articles on KU campus architecture which both criticized and praised the "electicism" of the 19th century campus buildings. Lewis Hall Maid Likes Students, and Work By Jacquie Glaser One of the biggest problems many new students have when they first arrive at college is learning how to take care of themselves, their clothes and their rooms. Mrs. Adah Fish, a Lewis Hall maid, said in an early morning interview. "I really think every boy and every girl should know how to clean his own room, wash and iron his own clothes, and take care of himself, especially since one never knows what will happen in the future," said Adah, who tells everyone to "just cross out the 'h' in my name and then pronounce it!" ADAH, WHO WORKS with three other maids in Lewis Hall, had cleaned on the fourth and fifth floors ever since the building opened. Each maid takes care of two floors, from seven to three-thirty every day except Sunday and their half day off. The dorm also is served by two janitors, who put in lights, wash windows, care for the stairways, and do other jobs. Certain maintenance men, or carpenters and plumbers, do the repair work in all of the buildings on the hill. Probably the biggest chore the maids have to tackle is keeping the shower stalls clean. All of the time this reporter was interviewing Adah, she was busily working. IF ONE HAS EVER seen a maid cleaning the shower stalls, he would understand why Adah says, "I do not think the girls need to worry about getting germs—we use so much disinfectant!" With a combination of scalding hot water, a quantity of ammonia to help cut the grease off the walls, and a large amount of disinfectant, Adah moped one of the shower stalls for about five minutes as vigorously as she could. "Each maid must work out a system by which she can get all of her work done. We cannot do everything all in one day. Even at home you do not do every job on every day." said the constantly busy maid. Although the college girls are in the building more and stay for a longer period of time than the campers, either group is nice to work with and usually very cooperative. "COOPERATION REALLY helps us, because it is such a job just to get done at all!" she commented. In the summer, the maids try to get some extra work done. They do jobs like washing furniture and doors because when the college girls are here the every-day jobs X-Ray Course Offered The newest developments in X-ray technology are the program for the seventh annual refresher course scheduled for Oct. 9-10 at the Medical Center in Kansas City. The Kansas Society of X-ray Technicians is sponsor of the course, presented by the School of Medicine and University Extension. RECORDS SIDEWALK BAZAAR SALE RECORDS, SHEET MUSIC, RADIOS BAZAAR DAY ONLY RECORDS BELL'S VI 3-2644 925 Mass. RECORDS- RECORDS This had been Adah's first summer to work with the campers. "The biggest difference between the campers and the college girls," said Adah, "is the fact that we were always unlocking the college girl's doors, more often than we do the campers' doors." keep them very busy. In the winter, the university furnishes the bed sheets, and once a week the maid must change these also. MANY NICE GIRLS have been known as "Adah's girls or Adah's honeys" in the past years. "The girls are all different but all swell!" she said, "However, in that large a group, there will always be one or two people who will cause some trouble—but most of the group will be very nice. "I really think it is a good experience for the girls to live at Lewis Hall during the summer, because they learn how to live with and get along with other girls in a large group! That is something which you cannot learn at home." Not only does Adah have a "large eight children at her own home in Lecompton. Five of her children are married and away from home, and the youngest child will be 11 this month. Not only does Adah have a "large family" at Lewis Hall but she has As Adah was finishing one phase of her work, she paused and said, "We do not have it so bad up here. It sure would be worse if we had to come up here every day and the girls did not smile at us or would just pass by and not speak. It would probably be too hard to take! But when the girls are friendly and smile at us, it is so much nicer!" McCoy'S SHOES SIDEWALK BAZAAR M.Coy's SHOES On the sidewalk 1 Big Table of odds and ends Children's $3 tennis shoes; women's $3 tennis shoes; women's sandals and many other items 1/2 price and less. $1.50 Final Mark Downs on Women's and Girls' Spring and Summer Shoes. Sbicca Little Hour Glass Heels in white and colors. Were $14.95 $8.90 Women's Keds and Kedettes Discontinued colors and patterns. Were $5 and $6 $3.90 Risque Medium and High Heel Pumps in white and pastel colors. Were to $13 and $14 $7.90 On the sidewalk 1 Big Table Women's $4 sandals, girls' $4 and $5 dress flats. Many short lots of better shoes 1/2 price and less. $1.99 Sbicca Little Stacked Heels Several colors to choose from. Were $13 $7.90 Sbicca Dress Flats in white, bone and black. Were $10 and $10.95 $6.90 Miss America and Jolene Dress Flats in white, red, bone and black. Were $7 to $9 $3.90 and $4.90 Leprecon Sandals Several patterns and colors to choose from. $2.99 2 pairs $5 813 Mass. M.Coy's SHOES VI 3-2091 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1964 Lodge Quiet On Backing OfGoldwater BEVERLY, Mass.—(UPI)—Gold-water Republicans are awaiting support they may never get from former Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge. Lodge, a staunch supporter of Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton, flew home from San Francisco before the Republican national convention had ended. Obviously smarting from the political beating he had received, Lodge refused to say whether he would support Sen. Barry Goldwater for President. But he promised not to bolt the Republican Party. Asked whether he would back Goldwater, Lodge said, "I adhere to my convictions in the field of foreign affairs and, of course, on civil rights. "Also, I am a lifelong Republican and shall continue in the Republican Party in the future as I always have in the past to advance the cause of positive Republicanism." Questioned as to why he left San Francisco before the Republicans had selected a vice-president, Lodge answered, "I was not a delegate. I did all I could for Bill Scranton, and there was no further reason for me to stay." He said he had not discussed with Goldwater the possibility of supporting him during the coming election. Driving Classes Now in Session The Advanced Driver Education class, with an enrollment of 27 high school teachers, is meeting on the KU campus from July 20-31. During this period, the teachers are receiving additional training in classroom and driving instruction. This is the 14th year that teachers have been attending the course on an All State Foundation grant. These teachers from Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri will be teaching approximately 1,500 students in driver education this fall. The class is under the direction of Prof. Jack Kinchelow of Wichita State University. Teachers may receive two hours' graduate credit. The purpose of the summer course is to help teachers meet the requirements set up for them before they are able to teach the course. Besides the classes that are being held in the Student Union, the driver education teachers are required to take a course in driving training. Upton Sinclair Still Trying To Master Ills LOS ANGELES—(UPI)—Novelist Upton Sinclair, 85, says he's still searching for the reason why some people are rich and others poor. "Oh, my goodness, I've been warring on poverty since I was about 4 years old. I said to my mother, 'Mother, why are some people so rich and others so poor?' My mother didn't know. I've been asking that question ever since and nobody has been able to give me the answer." Sinclair, with 90 books behind him, now lives quietly in nearby Mon- rovia with his third wife, whom he married two years ago. HE APPEARED at a news conference at the county museum, where a group of photographs taken by Farm Security Administration photographers were on display. "The Bitter Years: 1955-41" is a collection of more than 200 photographs taken all over the United States during the depression. Sinclair, with wispy white hair, a deeply lined face, glasses and suspenders, spoke into a battery of microphones as he told newsmen "I'm a Socialist Democrat. What we want to do is bring into our industrial world the same democratic system we have in our government. "IT'S NOT RIGHT for some to billie-ah, other things." in danger" someone to have billion while others started." Then he turned his attention to President Johnson's "War on Poverty;" "It's just what I've been asking for since I woke up and joined the Socialist Party," he said. (He added that he later became a Democrat because Socialists were ineffective). "I think that man (President Johnson) has seen the horror, the horror of so many living in poverty and degradation and the big fellas with so much money." But the author of "The Jungle," "The Brass Check" and "Dragon's Teeth" said it was a wrong someone else would have to right. Gamblers in London Backing Goldwater LONDON — (UPI)— One of the chief London bookmakers yesterday reported a heavy run of betting on Sen. Barry Goldwater to win the presidential election. "We were surprised but we think this was because we were offering very generous odds of 7-1 against," said a spokesman for the bookmakers. "We have dropped the odds to 4-1 against since this morning, and the betting will probably ease off now." SUA's Silent Film Series presents— W. C. FIELDS & MAE WEST. in "MY LITTLE CHICKADEE" July 23rd Thursday DYCHE AUD. 50c --- 50c ROME—(UPI)—Teenagers in their slacks, shorts and "casuals" have been given the Roman snub in the last of the Eternal City's fall-winter high fashion showings. GARNETT IS A DESIGNER who designs for grown-up women. She says that there is no point in slanting high fashion to the teenagers, since they don't need it in the first place and can't afford it in the second. Italian Designers Show High Fashion for Adults The result of this fashion philosophy is a flatteringly elegant collection. Hemlines fell slightly below the knee and the figure was gently molded. GARNETT LIKES the softer look of the unlined coat. She showed one in nubby wool with the shoulders draped in a capelet. For contrast, it was teamed with a black wool dress. Eleonora Garnett's collection marked the end of the Roman half of the Italian high fashion showings for international buyers and press. Garnett's suits have the longer jackets that have emerged as one of the fashion dictates of the Roman collections. The scene now shifts to Florence and six days of fashion shows in the Pitti Palace. SALE Entire Stock of Spring and Summer Dresses Sportswear: Slacks, Jamaicas, Blouses, Culotte Skirts The coats of the collection were generally straight, with rounded shoulders and small collars. Fur linings were part of the coat picture—in combination like white wool and brown seal. 1424 Crescent Road Velvets, cloque silks and brocades Campus WEST J7 Some Lingerie 30% to 50% Discount All Sales Final took over for evening. Garnett teamed an impeccably simple and stately black velvet gown with a cape-shouldered evening coat in turquoise wool. She liked dinner dresses with long skirts, usually narrow enough to be in the habble class. Blacks, browns and beiges were the basic colors of the collection, along with amethyst, wine and touches of brilliant red. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers NOW! Mat. 2: Eve. 7:-9: Walt Disney presents The Moon- Spinners Technicolor® with HAYLEY MILLS C Granada TREATHE---Telephone W3-506 Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40 Ensign PUVER with Robt. Walker Starts TONITE - - - "THE REVOLT OF MAMIE STOVER" PLUS "NEVER SO FEW" Not For The Kiddies! Open 7... Starts at Dusk an evening with... - SUA PRESENTS - THE MODERN JAZZ TRIO featuring Kent Riley-piano Clarence Awaya-bass David Boyd-drums $ R u $ $ A s $ Budinee Indosenti jubil TUESDAY JULY 21, 7:30 PM STUDENT UNION BLDG. BIG EIGHT ROOM At July, Crim pickl "O victo said Know divi on e a Co La of Viet "A ers o surp of a Hane York when year at a of m ADMISSION FREE Page 7 nett and ha in Summer Session Kansan Russia Celebrated, U.S. Foresaw Disaster As Settlement Ended Indochina War in '54 By Gerald S. Snyder United Press, International At Geneva's Hotel Metropole that July, the order of the day was caviar, Crimean champagne, vodka and pickled walnuts. But while the Russians wined and dined to celebrate the end of the Indochina war on July 21, 1954, the sentiment in Washington was less injilant. "One of the great Communist victories of the present decade," said Republican leader William F. Knowland, of the agreement that divided Viet Nam into two zones on either side of the 17th parallel, a Communist north and a free south. "A TRAGIC LOSS," other observers called it. And "a stunning if not surprising reversal" . . . "the best of a bad bargain." Military analyst Hanson W. Baldwin of the New York Times summed it up then when he said the peace signed 10 years ago today was really no peace at all—just "the least unsatisfactory of many unsatisfactory alternatives." Last week, as the 10th anniversary of the peace signing approached, Viet Cong Communist guerrillas from the north stormed out of dense jungle in the Mekong River delta and poured their fire into another group trying to make another peace. Three American officers and 16 Vietnamese were killed in the raid, pushing the U.S. death toll since Jan. 1, 1961, when the American build-up began, to more than 250. TO DATE, SINCE the second Indochina war began early in 1947, the fighting has spread to the point where casualties have run into the thousands. This year the U.S. will pump in some $50 million in its military and economic commitment to South Viet Nam. And the situation is steadily growing more critical. How did things get this way, Americans may ask now—10 years after the first seven-and-a-half-year-long battle for Indochina ended? At Geneva on July 21, 1954, the United States, Britain, France, Russia and Red China, among others, attended. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, then under secretary of state, expressed general U.S. satisfaction at the end of hostilities in the war that had been bleeding France. "WE SHARE the fervent hope of millions throughout the world that an important step has been taken toward a lasting peace in Southeast Asia, which will establish the right of the peoples of that area to determine their own future," he said. But the U.S. did not subscribe to the final declaration of the conference concerning a partitioned Viet Nam, and it warned that it would view "any renewal of the aggression in violation of the Geneva agreements with grave concern as seriously threatening international peace and security." President Dwight D. Eisenhower explained that the U.S. did not like many of the features in the agreement but said then that "a great deal depends on how they work in practice." IN PRACTICE, the agreement was never fully followed. The Communists did not withdraw as called for under the treaty arrangements. And guerrilla infiltration, subversion and outright aggression spurred And guerrilla infiltration, subversion and outright aggression spurred the second Indochina war. SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN Ireland HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? Irish Dancer ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL BOWLING Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in HILLCREST BOWL 9th & Iowa Streets HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER CLASSIFIED ADS TYPING Experienced typist would like to do typing in her home. Call VI 31-5389 tf Experienced typist. Former secretary will be assigned to the office of Accurate work, Reasonable rates, Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McEldowney 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. tr 8368. Accurate export typist would like typing these prompt service. Call VI 3-2651 Accurate and experienced typist-Wants typing of any kind-Very reasonable rates-Contact Contact-acquire Kaufman TV 3-7493 5.00-5.00-Typist experienced with term papers, thesis and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with special symbols. Mrs Hilgley . 408 W13th . 13t VI 3-6048 . tf Expert typing on thesis, dissertations and term papers. Electric typewriter. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Mrs. Mishler at 3-1029. tf Secretary would like typing for thesis and term papers. Call VI 3-9228, tt FOR RENT Furnished 4 room basement apartment—private entrance and shower, utilities paid-$62.50. 227 W. 22nd St. Call after 3.30. VI. 3-1980. tf One bedroom, private 1/2 bath with shower. Private kitchen available. Call VI 3-2402 or see at 516 Louisiana from 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. 7-24 Very nice apartment for 2 men. Fall semester. Private entrance. Walking distance to campus. See at 1102 West 19th Terrace. See at 1102 West 19th 7-24 Close to campus, very nice air-condition- ment. Email: hcwang@utah.edu 2116 or inquire at office—1123 University, tl Two bedroom duplex - Stove and refrig- rietry furnished - VI 3-2281 BUSINESS DIRECTORY RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed GB 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 FOR SALE $60.00 monthly and $1,000 down buys nicely landscaped 3 bedroom home with glass enclosed shower-bath, refrigerator and stove. Call VI 1-2-1535. 7-24 Extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Private parking—automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8534. tf Room with 15 bath. Edge of campus. Student ID VI 3-1425 between 5-7 p.m. 7-24 Typewriter, new and used portables, standards, electrics, Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables, Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St. VI 3-3644. tt MISCELLANEOUS Cute Kittens. Free to good home. Three male and one female. Six weeks, weaned. Use Polaroid camera with some accessory. 45. Baby Carriage, $7.50. 3-8325. 7-21 Vespa 2-seater $150.00 motor scooter for sale. Has large utility basket on back and is in good condition. Call John, room 243, VI 2-1200. 7-11 Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of other topics in the book Reference Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery 1962 Ducati motorcycle. Perfect condition. $450. See at 931 Louisiana. 7-31 Hillcrest Bowl maintains the finest lanes in Kansas. All time high scores rolled on our lanes last year in Kansas State Men's Tournament and in 1963 American Legion Tournament. Come in for a FREE line before 6 p.m. or after 9 p.m. any Have you tried the Hillerest Bowl gourmet prices 9th and 10th - 7-24 gourmet prices Patronize Kansan Advertisers Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking REAL PET BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 OPEN 24 hrs. a day 838 Mass. Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd STUDENTS JIM'S CAFE CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ... right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI 3-3034 Closed on Monday Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 21, 1964 SIDEWALK BAZAAR SPECIAL THURSDAY JULY 23 7:30-5:30 Eight Pounds of Dry Cleaning done for only $1.50, instead of the regular $2.00. Visit our convenient self-service laundry and dry cleaning Thursday and use our Deluxe machines at a real bargain price. Results you can depend on-Quality you can trust. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN DOWNTOWN PLANT 900 Miss. 740 Vt. Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi K --- Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 24,1964 52nd Year, No.14 Lawrence Kansas JOHN HAYES Laird Wilcox Minutemen's KU Target Is Partisan of Minority View By Dan Austin Robert DePugh, leader of the right wing para-military Minuteum organization, last week accused Laird Wilcox, a sophomore active in KU politics, of being a "professional . . . leftist agitator." Wilcox was interviewed to discuss DePugh's charge, which was made in a St. Louis Post-Dispatch interview with DePugh and Wilcox. In one of these statements DePugh said: "Wilcox came to the University and was given an apartment in the basement of the chancellor's home. He was given a good job in one of the offices of the university. Bear in mind that Laird Wilcox has his carbon copy on almost all college campuses in the United States." WILCOX IMMEDIATELY REPLied to these charges. "I have never lived in the Chancellor's basement nor have I ever been granted any special favors by the University. Last year I managed the Office Supply Store for eight months. The job was a civil service position. I received an excellent recommendation. . . ." As far as personal politics go, Wilcox says he is a Social Democrat. "That is the same party as Willy Brandt (mayor of West Berlin), Nehru of India and the Labour Party of Great Britain." DePugh said he had no party affiliation, but has often called the John Birch Society "too liberal." WILCOX HAS BEEN quite active in various phases of campus life During the 1963-1964 school year he was chairman of the Minority Opinions Forum, member of the Student Peace Union and editor of the Kansas Free Press. While chairman of the Opinions Forum, Wilcox brought George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi Party, to speak before KU students. "DePugh accused me of bringing only far left speakers to the forum. Last year . . . only one guest before the forum was a leftist, and he was not a Communist." DePugh had been a guest of the forum in May, 1963. A $200 SCHOLARSHIP from the American School in Chicago helped Wilcox enter KU. Wilcox said last summer that he had a three-point grade average but this year only a one-point average. He attributed this to time spent on the forum and the Kansas Free Press, as well as his family responsibilities. The Kansas Free Press is a biweekly newsletter published by Wilcox and several friends. It is not subsidized by the University and operates solely on small contributions and subscriptions. Student subscription rates are $1 for 20 issues. The Free Press has attacked both the extreme right and the extreme left, and is considered to be a liberal paper. At the moment, it is raising funds for Henry Haldeman, a book-seller who was convicted last year on a charge of sending allegedly obscene literature through the mail. To date more than $1,100 has been raised in his defense. WILCOX PREVIOUSLY ran a national subscription agency which handled both leftist and rightist material, until he was forced to give it up for more pressing matters. One of these "pressing matters" is his family. He has a wife and a young son. In his office, located in the basement of his home, Wilcox keeps a large collection of right-wing and left-wing propaganda material, including the taped speeches of George Lincoln Rockwell and Billy James Hargis, leader of the Christian Crusade. According to him, this collection is a hobby on which he hopes to write a book later. "I think it's the largest collection of material between the University of Colorado and Iowa University." he said. WILCOX HAS found that the easiest way to obtain this material is to join the organization which publishes it. There are two organizations in which Wilcox does not claim membership—the John Birch Society and the Communist Party. Life Science Research Is In New Era "I must be a member of at least four dozen organizations on both the left and the right." Wilcox said. "Extremist organizations play a more important part in politics than most people realize," Wilcox said. He then showed a pro-Goldwater pamphlet written by a former Nazi supporter. Research at the University of Kansas is growing up. The entrance by life scientists here into the computer age has been emphasized further by United States Public Health Service announcement of a $116,668 grant for computer support for health-related research. (Continued on page 3) The announcement comes as the University is installing a new 7040-1401 computer complex to replace smaller computers no longer adequate for KU needs in research and other areas. The new grant will provide $41,668 for an initial 16-month period. Grants of $35,000 and $40,000 are allocated for the second and third years, respectively. THE FUNDS WILL support staff and other costs for computer services to handle research in life sciences at the KU Computation Center. William J. Argersinger Jr., associate dean of faculties for research and co-director of the grant, estimates research in these areas to comprise 20 per cent of computer usage in the next five years. Robert R. Sokal, professor of statistical biology, is also a co-director of the grant. As such, he represents all faculty at Lawrence and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City who will undertake health-related projects using the expanded Computation Center. Sokal, now completing a year of lecturing on ecology and biometry at Tel-Aviv and Hebrew universities in Israel, has emphasized a quantitative approach to biological problems in his studies. One of his interests is numerical taxonomy by computer methods, a new research area which he helped to develop. BESIDES SOKAL, many KU scientists conducting health-related research will benefit from the new Public Health Service grant. It will allow them either to continue or to expand their studies, using the improved computation facilities. Among initiated or anticipated health-related projects that will depend on computer support are the following located at the Lawrence campus: Analysis of mark-recapture data used by scientists to determine the populations of organisms, by Frank Sonleitner, assistant professor of entomology. Development of a numerical model of the human blood system, by Charles F. Weinaug, professor of petroleum engineering. SYSTEMS ANALYSIS and water quality studies related to environmental health, by Ross E. McKinney, professor, and Raymond H. Loehr, associate professor, both of civil engineering. Study of ground-water pumping and the rain recharge problem, by Weinaug and Floyd W. Preston, associate professor of petroleum engineering. Population geography investigations, by Robert E. Nunley, associate professor of geography and associate chairman of Latin American area studies. Development of the "Kansas Slavic Index," an alphabetical listing of key words-in-context of material published in current journals on social sciences and the humanities, by Earl Farley, KU library systems specialist. Ground-water studies, by Jesse M. McNellis, geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. A combined list of serial publications for the Kansas institutions of higher education, also by Farley. Three Films Tonight Three travelogues will be shown north of Robinson Gymnasium at 8 p.m. today. The films are "See You in Peru," "A Wonderful World," and "Greece—The New Age." De Gaulle Urges Viet Nam Meeting PARIS—(UPI)—President Charles de Gaulle yesterday proposed an international conference be held to end the Vietnamese war and to agree on neutralization of Southeast Asia. Last Kamper Kansan Last Kamper Kansan This issue includes the last edition of the Kamper Kansan, edited and published by the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. English Pro List Announced The following students passed the English Proficiency examination, which was given June 13: Gwendolyn B. Altie, Gall Ann Andre, Malloney M. Aher, Rex Baker, Carolyn Sue Jateson, Patrick A. Bennett, L. Bernstein, Patricia A. Bennett, Sheldon L. Bernstein, Caroll Ann W. Bland, Dona Marie Blank, Jimmi R. Boling, Merle Ray Bolton, Robbie E. Coulson, David Stephen P. Brandon, David Charles Brill, Willis E. Brooks, Steve Shadwick Brown, Cheryl Mac Browne, Don Elmer Buckelb, Melinda Cornellia Sue Cable, John Allan Cassell David J. Christenson, Rosemary C. Clark, Larry William Cole, Jack C. Connell, Charles W. Dillon, John C. Connell, T. Dantiforth, Phyllis S. Daniels, Dunny E. Davidson, Constance E. Dean, Richard C. Dearth, David Robert Dill. Ancy L. Diller, David Robert Dill. Cassie E. Dotson, Henry S. Dreher, David Edward Dwyer, Susan M. Easterly. Doris Beth Everhart, Helen W. Fair, Famelia K. Fowler, Henry S. Dreher, Jerry Edwin Freund, Karen Adele Gilling, Ina Beth Gillland. John Richard Goheen, Jennifer Sue Graves, Eduardo F. Gullen, Barry K. Gunderson, Carlo K. Kaplan, Gwennie Clarissa Hardy, Terry W. Harbaugh, Clarissa Hardy, Nanyek Kollogg Harper, Rita M. Harrington, William W. Hartman, Stephen B. Hill, Elizabeth Jacoe J. Score, H. Hallston, Joseph B. Henderson, John Lee Hendricks, Larry Joe Henletr, Kenneth N. Hensley, Millard F. Hickes, Michael K. McGrath, Lenora Kam Yuk He, Martha R. Hodges, Samuel M. Hodges III, James R. Hubbard Elwyn R. Jefferson, Charles A. Killian, Sandra S. Kingry, Ira R. Kirkendell, Mary A. Kistner, Jerry F. Kobler, Sharon Dietrich Koch, Cornella Ann Kosfeld, James Arniel Ankristen, James Ann Lawson, Paul E. Lindquist, Susan L. Litzinger, Elma Judith Lohrenz, Robert L. Magnuson, Roman Thomas Magur, Judith Lynn Maler, Alice Dell Mann, Melinda R. Marmor, George G. McCreedy, Harold R. Mason, Jon Webb Matthews, Kaye E. McCready, Larry Charles McKee. Marvin C. McKee, Judith N. McKinney, Sally Bea McMurray, Carol L. Meverden, Rober Cols, Richard J. Meister, Arianna Miller, Sharon Gail Miller, Virginia L. Monroe, John Alden Montfort, Mary K. Morton, Michelle Mosier, James M. Murray, Junia Okkelen, John A. Riggle, Marie Riggle, Roger Walter Park, Mary Suzanne Patrick, Cheryl Diane Paul, Diane Lee Peters, Patricia Peterson, Jean D. Peterson, Augie Pritchett, Carolina Fusion Peters, Robert Alton Pitner. Sharon Kay Popp, Patricia C. Rector, Roger Glenn Romro, Carolyn S. Rhoads, Philip S. Rhoads, Valera Jean Richmond, Roena Joy Roberts, Patricia Ann Robinson, Connie Jo Roeder, Phyllis Jean Romine, Pamela Jo Roski, Judith L. Sarazan, (Continued on page 4) The French president also called on Europe to play its own independent role in world politics, free from "subordination" to the United States. De Gaulle told a news conference Europe must remain allied to the United States "but the reasons which turned this alliance into subordination are fast disappearing." DE GAULLE ASSERTED that a military victory against the Communist Viet Cong forces in South Viet Nam does not seem possible. "Some people there think of carrying the fight to the north," he said. "But it is difficult to believe they would assume the responsibility of the enormous adventure of a generalized conflict." He added that "since war can bring no decision, it is necessary to make peace—in other words, to ensure that no foreign power should intervene in South Viet Nam, North Vietnam, Cambodia or Laos." "FRANCE, THEREFORE, proposes—and the sooner the better—that all those who desire peace should meet together," De Gaulle said. "One can see no other means that would lead to peace in Southeast Asia." He proposed a two-stage program for peace in the area: - First, the countries with a direct responsibility in Viet Nam—France, Communist China, the Soviet Union and the United States—should agree not to interfere there any more. - Second, a massive international economic and technical aid program for all of Indochina should be started "in order that development may take the place of destruction." DE GAULLE SPOKE at a crowded Elysee Palace news conference, his first since Jan. 31 and his 10th since he became president five and a half years ago. The entire French cabinet and nearly 1,000 French and foreign newsmen, officials and invited guests were jammed into the orate gilded state reception room of the presidential palace. De Gaulle looked well and spoke in a strong, energetic voice. He appeared to have overcome all after-effects of his prostate surgery last April. AFTER A VERY brief opening statement of welcome, De Gaulle called for questions. Then he began answering by subiects. De Gaulle called for a new effort aimed at European unity. "As far as we French are concerned," he said, "the kind of Europe we must build must be a European Europe with its own independent policy." Enthusiasm of Young Cast Keynotes 'Bye Bye Birdie' By Margaret Ogilvie It took a while to get the gist of the rhythm, but the enthusiasm of the Midwestern Music and Art dramacampers finally broke loose in the way Charles Stewart must have pictured the portrayal of "Bye Bye Birdie." One just expects its music and comedy to bounce right off the downbeat, and in this last production of Side Door '64 summer series, the actors conveyed these elements best in their leaps and bounds around the arena. The teen-agers only had to stir up every ounce of joy, and sweet pain, that they had ever felt about living, and it automatically flowed out over the audience. Being glad is the most savory of emotions, and the spectators appreciated their taste of it. THE SWIRL AROUND the brilliantly colored nucleus of the stage sets was sparkled with gay lighting and beautiful costuming which helped immensely to project the spirit even when the tempo slowed occasionally. The only major disappointment came in constantly expecting something to bubble over, and a few of (Continued on page 8) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 The Press and Barry Things have quieted down at the Cow Palace. The floors have been swept, the banners and balloons and cigarette butts and ice cream wrappers removed. Now the people can watch the summer re-runs again, and some of them, those who are really interested in politics, can wait for Atlantic City the end of August, and more big datelined stories and more newspaper prognostics. It is doubtful that the gentlemen of the press will get it in Atlantic City the way they got it in San Francisco. Throughout this century the press has been predominantly pro-Republican, on the editorial pages, at least. The cry of the "one-party Republican press" began around 1952, led by attacks from President Truman and Adlai Stevenson. Not until 1960 did the Republicans seriously talk about another one-party press—a one-party Democratic press—when, after the Nixon defeat, Herb Klein, who had been Nixon's press secretary, let the newsmen have it. Two years later, after Pat Brown won in California, Nixon let go again—not at the editors but at the men and women who work for them. THE PRESS GOT a new set of lumps in San Francisco, when Gen. Eisenhower spoke of "sensationalizing columnists and commentators" and got such applause. Republican delegates hooted and yelled and pointed in derision at the press galleries. Calm folks like Chet Huntley and David Brinkley found it difficult to hold themselves back, but they succeeded. Such an attack as that of Eisenhower came even though it seems safe to wager that most of the nation's press, outside of such obvious left-wing scoundrels as Walter Lippmann and Ralph McGill and James Reston, soon will be making an accommodation with the man one commentator referred to as Gen. Goldwater (a designation which, he said, is technically correct). Editors whose dislike for the Arizona senator was as pronounced as that of their reporters (who usually, by the way, seem to favor Democratic candidates, to be quite honest about it) will be finding a way to come out for Goldwater in the months to come. BUT SOME OF THESE EDITORS will find an endorsement of Goldwater difficult to make. It is hard to see, for example, how the Kansas City Star, which has been leaning Johnsonward for some time, but which usually is strongly Republican, will be able to make the pitch for Goldwater. Or John S. Knight, who heads up a string of papers in Michigan, Ohio, North Carolina and Florida, and who has not been at all fond of Goldwater, even though a Knight interview with the senator last week sounded a bit more friendly. The New York Herald Tribune, true to the heritage of both Horace Greeley and Whitelaw Reid, has been staunchly Republican, but according to that righteous citadel of conservatism, the Chicago Tribune, the New York paper sees Goldwater enfolded in "a dream of a world that isn't." How can the Trib endorse Goldwater? How can even a conservative paper like the Salt Lake Tribune, which ALWAYS comes out for Republicans, but wrote last week that "It is inconceivable that Goldwater can be victorious without somehow divorcing himself from the far right groups as well as gaining the support of a united party..." WHAT THE EDITORS in Kansas will do we don't know, obviously, nor do they in all likelihood. One can hazard a guess that the Hutchinson News, which some Kansans probably regard as a combination of the devil and Karl Marx, will like Lyndon Johnson for November. And in the column to the right we quote from Whitley Austin of the Salina Journal, who daily boosts Harold Chase for governor but who probably would have many twinges about supporting Barry Goldwater. We know what the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the New York Post, the Milwaukee Journal and the Louisville Courier-Journal will do: they'll back Lyndon Johnson. So will, in all likelihood, the New York Times and the Denver Post. But most of these other journals that are so shocked by the candidacy of the senator from the South-west? Well, they'll probably take something strong, to keep it in their stomachs, and in good form do what they've been doing these many generations—back a Republican, because that's the only way to save America from the welfare staters and the hordes of Genghis Khan. A Note from a Fan Dear Hollywood: Please quit making movies from Broadway musicals. We don't know what you'll do with "My Fair Lady"—goof it up, probably, with big fantastic sets and Audrey Hepburn as big on your wide screen as the Arabian deserts. We do know what you've done with "Bye Bye Birdie" and "The Unsinkable Molly Brown." You've ruined them, that's what. You took all the good songs out of "Bye Bye Birdie" and turned it into a gigantic writhe for Ann-Margret. You made it one of the stupidest things turned loose onto an unsuspecting public in years. You took all but four of the songs out of "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" and made it a showpiece for Debbie Reynolds. You dropped good songs from "Guys and Dolls" and "The Music Man," and you made "South Pacific" a garish picture postcard. Your incredibly bad taste has given us almost no movie musical of any worth since "The King and I" and "The Pajama Game." We've had it. We meaning my family. We know the rest of America will flock in to see a musical version of Elvis Presley in "Hamlet," with Ann-Margret as Ophelia in a happy clinch at the end. We won't be there. We'll buy the record and listen at home.—CMP Salina Editor And the GOP (Editor's note: Here are excerpts from (1) the Salina Journal's front page story of Wednesday, July 15, and (2) the editorial of Thursday, July 18. First, part of the news story: SAN FRANCISCO (Via Television)—A new Republican party has been born here by Caesarean section. It is a new blood line as well as a new generation. The name is the same but the lily white child is out of John's Other Wife, a cousin of the late George Babbitt. And it won't require a paternity suit to determine the father. He is Barry Goldwater, progenitor, midwife and Godfather all in one. As the result of Tuesday night's protracted and noisy travail, Republicanism now means Militant Conservatism as bankers, generals and mid-week golfers understand the term. Progressive Republicianism is out—a naughty phrase. Abraham Lincoln is to be treated as a "fellow-traveler." General Goldwater, moreover, has a plan for victory. He has described it plainly in his vart- ious campaign speeches. He would: FROM THE EDITORIAL: Tear down the Berlin wall. Foster and support a revolution against the Soviets in Hungary. . . . Demand a military victory in Vietnam and Laos and give the generals the power to achieve that victory as they think best. . . Build more hydrogen bombs and bombers and develop an armament system superior to any. Repudiate the nuclear test ban treaty. Give top U.S. field commanders the power to use low-yield atomic explosives without consulting the President. . . The Goldwater strategy certainly would involve us in a multi-front war with Russia, China and assorted nations. But this is why we should build more bombs. . . What a sweeping, dynamic plan! What a sweeping, dynamic plan: My only worry is whether I still can get into my old uniform. Fog Over Smoking NEW YORK — (UPI) — In a study of 5,381 white women members of the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Dr. Jacob Yerushalmy, of the University of California, found that almost twice as many smokers as non-smokers failed to carry their babies to term. The ratio, as reported in "Medical Tribune," a publication for doctors: 6.4 per cent prematures among smokers, 3.5 among nonsmokers. Most unlikely, said Dr. Yerushalmy. He said he cited the fixtures merely to show how, in connection with smoking, statistics can mislead. However, the mortality rate for the premature infants of nonsmokers was strikingly higher 232.1 per 1,000 against 137.7 per 1,000 for those of smokers. What is the significance? Are premature babies of mothers who smoke hardier than those of abstainers? Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646 newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas BOOK REVIEWS THE FRONTIER EXPERIENCE: READINGS IN THE TRANS-MISSISSIPPI WEST, edited by Robert V. Hine and Edwin R. Bingham (Wadsworth). Enthusiasms of western history and the western symbol in American history should find this a beautiful and worthwhile volume to have. The editors are scholars of perception, who understand the deep meaning of the word "frontier." Though they confine themselves to what we think of as the West, they recognize that the word "frontier" has meanings and implications that go beyond a simple definition. These are the general subjects which the editors explore: Understanding the American West, the explorer and the government, the Far Western fur trade, the Oregon territory, the Southwest and the Santa Fe Trail, Texas, Manifest Destiny and the Mexican War, the Mormons, the mining frontier, the cattle frontier, conflict between Indians and whites, transportation, the development of communities, the land and the farmer, and culture and the frontier. Many of the writers are well known to historians and readers of general literature. It is not surprising that the editors begin with Frederick Jackson Turner, who pioneered this subject 70 years ago. Other familiar names are Henry Nash Smith of "Virgin Land," Bernard De Voto of several outstanding books, Francis Parkman, Jefferson (who sent Lewis and Clark West), Fremont the Pathfinder, architects of the Hudson Bay Co., Paul Horgan, the frontiersman James Ohio Pattie. Josiah Gregg of the Santa Fe Trail, Stephen Austin, Walter Prescott Webb of the University of Texas, the Congressional Globe, President Polk, Gen. Meade, Josiah Royce, the Mormon historian Brigham Roberts, Theodore Roosevelt, Helen Hunt Jackson, William Gilpin, Grenville Dodge, Mark Twain, Edgar Watson Howe of Atchison, Horace Greeley, Hamlin Garland, Carl Becker the Kansas historian, Ignatius Donnelly, John Wesley Powell and Henry Ward Beecher. *** JOHN F. KENNEDY, PRESIDENT, by Hugh Sidey (Crest 75 cents). And still they come, and still they will come for many years, for John F. Kennedy is part of American legend. Here is another, by the White House correspondent for Time magazine. Sidey describes Kennedy from the time he met the late President in a Senate elevator in 1958 until November 22, 1963, the black day of last year. This starts, then, two years before Kennedy received the Democratic nomination. Sidey takes the reader through the big White House years—Cuba and the Bay of Pigs; the confrontation with Premier Khrushchev; the conference with President De Gaulle; Jackson, Miss., and the racial crisis; the call to arms last summer at the time of more racial crises. There are eight pages of photographs. AURORA DAWN, by Herman Wouk (Dell, 60 cents). Let an author get a little fame and wham, out come the things he wrote in the days before he became famous. Like some college themes and term papers it should have been filed away—it meaning those books that appeared long ago and got bad critical reception. "Aurora Dawn" came four years before "The Caine Mutiny." It's a story of the city and a young man and two young women. The book came out of Herman Wouk's radio-writing experience. CONGRESS NATIONAL PEBT OFFICIAL "CEILING" © HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Remember, Now Don't Grow Any Bigger". FinalSunday Concerts Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Friday; July 24, 1964 Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Sunday, July 26 Thomas Hillbish, Guest Conductor 3 p.m. University Theatre Chorale Liebes Lieder Walzes ... Brahms Mr. Ralston, conducting Soprano — Alto — Tenor — Bass — Jeanie Barnett Nancy Barrett Bruce Ford Martin Bebt Fran Flentje Cynthia Brown Leslie Gilbert Dan Curry Nancy Hamm Diane Dahl Terry Hyde Bob Flannery Cheryl Halstead Gayle Gallagher Doug Murdock Paul Herche Pat Holstege Beverly Gibbs David Newberry Bob Lesh Marti Larkin Diane Phillips Wayne Northcutt Don McNemar Lettie Palmer Dorothy Purdy Steve Sparks John Mount Judi Pickering Beverly Tesh Charles Simmons Alan Powers C. Ann Richards Cheryl VanDonge Jack Tracy John Shepard Carol Williams Peggy Victor Ronald Wackholtz Jim Willmoth St. Thomas Moss Mr. Hillbish, conducting 12-Minute Intermission Orchestra Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Benvenuto Cellini, Overture Berlioz Symphony in D Major, No. 1 Mahler 1. Slowly, like a sound of nature 2. Strongly agitated 3. Stormily agitated Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Concert Band and Symphonic Band Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor KU Outdoor Theatre January-February March Gillis Folk Song Suite Williams St. Lawrence Suite Gould March of the Steel Men Belsterling 8 p.m. Symphonic Band Mr. Bloomquist, conducting Rakoczy March ... Berlioz Intermezzo from "Vanessa" ... Barber-Beeler Lincoln Portrait ... Copland Don Grant, Narrator Introduction and Wedding March from "The Golden Cockerel" ... Rimski-Korsakov Mr. Alessandro, conducting Concert Band William Tell Overture ... Rossini Mr. Wiley, conducting Laredo (Paso doble) ... Williams Symphony No. V. ... Beethoven-Godfrey Allegro con brio Andante con moto Scherzo-Allegro Finale-Presto played without pause March from "The Love of Three Oranges" ... Prokofieff Mr. Alessandro, conducting 1812 Overture ... Rossini Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting Mr. Wiley, conducting Engineers Get Refresher In New Training Program PITTSBURGH—(UPI) Graduate engineers can discard about 50 per cent of their professional knowledge 10 years from now because it will be obsolete. The pity of it is that only about half of what the engineer must know by 1974 is available at present. RECENTLY 17 Westinghouse engineering managers from the United States and Canada put the finishing touches on a four-week program aimed at keeping professional engineers up-to-date on new trends and new knowledge. Westinghouse Electric Corp. is taking steps to remedy this situation with its New Engineering Concepts Program. This plan is designed for non-management engineers who have about 10 years' engineering experience "The graduate of 10 or more years ago received his college education at a time when modern techniques of design and analysis, now rapidly becoming conventional, were not taught in undergraduate schools nor, in many cases, even in graduate schools." John R. Van Horn. Westinghouse manager of professional development. said: VAN HORN said most of the men in the current Westinghouse program earned their engineering degrees from 15 to 20 years ago. They now supervise departments ranging in size from 20 to 100 engineers. Carnegie Institute of Technology helped design the program with top lecturers supplied by the University of Pittsburgh, Case Institute of Technology and Princeton University. The goals of the program are to encourage self-education of the engineering manager in new fields by providing understanding and familiarization with new concepts and developments. During the sessions, which ran five days a week and some evenings, managers covered such fields as modern and numerical analysis, probability and statistics, logic theory, physics. "BARRY GOLDWATER'S nomination was largely the result of four years of hard work by groups like the Birch Society. I think that if the average citizen was aware of the nature of some of these pro-Goldwater groups, he would think twice before voting for him," he commented. KU Target— (Continued from page 1) Friends of Wilcox often call him "the lever of this campus." However, the "lever" (Wilcox) believes that he may not be here next year because of grades. If this is true, the KU campus may at least be "quieter" next year. One thing is sure however—Laird Wilcox will be missed. Teaching of English as Foreign Language Will Receive New Emphasis at University The teaching of English as a foreign language will become a serious business at KU this fall. The new self-supporting Intensive English Center will receive about 40 men and women from abroad for a semester of intensive study of English. Most of them will be here with sponsorship by their own governments or by the United States. Edward Erasmus, director of the English Language Center at Michigan State University for the past three years, heads the new program. He is a graduate of Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Mich., and received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at the University of Michigan. African-America Institute, the Kuwait Student Bureau and the Saudi Arabia Cultural Educational Mission. AMONG THE SPONSORS OF students in the first class will be the The center's goal is to bring a student to proficiency in the English language in one semester. This is usually enough for those who have had previous instruction in English, although some may need a second semester. Prospective students are those from abroad who will enter the academic programs of American colleges and universities and visitors who wish to improve their English for business, professional or personal reasons. "MANY PERSONS from abroad are disappointed academically and personally simply because their lack of proficiency in English is a block in and out of the classroom," Erasmus said. Each student in the center will receive from 25 to 32 hours a week of instruction, depending on his initial proficiency. Sections of the program are pronunciation, grammar, pattern practice, language laboratory, composition, reading, American society, and the opportunity to audit KU lectures in the personal field of interest. KU for several years has had a program of remedial English for its own international students. It will be merged with the center a year from now after the latter has become established. --- A SPECIAL SALE AT The Round Corner Drug Store Prince Matchabelli Cologne Sale 1/2 Dram of Perfume FREE with 2 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne — A $4.50 value for only $250 1 Dram of Perfume FREE with 4 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne-An $8.00 value for only $400 In All Matchabelli Fragrances Visit Our Store Today For Complete Friendly Service Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER --- Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 Brass Choir Terms Stay In Indonesia 'Hospitable' (Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles relating the experiences of the KU Brass Choir as they traveled through the Far East on a goodwill tour.) By Emery Goad INDONESIA — "This was the friendiest stop on the whole tour," commented Al Lowry, who plays a trumpet for the choir. The visit to Indonesia was termed more of a cultural exchange than were the other stops on the tour so far. The visiting choir stopped at the small villages, big cities, and universities on the islands. The choir members found the townpeople extremely friendly. Upon arrival by plane April 5 they were met at the airport by a committee and taken to their hotel and thereafter when they arrived by bus their motorcade was escorted through the town. SCHEDULING of programs and all arrangements for the fine stay on the islands were made by the Indonesian students. Unlike the U.S. Information Service and the U.S. Embassy, which were hosts for the choir in other East Asian countries, the Indonesian Student Union was "in charge." The Brass Choir averaged one concert a day, usually in the morning or afternoon. Three of the native students accompanied the group as they toured the islands and acted as their guides during the 21 days. MOST OF THESE were given at the universities, and the native students as well as the townspeople who attended liked the choir's music. The best items on the choir's program at the universities were jazz and native folk songs. Many of these performances were combined with local musical talent and Indian dancing. The Brass Choir members enjoyed this. During conversations with the student musicians in the local schools some of the KUers learned to play the gamelan instruments. CONVERSATION WAS very easy in Indonesia, for language was not a barrier. English is a requirement in the schools for all students. "What's happening at KU" was the main topic of the interviews of choir members with university students. The local hosts also asked about campus life in the U.S., dating, and music. Many of the touring musicians found friends at Gada Mada University, where they stayed. Fifty of the students had been to the U.S. under the American Field Service exchange program. Jagdjarka University, a school of 5,000, also was a stop for the choir. One of the three top-ranking Indonesian generals attended a concert at a military school on Java where the choir stayed. DURING MOST of the visit the weather was hot and dry, but the countryside was described as "most beautiful" by Mike Berger, choir member. The choir toured the entire island of Java by bus, traveling 1,500 miles. Constantly along side the road were rice paddies and a few volcanoes, which made a hit with some KU students. Nasi, as the rice was called, made up almost the entire diet. It was eaten three meals a day by the choir. Also enjoyable was water buffalo steaks. English Pro— (Continued from page 1) Susan A. Schaefer, Larry B. Scholtfeld, Roger P. Schmidt, Jennifer Human Sloeomb, Bonnie L. Smith, Sharon Kay Smith, John Charles, Spaeth, Sharon L. Stalcup, Spaeth, Robert A. Sbape P. Stephenson, Roberta Ann Stewart, Marlee Swift, Alan A. Rhon Thompson. B Gordon C. Thomson, Nancy Jane Verburg, Donald Ray Vion, Phyllis Wernig, Richard N. Walker, L Walker, Patricia N. Walker, Judiama Wallace, Valeta Ruth Warm. Ann Louise Waters, Judith T. Watson, Joan M. Waters, James T. Watson, R Wells, Steven James Wells, Robert Daniel Werner, Marilyn E. West, Carol Lee Whiple, Sharon K. Whitaker, Judith D. Whiple, Robert S. Williams, Marie Wilks, Linda Sue Williams, Kav Lynn Wills, Robert Orrin Wills. Vicky Wilson, Richard A. Woodward. Julie K. Wooldridge, Jonceylane G. Young. Philip Andrew Young, Mary Jo Zahradnik, Gearoid L. Zalewski. THE WATER in Indonesia -was not for drinking, so hot beer, soda pop, and hot tea were the liquids during the visit. Local hotels furnished most of the housing for the KU choir. Once in Djakarta, the capital city, the choir stayed in what was termed the "most luxurious hotel in the world." Another stay was the dormitory used by the Asian Games athletes. Most of the time there was no hot water or electricity, and showers were taken in cold water dipped from a pail. LIVING CONDITIONS on the islands are sub-standard, and the story is told of one choir member who found a rest room short of toilet paper. SANDY'S The only substitute available was 20,000 rupiah, which is equal to around 20 American dollars, which he carried. This currency is very unstable and many times worthless and so a 1,000 rupiah bill was used in the emergency. THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN IRELAND HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Irish dancing is a traditional dance that originated in Ireland. It involves dancers wearing traditional costumes and performing various styles of movement, including steps, jumps, and acrobatics. Irish dancing is often performed at festivals, events, and as part of cultural celebrations. PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS beat the heat the easy way ... Call for our convenient pick-up and delivery... 困 - same day service on request - courteous uniformed routemen - bachelor or family laundry - shirts starched to your taste (No starch — light — medium — heavy) - everything returned in complete repair 3 convenient locations: Downtown-Hillcrest Shopping Center-Malls Call VI 3-5155 acme laundry and dry cleaners 1 HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE Kamper Kansan LAWRENCE AS Vol II, No. 3 Friday, July 24.1964 Top Campers Honored At Annual Award Meeting Awards recognizing the outstanding campers in their respective divisions of the 27th Midwestern Music and Art Camp were announced Monday night in the weekly camp meeting. Winners in the music division covered two general areas. The best music theory student, with a perfect average, was Diane Dahl of Aberdeen, S.D. The best girl musician was Jennifer Nilsson of Chicago Heights, Ill. Charles Lawson from Muskogee, Okla., was the best boy musician. In the art department Judy Herschmann, St. Joseph, Mo., was recognized as the best girl artist. Best boy artist went to Walter Hatke of Topeka. Top Thespians Selected Top Thespians Selected Phyllis Goldblatt of Shawnee Mission, received the honors of being the best girl camper in the theater division. G. L. Johnson from Lakin, Kan., was noted as the best boy camper in the division. Three awards were given in the speech and debate camp. Oral interpretation awards went to Dwayne Tieszen, Newton, Kan. Cheri Moberly, also of Newton, was the outstanding girl in oral interpretation. The second award, public speaking, went to Cheri Moberly. The debate awards also went to Dwayne Tieszen and Cheri Moberly. The Audio House Record Album cover design award winner was Mike Elsia. As his prize he will receive six records of his choice. Writing Awards Given Journalism camp bestowed several certificates of achievement. As best advanced camper Jacquie Glaser was chosen. Her counterpart in beginning camp was Margaret Ogilvie. In the various single divisions, Emery Goad won best advanced editing award. Best advanced reporting went to Dan Austin. The advanced photography award also went to Dan Austin. Best editing certificate went to Dave Adams. The news writing award went to Charles Rouse, Laurie Lankin won in best reporting. The feature writing award went to Karen Haney. Dale Schroeder won an award for his achievement in sports writing. Best photographer was John Sullivan. In radio and television, Michael Dean and Jacquie Glaser received citations. The advertising department awarded Nancy Trabon, Doug Canada, Karen Haney, and Margaret Ogilvie certificates of achievement. Selection Varies Winners in the area of music and most other divisions of the camp were chosen by a faculty vote. Recipients of the awards were selected in various ways, depending upon the area of camp. Art students were first selected by the faculty, then by a vote of the campers. According to Mr. Arvid Jacobson, art camp director, faculty and student vote indicated approximately the same opinion. Ballet and engineering campers did not receive their awards at the regular presentations, but will be announced later. Due to the fact that science students have a longer course of study it was pointed out by Mr. Delbert Shankel, science camp director, that it will be impossible to decide upon a winner until late this week. CINEMAS OF MIDDLE EAST CONGRATULATIONS!-Paul Hill and Fran Flentje (from left) accept best wishes of friends as they remain on the throne following their crowning. MARIO Theater campers seen rehearsing their production of "Bye Bye Birdie" during the afternoons this week. Matinee performances were scheduled for Wednesday and today at 3 p.m. Fran, Paul Reign as '64 Camp Royalty Paul Hill, music major from Kansas City, Kan., and Fran Flentje, ballet student from Love City, Kan., were crowned king and queen of the Midwestern Music and Art camp Saturday, July 18. The announcement, which climaxed a week of campaigning and preparation by campers and supervisors, came at the formal dance held in the Lewis Hall cafeteria. Theater Series Ends With Select Excerpts Paul, of 5 North Templein, and Fran, of 6 South Lewis, were elected from a group of 23 candidates nominated by occupants of their respective wings July 13 during the Monday night floor meetings held in the dorms. Members of each wing took charge of the campaign activities of their representative, which were executed vigorously until the final vote was taken Friday night. Other candidates for camp king were: Doug Rath, 2N; David Watts, Four scenes were selected from a group of 10 for presentation by drama campers Friday, July 17, in the Experimental Theatre. The 10 excerpts were given that morning and the previous Thursday morning, composing the second and final such series produced by the students. "The Skin of Our Teeth" by Thornton Wilder was directed by Edward Eddy, KU graduate student. The cast included Jane Willis as Sabina, Myla Hodge as Mrs. Antrobus, and Tim Switzer as the telegraph boy and as Mr. Fitzgerald. "The Rainmaker," by N. Richard Nash and directed by Mary Lynn Speer, KU senior, included Mike Macey as Starbuck and Phyllis Goldblatt as Lizzie. 'Bye Bye Birdie' Ends Tonight; Closes Summer Side Door '64 Female queen candidates, who completed the royal court were: Janie Hausman, 2N; Jewel Othmann, 2S; Ann Bunting, 3N; Gina Connall, 3S; Chris Mattheinenher, 4N; Isabel Burton, 4S; Liz Harris, 5N; Nancy Krompotich, 5S; Janie Christmann, 6N; Pat Holstegge, 7N; and Barb Shank. 7S "We Love You, Charlie Brown" by Charles M. Shultz was directed by Hoite Caston, KU graduate student. John Hayworth appeared as Charlie Brown, Gina Bikales as Lucy VanPelt, Bill Flannery as Linus VanPelt and as Schroeder, and Karen Mills as Violet and as Sally. 3N; Brent Waldron, 3S; Mark Smith, 4N; Richard Mantz, 4S; Mike Smith. 5S; Mike Lattimer, 6N; Jim Medlock, 6S; Dana Walden, 7N; and Wayne Erck. 7S. Campaign posters and publicity lined the walls and hung from the ceilings of Lewis and Templin halls. Evidence of hard work toward the support and promotion of each candidate was even more visible in the cafeteria election night when a series of boosters made attempts The final performances of "Bye Bye Birdie" will be staked at 3 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. today by students of the drama division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Having opened July 20, two such productions daily have brought KU's summer season Side Door '64 series to a close. The Michael Stewart-Charles Strouse-Lee Adams musical comedy climaxes six weeks' effort for approximately 50 campers. This "ideal vehicle for teen-age talent" was thus adapted for presentation in the round in the University Theatre by Dr. Jed Davis of the theatre department, Hoite Caston, Independence graduate student, is stage manager and assistant director to Dr. Davis. Acting coaches are Dennis Dalen, Lawrence graduate student, and Stouffer graduate student Vincent Angotti. Mrs. Helene Scheff, a local dance instructor, is choreographer for "Birdie." Cast Listed The cast of the two-act play includes the following theatre majors: Charles Armantrout, mayor, a chorus, customer, third man; Ingrid Berg, cheerleader, neighbor, traveler; Gina Bikales, Kim; Andi Block, Nancy; Johanna Branson, Phyllis, a chorus; Sharon Cade, a chorus, traveler; Roxy Clark, Mrs. MacAfee; Tommy Collier, mayor's wife; Yolanda Dozier, Teen Trio; Susie; Harriet Frank, Deborah Sue; Marlene L. Fowler, Helen, traveler, Ethel; Linda Jo Groman, Ursula. to promote their candidate. Marchers carrying their representatives paraded through the lunch room aisles throwing candy and bubble gum to the onlooking campers. Music and speeches furnished entertainment with a band in a corner of the cafeteria. Despite all the other effort put out by boosters of the various candidates, the ambitious "Fran Fans" (who even carried trays in the cafeteria to win votes), and those who wanted to "Put the Crown on Paul" finally received the big reward for their work. Paul led a group in song in one corner of the Templin lounge, while Lewis Hall was the site selected by a band to promote one of his contenders. Jim Medlock, a drummer, beat out the accompaniment to records at a campaign party on the Lewis Hall patio Friday night. Phyllis Goldblatt, Mrs. Peterson; G, L. Johnson, Conrad Birdie; Barbara Kahn, Lyda, neighbor: Kristin Kessinger; Alice, Sandra Kirmser, Teen Trio, Penelope; Mike Macey, a chorus, Maude Lee, reporter; Linda Marriott, Margie, second sad girl; Karen Kay Mill, Carol; Rebecca Owensby, a chorus, neighbor. woman's voice, other parent. Penny Rich, a chorus, neighbor, traveler; Debra Singer, Martha; Ron Underwood, a chorus, army officer, reporter, customer; Jolene Van Hooser, a chorus, neighbor, traveler; Gass Vandermeer, Gloria Ruspit; Connie Jo Villont, Mrs. Meakle, a chorus; Marilu Welden, neighbor, cheerleader; Jane Margaret Willis, Rosie; Donald Woods, Hugo; and Woody Wright, Karl, guitarist, customer, Ettril's dad. Theatre minors also in the cast are: George Brown, Ed Cazzola, Don Curry, Bob Gabaldon, adult chorus; Paul Herche, Terry Hyde, John Mount, Richard Munroe, Doug Murdock, Steve Reed, Albert; Jim Tharp, Ronnie Washholtz, and James Willimoth, Mr. MacAfee. Volunteers from other divisions of the camp are performing minor roles. Rebearsals Long Rehearsals Long Having rehearsed from 1:30 p.m. on into the night every day since tryouts were held for the 10 scenes June 29, the campers have attempted to convey the same satirical spoof on contemporary society, in the same cheerful way that made "Birdie" the smash of Broadway in 1960 and 1961 and "the best film musical of the year" in 1963. Some of the longer solos from the musical score have been deleted to smooth production, but the plot follows convention. It deals primarily with the familiar Presley-image in a portrayal of Conrad Birdie's submittance to the draft and to the call of his female following. The story also involves his "One Last Kiss," its recipient, her boyfriend, and her whole town of Sweet Apple, Ohio, as well as the romance of his manager and the manager's secretary. The romance also includes the manager's dramatic mother, who is always miserable at crucial moments. Part of the plan for the success of the love affair is the campaign in Sweet Apple, which evolves into an Ed Sullivan farewell for Birdie—as well as for the appeasement of a certain young lady's father who finally displays his self-assertion in a form other than that found in his previously obstinate attitude. Both couples finally attain a satisfactory situation, and there is an opportunity to relax for the first time. Mother Fouls Plot Best In Ballet Division Recognized As Concert Concludes Dance Study Accomplishments of six weeks will be shown tomorrow night by the ballet students of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, when the Ballet Concert is presented at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre of Murphy Hali. After the finale, Prof. Russell L. Wiley, camp director, and Mrs. Reed will close the ballet division of camp by presenting the outstanding ballet students' awards and recognitions of merit. "Chopin," "A Country Theme," and "A Festival" will be the three acts on the program. "The Festival" is divided into three parts: Tarentella, Polka, and Dance of the Comedians. The choreographer and head of the ballet division, Mrs. Marguerite Reed; and the guest artists, Miss Delores Lapinski and Mr. Larry Long of the Chicago Ballet, will be performing throughout the evening. The music accompaniment is directed by Gerald M. Carney, associate camp director, and the ballet orchestra. Piano accompanists are Carole Swift and Roger Rundle. The costumes that the performers will be using during the first act of Chopin were provided by the University. The source of the majority of other costumes was the Colonial Costume Company of Oklahoma City. Some furnishings for the production were improvised by the cast. Miss Sandra Yeager, assistant to Mrs. Reed, said that the group has been working on tomorrow night's production since the beginning of camp. "In fact," Miss Yeager stated, "the 24 hours of Mrs. Reed's day have been devoted entirely to the upcoming concert and her students." Page 2 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 We Remember... smoke . . . the long hot walks to class . . . the nice Big hill just ahead . . . the blasting wind . . . the broiling sun . . . the kids one has met and has gotten well acquainted with . . . seeing other kids on bikes go whizzing by . . . soap suds in the fountain . . . tornade warnings . . . fudge bars for the prize if one's wing wins the cleanest award . . . no demirts for the boys of 2 North for the fourth week . . . the gruelsome wait in the cafeteria lines . . . the most enjoyable Kamper Kansan . . . all the recitals . . . getting caught in rain storms . . . having a warm, delicious pizza brought over from the Campus Hideaway . . . girls getting serenaded by the boys of 3 North . . . the multicolored sunsets . . . the girls of 5 South getting awakened at 5:45 to the blasting sound of the French National Anthem . . . soap suds spewing all over the washroom floor . . . mops . . cigarette butts on the patio lawn . . . ballet girls and boys toiling away . . . not getting to the cafeteria line on time, so no food . . . getting goodies in the mail . . . MAIL . . . counselors trying to turn out the lights . . . "Good morning girls, time to get up" . . . and for some the nomination of king and queen candidates . . . Starlight Trip . . . cats and dogs in the rooms . . . signing of Tempos . . . epidemic of measles . . . Sadie Hawkins dance . . . fireworks . . camp meeting on Monday nights . . . "Young People" . . . hootenannys . . paper airplanes . . patio dances . . the counselors and bush duty . . sitting on the hill . . "Bye Bye Birdie" . . concerts . . art exhibitions . . science displays . . campaigning of king and queen nominations . . trying to GET UP . . . "you have a caller at the desk" . . weekend trips home . . buses . . ice cream man . . trips to town . . sandals . . cars whizzing by . . . blisters . . Duncan's drum solo . . drenching rain at concerts . . butterfly nets . . purple-colored fountain . . unwrapping wraparounds . . "crisp" toast . . one cold line and one hot (?) . . practice rooms . chapel services . . change machines that don't . . tennis courts . . saggy ping-pong tables . . wing meetings . . writing letters . . the screams and excitement in the girls' dorm of the big dance . . seems that one gets up later each day . . poster-lined walls . . t.p.ing the counselors' rooms . floor-louge seat cushions piled in front of the counselors' doors . beard-growing fad . . the boy who reversed that fad by shaving his head . . the French Rivieria behind Lewis minus the water . . money . transistor radios . . cokes . Vendo machines . air-conditions . ID cards . Student Union . movies on Tuesday and Friday nights . . boys . intercom system . . ice tea . Watson Memorial Hospital . meal tickets . satisfaction if the man can remember your meal ticket number . showers . chirping crickets . Moonlight Swim . June bugs . book store . suckers . hair spray . rollers . popcorn popper on 5 South . buzzing hair-dryers . sidewalks . the night that the Patio Kids did cheers and acrobats on the grass . tours to the zoo and Nelson Art Gallery made by the art campers . box lunches . leafy green outfit which won the best boy costume for the Sadie Hawkins dance . guitars . visiting the local museums . unpacking . packing . Bunny outfit for the Sadie Hawkins dance . trying to make the dorm doors by 9:30 . getting campused . not riding in cars . room inspection . mattress check . stacks of coke cans lining a wall . skits . "man on the floor" . try-outs in the music department . money refund forms . chemical students analyzing KNO$_3$. "Anatomy of a Murder"(?) . dancing on the tables . pierced ears . "piggie packs" . excitement of the very first day . tears of the very last day . We shall remember! Lankin's Lines By Laurie Lankin In this, the third and last issue of the "Kamper Kansan," we have placed the emphasis on the campers themselves. The main reason for this is that we are the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Without us eating, sleeping, walking, learning, singing, complaining, and changing every day, there would be no camp. Without us, as the lifeblood of the camp, it would be an idealistic dream in the back of Professor Wiley's mind. Without us as a living, vital, moving body of people, the camp could not be. We came to KU and made of a stable object a camp, a great camp, a camp of which we are rightly proud. $$ * * * * $$ As we leave Midwestern Music and Art Camp, we must not forget to take things home with us. By this we don't mean the material objects like a paint-stained shirt from art class, a program from a Sunday concert, a science experiment, or an issue of the "Kamper Kansan." These material possessions are, of course, important, but they are not nearly as vital as the abstract possessions which one can receive at a camp like ours. There are values here to be gained by everyone. It is often said, "You gain from something just what you put into it." This philosophy is not entirely applicable to our situation. Even if a person puts forth very little effort, he can hardly help but gain something from his experiences. Besides becoming more cultured, we learn to make friends quickly and to adjust to losing them. Because the range of subjects offered at camp is so wide, we learn to make friends with all types of people. We learn to budget our time and money. We learn to take orders and also to give them. The camp has unparalleled opportunities for cultural development. It would be difficult to attend a season of camp concerts and not absorb something about music. Different techniques used by artists can be visualized by a simple visit to the art exhibit. The latest in scientific, mathematical, and psychological discoveries can be understood by a conversation with a camper in one of the scientific fields. Camp is not just a place to learn and have fun. It is an excellent opportunity to change, grow up, and get acquainted with ourselves. Let each of us go home with a new understanding of the arts, sciences, other people, and, most important, ourselves. Conducting Is On Its Way Although not initiated until the camp was half-over, the conducting class, taught by Mr. Dale L. Bartlett, seems to be thriving with students. The class, which meets three times a week, gives its forty pupils instruction in the basic fundamentals of conducting as well as a taste of the real thing. The members learned the hand patterns for the different key signatures such as four/four or three/four time, and then practiced to records. Later, the class provided the music in the form of a lusty-voiced song while different students stood at the front of the room conducting. The class also worked with the aspects of conducting which included dynamics, cuing, preparatory motions, starts, holds, and closings. At times, open discussions were held in order that the students might ask individual or more technical questions. Commenting on the value of the class to the students, Gerald Carney, assistant director of music, stated: "One of the greatest values of the class is that the students learn the problems of conducting which as a result gives them an insight into the problems of the conductor and finally, because of this insight, they play better." The cover design by Mike Elzea was chosen for the six record albums of the senior and junior high music camp concerts. Art Campers Receive Recognition By Work The only specifications for the contest were that an art camper use the words "Band-Orchestra-Chorus" and "1964 Midwestern Music and Art Camp" on the cover. Audio House Record Company, sponsor of the contest, offers six long-playing to the first-place winner, three to the second-place, and one to the third place. Magazine Art Chosen All entries were screened by the art staff and the top ten were chosen. These were judged by the music staff; Prof. Marjorie Whitney, director of the art division; Mr. Edwin Downs, from the Audio House; Mr. C. Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor; and a music camper. "I was surprised—I didn't like my picture because I thought I could do better." The schools in Hawaii are as good as those here in the continental United States. Children begin to learn Asian and European languages while in Hawaiian elementary schools. Hawaii Represented By Girls' Counselor This was the reaction of art camper Ann Shulenberger of Lawrence, when she was informed that her picture had been chosen by Mrs. Bv Pamela Peck Eleanor Yoshie Higa, a counselor in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, was born in Honolulu, on the island of Oahu. Her father, the son of Okinawan parents, is a bail bondsman, while her mother, the daughter of Russian parents, is a registered nurse. Eleanor is seventeen years old and approximately 5,000 miles away from home. She displays adult characteristics as she describes her life and the land she loves. "Hawaiians are proud of their land, their heritages, and their statehood," said Eleanor. "Since becoming a state, Hawaiian culture has not changed except in that the people are very demanding for recognition as being a state in the Union." Eleanor was able to advance over four grades during grade and high school. While very young, 14 or 15 years old, she completed two years of pre-med study at the University of Hawaii. Eleven months ago this young Hawaiian came to the continental United States. During the past eleven months she has studied pre-med and applied music at the University of South Dakota. Now, Eleanor is continuing with music at the University of Kansas. She might also finish the required premed courses here. Eleanor described Hawaii as being a fabulous and colorful paradise. It is a place where one can run out into the yard when hungry and pick an assortment of tropical fruits. Its waters offer a place for surfing, skin-diving, swimming and boating. Here in the continental United States orchids are a luxury, but in Hawaii they grow abundantly, and are inexpensive. Hawaii Tropical Paradise Eleanor remembers when John Griffith, author of "Black Like Me," said, "There is no racial prejudice in Hawaii." He lived in Hawaii for two years. Teenagers Compared The teenagers of Hawaii are exactly like other American teens, "They like the Beatles, good food, parties, and dates, too," Eleanor explained. "They are different in that they are influenced by so many nationalities and cultures." Eleanor has many hobbies. She likes the rougher arts—karate, judo, and aikido. Eleanor writes music. In 1960 and 1961, she sold several of her songs to Liberty Records. Her musical talent continues as she plays in ensembles and orchestras. She has played with the Honolulu Symphony for six years. Noted guest conductors for this group have included Andre Kostelanetz, Arthur Fiedler, and Leonard Bernstein. A Buddhist, Eleanor enjoys reading about religion and philosophy. She studies writing styles. Social work gives her pleasure, and she can surf and skin dive quite well. Besides English, Eleanor can speak Hawaiian, Chinese, Filipino, Samoaan, Tahitian, French, Japanese and Okinawan. Future Planned In the future, Eleanor plans to finish work on a bachelor's degree in music education, and perhaps a bachelor of science degree in premed. She will do some practice teaching. Later, she wants to work for a master's degree and a Ph.D in music education. Kamper Kansan Eleanor said, "It has given me some preparation for teaching." Eleanor added, "Hawaii is known as the friendliest place in the world. As I have traveled, there have been those who were unpleasant to me, but here in the camp, I have found abundant kindness. The students are friendly, and I am very thankful for this. This experience will never be forgotten." Published bi-monthly by first-year students of the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Staff Editor-in-chief ... Laurie Lankin Assistant editor ... Karen Haney News staff ... Nancy Trabon, Ed. Margaret Ogilvie, John Sullivan, Lynn Liles, Rose Resnick Features-Editorials staff ... Paula Myers, Ed. Pamela Peck, Janie Choice, Linda Barham Secondary News staff ... Christopher Gunn, Ed. Maxine Cohen, Sheryl Dreifuss, Charles Potter Staff ... Dave Adams, Ed. Chip Rouse, Dale Schroeder Mladja Vesselinovic of Yugoslavia to be exhibited in a Belgrade professional periodical. Mr. and Mrs. Vesselinovic of the Yugoslavia Drams Theatre in Belgrade are in America with a Yugoslav theatre group that came to the World's Fair. While in Lawrence to speak to several theatre groups, Mrs. Vesselinovic viewed the campers' art display in Murphy and was inspired by some of the exhibits. She judged them and chose Ann's to appear in the periodical. Ann's portrait was of an Egyptian model and was done on bond paper, "I did it in probably half an hour and didn't intend it to be a finished picture," Ann commented. ON imp dek visi Journalists Prepare For Future Work After six weeks of study, the students in the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are probably more prepared to return to their various high school papers with a better understanding of the many aspects of journalism and some knowledge of how to eliminate individual problems. During the six week workshop, journalism campers had classes in news, feature, and editorial writing, radio and television production, creative writing, and advertising and business management. In addition to these classes, the students put out a biweekly camp paper, the "Kamper Kansan," and worked on the "Summer Session Kansan," the University paper. $ \frac{S_{i}}{E} $ The journalism division is divided into a beginning and an advanced group. Out of the 28 students, 21 of them are first year campers in beginning journalism, while seven are in the advanced group. The advanced group's schedule differs from the beginning group, in that they do less classroom writing and more work on the "Kansan" and also the "Tempo," the camp yearbook. Differences Noted The creative writing course which meets once a week is designed to stimulate the student to use his individual expression or creativity to produce several short stories or a novel. In this way, the student can get away from the strict journalistic style long enough to really add feeling and description to his writing. The news writing class gives the students an opportunity to practice on straight reporting of news events, while the editorial and feature writing period allows more freedom of opinion and expression. Field Trips Taken Though it is not often thought of as such, radio and television production, especially news casts and interviews are also a part of journalism. In this class, scripts are prepared and given over radio or television in the Hoch Auditorium radio and TV lab. The class also receives instruction in the use and operation of television equipment. In another aspect of journalism, advertising and business management, students receive instruction in the basic rules of advertising in lay-out techniques, customer satisfaction, and business promotion. If or de from The class, during the course of its studies took several field trips which included tours through the "Kansas City Star," KCMO radio and television station. the "Lawrence Daily Journal World," the "Topeka Capital-Journal," and the Meyers Yearbook Publishing Company. Chip Rouse, a first year journalism camper, gave some hint of how the six week course aided him when he stated. T guag atter "I've developed a better insight into the technicalities prevalent in the foundation of the field of journalism." B spee tion Her pres R D For the class. ent 1 areas inclus guag of P Fo oral taugs stud senta taler the mati chon Thory, taught aspee Inclu ideas dence prop A drau gue too Friday, July 24, 1964 Kamper Kansan Page 3 HUFFY'S MUSEUM ON THE OTHER HAND . . . Steve Reed, seated, points out an important fact to Steve Serridge while preparing for a debate in debate practice lab. Both boys are in the speech and debate division of the camp. Speech and Debate Ends Full Schedule If anyone should have heard voices singing praise for some cause or denouncing a practice during the past six weeks, it probably came from one of the speech and debate campers. These teenagers, who have a great command of the English language, have been learning how to use it to win arguments and gain attention to their speaking. For speech and debate campers the day of classes began at 8 a.m., when they entered a speech theory class. During the course six different professors discussed their own areas of speech. The topics covered included "The Relationship of Language and Culture," and "The Role of Public Address in Society." The second class was debate theory, which began at 10:10 a.m., taught by Dr. Kim Giffin. Various aspects of debate were discussed. Included in these discussions were ideas on how to build a case, evidence, reasoning, and analysis of proposition. Following the schedule, next was oral interpretation. This course was taught by Roxann Beihl, graduate student, who on last Tuesday presented a program to display the talents of her group. In her class the campers learned how to dramatically read both literature and choral reading material. Beginning the afternoon was i speech practice lab, under the direction of Dr. Richard L. Johannessen. Here the students prepared and presented six-minute speeches on three general topic areas. The first topic discussed was "What is the Role of Public Address in Our Contemporary Society?" Other questions presented were "What Is the Nature of Propaganda?" and "What Should Be the Ethical Responsibility of the Speaker in Our Society?" Last week impromptu speeches were made by each camper and a ten minute speech or oration on any topic was presented as part of the course. On Monday, July 13, a guest speaker, Dr. E. C. Buchler, lectured to the speech students. Debate practice lab is the last class on the schedule. A round-robin of teams was run to give the campers a chance to debate each other. An application of the theory they learned in the morning class was used by debating in tournaments. The question that was contested was "Resolved, the United Nations' charter should be revised to form a world federal government." The director of the division is Prof. Wilmer Linkugel. Renowned Conductors Direct Camp Musicians As the six-week camp period draws to a close, the last of the guest conductors comes and goes, too. Victor Alessandro, the present conductor, ends the list of nationally and internationally known conductors that have come to the camp to provide expert direction for the music campers. The five symphony conductors and three choral directors have come from as far away as Seattle to instruct here. Victor Alessandro, who is the guest conductor for the sixth week, is from San Antonio. Past conductors are as follows: Second week, Commander Charles Brendler, of the U. S. Navy band; third week, Daniel Moe, of the University of Iowa, and Vilem Sokol, of the Seattle Symphony; fourth week, Guy Taylor, of the Phoenix Symphony Orchestra, and Warner Lawson, of the College of Fine Arts, Howard University; fifth week, Saul Caston, Director, Denver Symphony Orchestra, and in the sixth week, Thomas Hilbish, Choral Director of Princeton, and Victor Alessandro, Conductor of the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra. Professor Russell Wiley, camp director, expressed thanks to these distinguished men for their fine work here and the help they have given the campers. Last Sunday in Lewis Hall one natural blonde female camper decided to shock her friends by coloring her hair with a dark black rinse. Her friends were indeed shocked, for, much to the girl's chagrin, her hair came out bright peacock blue instead of raven black. As a result of constant shampooing, her haid has now returned to an almost normal color, with only the slightest green. Let this be a lesson to all to read directions before attempting to shock anyone in this manner—one may be more successful than one intends. Colorful Hair Styles Thought for Today I have found that most people are about as happy as they make up their minds to be. Campers Evaluate Gains In Knowledge Through Poll Abraham Lincoln By Christopher Gunn With the last week of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp drawing to a close, it seems proper to look back and evaluate what has been gained by a summer spent on the campus of the University of Kansas. To do this, several reporters from the "Kamper Kansan" were dispatched to interview campers at random and determine what they thought about this summer at camp. The results were quite interesting. By Christopher Gunn The campers questioned, selected completely at random, were asked what they felt they had gained by attending, if they felt it was enjoyable, and if they were planning to return. The campers interviewed were unanimous in one respect—none regriffened coming. The question "Did you enjoy your stay here?" provoked not a single negative response. Unanimous Enjoyment A large majority of the campers polled were first-year campers. Ir addition, most of those interviewee did not plan to return. Several expressed the desire to return, but were not sure if it would be possible, and a few campers eliminated their possibility of returning by waiting until after high school graduation—the oldest age-range eligible to come—to attend. Learning Stressed The most popular time to attend camp appears to be after one's junior year, although many freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and prospective college students attend. In addition to having universally enjoyed attending the camp, every camper questioned also felt he had learned something by attending. Just what was learned was rather surprising. Of all the campers interviewed, over 75 per cent expressed increased insight into living with people, more open-mindedness, life in general and new outlooks on things. Science & Math Finish Term As camp draws to a close, science and math students are concluding their studies in the various phases of their fields. After completing phase one of their program, which is a week of orientation including classes in each of the courses offered, the students selected two areas in which to study in more depth. The entire program covers the departments of anthropology, microbiology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, psychology, radiation biophysics, and zoology. The students affiliated with this program must have maintained almost constant "A" grades in their school work. Their applications are carefully screened and only a small percentage of those applying are accepted. School Averages High During the course of their study the students have taken various field trips to supplement classwork. This gives them an added insight into their area of study. After the orientation course referred to as phase one, the studies of the students are called phase two. Successful completion of this part of the program is necessary if the student wishes to apply to return next year. Only a small number are accepted for this phase three or apprentice program. In this portion of the project, the students do laboratory research under various professors for an eight week period. NSF Aids The entire program, including all three phases, is operated as a National Science Foundation project. The director of the program, Delbert Shankel, associate professor of microbiology, submitted an outline to the NSF of the endeavor and the estimated cost. The NSF awarded grants as to the merit of the plan. This year the program received $22,000 and an additional $6,000 for research. When asked, "What do you feel you have gained?" Terry Steele, a music camper, expressed the general trend quite well: "Many things outside of music. I've learned about people, life, and how to live away from home." Nancy Trabon was also indicative of many campers, with "I learned a lot about life and the experience of being an individual. Insight Gained Many campers also felt they had gained an added insight on things in general. Judy Lane, an art and science camper, thought her summer here "improved me as a person and has given me a better outlook on life." Linda Barham, music and journalism, said ". . I now see facets to many things." Another valuable thing gained by many of the campers was knowledge of college life. As Maxine Cohen, journalism, put it, "I've gained . . . the feeling of college life and living on a campus." Bill Sims, art, gained "knowledge, a lot about life." Personality Changes Paul Hill, music, art, science, and ballet, discovered "lots and lots and lots about life." Personalities Changed Carole Ann Cupps, art and music, gained "a knowledge of people." Connie Sutton, music, said, "I've grown up." Pam Christensen, ballet, learned "how to live with people." Sharon Bassett, music, was "exposed to a lot of good music." Leisure Time Is Occupied With Variety Of Activities All the campers talked to also gained much knowledge in their field of study, and this coupled with the more intangible knowledge make a powerful combination. As Larry Maxwell eloquently phrased is, "It's the best thing that ever happened to me—I've learned things here nobody could teach me back home." By Charles Potter Up until now most, if not all, of the classes campers attend have been discussed in detail in the Kamper Kansan. Each division, including art, science, journalism, and ballet, have been reviewed here. However, one aspect of camp life has not been covered—what do campers do when they're **not** in class? Where do they go? What do they do? Recent Movies Drew Crowds Twice a Week For the second year, regular movies have been provided by the camp to provide what Mr. Duncan terms "relaxation that's entertaining and interesting." Since the beginning of camp, Midwestern Music and Art campers have been able to enjoy Tuesdays and Thursdays at the movies. The first movie shown was Walt Disney's "Third Man on the Mountain" Another Walt Disney favorite, "Pollyanna" with Hayley Mills, was shown the second week of camp, "Arsenic and Old Lace" and "The Wackiest Ship in the Army" provided campers with laugh-filled evenings while "The Great Locomotive Chase" and the "Big Circus" kept watchers on the edge of their seats. Other movies shown these six weeks were "Caine Mutiny," "The Eddie Duchin Story," and "It Happened to Jane." Camp counselors are in charge of getting the movies, setting up the theater, and running the movies. Hal Boston is in charge of this activity, and Jim Zimmerman and Frank Scammon are his co-chairmen. The movies are rented from Ideal Pictures in Kansas City, and must be picked up there twice a week for their Tuesday and Thursday showings. Mr. Duncan explained that the biggest difficulty in renting these movies is obtaining a fairly modern, entertaining one. He says the most difficult to rent are Walt Disney movies because they are in such demand. Mr. Duncan says that everyone in charge is quite pleased with the turn out they have obtained with this project. Each movie is rented at from $30 to $35, which is paid by the camp. Not only must the film be rented, but also the projector. The program has drawn students from all parts of the country, including Guam and the Canal Zone. The cost of the program, in addition to travel expenses, was $150, since much of the expense is covered by the NSF. Many of them stay right in the dorms. There they can play ping pong, dance, and sometimes see free movies. And once in a while, when the counselors aren't looking, they can play poker. Ping Pong Popular Ping pong is one of the more popular pastimes and usually all the tables are occupied. Echoes of "You didn't have to smash it" and "Will you quit slamming my paddle on the table when you miss it?" can always be heard throughout the halls. Dancing is another form of recreation that attracts many campers. Many can be found on the patio at Lewis at night dancing to music provided by a camper's record player. Poker, although frowned upon by supervisors and counselors alike, is usually played anyway by the more adventurous campers. These campers, by the way, are the ones who have the extra lock on their door. They can be found anytime relaxing in their closet with a deck of cards. The fact that they jump six inches whenever someone knocks is probably due to nervous tension. Union Is Center Moving to recreation outside the dorms, the Kansas Union provides a center for many activities. Pool and billiards cost only a small amount to play and the fun that campers get out of it more than makes up for the cost. Bowling teams have also been formed and the Jay Bowl always has its share of campers making use of its facilities. Last, tennis matches are always underway and the tournament seems to be progressing rapidly. Even the noonday Kansas sun can't deter the hardy Midwestern Music and Art campers from enjoying the activities and pastimes that fill their leisure hours. Tempo-signing Party Planned for Tonight A "Tempo" signing party will be held tonight at 7:00 in the lounge of Templin Hall. "Tempos" ordered will be available between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m., and they should be picked up during this time. All campers interested in obtaining signatures of the friends they have met during their six week stay at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp are invited to bring their "Tempos" and attend. Page 4 Kamper Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 Sports 'N' Shorts By Dave Adams Camp life can be an utter "scream." It can be exciting or just plain fun. Because physical fitness is a definite part of the camp program, this column will try to re-enact some of the "interacting" events that have taken place around the camp recently. $$ * * * * $$ It seems two hungry art campers were tired of being starved. The girls claimed that because they walked over to Strong Hall and back several times each day, they were getting physically fitter, but at the same time, physically thinner. A raid on the refrigerator in the Templin Hall cafeteria was scheduled and launched. The prize was five hamburger "buns" each. $$ $$ Is it luck or is it skill? Steve Wilmoth bowled a game of 120 recently. However, during the first five frames of the game, Steve stepped over the foul-line eight times. His other two games of the evening had scores of better than 140. $$ $$ Jo Anne Thomas seems to enjoy playing tennis. She places such force on the game. Knocking the ball clear over and out of the courts is a favorite hit of hers. Jo Anne seems to have competition from Bill Palmer. He has placed a ball on top of Allen Field House. When Jo Anne found out about this, she said "I'll have to try that!" $$ *** $$ Indoor golf is played at Templin Hall. On the seventh floor lounge, Andy Simmons practices putting the golfball through a cardboard strip. Only once has he hit the correct spot. Andy says the floor isn't level in some places and the ball always curves. Other indoor-golfers agree that Templin is not the ideal place to play the game. So do the supervisors! $$ * * * * $$ Card playing in the meal line seems to be hitting a highlight with many campers. Whether it be "hearts," "poker" or any other card game there arise certain difficulties. "Where do I put the discard pile," is one of the first questions asked. It usually goes in someone's pocket. Some campers say that it is harder to concentrate on the game, when playing in the meal line. But a hand with five aces is surely to be noticed. 3 South II Victory Over 5 North Decides BB Champs Mike McCoy, player for the 3 South II basketball team, was high scorer with 16 points, in the championship basketball tournament game played at Robinson gym last Saturday. The tournament was a singleelimination bracket. If a team lost, it was thereby eliminated from tourney competition. Until last Saturday, both the 3 South II and 5 North I teams remained undefeated. They met then and 3 South II slipped by the fifth floor challengers, 42-41. Brent Waldron, the team scoring leader during the four game series, scored 10 points against 5 North I. The half-time score was 25-18 favoring 3 South II. With three seconds to go in the last period, Roger Pumphe put in a bucket shot which defeated the opponent. Teams defeated by the victorious champions were as follows: 7 North, June 28; 3 South III, July 5; 3 North, July 12; and 5 North 1, July 19. Individual team statistics of the 3 South II team during the tournament for average points per game and percentage of shots good are listed below. Avg. % Steve Lucas 10.0 30 Mike McCoy 9.5 53 Roger Pumphey 7.5 69 Rod Seeman 9.0 22 Brent Waldron 10.0 42 Dancing Draws Large Groups Dancing rules the roost as far as a majority of Midwestern Music and Art campers are concerned as can be witnessed in nightly activities at Lewis Hall. Night after night this spirited recreation lures throngs of campers to the patio located in the back yard of Lewis Hall. Records provide the main entertainment as revitalized bodies shake to the harmonic beat of the music. Up to date tunes spice the agenda as the campers get a look at the many types of dance styles which are currently roving this portion of the country. Floor parties have been the recent topics up for discussion as floors from Lewis and Templin Halls got together to arrange a so called "floor party." Refreshments and entertainment were provided by the campers themselves. Records and a record player are donated to the nightly patio dances at Lewis Hall by the individual campers. Often folk music attracts a large group of participants where various divisions of the camp intermingle to form a different variety of harmony, that of the vocal arrangement. Many campers say these activities have been enjoyed by a majority of campers throughout their six week stay here at the University of Kansas. Bowling Tournament Draws To Final Play As camp draws to a close, the bowling leagues begin to wind up their competitive play. Through Friday, July 17, the boys' league had finished a total of 16 games. The Spastics led the league followed by the Psychos, the Kingpins, the Unknowns, the Untouchables, the Ball Busters, the High Five and the Goofballs. M. K. NELSON Jim Medlock and Dennis Jones, music campers, are seen practicing catching a frisbee before their evening concerts. The frisbee is a saucer-shaped object which takes a great deal of coordination to catch it. The game of frisbee has become one of the newest and most interesting sports around camp this summer. Table Tennis Contest Begins Final Play Today By Chip Rouse Seventeen boys remained as the annual boys' ping pong tournament moved into the quarterfinal round of play last week at Templin Hall. Of the 68 who started out four weeks ago, only these 17 remain in a tourney which has provided its share of thrills and excitement. Campers Give Many Opinions On Their Reactions To Sports By Dale Schroeder During the past weeks of camp, supervisors have tried to present the campers with a varied and profitable program of recreation. Judging from talking to the campers themselves, this attempt was largely successful. The members of the championship basketball team, 3 South II, are Grady Waugh, Mike McCoy, Brent Waldron, Rod Seeman, Steve Lucas and The sports offered were basketball, tennis, ping pong, and bowling, all in tournament form. Aside from these, football, baseball, volleyball, and frisbee were played by many campers. The tournament sports were set in a bracket and opponents were drawn by each team or player. This form of competition was used for Roger Pumphey. The team won the championship by defeating 5 North I team, 42-41, at Robinson gym last Saturday. CHEVY sports that had large enough numbers of participants to merit such a setup. Choice Involved The other form of competition was a type that was based on personal interest alone. For instance, if one wished to play football or volleyball, he could check out a football or a volleyball at the desk and enjoy the sport in this manner. An activity of this type that has caught on in the camp in the last few weeks is a game called frisbee. This consists of a scientifically shaped saucer which, when thrown correctly, requires a certain amount of skill and coordination to catch it. Campers Queried One of the questions that could come to one's mind would be what the campers thought of the recreational program and how they benefited by it. Also, could any improvements have been made? When these questions were asked to Dave Newbery, Colby music camper, he answered, "I thought the recreation program was basically good, and I don't see how it could have been improved. More supervision would have helped, but time prevented many of these assets." "For instance, there could have been officials at the basketball games; a softball and volleyball program; and more encouragement from the supervisors. Overall, I thought the program was very satisfactorily entertained," he concluded. Girls React Others who reacted to the program complained about the lack of officials at the basketball games. It was suggested that there be a special night for basketball games with certain people designated as supervisors. The girls' reaction seemed to be one of "What recreation program?" Most of them felt that any type of recreation would have been appreciated in a great way. Bowling was offered for the girls, but that was as far as it went. There were many creditable opinions about the activities. For instance, Paul Hill, Kansas City camper, stated, "They could have offered more, but what they offered was pretty good." A new table for ping pong has recently been installed on the sixth floor of Templin Hall keeping the - Contests have ranged from the best three out of five games to just a single encounter as individuals strive toward the coveted table tennis crown. For the most part, individual battles have been generally close with only a few large defeats being rendered. This goes to show how keen competition has been during the ping pong tournament. BULLETIN The final round of the table tennis tournament is scheduled to get underway today. The results of the affair will be posted on the bulletin board in the lobby at Templin Hall. grand total of table tennis apparatus in the boys' dorm at five. The new table, which was transferred from the third floor to the sixth floor, has proved to be an asset in providing for additional facilities in order to keep the tournament moving right along. Very few forfeits have been registered in the affair which is a sign of the fine sense of responsibility that is being taken on by all of the tournament participants. Tension began to mount considerably as the field thinned down to only a handful of active entries. Each contest provided a new outlook on the basic fundamentals of the game with offensive and defensive styles being adjusted to the type of play prevalent at the time. Table tennis is just one of the several recreational activities at the 27th annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp that has been provided for the enjoyment of the campers. Ping pong results if posted and scores where available as of Friday, July 17: Chuck Levy def. Tom Tschappat (21-13) (21-17) Keith Dougherty (advances as a result of forfelt) Burt Meisenbach def. Steve Shull (21-23) (21-10) (21-14) Tom Miller def. Don Grantham Dennis' Hope def. Bob Dukelow (17-21) (21-11) def. 19 Steve Reed def. Bill Bunn (21-14) (21-7) Ron Wachholtz def. Harlan Geiser (21- 18) (21-19) Richard Stone def. Dick Burns Richard Stone def. Dick Burns Mike Haasman def. Marvin Chandler Larry Yeager def. Tony Kelly (21-19) (21-16) (21-9) Bob Colwell def. Jim Zakoura (advancement by forfeit) Page 5 in in the just duals ten indi- rally feats show dur- at. Canal Zone Girl Travels Many Miles to Attend Camp has sixth the ennis t unce af- lletinin Hall. By Jolan Csukas aratus new from r, has visiting ler to right regis sign of that of the insider- wn to intrries, new entals d de- to the time. of the that the c and and used forers. and Friday, (21-13) result Although the name Midwestern Music and Art Camp implies that all campers involved are from the Midwest, it is very misleading. Many students travel thousands of miles to attend, and two of them have come from outside the United States. result (21-23) (17-21) (21-7) ser (21= handler (21-19) ra (ad- Friday, July 24, 1963 Summer Séssion Kansan At the camp, she is enrolled in the science division and taking classes in psychology and zoology. Asked how she became interested in attending camp, she replied that her teachers encouraged her to go to a science camp during the summer. She then obtained a National Science Foundation booklet and applied to the camps offering psychology. LORRAINE FEELS that "Midwestern Music and Art Camp" is misleading because it gives the impression of being an outdoor affair. Other than that, she is all for the camp and is glad that students from all divisions of the camp are together. Meeting the people from almost every state, and especially the ones from Kansas, is really great, she says, because she has never been associated with anyone from here. She finally decided on the camp in Kansas because she had written to Delbert Shankel, assistant professor of microbiology, and he assured her of the psychology course she was interested in taking. Miss Johnson has lived in the Panama Canal Zone for the past two years and will be leaving it to live in the United States next August. She had lived in Panama four years before this but was in Ohio for three years before moving back to the Canal Zone. One such camper is Isis Lorraine Johnson, daughter of M/Sgt. and Mrs. Leonard Johnson, who has come here from the Canal Zone. "The science program is exceptional and the individual classes are 'great' especially if someone has had only limited opportunities in the fields." She also feels she has an opportunity, which she otherwise might not have, to meet top students from schools. PEOPLE DIFFER everywhere, and Lorraine feels there is a great difference in the students in the Canal Zone because of the living conditions. The community is much different from those in the United States and therefore, outlooks differ. One thing that she notices is that people in the Canal Zone are more restricted to community life than are those here. They do not go to another town for entertainment, and cars are not used as much. A larger percentage of the students go to college because education is emphasized more by the parent. The term "army brats" may very well be used, because children of Pianist to Present Recital Tonight Miss Stotts is a graduate student from Ponca City, Okla. She received her bachelor of music education degree in 1963 from Oklahoma State University. She is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota, honorary fraternity for women in music. The School of Fine Arts will present Suzanne Stotts, pianist, in a recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall. Her program will consist of Sonata, K. 330 by Mozart, Sonata quasi una Fantasia by Beethoven, Mazurka, Nocturne, and Impromptu by Chopin and Images by Dussybs. The program will be open to the publie. KU ROTC Officers Training at Ft. Riley Forty-three Army ROTC students from KU are among several thousand young officers taking part in summer camp at Fort Riley. At the six weeks' camp they receive individual training, and take part in tactical bivouac's and field training exercises. servicemen, Lorraine feels, are spoiled more than the average children. Although they do much traveling and there is a greater variety in backgrounds, the thing they have in common with teenagers in the States is school spirit. Col. Max Pitney, head of the KU Army Reserve Officers Training Corps, also is at Fort Riley. SINCE THE CANAL Zone is not too large, there is the problem of how to carry on intramural sports and other activities. Although the selection is limited, Lorraine reported that there were enough activities scheduled to allow for school spirit. Her school, Balboa Senior High School, plays against the Canal Zone College, Cristobal High School, and the Athletic Club, which is formed from boys from all of these schools. One thing that every Kansan will ask someone from out of state is what they think of Kansas. Lorraine had thought Kansas would be very flat and that there would be many farm communities, but she now feels that it is just like other places in the United States. Lorraine said that while she liked living in the Canal Zone, she would be very happy to return to the States. Although her plans for college are not yet definite, she knows that she will attend one in the Midwest. At Balboa High School, about one-half of the students are service children, and the rest of the 1,800 students are either American or come from Panama. FRIDAY FLICKS presents 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' starring Audrey Hepburn & George Peppard Tonite...July 24th 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. DYCHE AUDITORIUM 35c PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS A Favorite Much-Read Page Am I I Rent,I Find I Sell,I Buy Whenever you want to rent, find, sell or buy merchandise or services, on or off campus, you will be rewarded by consulting me. My services are low cost too-Can I find something, sell something, maybe, for you? ROOM for 2 or 4 boys, extra clear, quiet, clean. Phone VI 3-2601 or see 1082 A home. BREAKINDEPENDENT. Live where of the campers Room and board $45.00 per month. Board $45.00 per month. Boo-date Co-op 15775. Tennessee Ph. VI 3-7025. Ask for Tow Aft际 or Jack. 2-1 COMES for boys. Tired of waiting up. Have two rooms nearby from inside. Homedale paws noise. 2-8 TEMPMENT for TV and breakfast served. a ride to the school or girl at VI 3-28 TEMPMENT for female entrances. No other cities did. Chicopee and New Hampshire. Pre-VI 3-28 TEMPMENT for large bridges for male students to campus. Reasonable VI 3-28 NICE CLEAN ROOM for 1 or 2 Indiana Phone VI 3-418. BUSINESS SERVICES EXPIST. experienced in these papers, reports. Fast and accurate student rates Mrs. Betty Voguelt. MIS worker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. EXPIST. Experienced in these papers, reports. Fast and accurate student rates Mrs. Gibbs. MIS worker Ave. Phone VI 3-1240. EXPIRING. DRESS MAKING. Alter dresses and slip coats. VI 3-6057. 1100 La. EXPERIENCED. Former secretary will type documents. Former service at regm. rate. VI 3-8563. EXPERIENCING IN ENGLISH. Review sentence structure, outlining photographs and theme structure. VI 3-7401. OR SALE LIVE GIFTS. Nightingale Campus. Parakeet call chords. Compo. complete foods and toys for dogs. Summer Session Kansan Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint or Call UN 4-3198 Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 MARSELLA MAYORAL SCIENCE AT CAMP-As a feature of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, a group of campers in the microbiology division displayed a chemical experiment at a table in Lewis Hall this week. The camp officially ends Sunday. Science Campers' Initiative Leads to Successful Show By Jacquie Glaser Initiative of the Science Campers, planning and imagination, work and cooperation, and knowledge and enthusiasm were combined to make the very successful science exhibit which was held last Monday evening in the Lewis Hall lounge. Purpose of the nine-division display was to show the campers from other divisions what the Science Campers have been working with and learning about for the past six weeks. The exhibit was worked up entirely by the students, with them doing the planning, arrangement and gathering of materials. The students' instructors supplied the equipment and materials which were used in the captivating display. COUGH PLATES of several camp leaders; slides showing bacteria found in Templin cafeteria food; slides showing disease germs; and a slide showing bacteria cultures from the food in the cafeteria were all on display for campers to see at the microbiology table. The chairman of the science display committee, Barbara Hughes also was the chairman of this particular showing. In order to show the internal effects of radiation, an exposed mouse was carefully cut open and compared to a mouse which had not been exposed to the radiation. An onion skin was put under a microscope to show the effect of radiation on cell division. This display was worked out by the students of radiation biophysics under the direction of chairman William O'Meare. PLASTIC APE-SKULLS and three modern skulls were compared at the anthropology table. The evolution of culture was indicated by the tools men have used. Jan Fangman was in charge of this showing. Two dissected frogs were displayed at the zoology table, to point out and explain the organs. The chairman of that group was Shelby Shapiro. The number theory table showed the complicated theorem which students proved in their exercises. Larry Yeager led his group to a successive exhibit. PERHAPS ONE of the most interesting displays was the visual perception and span of attention tests which were shown at the psychology table. Bob Ermen was in charge of this table. The iodide clock experiment at the chemistry table caught everyone's attention. This experiment, which was directed by Chairman Jan Oscherwitz, changed a clear solution to a purple color faster than one could blink an eye. Around the physics table, one could hear the whirring of a machine. Bob Dukelow was the chairman of this particular table, which showed standing waves on a vibrating string and measured the velocity of the waves on the string. CAREY FULLER was in charge of the topology display, which displayed such problems as the mobius bands, the four color map problem, and the Konigsburg bridges problem. These curious problems do not have much practical application, but they have come up in the study of topology. When one boy reached the anthropology exhibit, he looked into a mirror to compare his teeth to the ones which were displayed there and said: "I hate to say it, but my teeth look more like the baboon's!" The exhibit chairman was very pleased and amazed to see how interested the other campers were in the showing. "I THINK IT WAS good that the Science Campers could show what they have been doing, especially since most of the other divisions have concerts, or exhibits, or other ways to display their work. "Almost all the science campers helped and there was a great spirit of cooperation among them," said Miss Hughes. the more romantic moods, which are meant to make one simmer, never quite reached me. Where Gina Bikales, who was a cute Kim, faltered in this capacity, Jane Willis, the perfect Rosie, carried through. (Continued from page 1) Enthusiasm— ALBERT, PLAYED by Steve Reed, was at first a facesimile of Dick Van Dyke, especially during "Put On a Happy Face." But he came into his own as the story progressed, and very effectively so. Phyllis Goldblatt, as Mrs. Peterson, gave him something to work with as no one else in the cast could have. Her portrayal, undoubtedly the most difficult one for a young person, showed excellently energetic execution. The choreography was exceptionally well-adapted. Besides flinging her way through several mad chases, Rosie led a veiled caravan of death dancers against Albert, casting a spell over the spectators. Another touching moment occurred when the tragedy of the besieged MacAfee family was dissolved into church-hymn praise of Ed Sullivan. No one felt so sorry for the poor martyred parent as he did, in an almost unbelievably realistic interpretation by James Wilmouth. THE MOB SCENES for Birdie in Sweet Apple provided fast action that balanced out all else, and drew one so into their midst of harassed parents and flighty "Kids" with a "Lot of Livin' to Do," that it would have been difficult to withdraw. The telephone scene, further supplement to the madness, was as clever as ever. Conrad's strains of song, incidentally, were in swinging contrast to the starkness of "Maude's," for instance, where some of the desperate moments in the experience of loving life fleeted away. All in all "Birdie" was once again hysteric and gentle, simple, sweet, and very very "sincere." Western Civ Exam To Be Held Saturday The Western Civilization examination will be given this Saturday. July 25. from 8 a.m. to noon. The test will consist of four parts, each part lasting one hour. Students taking the test must bring their KU ID cards and room assignment cards to the place of examination. No other materials except a pen are required. CHICAGO—(UPI)—An expert on the nation's economically deprived Appalachian area warns that a proposed government relief project would amount to "just another handout" program unless it takes into account the need for raising educational levels. Economic Expert Urges Education for Appalachia Ayer, an associate professor of sociology at Berea College, said it is the responsibility of any aid programs to "see that these people are adequately prepared to meet the challenges they will face in new environments and to try to keep them from migrating until we can raise their educational levels to a point where they can cope with modern society." "OF THE 8 MILLION persons living in the nine-state Appalachian south, possibly as many as 4 million will migrate some day because the area can't possibly support them," Ayer said in an interview. Perley F. Ayer, executive secretary of the Council of the Southern Mountains, Berea, Ky., said any such "gigantic relief project" is doomed to failure unless it stresses the type of people it is dealing with, their economic and educational shortcomings and the fact that hundreds of thousands of persons are migrating from Appalachia to cities such as Chicago, Cincinnati, Akron, Dayton and Detroit. AYER, IN CHICAGO for a tour of a neighborhood area now containing an estimated 30,000 Appalachian migrants, said it is the feeling of the Southern Mountains Council that cities also have a responsibility to meet the problem presented by the migrants. "The migrant problem alone makes it necessary for us to see this as a joint problem of both the city and the rural areas," he said. One such aid project has been successfully tested in Chicago, Ayer said. The Mountain Council has opened a neighborhood center to help mountain people adjust to city life. Another will open soon in Cincinnati, he said. Ayer said he believes current government plans for the area are not comprehensive enough and fail to take into account the real need of the people—education. "Road building programs, forestry construction projects, all are good," he said. "They help the economy, Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL t Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in but don't help the basic problem at all . . . human resources. HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER HILLCREST BOWL 9th & Iowa Streets ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY From past experience, Ayer said funds from such government projects generally "always end up in the hands of those people who need it least." "A simple relief program would merely doom a large number of these people to a life of taking rather than giving." ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER "We have millions of people in that area living on a substandard basis," he said. "They need to be brought back into the economy. "Here is a tremendous supply of unused resources for the nation, but they won't be of any help unless their educational and economic levels are raised so that they can help themselves." Ayer said the most recent U.S. census figures show only two of 257 counties in the Appalachian area were above the national grades completed median of 10.6. The national median income was $5,660 per year. Representative family incomes from the Appalachian South ranged generally from $2,000 to $4,000, he said. Ends Tonite! Walt Disney's "THE MOON SPINNERS" Granada THE AT BE----Telephone W. 3-6207 Granada THEATRE----Talent Stage M-3-GOLD Starts SATURDAY! Starts SATURDAY Following in the hilarious foot-steps of "MISTER ROBERTS" Ensign PULVER ROBERT BURL WALTER TOMMY WALKER IVES MATTAHU SANDS LILIE PELLIERS ASSOCIATE JOSHUA LOGAN AND PETER FREEMAN KAY MEDFORD PRODUCED AND ASSOCIATED JOSHUA LOGAN "TEACHING MOMS TO WRITE FOR CHILDREN" Open Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Eve. only Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts FRIDAY... A Mighty Spectacle From The Dark Continent! ZULU ZULU A Stanley Baker - Cy Endfield Production TECHNICOLOR* TECHNIRAMA* Evenings 7:00 & 9:00 Regular Prices! OPEN 7:00 - STARTS DUSK TONITE & SAT. "Ballad of a Gun Fighter" and "Cavalry Command" 2 Bonus Hits Sat. Only "POLICE NURSE" "The CEREMONY" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 60 SUN.-MON. Tab Hunter Frankie Avalon "OPERATION BIKINI" and "BEACH PARTY" 3 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Arthur Miller Resumes Playwright Career With Two Major Works Since January By Jack Gaver UPI Drama Editor NEW YORK—(UPI)—For a successful playwright who let his career stagnate for more than eight years and who never was exactly prolific in a 20-year span, Arthur Miller suddenly has come alive. Apparently, the birth of the Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center has triggered this dramatist, who has made no secret of the fact that the commercial Broadway theater, although it "made" him, no longer inspires him to create. Miller got back into the swing of things last January with his controversial "After the Fall." which was the initial production of the new-born Repertory Theater acquired, by the way, at a no-doubt astronomical sum, for movie production by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer late in 1965. Peace Officers Take Special Police Courses Peace officers meeting here for the 18th Annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School are taking courses to acquaint them with basic police functions. For the peace officer with less than four years' experience who has not received similar training, Applied Police Science I is being taught. This course covers subjects of importance to the new officers, and the material given is intended to help the officer of limited experience in future law enforcement activities. THE APPLIED Police Science II course is presented for the more experienced officer, or one who already has completed training at the Applied Police Science I level. Participants are viewing films, hearing lectures and holding interviews with witnesses. A three-day course also has been presented for prison and jail personnel to acquaint them with principles of supervision of inmates, security and safety procedures, and evaluation and treatment methods. In addition to lectures and panel discussion at the Correctional Officers Seminar, there are small group discussions provided for consideration of the officer's role in specific cases. The training school is financed by funds made available through legislative appropriation, so no registration fee was required from Kansas peace officers. However, the officers are paying for their rooms at Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall and are responsible for their own meals. AT A BANQUET tonight Chief Clarence M. Kelly of the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department will talk on "Law Enforcement—Present and Future." The presentation of certificates will be made tomorrow morning by Logan H. Sanford, president of the Kansas Peace Officers Association. The closing address will be by Harold R. Fatzer, associate justice, Kansas Supreme Court. Kansas Superiors the sponsors of the Kansas Peace Officers Training School are the Governmental Research Center. University Extension, KU, and the Kansas Peace Officers Association Peace Corps Test Planned in August A Peace Corps placement test will be given at 8:30 a.m. Aug. 8 at the main Post Office in Lawrence. Any citizen of the United States who is 18 or older and has no dependents under 18 is eligible. Married couples are welcome if both can serve in the corps. The test will tell the Peace Corps how a person can serve the people of developing countries around the world. Applicants must fill out a Peace Corps questionnaire. Forms are available at all Post Offices and at Peace Corps headquarters in Washington, D.C. 20525. Applicants who already have submitted a questionnaire should bring one when they take the test. The test also will be given in Kansas City at the federal building, and in post offices in Topeka, Emporia, Hutchinson, Independence, Manhattan, Salina, and Wichita. He wrote the play for the new group, but he surprised even his closest friends in it by suddenly coming up with another play for the company less than six months after the premiere of "After the Fall." Secret Is Out This well-guarded secret came out with the announcement of the schedule for the second season of the Repertory Theater in its temporary home at the ANTA Washington Square Theater. It won't get into its permanent home in Lincoln Center of the Performing Arts until the fall of 1965. The new Miller play is "Incident at Vichy." It is a drama set in occupied France in 1943. There are no female characters nor any American ones, the latter being especially unusual in his case. Anyway, the Repertory Theater's second subscription season will begin Oct. 29 with presentation of "The Changeling" by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley. This is a 1622 English shocker that would seem to be a partial answer to critics of the new group who felt there was an unhappy bypassing of the classics in the initial season, which saw production of two new plays—"After the Fall" and S. N. Behrman's "But for Whom Charlie"—and modern Eugene O'Neill's "Marco Millions." Miller's "Incident at Vichy" is scheduled to enter the repertoire on Nov. 26. "After the Fall," by the way, will be held over for the second season. season. The third of four new productions Arctic Sewage Disposal Is Research Study Problems that complicate sewage disposal in low temperature areas will be studied here under contract with the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command. First-year funds in an expected 3-year study will be $19,556, according to Ross E. McKinney, director of the C. L. Burt Environmental Health Research Laboratory, where the work will be done. of civil bases. Sewage disposal at Arctic bases poses difficult health problems as sewage discharged into the ice field does not freeze as had been expected. Rather, the sewage remains fluid because of the heat energy released by microbiological reactions. The project supervisor will be John T. Pfeffer, assistant professor of civil engineering. The Army Arctic study becomes another in a group underway in the C. L. Burt Laboratory on biological stabilization of sewage and industrial wastes. KU now is one of the nation's most active research centers in the water pollution field, with the work having been organized by McKinney since he came here in 1960 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. by microbiologists The KU research seeks information on the rate of stabilization of the sewage at low temperature and more information about heat release from the microbial reactions. James McDonald, senior research analyst, Governmental Research Center, has been elected a director of the Kaw Valley Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration. Two years ago McKinney received the Harrison Prescott Eddy award or research from the Water Pollution Control Federation. Public Administration Post Goes to KU Man McDonald, who has been at KU since 1953, served on the Governor's Committee on Finance and Taxation and has written extensively on state and local finance. The American Society for Public Administration is a nationwide organization for the advancement of the science, processes and art of public administration. No decision has been reached on the fourth play. It could be either another revival of a classic or a new work. for the second season will be an adaptation of Moliere's "Tartuffe" by poet Richard Wilbur. This will be offered next Jan. 14. The Repertory Theater, which is keeping "After the Fall" running through this summer, dropping the O'Neill and Behrman works, will extend its subscription season from 23 to 35 weeks for 1964-65. Each play in the repertoire will receive at least 45 performances. The 47,000 subscribers of the first season will have first call on tickets for the second. Friday, July 24,1964 Extended Season However, a notable absentee among those who originally signed on for a two-year hitch will be Jason Robards Jr., the spark of Miller's "After the Fall." Robards gets a sort of leave of absence. He will be back later. Ralph Meeker has bowed out of the company by mutual agreement, seeing nothing in the new lineup that calls for his services. The company will remain largely the same, although several new members will have to be added to accommodate a five-play repertoire. Directors Ela Kazan and Robert Whitehead are looking farther ahead to the time when the Vivian Beaumont Theater in the Lincoln Center cultural complex becomes available as the company's permanent home Hal Holbrook is playing two performances a week this summer in "After the Fall," and presumably will take over the entire assignment for this play in the autumn, with Robards gone. For that occasion, plans call for Kazan to stage a new version of that ancient Grecian trilogy by Aeschylus, the "Orestia" consisting of the plays "Agamemnon," "Choephori" and "Eumenides." Another prospect is a production by Italy's hot-shot Franco Zeffirelli of "Lorenzaccio" by France's 19th century Alfred de Musset. No Relief in Sight For State Weather By United Press International The scorching temperatures of the past four days were expected to continue through the weekend over Kansas. Wednesday every area in the state logged readings well above 100 degrees as highs ranged from 102 at Goodland, Hill City and Olathe to 108 at Manhattan. By United Press International The mass of warm air that covers the plains was expected to maintain the high temperatures and uncomfortable weather into the weekend. There were a few widely scattered thundershowers that dropped .14 on Olathe. .25 at Prairie Village and .50 at Walnut. Overnight lows ranged from 65 at Goodland to 79 at Concordia. A Friday morning workshop for piano teachers will be offered this fall by the School of Fine Arts. Miss Martha Staey, assistant professor of piano, will teach the course which may be taken for credit. Pedagogy-musicianship sessions will meet from 9:30-11:20 a.m. in Murphy Hall eight times: Sept. 25, Oct. 2, 9, 23, Nov. 6, 20, and Dec. 4, 18. KU Offers Workshop For Piano Teachers RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 BUSINESS DIRECTORY STUDENTS Brake Adj. . . . 98c Grease Jobs . $1.00 Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure—Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Copp VL3-2921 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ... right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI3-3034 Closed on Monday Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER B G Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 0 W 10th St. YU 2 2 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 CLASSIFIEDS TYPING Experienced typist would like to do typing in her home. Call VI 31-5139. Experienced typist. Faxes, letters, reports, wills. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Duplicating machine. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 31- 8568 Accurate expert typist would like typing Prompt service. Call C91-3-2651. Prompt service. Call C91-3-2651. in her home. Term papers and theses. Prompt service. Call VI 3-2651. tf Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any mind—Very reasonable rates—Contact Jaceau, Kaufman obt.) 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Private kitchen available. Call IV 3-2402 or sec at 516 Louisiana from 12:00 p.m to 4:00 p.m. 7-24 Extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment.Close to KU. Private parking—automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8834 Room with 16, 29, 44, 68, gait, college or campus. 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430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 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1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1 FOR SALE Registered Dachshund Puppies, 845 Ala. VI 3-0326. 7-3E Magazines for Sale—Complete file of Life Magazines, excellent condition — write University Daily Kansan, Box 99 Lawrence, Kans. 7-31 Stereo tape recorder. Almost new Robots 770. Save over $150.00. Used Webcor Rentag Stereo playback tapedeck. $65.00. Call VI 3-3251. 7-31 Cute Kittens. Free to good home. Three male and one female. Six weeks, weaned. Also Polaroid camera with some accessories. 45. Baby Carriage. $7.50. GC-3852 7-8352 7-21 $60.00 monthly and $1,000 down buys nicely landscaped 3 bedroom home with glass enclosed shower-bath, refrigerator and stove. Call VI 1-1353. 7-24 Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St., VI 3-3644. tf. Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of geography, history and culture. Reference Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. 1962 Ducati motorcycle. Perfect condition. $450. See at 931 Louisiana. 7-31 Vaspa 2-seater $150.00 motor scooter (for sale. Has large utility basket on back and is in good condition. Call John room 243, VI 2-1200. 7-3⁹ MISCELLANEOUS Hillcrest Bowl maintains the finest lanes in Kansas. All time high scores rolled on our lanes last year in Kansas State Men's Tournament and in 1963 American Legion Tournament. Come in for a FREE line before 6 p.m. or after 9 p.m. any Have you tried the Hillierest Bow? Always look away. Prepare a double table. 9th and 10th floor. 7-24 Woman wanted to share home with working mother & school aged children in exchange for flexible hours of child care. To begin on or before Sept. 1st, Call Mrs. Millikens for interview. VI 3-5920. 7-31 LOST Straw pursue leaf at Lone Star swim area questions asked - Reward 7-31 questions asked - Reward 7-31 HELP WANTED Wanted Student (prefer graduate) 30 hours on or off time. Call VI 35-8734-7511 or full time. Call VI 35-8734-7511 TRANSPORTATION Need ride to Philadelphia, or South Jersey-Aug. 1 or 2. Share expenses and driving. Need ride badly. Call Linda Ellis VI 2-1931 or VI 2-0445. 7-28 Ride waned out to West—Prefer to San Almiru Egpenen at VI 3-3944. August 7-31 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 24, 1964 10 15 FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. PETTINGER CAFE Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th ond Mississippi Visit the Independent Laundry for complete service you can rely on! K The key to fashion freshness and beauty is Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners. We strive to give you excellent service on your every cleaning problem. Extra care is given to assure your complete satisfaction; each garment is placed on a hanger and covered to keep it neat, clean, and dust-free. ©SCW INC. Summer Session Kansan Lawrence. Kansas Tuesday, July 28, 1964 52nd Year, No.15 Country, Cities, People, Theaters All Interest Two Polish Visitors 1978. PLAYING THE VAGABOND—Jan Wilkowski is shown above in Paris portraying the role he played in a French production, "The Adventures of Guignol." The play was a 1958 gold-medalist at the National Festival of Puppet Theater in Europe, held in Bucharest, Romania. By Margaret Ogilvy The University of Kansas has two distinguished visitors this summer who explained that they have come from Poland as guests of the theater department, "to see your country, its nature, the people, and theaters." Jan Willkowski, the artistic director of the Lalka Children's Theater in Warsaw, and Adam Kilian, the designer of the company, were invited to visit the campus by Lewin Goff, professor of speech and drama, and Jed Davis, associate professor of speech and drama, whom they met there last summer. Killian, who speaks English, replied cordially, with enthusiasm commentary from Wilkowski, to questions ranging from his impressions of the United States in general to his theater work and that of student dramatists. PRESENTLY THE TWO are attending the morning children's theater class, the "talking together" of which they find interesting. They also have appeared in a short interview session with Davis on television in Kansas City, Mo. The program was in color. Bert Meisel, KU graduate student, has accompanied them on weekend tours of Joplin, Mo., and St. Louis, where they attended the Municipal Opera. Meisel also has served as "guardian angel" (as Killan puts it) to the Poles during their stay at Ellsworth Hall, which is to extend until their departure for the western states Aug. 1. They will return for the National Children's Theater Conference Aug. 17. Arrival on campus July 15 ended a cross-country jet flight which took them through New York and Washington, D.C., where they made brief stops. FOR THE THEATRICAL team, who are seasoned travelers, it was not a new experience. Their company has toured Germany, Italy, France, and such European centers as Stockholm and Helsinki, by jet. After the August conference here, they plan to visit London prior to returning with the group two months later. The Lalka theater is widely and highly recognized in European circles, particularly since it was awarded a top rating when playing at the Theater of Nations in Paris. The honor opened possibilities for future productions in Russia, an opportunity attainable only on meritorious reputation. WILKOWSKI, WHOSE monthly children's TV program is famous in Poland, is as concerned as is Kilian with youth in drama. Kilian's observations of acting sessions at KU provoked approving comment. "You like to do and you are not lazy," he stated thoughtfully. "There is a good atmosphere that should be in the theater. The concentration about the job and the discipline is sometimes better than in a few professional theaters." Kilian added, speaking for both himself and Wilkowski, "We think the students are very capable and fresh. Some of them are very good actors." HOW DOES THIS sample of American talent compare with similar activity in Poland? First, in that the two guests see our university theaters as "centers connecting students from all areas," as "ambassadors of acting for all the country," there arises a difference in method. Polish student theaters, of which there is a very strong movement, are numerous, but there are not as many productions because "nobody helps." As Killian elaborated on these conditions he mentioned that because there are no professors of drama abroad, only the government sometimes helps in furnishing costumes for the students. "Sometimes they buy their own, but sometimes costumes are not so necessary." "They don't get money as if they were pro's," commented Killian, "and WHILE PRESENTING demonstrations of techniques to classes, the two have discovered that the other side of campus life, found in private conversation, is interesting, too. "In talking to rather young people as you are, we are younger," Mr. Killan chuckled. "Everyone is friendly, even the people from the street." they play their own plays"—the most popular of which, he said, are satirical, all experimental. One of the most popular presentations among the young actors there is "King Ubu," by Mrozek. Three one-act plays by this popular Polish author will be given at KU next fall. Mr. Kilian made another "very unusual" discovery in coming to Kansas. "Looking at the map I was assured it would be desert," he recalled. The first big impression the United States made on him was the "space everywhere." "There are so many cars," he marveled, "and the highheads' are very good." THE LISTING of impressionable objects aroused an excited series of translations, with the conclusion that Wilkowski and Kilian find everything at the dorm "comfortable and convenient, thank you." Living conditions in the United States seem "very good indeed" to them. "Even the heat is outside—even in cars." The buildings on the KU grounds all appear modern, and the theater facilities are "great for a smaller place." "for us everything is very big—towns cities. Even the steaks are too big." Mr. Kilian mused. "In the restaurant we never can cat everything. And the cakes, too, are big. In War-saw they are small and many." KILIAN HALTED a moment and then said, with a hint of amusement, "Only one thing--you need a swimming pool outdoors! Well, maybe you don't need it, because so many students should learn—not to swim!" The remainder of the time they will spend in the United States on "the very nice invitation from your Department of State" will be scheduled to include some of the sights Dr. Goff wants the two to see, as well as some of "(the beautiful nature in your country, (which) is famous." Viet Nam Victory Called LBJ's Aim WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Johnson's order for an "across-the-board" intensification of the American effort in South Viet Nam underlines his determination to carry the entire anti-Communist fight there to victory, high administration officials said yesterday. They disclosed that the 600 additional military personnel to be sent immediately—bringing to more than 16,000 the U. S. special forces and "advisers" there—would be only the "first contingent," with more to follow as needed. Commenting on yesterday's announcement from Saigon, which had been predicted here over the weekend, these officials emphasized the decision to make available more U.S. Rainfall Brings Slight Relief to Parched State By United Press International Substantial rains fell over most of central Kansas Monday, with amounts ranging to more than four inches. however, there was very little rain in areas west of Russell and in a three-county tier of extreme eastern Kansas. London measured the heaviest rain reported 4.81 inches. Other readings included 3.61 at Miltonvale, 3.18 at Manhattan, 2.91 at Minneapolis, and 2.81 at Sand Springs and Abilene. Ft. Riley reported 3.56 inches for a 24-hour period, bringing its 48-hour total to 4.63 inches. In south central counties, rainfall generally measured one half to one inch, but the rain was more widely scattered. The Weather Bureau said the weather pattern still was favorable for additional moisture, to bring much-needed rainfall to areas missed by Sunday night's rains. Maximum temperatures ranged from 90 at Goodland and Hill City up to 101 at Russell and Salina. Wichita was the only other point reporting 100-degree weather, as compared with the extreme heat's general domination of Kansas temperatures Saturday. Lows early Monday were spread from 63 at Goodland up to 74 at Dodge City and Garden City. forces to operate at "battalion level" with the South Vietnamese army and also work alongside that country's sea and air patrol units. THIS INCREASE in the U. S. participation, long urged by some military experts, is expected to increase considerably the effectiveness of local forces fighting the war against Communist guerrillas. Asked to supplement the Saigon announcement that the United States would increase its shipments of military equipment, including transport planes, high officials here would say only that the forces of Premier Nguyen Khanh would get "all they need." The officials made it clear that Johnson's decision to beef up American forces and aid provided for "open end" assistance, meaning that the President was prepared to go as high as necessary. THE FACT that the United States was planning to send 600 more military men to South Viet Nam was disclosed in mid-July by sources who said 300 would be from the elite "special forces" and the other 300 would be "military advisers." This commitment would raise the number of special forces troops in South Viet Nam to 1,000. Officials said this was but one part of the vastly expanded program envisaged in the Saigon announcement. It was more difficult to say, officials added, just what the increase in U. S. civilian personnel would be because of the difficulty the government here is having in recruiting top-notch people to give technical advice and help administer the aid program in that country. THE DECISION to intensify the U. S. effort in Viet Nam, which includes the training of special Vietnamese guerrilla forces to operate across the border in Communist North Viet Nam, is expected to have political as well as military implications. President Johnson told his news conference Friday that the United States "seeks no wider war," referring to possible expansion of the war into North Viet Nam. 18 Watkins, Summerfield Scholars Named at KU Eighteen young men and women have received appointment to scholarships carrying the highest academic and all-round ability recognition that the University confers upon students who have graduated from Kansas high schools. Seven women have been named Watkins scholars and 11 men Summerfield scholars on the basis of their records in scholarship, in leadership, and in promise of future usefulness to society. Although most Summerfield and Watkins scholars are chosen through statewide competitive examinations given the senior year in high school, appointments are given each year to some who as KU students have clearly demonstrated superior achievement. The amount of each scholarship is dependent upon individual need, varying from a single $100 honorarium up to full support. Funds for the scholarship programs are provided through bequests by the late Solon E. Summerfield of New York City and Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins of Lawrence. The new Watkins scholars are: The new Watkins scholars are: Patricia Sue Barnes, Ellinwood senior in French and Spanish education, Barbara Kay Buller, Clyde sophomore planning to major in French and English; Gwendolynn F. (Wendy) Fisher, Topeka senior in psychology and sociology; Patricia A. Goodwin Hiwatha sophomore planning to major in anthropology; Judith G. Liechman, Overland Park junior; Mary E. Tate, Prairie Village sophomore in pre-nursing; Victoria Ann Williams, Shawnee sophomore. The new Summerfield scholars are: The new Summerfield scholars are Karl E. Becker Jr., Wichita senior in pre-medicine, chemistry, and economics; Robert A. Beyerlein, Phillipsburg senior in physics; Paul Louis Bock, Dodge City sophomore; David Mark Borel, Prairie Village sophomore in pre-medicine and zoology; Edmond Q. Haggart, Salina sophomore; David Kent Hall, Coffeyville sophomore in engineering physics; Stephen H. Klemp, Lawrence senior in Slavic and Soviet area studies, Russian, and French; Shelley Boyd Peace Jr., Topeka sophomore in chemistry and mathematics; James Arnold Roberts Jr, Chanute junior in electrical engineering; Larry Raymond Salmon, Winfield sophomore, and John Burke Stinson, Topeka sophomore. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28.1964 Young and Excited They've all gone home now, so they won't be likely to read this piece, which is about the noisy and enthusiastic young people who have been on the campus for six weeks. We had them in Flint Hall for only the second year, our journalism division being comparatively new in the Midwestern Music and Art Camp (whose name had better be changed one of these years). The chief association the staff of the Summer Session Kansan has had with them ("them," in case there's an unclear antecedent showing up about now, meaning these young "campers") has been in relation to publication of our paper, which comes out, as you may have noticed, twice each week. NOW IT WOULD BE absolutely false to say that we've had 100 per cent enthusiasm or cooperation. With due apologies to perhaps several people, we believe a few of the kids come here for a pleasant, relatively cool place away from constraints from Mom and Dad. A good place to loaf, maybe to have dates, certainly—in the case of some we could name—not to work or to learn much. But we have had something that has brought some pleasant compliments, and journalists, by and large, don't get many compliments. We've had a few of these high school people ranging over the campus, writing features, brightening up afternoons for scholarly types who might not be contacted all year long by the more sophisticated members of the regular Daily Kansan staff, looking with big eyes at the various museums and exhibits on the campus and then writing about them, goofing up a few facts pretty badly and forgetting at times that the KU faculty is a bit bigger than the one back in the high school. WEVE HAD STORIES about research and about women who work in Strong Hall and in dormitories. We've had bright little articles about those camp members who had farther to come than Leavenworth or Winfield. We've had reviews of music and drama that one blase KU student referred to as "a bit purple." Well, maybe they have been purple, but they also haven't been so blasted omniscient and critical (who can be more critical than a 20-year-old who has seen his first Shakespearean play?) This faculty member had a few times when his encounters with journalism campers reached the hair-tearing stage, but such times were few. There were some delightful conversations with students entranced by what was going on at the San Francisco convention. There was a surprising request for extra help, a request that turned into a long lecture for two young ladies with many many questions. SOMETHING HAPPENS to the university student after he's been for a few days. His sentiment disappears (or at least his willingness to exhibit it). Like the hero of "The Catcher in the Rye," he looks at everything as "phony." He wouldn't think of cheering at a football game, and for that matter he might be ashamed of even wanting to see a football game. High school students aren't like that. Life hasn't become entirely a matter of causes. There are still things to get excited about—dates, dances, games. Our journalism campers seem to think journalism is a romantic profession. Let's hope they keep thinking that, because they'll be agreeing with one teacher of journalism who almost gets stars in his eyes himself in a hot Kansas summer spent with young journalists, who give us hope for tomorrow.—CMP It's Still Egypt U.A.R. Failing To Be Popular CAIRO—(UPI) Six years ago one of the world's most ancient lands took on a new name. After thousands of years, "Egypt" was to give way to "United Arab Republic." But it hasn't worked out that way. Of all the revolutionary changes President Gamal Adbel Nasser has made since coming to power, this has been one of the least successful. EGYPTIANS CHEERED the proclamation of the new republic but went on calling their country Egypt. Official government publicity beckons tourists to "see Egypt." Even Nasser frequently says "Egypt" in his speeches. The term United Arab Republic is largely confined to official documents, postage stamps, maps and some bank notes. Because of the continued popularity of the word Egypt, it is now generally accepted that one name is as correct as the other. The United Arab Republic designation was adopted when Egypt merged with Syria in 1958 to form one nation. In 1961 Syria pulled out of the union but Egypt decided to officially keep the name of United Arab Republic. Now Egypt is taking steps toward a union with Iraq and if that comes about the new nation undoubtedly will also be known as the United Arab Republic. BUT EGYPTIANS aren't likely to change their ways of speech. Egypt represents a long tradition and evokes a glorious past. United Arab Republic represents the dream of a single Arab nation stretching from North Africa to Asia. Egypt connotes stability and continuity. United Arab Republic is an amorphous thing—part Syria yesterday, solely Egypt today, part Iraq tomorrow. Another problem is that no one has even coined an adjective to correspond with United Arab Republic. It's much easier to say "Egyptian" than "Citizen of the United Arab Republic." U. A.R. is a handy abbreviation in English. But an abbreviation is not used in Arabic and the full Arabic name is "Al-Gomhouria Al-Arabiya Al-Muttahida" which partly accounts for the fact Egyptians don't like it. U.S. Labor, Government Training Leaders To Fight Reds in Latin American Unions WASHINGTON - (UPI) A training program operated by American labor, management and the federal government is helping counter communist influence in Latin American trade unions. The American Institute for Free Labor Development (AIFLD), now two years old, has trained thousands of potential leaders in the concepts of the democratic labor movement. "Fighting communism is not the sole purpose of AIFLD," Serafino Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3646, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1504, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas Romuald said in the AFL-CIO Federationist. But "its graduates have found . . . that they had to fight it if they were going to continue to work for the development of the free labor movement." Romualdi said graduates have been just as successful in Venezuela, Honduras, Brazil, Bolivia and Chile where "the challenges were met head on; the graduates not only held their own but eliminated totalitarian elements from a number of important unions." ONE GRADUATE in British Guiana used parliamentary techniques taught by the AIFLD to dislodge an agent of Marxist Premier Cheddi Jagan from the presidency of the Commercial and Clerical Workers Union. The institute, organized by the AFL-CIO, American industry and the Latin American Alliance for Progress, is promoting a new concept of labor's role in national affairs. THE OLD CONCEPT of confining organizer's role to . . . wages, working conditions, and, above all fighting against the employer," Romualdi said, "is being supplanted by the new concept of labor as a full fledged partner in a national society." “There was a time.” he said, “when a Latin American leader’s primary qualification was his ability to sway listeners to his point of view through oratory.” He said that this is no longer true; that the new type of labor leader “cannot be improvised.” Romualda added: The field programs are tailored to the country in which they operate. In some there are full-time resident schools offering eight to 10-week courses similar to the program in Washington. In others, short-term seminars are held in various industrial complexes. Eventually the institute hopes to have both programs in each country supplemented by the Washington operation. "Today's labor leader must have deep within himself a burning desire to serve his fellow workers and . . . his own country. But he must also acquire a great deal of technical knowledge and this requires specialized education and intensive study." THE INSTITUTE operates a school in Washington, field programs throughout Latin America, and a still-experimental European travel course. Students in the European course are given a first-hand look at trade union operations in other countries. After a three-week orientation period at the Washington school, they spend eight weeks investigating the workings of the Israeli Histadrut (General Confederation of Labor), the Italian Confederation of Labor Unions and the International Labor Ogranization in Geneva. IN WEST GERMANY, they are taken to West Berlin and — when possible — to East Berlin, where they can see the dramatic contrast "between the worlds of democracy and totalitarianism." BOOK REVIEWS THE HORIZON BOOK OF LOST WORLDs, by Leonard Cottrell (Dell Laurel, 75 cents). Though it lacks the illustrations that would make it of even more interest, this paperback reprint of a Horizon book still has real fascination. The author has endeavored to recreate for us the famous vanished civilizations, a topic that continues to enchant many readers. Some of these were obviously great civilizations, which disappeared for reasons we do not understand today. Archaeologists have worked to restore some of these; some remain merely a step beyond myth and legend. Cottrell deals with the following: the Egyptians, the Mesopotamians, the people of the Indus Valley, the Minoans of Crete, the Mycenaeans, the peoples of Anatolia, the Etruscans, the Khmers and the Maya of this hemisphere. The style, like that of most articles which have appeared in Horizon, as well as the Horizon books, is consistently interesting. THE AMERICAN HERITAGE BOOK OF INDIANS, by William Brandon (Dell Laurel, 75 cents). This is another book that will find many absorbed readers, despite the unfortunate lack of illustrations. The volume was published by American Heritage, and an introduction was written by the late President John F. Kennedy. It is no sketchy book that will appeal chiefly to the lazy. William Brandon attempts to show interrelationships of various red men as well as red men and white men. He also shows the significance of the Indian in the history and culture of America, a significance too obvious to belabor, perhaps. His story goes back to the likely beginnings of the Indian civilizations in the Americas and continues to the tragic period of late 19th century, when the Indian was going the way of the buffalo and passenger pigeon. Almost all readers will find this a tale easy to follow and ever-stirring. HORIZON, by Helen MacInnes (Dell. 50 cents). In the field of suspense fiction, Helen Machnnes rates high, alongside Eric Ambler and maybe even Graham Greene. During World War II her cloak-and-dagger tales were exciting and even meaningful. Since the war she has continued to pump out stories that make for good reading. This is one of her earlier books, written in 1945 and dealing, predictably, with the Nazis. This will date it for some readers, but it will also help to recall how such stories both revolted and thrilled us 20 years ago. THE COLLECTOR, by John Fowles (Dell. 75 cents). The hero of this successful novel first published last year is a collector of butterflies; but that ends any possible analogy to "The Girl of the Limberlost." For the story is shocking and sinister and not for the weak in heart. It has received praise not only for its sensational qualities but for its suspense, original theme and conception, and maturity of style. The reader will think he has come across a nut as unique as anybody in recent fiction, and he'll be quite right. THE TRUMPET UNBLOWN, by William Huckleman (Crest. 60 cents.) William Horman (Crescent, O'Brien). This war novel, though the cover bleats its resemblance to Hemingway, is more sensational than profound. It's about an American medical outfit and its experiences in Europe in World War II, experiences resembling some of those James Jones told of in "From Here to Eternity." The hero himself is a young gentleman compared with the supporting cast—a raging bully, a thief and pimp who practically takes over a German town, a nurse with the morals of a cat, a German lady of no principles. All in all—rough, sordid and likely to sell this summer and fall. THE LIFE OF LENIN, by Louis Fischer (Harper & Row, $10). Vladimir Lenin was the founder of the Soviet state and the father of Soviet politics, as Louis Fischer says in the first sentence of his biography of nearly 700 pages. In the succeeding sentences, with impressive documentation from official sources, memoirs, interviews, and his own experience as a Moscow correspondent in the early years of the Soviet regime, Fischer tells us Lenin's role in building state and party and how it might have been different in another man's hands. The life of any politician cannot be separated from the events that he helped shape and that shaped him; thus a large part of the book is pure history, with Lenin often appearing only on the periphery, as in the Brest-Litovsk peace negotiations between Trotsky and the Germans. And although this is the life of Lenin, the lives of the other Soviet leaders—Stalin and Trotsky in particular—get rather full treatment. A criticism of this complete and scholarly work might be that it is somewhat too complete. Having gathered his facts, Fischer seems reluctant to let any of them go. This spatters the book with references and events that have no real bearing on the main narrative and unnecessarily lengthens an already formidable study.—UPI DEAR UNCLE SAM JOHN C. BACON, 1924 "I'm Getting Hungry" Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Honors Program Here Receives High Praise Tuesday, July 28, 1964 The honors program at KU has received high praise in an article published in the Ohio State Lantern, Ohio State University. The story follows: The story of a top-notch honors program at Ohio State may be one reason why the University is failing to attract students "with great intellectual promise". Hans Rosenhaupt, national director of the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Foundation, said in a letter to the Lantern: J. Osborn Fuller, dean of the college of Arts and Sciences, believes the University must decide exactly what its role will be. ... IT IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE, in fact probable, that the public image of OSU has failed to attract large numbers of students with great intellectual promise as does by contrast the magnificent honors program of the University of Kansas." "WE NOW HAVE a come-whatmay organization," he said, referring to the 10 separate colleges plus the Graduate School and the Offices ofContinuing Education. In 1946, the Board of Trustees drafted a statement of policy which says, in part: "The Ohio State University (should become) . . . the center of research, graduate and professional work, and share the giving of undergraduate instruction (with the other four state universities)." Seniors this year at the University of Kansas won 19 Woodrow Wilson Fellowships. The University of Michigan won 24. Ohio's tiny Kenyon College, enrollment 650, won 6. Ohio State won 2. The fellowships are awarded to outstanding students planning to do graduate study, then become college teachers. In February 1964, the President's Permanent Planning Committee published some statements which expanded the 1946 policy. The expanded version of the University's goals has not been accepted by the faculty council to date. RICHARD ARMITAGE, dean of the graduate school and regional chairman for the fellowship foundation, feels that a top-quality honors program at Ohio State would attract top-quality students. "We need a climate which encourages scholarship." he said. "That feeling for scholarship should be reflected everywhere — from the school newspaper to the dorm counselor." He said many quality students are unwilling to enter a university in which activities such as fraternity membership seem more important than scholarship. The University should actively recruit top students from around the Botanist to Give TalkinScotland The only Midwesterner to present a paper at the 10th International Botanical Congress Aug. 3-12 in Edinburgh, Scotland, is Robert W. Baxter, a KU professor of botany. Baxter will present his paper in a formal symposium called Morphology of Palaeozoic Vascular Plants. His paper's title is "Reproductive Structures of Some Carboniferous Articulates." The paper deals with research he has conducted on a group of primarily extinct plants having evolutionary significance. The horsetail plant is the sole living survivor of the group. Besides studying this survivor, Baxter has been collecting data from fossil evidence of other members of the group. Such evidence occurs in coal mines in the southeastern part of the state. Before returning to KU, Baxter will take a week-long paleobotanical field trip to fossil locations in Great Britain. Specimens will be shipped to Lawrence and added to the KU collection. MUNICH, Germany—(UP1)—Two Soviet Red Army soldiers fled from East Germany to the West over the weekend. The Russians crossed into the West near Neustadt on the Saale River, a police spokesman said. 2 Reds Flee to West nation, create an environment encouraging scholarship, and develop an honors program which will let the student accelerate himself," Dean Armitage said. The closest thing Ohio State has to an honors college is President Novice G. Fawett's proposal for a General College. "THE GENERAL COLLEGE would enroll 75 to 80 per cent of the incoming freshmen," said John Corbally, executive assistant to the President. "Only 20 per cent of the entering freshmen would go directly into the regular university colleges." The two-year College would teach the bulk of presently existing freshman-sophomore courses. Students would then enter the college of their choice to pursue a more individualized plan of study. On Nov. 15, the State Board of Regents will make a "tentatively final" report to the legislature on its "Master Plan of Higher Education in Ohio." The report will define the role of state universities in teaching undergraduate and graduate-level courses. Solutions to Life May Lie Ahead NEW YORK—(UPI)—An American Nobel prize-winning scientist made a bold scientific forecast yesterday in opening the sixth International Congress of Biochemistry. "The human intellect," said Dr. Severo Ochoa, "will eventually solve the puzzle of the nature of life." He then asked this question: "Will it ever solve the riddle of the meaning of life, of the existence of the universe or even of its prerequisite, matter, and of the essence of the intellect itself?" To that question he gave no answer, not even a guess, and proceeded, as president of the International Union of Biochemistry, to declare the gathering of some 6,000 biochemists from all parts of the world officially in session. IF HIS FORECAST proves accurate, if his question is ever answered in the affirmative, it will be the work of these scientists or their successors. Biochemistry is the chemistry which forms a living body—any body—operates it from inception to death and confers upon it the wondrous power to reproduce itself. Ochoa was pleased by the progress of this basic chemical science of life. Why, it could be that in the next few decades biochemists will begin to understand the chemistry of the molecules responsible for "the higher functions" of the human brain! "WE ARE PROGRESSING fast toward a full understanding of the molecular mechanisms responsible for the continuity of life and for the amazing variety of living forms on our planet." he said. "We are even beginning to catch some glimpse of the mode in which organic matter originated, and the exploration of space which might provide clues for further inquiry into the origin of life itself." Ochoa, who is chairman of the department of biochemistry at New York University, was but one of 15 Nobel Prize winners here for the congress, which will hear some 700 research reports, lectures and symposium papers before it ends Saturday. RUSSIA WAS represented by the distinguished Prof. Sergei E. Severin of Moscow University, Great Britain by Dr. Francis H. C. Crick of Cambridge, who opened a new era of biochemistry by his revelations of the fundamental molecule of life, desoxyribonucleic acid, and received a Nobel Prize. Poland and other Iron Curtain countries also were represented, also Western European and South American countries, Australia, Israel and Japan. The congress meets every three years. The current congress, of which Prof. John T. Edsall of Harvard is president, is the first in the United States. The 1961 congress was in Moscow. THE CHEMICAL processes which will enthrall the scientists during this week are those which cause all living things to age, which permit them to resist disease, which enable them to put energy into "storage" and take it out as needed, which regulate their body mechanics, which account for offspring being like parents in finest detail, and which provide the instant and thoroughly reliable interior communications of the body, those being the nerve impulses. CASH Paid for BOOKS kansas union BOOKSTORE Thursday and Friday ONLY July 30th and 31st CASH Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28, 1964 --guy" he said. "If I had to depend on social contacts for a job I guess I'd never get one. I paid attention. I watch these kids now. When the director yells 'ready', your old-time actors are the first ones in." BUFKE SUMMER AT CAMP—Cadet Richard K. Burke is shown receiving instruction in the use of the mortar weapon during small arms training at the Ft. Riley ROTC camp. Burke is a member of Scabbard and Blade and a graduate of Dodge City High School. No Retirement for 'Amos McCoy' HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) -- Walter Brennan, that cagey hick on "The Real McCoy's," is back at work on a new series, content to be acting instead of loafing around a filmland swimming pool. As "Amos McCov," Academy Award-winning Walter was one of television's most popular personalities. The series ran for six years, and it's fair to assume that Walter's slice of the pie was enough to keep him eating for many years to come. WHEN THE SHOW ended, Walter and his wife Ruth, whom he married 44 years ago, went to Europe for a vacation. Returning to his home in Moorpark, a small community 50 miles from Hollywood, Brennan sifted through offers to work in a new series, anxious to get back into harness with the right team. He finally settled on ABC-TV's new "Tycoon" series in which he plays a self-made millionaire, a character not unlike the real-life Brennan. "I COULDN'T SIT around," said Walter in his office at Desilu Studio. "I'd go nuts. I don't have much spare time. I shouldn't even be here today but I had some things to do." Even though Walter is a three-time Oscar winner and an important star, he lives a quiet personal life many miles away from Hollywood's glamor. "I was never much of a Hollywood WALTER AND HIS chauffeur drive from his Moorpark park to the Desilu Studio in Culver City each day that he's filming "Tycoon." "I leave there at 7 o'clock in the morning and get back home at eight or nine at night," said Walter. "I guess I should keep an apartment in town, but I love my home too much." Walter's home is one that he describes as "just a house," which is "plenty big." It's situated on eleven acres of land which is well-stocked with grapefruit trees. Alumni Association GUF Get Citations The American Alumni Council has cited KU in two areas of its annual publications and promotions competition. The KU Alumni Association earned second place for its materials on dues and membership promotions. The Greater University Fund earned third place for a single direct mail piece in the annual giving section. The Colorado Alumnus, a newspaper of the University of Colorado, won a third place and received a distinctive merit award for editor's comment and opinion materials. No other Big Eight schools placed in the competition. He also has a "small swimming pool," standard equipment for a major star. WALTER HAS NO organized hockey. He is a member of the Lakeside Golf Club—although he doesn't play golf—along with many of filmland's biggest names. Occasionally on a Saturday Walter will drive from his Moorpark home to Lakeside for lunch with friends. "I think working is my hobby," he said. "I'm happier when I'm working." His talents have brought Brennan plenty of work during his many years in movies and television. His earnings have purchased a ranch in northeastern Oregon, a section of the country he tries to visit often. THE BRENNANS have a daughter, two sons and 14 grandchildren. One of the sons, Andy, is associate producer of dad's television series, and the other son, Mike, runs Walter's Oregon cattle ranch. Almost any conversation with Walter Brennan will have elements of his two favorite subjects, a love of God and country. "I go out every morning and pull up my flag," said the 70-year-old Walter. "I thank God morning and night for my blessings. I sure have them." SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN DANCING HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality.Service.What else is there? ACROSS FROM HILLCREST Medical Aides Studying In State Circuit Course The fourth annual Kansas Medical Assistants Circuit Course, a continuing educational program designed for medical assistants to keep pace with rapidly changing problems I 45 Countries On KU's Rolls The record enrollment approaching 5,000 students includes 147 foreign students from 45 countries—both summer session highs. Also represented are 44 of the 50 states and 98 of the 105 Kansas counties. Never before have so many come so far for a University of Kansas summer session. The foreign students are from Algeria, Bolivia, Burma, Cambodia, Cameroun, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Congo Republic, Costa Rica, Cuba, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, Germany, Ghana, Great Britain, Greece, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Korea, Lebanon, Liberia, The Netherlands, Nigeria, Mexico, The Philippines, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Southern Rhodesia, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey Venezuela, Viet Nam, and Yemen. Not included were the high school age students attending the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. They would have filled the gaps in several states and added the Panama Canal Zone and Guam. KU Professor Writes New Book on Waves A University of Kansas professor's book on wave problems in engineering has been published by the McGraw-Hill Company, New York. Richard K. Moore is the author of "Wave and Diffusion Analogies", which describes the relationship of electric transmission, sound, liquid, and various other kinds of waves. The 114-page volume is one of a series of monographs on modern engineering science published by McGraw-Hill. The book is issued in both hard cover and paperback Seek Airmen's Bodies MISAWA AIR BASE, Japan — (UPI) — Searchers are looking for the bodies of two U.S. airmen feared lost when a small rowboat capsized Saturday. Two other airmen were rescued. Scene of the accident was Lake Kogawara near the Misawa city beach in northern Honshu. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers in today's medical profession, was held last weekend in Hays. Each year the course is held in four different areas of Kansas. The first meeting was held on the Fort Hays Kansas State College campus and will be presented at Kansas City, Kan., Aug. 8-9; Dodge City, Aug. 22-23, and Wichita, Sept. 12-13. Saturday afternoon in Hays, the group divided into two sections. One section was on office skills and procedures meeting with John A. Polson, assistant business manager, Hertzler Clinic, in Halstead, Kan. Florence J. Nelson, R.N., of Topeka, discussed examination room techniques. After dinner, Dr. John C. Mitchell, president of the Kansas Medical Society, Salina, gave a report from the Kansas Medical Society. In the Dodge City and Wichita area, Dr. George E. Burket Jr., president-elect of the Kansas Medical Society, Kingman, Kan., will give a report. Other programs for the meeting were lectures on grooming, personal adjustment and human relations; "Pardon Ma'am, Your Telephone is Showing;" mental health and its effect on the medical assistant; medicine and religion. "What's Really Behind the Rising Costs of Health Care," and state and local health departments and the physician in private practice. A question-answer period will be held following each session. The program is sponsored by the Kansas Medical Society, Kansas Medical Assistants Society, University Extension, and the Kansas State Board for Vocational Education. Pharmacy School Names 4 Scholars Three men will receive Hall scholarships of $250 each: Gerald Robert Brizendine, Eureka fourth year student in pharmacy; Norman Michael Shanks, Winfield senior, and Theodore William Wrench, Emporia senior. Mary Elizabeth Hodges, senior from Monument, has been appointed an honorary Hall scholar and will receive a stipend of $50. The scholarships memorialize the late George Guy Hall, who was for many years a pharmacist and civic leader in Oakley. The awards are the gift of his widow, Mrs. Edith Hall, who now lives in Salina. She said she feels the award of these scholarships carries on Hall's tradition of having assisted many Oakley young people to attend college. He died in 1952. Four George Guy Hall scholars have been appointed in the School of Pharmacy for 1964-65. COLBY "KU & FRITZ KC SALINA EMPORIA DODGE CITY WICHITA CHANUTE LIBERAL COFFEYVILLE BEFORE YOU GO HOME, MAKE YOUR FIRST STOP "FRITZ," FOR A COMPLETE SAFETY CHECK!! CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Service out of the weather 8th & New Hampshire Phone VI 3-4321 CITIES SERVICE Downtown — Near Everythina We cash your checks — mail your letters — invite your account e s l r d l l l l d h n d a o e p r i c h n o e s i e y Tuesday, July 28, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 We feature fine service and best results from our downtown plant at 740 Vermont. Extra care is given to every garment to assure your complete satisfaction. The Independent Drive-in center, located on the corner of 9th & Mississippi, features the finest washing & dry cleaning self-service equipment and a convenient station for professional dry cleaning pick-up and delivery. All in all, the Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners feature complete service — either professionally done or self-service. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28, 1964 Egypt Desert Has Water— Underground CAIRO—(UPI)—Buried far below Egypt's western desert is a vast lake, stretching for hundreds of miles, that holds a water supply good for at least 200 years, and perhaps indefinitely. Egypt is now beginning to use that water in a land reclamation scheme potentially as important as the Aswan High Dam. If all goes as planned, the country will put 2 million acres of desert under cultivation in this region and about 400,-000 persons will find a new home there. THERE IS NO target date for completion. After more than three years' work, only 36,000 acres have been reclaimed and the immediate goal is 42,000 acres by the end of 1965. The cost, including housing and other allowances for settlers, is tremendous: more than $1.5 billion, or 1½ times the cost of the high dam, which also is expected to add two million acres to Egypt's meager land resources. The area is known as the New Valley. It lies 100 miles or more west of the Nile, with its extremities roughly parallel to Aswan in the south and Cairo in the north, a distance of more than 500 miles. For centuries the valley has contained five large oases supporting a population of about 50,000. The Egyptian plan is to link these oases into one long, fertile green belt. AT PRESENT LAND reclamation is confined to the two southernmost oases, Kharga and Dakhla. Egyptians have drilled 196 wells in the area, producing 600,000 cubic meters of water daily. The Romans who conquered Egypt 2,000 years ago had the same idea. Nearly 1,000 wells that they dug still produce 300,000 cubic meters each day. Ruins of two Roman temples stand amid the modern well rigs and fields of rice and wheat. Two American engineers, C. D Kent and Ralph Fry, are providing technical assistance to the New Valley project under the U.S. foreign aid program, and most of the drilling rigs are American-made. Russians, Germans, French, Italians and Yugoslavs also are employed, along with 3.650 Egyptians. HOW THE LAKE into which they are drilling came to be under the desert still is a mystery to geologists. One theory is that the water has been around since the early ice age, when Egypt had no deserts and rainfall was abundant. But the most popular belief at the moment is that the water seeped into Egypt underground all the way from two neighboring countries to the south, Sudan and Chad, which still have huge rainfalls in their jungles. A study made in 1940 showed it would take at least 50,000 years for water to travel from the nearest rainfall areas in the Sudan in this manner. NO ONE KNOWS exactly how much water is in the lakes. One estimate is that 1.28 billion cubic meters of water could be withdrawn each year for 200 years. Other scientists calculate that 17 billion cubic meters of water are filtering into the lake each year, and thus that much could be withdrawn indefinitely. The biggest problem for Egypt in the current project is to persuade peasants of the Nile Valley, who are not adventuresome people, to move out into the New Valley. To lend encouragement, the government provides each family with a free house, cow, donkey, chickens, water, seed and five feddams (5.19 acres) of land. After one year, the family pays the government five pounds (14 dollars) a month. MODERN ASPHALT highways, date, brick and ice factories, a movie theater and hospitals have been built in the New Valley. Wheat, alfalfa, beans and rice now are being grown. But the desert is still oppressively near, the heat in summer is intense and the peasants are not enthusiastic. Scenery, Restaurants Captivate KU Students University of Kansas students are participating this summer in the German Summer Language Institute, Holzkirchen, Germany. Here is the first report to parents from these students: Greetings from Holzkirchen! Here, with a marvelous view of the Bavarian Alps and at an altitude of approximately 2,000 feet, the German Summer Language Institute opened on Monday. June 15. The students are in good health and high spirits, and are already quartered with their German families who have been looking forward to this occasion for a long time. You may be sure that, even though the students may be too busy to write detailed letters about their experiences here we have taken it upon ourselves to make sure that they are comfortable with their foster parents. YOU MAY HAVE already received at least a postcard about our most pleasant journey into the heart of Europe, but these few lines may give you some more details. After an uneventful flight to Brussels, we took our bus to Aachen, and for the first time we noticed the extraordinary ability of our driver, Willi, to negotiate European traffic. Aachen, the first seat of Charlemagne and the site of the Battle of the Bulge, was the first German city that most of the students had ever seen. They were not only enchanted with the Cathedral, but also with the shops, restaurants, and winding streets of this very ancient town. THE NEXT MORNING we made the short jaunt to Cologne and were guided about the city by a most interesting student, who had spent some time in the states, and who pointed out the most striking contrasts between the old and the new: the Cathedral and the Ford plant, the Bath of Dionysos and the single suspension St. Severinus-Bridge. That evening in Bonn we were received by the "Inter Nations" and had our first real contact with German students on German soil. The next morning it was Beethovenhaus, Palais Schaumberg, Parliament Building, University and on to Koblenz. To our great good fortune our whole trip was accompanied by a heat wave and that was particularly important on our boat trip on the Rhine from Koblenz to Bingen. None of the romantic castles were shrouded in fog; the "Loreley" was visible for miles, and the "Mouse Tower" did not have to serve as a light house! THE SAME EVENING in Mainz Social Psychology Grants Awarded Highly prized fellowships of the United States Public Health Service have been awarded to three graduate students in social psychology at the University of Kansas. GOLDSTEIN WAS a scholarship student at Grinnell College, where he was graduated in 1961. He held a U.S. Public Health Service traineeship for three years at KU, where he received the M.A. in October 1963. His Ph.D. dissertation will deal with the formation and maintenance of relationships and friendships. Joel William Goldstein, Highland Park, Ill., will hold a first-year fellowship; Roland Reboussin, Williamsburg, Va., a second-year (renewal), and Edwin P. Willems, Hillsboro, third-year (renewal). All are in Ph.D. programs. Willems, a 1954 graduate of Hillsboro High School, received the A.B. from Bethel College in 1960 and the M.A. from KU in June, 1963. His doctoral work is being conducted at the Midwest Project in Oskaloosa. The project is a field study of naturally occurring behavior of children as they live in their community. Reboussin, also a Public Health Service trainee for three years, received the M.A. from KU in June. 1963. His doctoral dissertation is an investigation of how persons form first impressions of others. He is a 1956 honors graduate of Swarthmore College. the chairman of the Department of American Studies, together with a group of German students and some KU exchange students, entertained us so well that we arrived very late in a little village near Mainz where we stayed overnight. Next morning—Mainzer Dom, Paulskirche Frankfurt am., Romer, Goethehaus. We had lunch in two very famous student restaurants: "Roter Ochse" and "Seppl," right out of the "Student Prince!" After meandering about the castle of Heidelberg we made our way through the Odenwald to the health resort Miltenberg, where we had a refreshing swim in the Main and where we spent the night. The next day we visited the Residenz at Wurzburg, lunched at the fortress Marienburg and pursued the Romantische Strasse to Rothenburg, where we walked on top of the old city wall, sang songs with a German fraternity and strolled through the romantic streets of this almost perfectly preserved medieval German town. SUNDAY MORNING: Dinkelsbuhl. Nordlingen, Donauworth, Augsburg—ancient German towns, associated with very early German history. At 5 p.m. we arrived in Holzkirchen by way of Munich and had a warm reception by the mayor and some of the townpeople. Right now we are so busy with our courses that our first trip seems like a dream. But as soon as we have taken our midterm examinations and are ready for another trip to Switzerland, you will hear more from us. COOL Cool is how you'll feel... look ... and act when you put your confidence in Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners. Every part of the shirt is quality ironed and finished to preserve its beauty and to protect it. Each shirt is wrapped individually as positive dust protection or hung conveniently on a hanger. MEN'S SHORT SLEEVED SHIRT WITH PLAID. MADE FROM POLYESTER. SIZE MEDIUM (40) WIDE (32). METAL HEADBAND. MAINTAINS FLEXIBLE FIT. COTTON BODY. CUSTOM ORDER. ALL ORIGINAL DESIGN. MODEL NO. 7185. REPRINTED BY JOHNSON & CO. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H.—VI 3-3711 Fi Fra are p that v semes The ties b is to l No camp Call VI3-3711 For Fast, Free Pick-up & Delivery Dur are s by al their A PI Ir In tion depa be resea the C ence The dents chole micr tive radia Th with been and beeri tions subs and $48.0 wor Page 7 Fraternities, Sororities Wait Rush els- north, amman and aoyor night arms ure our you Fraternities and sororites at KU are preparing for the rush periods that will begin the week before fall semester. Sept. 21. The open rush period in fraternities begins Aug. 1, and formal rush is to be held Sept. 8-10. During the open rush period men are selected at functions sponsored by alumni chapters of fraternities in their home towns. No rushing is done on the KU campus. In the fall men meet other All-College Plan Used In Research Summer Session Kansan In order to stimulate an interaction between students in different departments an all-College approach is being used in an undergraduate research participation· program in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. This program encompasses students in the departments of psychology, zoology, chemistry, botany, microbiology, entomology, comparative biochemistry and physiology, radiation biophysics, and geology. The endeavor, which is affiliated with the gifted student program, has been in operation for several years, and for the past seven years has been receiving grants from the National Science Foundation. These subsidies are bestowed each year, and last May the program received $48,000 with which to continue its work. Students displaying an interest in research are nominated by faculty members and form this group. Participants in the project are selected by the director of the gifted students program, Francis Heller, associate dean, and the director of the National Science Foundation undergraduate research participation program, Frederick Samson, professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology. Openings are still available for undergraduates wishing to partake in research, and those interested may contact either of the directors. Forty-two students are participating in the program. Each week they meet in a group to discuss the work going on in their various areas. This gives the individual a wider scope of the general research in all the phases of the program. members of the various houses and are entertained for a week before the semester begins. FOR THE FIRST time since 1958 sororites will rush girls in the fall. The Panhellenic Council voted to change the time for women's rush activities to the second semester of the freshman year in 1959. For several years the membership selection period was held the week preceding the opening of the fall semester for women of sophomore standing or above. A short rush period is always held for transfer students during the orientation period in the fall. THE CHANGE OF TIME for formal rush resulted from the difficulties encountered in anticipating housing needs for upperclass women, complicated by increasing enrollment of women students and increasing registration for rush. The rush period to be held by the 12 sororities will involve transfer and upperclass students. Preliminary applications for participating in rush were submitted last May to the dean of women's office. The women will be formally pledged in the fall. The regular rush period in February will involve second semester freshman women. Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, coordinates the activities of fraternity rush. One-third of the men students at KU live in fraternity houses, and the remainder live in residence halls and apartments. According to Dean Alderson, without these houses there would not be enough room in the dormitories for all students. DEAN ALDERSON said he believes there are advantages to belonging to a fraternity and participating in their many planned activities. For a woman to be eligible to participate in formal rush she must be unaffiliated. unmarried and a student at KU for at least one semester, New President of BPW Is Kansas Graduate Mrs. Dorothy Marguerite Ford, a KU graduate living in Sherman Oaks, Calif., has been elected president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs. The new president of the 170,000member organization is a former model and was a Phi Beta Kappa at the University of Kansas. She is a consultant in business and distributive education for the Los Angeles County School system. In Dean Taylor's opinion, living in either a sorority house or a residence hall is an individual matter, and women must make their own decisions about where they want to live. while retaining a 1.0 grade point average. Ensign Pulver Granada TEL.471-200-1589 NOW! Ends Friday STARTS SATURDAY! SLAM! BAM! HERE COMES SAM! COLUMN PICTURES presents Jack LEMMON·SCHNEIDER "GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" on sharing Dorothy PROVINE·color, and good story Edward G. ROBINSON A OMNI 21ST PRESENT Open 7:00 Starts Dusk Now Showing "The VICTORS" and "When The Girls Take Over" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 40 Starts Friday RACING THRILLS! "Thunder In Carolina" and "Green Helmet" Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful Tuesday, July 28, 1964 HILLCREST BOWL HILLCREST BOWL t Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in 9th & Iowa Streets HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER Classified Ads一 Experienced typist would like to do typing in her home. Call VI 3-1539. tf Experienced typist will type term paper. Call VI 3-0875. 7-31 TYPING Experienced typist. Former secretary will provide administrative support. Accurate work, Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter, Duplicating machine. McEldowney 2521 Ala. Ph. VI & 83168 Accurate expert typist would like typing of any kind and these prompt service. Call ViI 3-2858 ff. Accurate and experienced typist—Wants typing of any kind—Very reasonable rates—Contact Mrs. Jacque Kaufman [Mrs. Robt] VI 3-7493 after 5:00 p.m. ff. Accurate typing immediately to thesis and dissertations. Will give your typing immediate attention with electric machine with special symbols, Mrs. Marlene Higley . 408 West 13th ff. Expert typing on thesis, dissertations and term papers Electric typewriter. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Mrs. Mishler at VI 3-1029. tt Secretary would like typing for thesis and term papers. Call VI 3-9288, tt Term papers. Thesis by experienced typist. Phone VI 3-6296 after five. 7-31 Thesis typing done—Accurate work on Typewriter. Call Pat Cat. **7-31** **3-5620** FOR RENT Furnished 4 room basement apartment— private entrance and shower, utilities paid-$62.50, 227 W. 22nd St. Call after 3:30, VI 3-1930. tf Two bedroom duplex—Stove and refrigerator except electri- tic furniture—VI 3-2281 Extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Private parking—automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8354. tf FOR SALE 3 bookcases, utility plywood table. T.V. artist paper cutter, large clothes hamper. Call Vi 3-0844 or come to 2350 Ridge- court, Apt. 3. Stereo tape recorder. Almost new Roberts 700. Save over $150.00. Used Webor Regent Stereo playback tapedeck. $65.00. Call VI 3-3251. 7-31 Magazines for Sale-Complete file of Life Magazines, excellent condition — write University Daily Kansan, Box 99. Lawrence, Kans. 7-31 RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Delivery Service REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING STUDENTS Grease Jobs .. $1.00 Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing Brake Adj. . . . 98c 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd GB Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Registered Dachshund Puppies, 845 Ala. VI 3-0328. 7-31 Typewriters, new and used portables, typewriter consoles, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter, adder, rentals and sales. Typewriter Typewiser, 735 Mass St., VI, 3-346-4 Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of 1963-64 readiness materials for publications, Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. 1962 Ducati motorcycle. Perfect condition, $450. See at 931 Louisiana. 7-31 Vespa 2-seater $150.0 motor scooter for sale. Has large utility basket on back and is in good condition. Call John, room 243. VI 2-1200. 7-31 MISCELLANEOUS LOST Woman wanted to share home with working mom & child care for flexible hours of child care. To begin on or before Sept. 1st, Mrs. Milikens for interview V924-5920 M924 Millikens for interview V924-731 HELP WANTED Straw purse lost at Lone Star swim area. A person returns. Return questions asked—Reward. 7-31 Wanted: Student (prefer graduate to be part or full time). Call VI F 8354. 7-31 TRANSPORTATION Ride wandel out to West—Prefer to San Diego Almur Egencen at VI 3-3944 7-31 Need ride to Philadelphia, or South Jersey—Aug. 1 or 2. Share expenses and driving. Need ride badly. Call Linda Ellis VI 2-1931 or VI 2-0445. 7-28 What: Ride wanted August Who: Onur Egemen . . . VI 3-3944 7-31 When: Any day within first half of August What? "i'de want" Where? Out to west preferably to San Diego. Riders wanted — St. Louis, Chicago, Cleveland or Pittsburgh. Leaving not later than Sat. August 1, Share expenses and driving. VI 2-3169 after 6 p.m. 7-28 REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure--Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 838 Mass. JIM'S CAFE OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ... right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI 3-3034 Closed on Monday Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 28, 1964 Check These Exclusive Features: Central Air Conditioning Large Swimming Pool Concrete Floors On All Levels Double Walls with Sound-board Large Walk-in Closet Paneling Beautiful vanity-dressing area with 6-foot mirror and vanity, separated bathroom, with shower, large linen closet, and 6-foot overhead storage area. Large, spacious, 2 & 3 rack walk-in closets add much to the convenience of Oaks one and two bedroom apartments. Large dining area with breakfast nook equipped with eye-level electric range and oven, 12 cu. foot refrigerator, and disposal. Rentals: $70, $85, $95, $115, and $120 Per Month AND ALSO: Water, Heat & Air-Conditioning Paid For Only $10 Per Month. Contact: VI 2-3711 The Oaks 24th & Ridge Court The Oaks 24th & Ridge Court AUGUST 1957 THE THE CHRISTMAS GIFT BOX Discount For 12-Month Rental Contact: VI 2-3711 24th & Ridge Court for display apartment Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 31, 1964 52nd Year, No.16 Lawrence, Kansas PRAISE THE LORD "OOH! THAT WATER'S COLD!"—Studying for their finals at the south edge of Potter Lake are Marian Allen, sophomore; Susan Campbell, freshman; Jill Perry, freshman, and Debbie Allen, sophomore. All the girls are from Lawrence and much to their chagrin, they soon found that mosquitoes, Socrates and economics just don't mix. University Prepares For Program in Fall By Linda Ellis Summer School ends today, but the fall semester will open in a few short weeks bringing with it, as usual, a new crop of properly confused and lost freshmen. Orientation week, when new students, freshmen and otherwise, are introduced to KU for the first time is a time for finding buildings, taking tests, getting blisters and planning a whole new life as a student. The week of Sept. 13-21 has been chosen as orientation week this year. Classes begin Sept. 21. Fall semester 1964 will be no different from any of the periods of the past. The orientation program for new students lists in detail the things students should do and where they should be the first week on campus. New students arrive on campus Saturday, Sept. 12. EACH STUDENT is sent an official orientation booklet that outlines the steps to take in enrolling, buying books and finding housing for the year. On Monday, Sept. 14, placement examinations will be given—tests consisting of psychological, aptitude and achievement measurements. They are used not for determining entrance into or elimination from the University but for better counseling of students with reference to careers and courses of study. All students in the University are required to take two sets of tests. These tests may also be taken during the summer-long KU Preview sessions. AFTER PLACEMENT tests are taken new students are assigned advisers with whom they meet to discuss their course of study for the coming semester. Placement test scores are given to the adviser in order better to plan the first semester. Although specific advisers are assigned to new students during enrollment week there often are times when deans and academic advisers are not available except to their specific advises. During this period selected upperclassmen, under the auspices of the All Student Council, will be available from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. for consultation on Tuesday, Sept. 15, in Hoch Auditorium and on Wednesday through Friday, Sept. 16-18, in both Hoch Auditorium and the Kansas Union. EACH NEW STUDENT is required to send or bring to the Student Health Service prior to registration a medical record and a report of a physical examination done by his own physician. Students are to report to Watkins Memorial Hospital for evaluation of this report and completion of additional tests. With the influx of new students and their families Sunday, Sept. 13, the food service facilities of Lawrence will be crowded. Meals are not served in the residence halls until Monday, Sept. 14. THE KANSAS UNION therefore will provide the following services: Cafeteria, two serving lines 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Prairie Room, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 4:30 to 9 p.m. and Hawk's Nest, continuous service from 11 a.m. Registration will be in Hoch Auditorium. Beginning at 8 a.m. Sept. 15 new students may call for their registration packet at any time before enrollment. This packet must be presented at the Kansas Union for checking at the time of enrollment. One event for new students this fall will be the traditional New Student Convocation at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 12 in Memorial Stadium. Classes for all students will begin Monday, Sept. 21. The All-University Convocation at 9:30 a.m. will formally open the school year for all students. It is the only occasion scheduled at which the Chancellor addresses all students and faculty. August Brings Early Rush For Fraternities Sorority-fraternity rush, that frantic time of socializing,impressing and entertaining prospective members will open this fall with a new twist. By Linda Ellis An innovation in the fraternity rushing system will permit pledging of a limited number of men in August. Each fraternity may pledge up to 75 per cent of the house's quota of pledges. During open rush, Aug. 1-31, each man whose application for admission to KU has been approved and who has registered for rush will be able to sign, upon invitation, an official pledge card from the fraternity of his choice. THE NEW SYSTEM for rushing is expected to ease the tight housing situation for many rushees, according to Donald K. Alderson, dean of men. Prospective pledges do not obtain residence hall contracts, and by the end of rush week, there usually are no vacancies in residence halls. August pledging will take place in the rushee's home town, since there will be no parties in KU fraternity houses in Lawrence. Fall rush for fraternities will begin Sept. 8 and end Sept. 11. Men who did not sign a pledge card in August may participate in fall rush. Rushees will live in Templin Hall during the rush period. Sororities will open fall rush Sept. 7 with a dinner meeting of house presidents and rush chairmen at the home of Emily Taylor, dean of women. 847 Avalon Road. All sorority houses will open Sept. 8. Rushees will meet at KU residence balls Sept. 9, and parties are scheduled for Sept. 10-13. About 100 women, mostly transfer students, are expected to participate in fall rush. KU to Be Center In Radar Study The University of Kansas will coordinate a $1,800,000 research project at eight university and government laboratories to perfect radar techniques for one of the first orbiting research laboratory satellites, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has announced. Work will begin immediately at several locations in the U.S. and Canada. The project, one of the largest of its kind ever undertaken at the University, is expected to span three years. It wil be directed by Prof. Richard K. Moore of the KU Center for Research, Inc., assisted by Robert Ellermeier, instructor of electrical engineering. The KU-directed research will test many kinds of radar and radiometry equipment, and will make recommendations about how various types could be used aboard a satellite. RADAR AND RADIOMETRY devices may ride the first manned, orbiting spacecraft around the moon, which may be launched sometime in 1969. The radar can map the surface of the moon before Americans land there, perhaps in 1970. A main reason for the research, Moore said, is that little is known about how well radar performs at such high altitudes in surveying vast land areas. Only in relatively recent earth satellite flights has radar been taken to altitudes approximating that of the moon probe. Moore is an authority on highaltitude radar and has served as a consultant to U.S. government agencies in interpreting radar data from earth satellites. FOUR SENIOR geographers and geologists from KU and at least four geology and geography graduate students will have major roles in the research. David Simonett, associate professor of geography, will be their group leader. Others include Joe Eagleman, assistant professor of geography, Louis Dellwig, professor of geology, and M. E. Bickford, associate professor of geology. Of the first year's allocation of almost $600,000 from NASA, more than $230,000 will go for work at the Center for Research on the Lawrence campus of the University. Other research will be at the Ai Force Wright Air Development Center, Dayton, Ohio; Acadia University, Nova Scotia; Ohio State University; the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at California Institute of Technology; the Naval Research Laboratory; the U.S. Army Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, Miss, and the Geodesy Intelligence and Mapping Research and Development Agency, Ft. Belvoir, Va. PART OF THE INVESTIGATION will involve flying "radar laboratory" airplanes from the Wright Air Development Center and Naval Research Laboratory over selected sites in the continental United States and Hawaii to test capabilities of electronic sensing devices. It will be determined from the flights how well various kinds of equipment detect ground moisture, soil and rock types, vegetation, and ground features, such as geological faults and coastline detail. A second part of the research will be done at KU, where radar, geography, and geology specialists will attempt to match radar theory with performance, and show how an orbiting radar-radiometer laboratory can increase knowledge of the earth's surface and its daily changing moisture, vegetation, and snow cover. ture, vegetation, and snow cover. The geographers and geologists will interpret what the radar "sees" as it scans simulated, miniature planetary surfaces in KU laboratories. They also will advise how to set up radar experiments over areas of the United States. ONE TECHNIQUE will be the use of radar color mapping. The geoscientists hope to translate radar signals into colors to represent varying surface features. An article in the July 24 issue of Time magazine explained the success NASA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers already have had with related radar procedures. Other radar data will be fed into KU's new IBM 7040 computer, which is to be installed this fall at the University Computation Center. The computer will provide statistical information from radar signals bounced off of rough surfaces. D. H. SMITH Richard K. Moore Pole Describes Nation's Theater A story published in the July 28 Summer Session Kansan may have improperly reflected certain facts because of differences in languages. The interview was with two Polish theatrical figures now on campus, Jan Wilkowski and Adam Kilian. Kilian said there is a strong movement in the Polish students' theater, which is the only amateur theater in Poland, and one which has both help and support of the government. He said the government supports theaters because they reflect the thoughts and feelings of a segment of the Polish culture. The student theater does not produce the same plays produced by the professional theater, he said. The student theater finds its own means and has the courage to present in new forms comments on the social scene, he added. Some are satirical and others political, but all are experimental in nature, he said. They are like laboratories and are used frequently as such by some professional theaters, be commented. Students are from academic universities in Poland, but student theaters are not connected with the universities themselves, Kilian said. Some professional theater schools train students for the professional theater, but these are not connected with the amateur student theaters at universities, he observed. Last Summer Kansan Today's edition of the Summer Session Kansan will be the last of the summer. Regular publication of the University Daily Kansan will resume Sept. 17. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 31, 1964 Is It 'The Fire Next Time'? Sen. Goldwater's wildly applauded convention remarks about hoodlumism in the streets of America's big cities were hardly out of his mouth when hoodlumism exploded in New York City and Rochester, N. Y. It's perhaps inadvisable to call it "hoodlumism," because author James Baldwin had warned us of the possible civil rights explosion, which he called "an apocalyptic flood," in "The Fire Next Time." Yet hoodlumism it is. These civil rights extremists, whoever they are, have lent considerable ammunition to the conservative position on the racial question. They have shocked liberals, who had thought passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act might hold down violence this summer. They have damaged our reputation abroad. Even the Congress of Racial Equality doesn't go far enough for the racial extremists of 1964. And the NAACP, which was in there fighting for Negro rights, has become old-fashioned, almost "Uacle Tom," to the new young militants. OUR REPUTATION abroad, of course, has been damaged by many events in the past year, so one needn't dwell on that. One can ask, however, why we need to justify rioting in the streets, looting of stores, all, it would seem, in the name of civil rights. Would it be reactionary to suggest that the extremists, and this doesn't refer to that unholy trio (Ku Klux Klan, John Birch Society, and Communists) who were mentioned so often at the recent Republican convention, have reached a point where they are endangering their own causes? An example this summer was the unsuccessful effort to block highway traffic to the New York World's Fair—in the name of civil rights. Another was the booing of President Johnson—in the name of civil rights. In another area there are the activities of Malalyn Murray, whose hatred of religion is so intense that she might be creating a kind of "backlash" (to use a word beloved of interpretative writers today). THE RACIAL DISTURBANCES in New York and Rochester, in all likelihood, are not directed by the militant forces who have made positive contributions in the direction of racial amity in America. Maybe the Communists, maybe the Black Muslim movement have had a hand in these. It's possible that we are seeing the fire of Baldwin's "Fire Next Time." Perhaps it is a racial explosion, a bursting-out of the ghettos. Perhaps it is the beginning of civil war between the races, as Baldwin suggested last weekend. Whatever it is it cannot be condoned merely because the long-oppressed Negro is raging through the streets. A few fuzzy-heads will so condone it; they are as mistaker, as are Gov. Wallace and former Gov. Barnett when they condone the white supremacists of Jackson and Birmingham. Harlem Violence Blamed Partly on City Attitudes NEW YORK—The outbreak of violence in Harlem on Saturday July 18, and in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn two days later, has been strongly condemned, but a share of the blame is attributed to the apathetic attitude of city officials toward the needs and problems of Negro citizens. The Rev, Richard A. Hildebrand, president of the New York branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, made this charge in a statement to the press. The disorders which erupted in the two communities, Mr. Hildebrand said, did not originate with the "senseless slaving" of 15-year-old James Powell by a white offduty police officer. That incident, Mr. Hildebarnd asserted, "merely triggered long smouldering and justified resentments stemming from gross neglect of the needs of the people imprisoned in these ghettoes." THE POWELL BOY was shot to death Thursday, July 16, by Police Lt. Thomas Gilligan. According to Gilligan, who has received several citations for bravery, the Negro lad moved toward him with a knife and refused to drop it when commanded to do so. Witnesses, however, gave sworn statements to the NAACP that the slightly built youngster did not have a knife during the confrontation with the 200-pound, 6-foot policeman. Hildebrand, who pastors Bethel Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Kansan Telephone UN-3198, business office UN-3644, newsroom Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. Member of Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50th St, New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas AME Church in Harlem, lashed out at both the rioters and the police who tried to contain them. "No responsible community leadership condones the rioting, the reckless provocation of police officers, the destruction of property, and the looting," said Hildebrand, addressing the rioters. "We condemn such actions and we sternly warn those guilty of such acts that they are betraying their own people and the cause of racial justice everywhere." THEN, HITTING at the indiscriminate clubbing of innocent people who were not involved in the mayhem by the predominantly white police contingent, Hildebrand said there is an "urgent need to curb the reckless and panicy violence which characterized so much of the police activity during the disorders. "Bluntly stated," he declared, "there has been a loss of confidence in the police department from the commissioner down to the officer on the beat." Hildebrand also struck out at Mayor Robert Wagner's continued support of Police Commissioner Michael Murphy and a nine-point program which the mayor says he will institute to head off further racial incidents. It will take more than police action or the Mayor's "pious promises." Hildebrand asserted, "to quell the resentments fostered by contemptuous disregard of basic human needs." "The city has neglected to move consistently and promptly to improve relations between the community and the police department, to provide decent housing at rents the people can afford to pay, to upgrade the educational system including school integration, to inspire hope for a better life among Negro youth, and to eliminate discrimination in employment," declared Hildebrand. "The roots of this deterioration." Hildebrand continued, "lie in the failure of the city to comprehend fully the desperate phight of the Negro in New York City. THE MAYOR SHOULD "recognize this fact and move swiftly to prevent further deterioration in police-community relations," said the NAACP official. "The NAACP has time and time again brought these needs to the attention of city officials but conditions remain basically unchanged. There have been promises but scant action. Action can no longer be delayed." Shrinking Coast Playgrounds Are U.S. Worry NEW YORK—(UPI)—Millions of Americans have never swum, surfed or fished in the waters surrounding the continental United States. Those who plan to may have to hurry. For while more vacationists flock to the seashores each year for fun and sport, the coastline where they can enjoy themselves is shrinking. It is not natural erosion. The factors involved in the shrinkage of public coastal recreational areas are expanding population concentrations close to the shore regions; purchase of land for residential and commercial developments; increasing restriction against "out-siders" by local communities; and pollution—the bane of swimmers and fishermen. ALONG THE 3,700 miles of general Atlantic and Gulf coast lines, for instance, the National Park Service of the Department of Interior reported that only 240 miles or 6.5 per cent remain in public hands—that is, owned by the federal or state governments. Less than 20 per cent or 258 miles is still available to the general public on the Pacific Coast. And, according to the service's survey, the few remaining accessible and undeveloped beach areas are widely scattered along the coasts. CONCERN OVER the decreasing facilities was expressed recently by Thomas T. Lenk, president of The Garcia Corp., manufacturers of fishing tackle. He said fishing, particularly saltwater angling, is probably the country's fastest growing pastime. And surfing, skiing, and other water sports also are gaining steadily in popularity, according to industry sources. Lenk cited estimates that the need for new fishing opportunities should go up 150 per cent by the year 2000. While the population of the United States may have doubled by then, participation in outdoor recreation is expected to triple as automation and other technological advances provide more leisure time for Americans. "FISHERMEN ARE going to turn increasingly to the oceans," the Garcia official said. His prediction was supported by a report of the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, which said that while the number of freshwater fishermen will about double by the turn of the century—from 19 million to 34 million—the saltwater angling population is expected to jump $ _{4/2} $ times, from 6.3 million to 29.3 million. VERDICT ON SCHWEITZER, by Gerald McKnight (John Day, $4.95). BOOK REVIEWS Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the jungle saint of Lambarene, is almost universally acknowledged to be one of the world's great figures. He distinguished himself as a theologian and musician before age 30, when he started the study of medicine so he could tend the sick in the African jungle. His hospital which he built in the jungle at Lambarene in what is now the new nation of Gabon, has become world renowned and Dr. Schweitzer at 90 is admired as a foremost humanitarian as well as a genius of many parts. But there are discrepancies and contradictions in the great doctor's career, and McKnight has sifted the evidence gained during a personal visit to Lambarene where he observed and interviewed Schweitzer, his disciples (mostly women) and his patients. While not detracting from Schweitzer's accomplishments, McKnight finds that the myth has outgrown the man. His observations and reflections on the man and the myth make fascinating reading.-UPI When Britain surrendered India, what Disraeli had called "the brightest jewel in the British Crown," in 1947, it was completing a process begun many decades before, when the first agitation began for Indian independence. Edwardes chronicles the background of Indian independence and gives the reader a closeup of the maneuvering among British officials at home and in New Delhi and the rival Indian Nationalist leaders. He gives a clear understanding of how the subcontinent came to be divided into Pakistan and India and why there was nevertheless violence and killing between the Hindu and Moslem communities. Edward tries to be fair to all concerned—Nehru, G a n d h i, Jinnah, Mountbatten, Attlee, Churchill —but he is given to blanket criticisms of many decisions despite his own admission that the situation was complex, not one that could be solved by simple, sweeping actions.—UPI SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION, by Ken Kesey (Viking, $7.50). A powerful novel about the effects of a logging strike in a Pacific Northwest community and on the family of Hank Stamper, a proud and ornamental descendant of a pioneer family that had been defying its neighbors for generations. Within the broader study there is the conflict among Stamper's circle of relatives—his intellectual half-brother, his attractive and unfulfilled wife, his peppery father. This is no romance of the old days of lumbering. Kesey's loggers use power chain saws, and go to work with transistor radios slung around their necks. They drink and fight like the lumbermen of old, but they also organize into unions and collect unemployment checks. CH The story traces Hank Stamper's two conflicts and describes how the selfishness of Hank and his half-brother, Leland Stanford Stamper, nearly lead to their mutual ruin. Kesey's dialogue is pungent and his tavern and working scenes skillfully drawn. His descriptions of the Oregon woods and rivers are among the best parts of this long (628 page) book.-UPI O. HENRY'S NEW YORK, selected by J. Donald Adams (Premier, 60 cents). And often fun. This is a selection of O. Henry's stories that attempts to convey New York as it looked to O. Henry 60 years ago. There are bright vignettes and revealing pictures of the people and things of the horsescar era. Who is older hat today than O. Henry? English professors scorn him, and even Hollywood seems to have dropped him. Old-fashioned, corny, artificial, melodramatic. There are 25 stories here altogether. Some of the better-known are "The Gift of the Magi" (what's better-known than that sentimental bit of nonsense?), "The Trimmed Lamp" and "The Last Leaf." It's a nostalgic book for people completely unattended to the fiction of the New Yorker. The documents are eyewitness reports. These are some of the people reporting to us in these pages: the late Thomas L. Stokes, newspaper columnist; Nicholas Roosevelt; Frances Perkins; Harold L. Ikes; Drew Pearson; Raymond Clapper; Robert E. Sherwood; Roosevelt's secretary Grace Tully, wife of the genius of the atom; Ernie Pyle; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Omar N. Bradley; Brendan Gill and John Lardner of the New Yorker; Harry Truman; John Hersey; Arthur Vandenberg; Marguerite Higgins, the reporter Robert J. Donovan; New York Times and Time magazine reporters, and Merriman Smith (his story of the assassination of Kennedy). THE UNEASY WORLD, edited by Paul M. Angell (Premier, 60 cents) Here is another volume in the series selected from The American Reader. The time has become contemporary, and we are treated to writings from the era of Franklin D. Roosevelt to that of John F. Kennedy. 1964 LOCAL CANDIDATES Henryy BALTIMORE EVE SUN "Off We Go, Into The Wild Blue Yonder——" Summer Session Kansan Page 3 nees the hokes, okes, holas hola wood; hully; wife wiie mie mjob John John arthur arriving; aviors; aga-ja aga-a sina- Choir Tours Australia Has Fill of Local Color (Editor's note: This is the last in a series of articles on the KU Brass Choir's recent tour of the Far East.) Friday, July 31, 1964 By Emery Goad Australia—During their stay in IN ADDITION, 12,000 pre-malignant conditions were discovered and 40,000 others had conditions requiring medical care and were referred to their family physicians for treatment. Cancer Clinic Finds Many New Cases Despite this service to patients who have come to New York from 36 states and 17 countries, the Strang Clinic came within a whisker of closing last year. However, physicians in private practice and agencies concerned with the cancer problem joined Strang patients in voicing their conviction that the clinic's operation must continue. Finally, a grant of $250,000 from the Damon Runyon Memorial Fund guaranteed its continuance. NEW YORK — (UPI) — The Strang Clinic of New York City, which has developed one of the most comprehensive physical examinations on record, reported recently that since its inception it had examined 110,000 persons who had one thing in common—they all thought they were in perfect health. More than 1,500 of them were found to have some form of cancer. ESTABLISHED AT MEMORIAL Hospital in New York in 1940, the Kate Depew Strang Cancer Prevention Clinic was the second such clinic in the United States. After 10 years, Strang became the nation's leading non-profit detection and diagnostic clinic for the periodic examination of apparently well adults The grant that led to continuance of the clinic was realized when supporters protested that loss of Strang would cut the city's clinic facilities for cancer detection by almost 50 per cent. The clinic has pioneered in use of modern technological developments. It has installed the most modern X-ray equipment for soft tissue studies and, in the administrative area, a 24-unit (Dictaphone) dictating system. STRANG NOW is widening its horizons by acquiring the building on East 34th Street, where it is located and launching a $2.5 million development fund drive. COLUMBIA, S.C. —(UPI)—Gov. Donald Russell says he would like to nominate Georgia's veteran Sen. Richard B. Russell for President Johnson's running mate. Russell Suggested For No.2 Position The latter enables doctors to dictate instantaneous reports on patients while the data is fresh in mind. With this system, eight central transcribers convert 15-minute plastic records into typed files on each patient. "Now our doctors spend their time where it counts—with the patients," a Strang Clinic spokesman said. "I would consider it a great honor for this state to nominate Sen. Russell," the South Carolina governor said at a news conference. The governor heads South Carolina's delegates to the Democratic national convention in Atlantic City, N.J., next month. He indicated such a meeting would take place before the convention. "I don't think there's anybody in federal government with the back-ground of experience and character that could excel Sen. Russell," he said. Asked if he would make the nomination, Gov. Russell said he would have to confer with the Georgia senator. The governor listed Sen. Russell's experience on armed forces, appropriations, atomic energy and agriculture committees as qualifications for the vice-presidency. Australia the KU Brass Choir visited five major cities and toured the width of the vast continent while entertaining and soaking up local culture. The group visited Perth, Sydney, Wagga Wagga, Canberra, the capital, and Melbourne. They also gave concerts at the University of Western Australia at Perth, University of Melbourne and the University of New South Wales. Al Lowry, Winfield senior, and Mike Berger, Springfield, Mo., junior, members of the choir, said the University of Western Australia was "the most beautiful campus, next to KU." "It was more beautiful than the botanical gardens we visited in Ceylon," they said. The choir stayed in Australia for 17 days. When it first arrived none of the members had seen a store for a month, and they spent a good part of the time shopping. They usually ate in native restaurants and ate local dishes. WHILE TOURING the country the choir performed at many University chapels. THE USUAL MODE of transportation for the group was plane and bus. They traveled across the continent several times. Possibly one of the strangest experiences of the trip was eating kangaroo tail soup and then discovering, as in an elephant joke, that the natives go out at night and see the kangaroos by their red eyes and then shoot them in the eyes. Wagga Wagga, the sister city of Leavenworth, gave the choir a chance to observe the Australian mountains, deserts and hills. There was snow on the ground when they arrived in the country, since it was winter. Many of them slept under kangaroo blankets in order to keep warm. On their visit to Perth the choir discovered it was a beautiful, modern city, with no slums and many landscaped yards. One of the most beautiful things about Australia was that it had "the best beer in the world-8 per cent," according to several of the members. ON THE WAY BACK to Kansas the choir stopped at the Fiji Islands, Honolulu and Los Angeles. Lowry said, "Australia was just like home. I liked it very much." While in the country the members became acquainted with members of the Western Australia Symphonic Brass and Australian Symphony. LONDON—(UPI)—An hour-long color film based on Sir Winston Churchill's book, "Painting as a Pastime," will be produced in England and premiered on NBC's Hallmark Hall of Fame on the British statesman's 90th birthday Nov. 30. The agreement between Churchill and the film's producer, Jack D. Le Vien, also provides that the film be televised the same day in the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth, and other nations. It is being produced for international television and motion picture distribution and also will be made available to schools and colleges throughout the world through its American television sponsor, Hallmark Cards, Inc., of Kansas City. One member said that "the only kaola bear and kangaroos we saw were in the zoo." Hallmark Sets Churchill Film Joyce C. Hall, president of Hallmark Cards and a longtime friend of Churehill, is in London to make arrangements for United States and Canadian television rights. Hall announced that as an added tribute a Churchill memorabilia exhibit will be presented this fall in New York at the newly opened Hallmark Gallery on Fifth Avenue. Examples of Churchill's paintings, photos, recordings, and possibly films will be included in the exhibit. U.S. Graduate Students Examine Tasks Of Asia in Program at Hawaii Center HONOLULU—Asia's vast, exciting struggles with the old and the new are being explored on-the-spot by American graduate students in a unique program sponsored by the East-West Center in Hawaii. of urbanization, especially on local political structures. "When you're on field study, you are more than an observer or someone passing through. You find yourself taking a part in their way of life, and you learn to see them in their own context." - Rebecca Stewart, music student from Crow's Landing, Calif., who studied some of the world's oldest and proudest music traditions at institutions in India, Republic of China and Japan. The center's field study is probably the high-point feature of one of the most outstanding scholarships in Asian-Pacific affairs offered to young American scholars. Commented one center student from Boise, Idaho, who plans to return to Asia on his own for further studies: - Harry Nimmo from Monroe, Iowa, who lived with one of the tribes of the remote Sulu archipelago of the Philippines to gather vital data for his anthropological project. CONSIDER THESE other recent examples: - Joseph Pulkrabek, political science major from Austin, Tex., who went to the rural areas of Thailand and Malaya to investigate the effects - Elizabeth Dodds, interchange teacher from Glens Falls, N.Y., who is currently on study tour of schools in northern Japan and Tokyo with 15 other American high school teachers. ice, teaching or other posts in Asian-Pacific affairs. THE EAST-WEST CENTER, now in its fourth year, is a national institution established by Congress in cooperation with the University of Hawaii. The student program seeks to promote international understanding, as well as to offer Americans training for government serv- For example, one recent center scholarship student plans to serve as a foreign student adviser at an American university. Another "alumnus" is now with the U.S. Foreign Service as vice-consul in Hokkaido, Japan. Typically, the American student on a center scholarship is a master's degree candidate in a field related to Asia and the Pacific basin. He also studies one of the nine Asian languages offered by the University of Hawaii (Chinese, Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Javanese, Korean, Tagalog, Thai and Sanskrit). EXCEPT FOR FIELD research in Asia, studies are primarily at the University of Hawaii. These scholarships are administered by the East-West Center's Institute for Student Interchange. Awards are generally for 21 months and are valued up to $9,000. SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN KILT DANCE HAVE YOU TRIED SANDY'S FISH-ON-A-BUN? We believe it's what's up front that really counts and SANDY'S got it all the way. Quality. Service. What else is there? AGROSS FROM HILLCREST Beat the Heat It's always cool at the beautiful HILLCREST BOWL bowling Come in and see for yourself we'll give you a FREE line of bowling just for coming in HILLCREST BOWL HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER 9th & Iowa Streets ★ BEFORE 6 P.M. OR AFTER 9 P.M. ANY DAY ★ LIMIT ONE FREE LINE PER BOWLER Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 31, 1964 We feature fine service and best results from our downtown plant at 740 Vermont. Extra care is given to every garment to assure your complete satisfaction. The Independent Drive-in center, located on the corner of 9th & Mississippi, features the finest washing & dry cleaning self-service equipment and a convenient station for professional dry cleaning pick-up and delivery. All in all, the Independent Laundry and Dry Cleaners feature complete service – either professionally done or self-service. FOR FASHIONABLE EFFICIENT CLEANING SERVICE IT'S Independent DRIVE-IN 900 Miss. DOWNTOWN PLANT 740 Vt. Call our plant for convenient pick-up and delivery today. VI 3-4011 Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi Friday, July 31, 1964 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Boating Fatalities Climb, But So Does Boating Fun A national magazine recently viewed with alarm U.S. Coast Guard figures for 1963 which showed an increase of 112 fatalities in boating accidents over 1962. But the magazine failed to point out there were 1,050,000 more persons and 210,000 more boats involved in the sport last year than in 1962. Actually, as statisticians of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. point out, until last year there has been a noticeable downtrend in deaths from water transportation accidents. They report that about 200 fewer persons were killed in this country in water transportation accidents in Top Scientific Students Listed The ninth annual science and mathematics camp, which had major support from the National Science Foundation, had 103 first-year campers from 28 states, the Panama Canal Zone and Guam. The outstanding students in the nine major fields of concentration for the 6-week University of Kansas summer science training program for high-ability secondary school students have been announced by Delbert M. Shankel, director. The outstanding campers were chosen by the KU faculty on the basis of test scores and class work in the respective major courses. They are: Anthropology-James P. Viney, West Coyina, Calif. Chemistry—G. Richard Russell Millard, Neb. Combinatorial Topology (mathe- matics))—Walter Rees Stromquist, Pittsburg. Pittsburg. Elementary Number Theory (mathematics) — Kenneth Keller Hickin, New Orleans. Microbiology Barbara Helen Hughes, Ottawa. Physics — George Carey Fuller. Knoxville. Teen. Psychology-Barbara Anne Zishka. Indianapolis. Radiation Biophysics — Kenneth Hickin, New Orleans. Zoology—Eric Francis Wieschaus Birmingham, Ala. How the American's increasing leisure time is creating "weekend neurosis" and other mental health problems will be explained by a KU professor to the World Federation for Mental Health, meeting Aug. 3-7 in Berne, Switzerland. Grace F. Brody, assistant professor of psychology, will present a report on "The Problems of Leisure: Implications for Mental Health" to the technical section considering unemployment and leisure. Professor to Present Paper in Switzerland Dr. Brody, a member of the clinical psychology faculty, is a specialist in community mental health. 1962 than in 1958-1.445 deaths in 1962 and 1.653 in 1958. THE METROPOLITAN statisticians said that four-fifths of the fatalities in water transportation mishaps were attributed to drownings involving small boats, most of them rowboats, canoes or open craft powered by outboard motors. They reported that a substantial number of small boat accidents are caused by such factors as overloading, shifting positions, speeding, and sharp turning. Foul weather and dangerous currents also are frequent contributory factors, they found. The groups mentioned above and a number of others for many years have done an excellent job of informing and educating boating enthusiasts, providing films, booklets and other educational tools and conducting classroom instruction programs. They pointed out that a large number of boats in which fatal accidents occur do not carry life-saving equipment. The Metropolitan group came to the same conclusion which always has been held by many groups associated with boating, such as the Coast Guard, the Coast Guard Auxiliary and the U.S. Power Squadrons- "UNSAFE PRACTICES contributing to water transportation accidents can to a considerable extent be eliminated through safety education." This year, a member of the industry itself-Outboard Marine Corp.-got into the education picture with an experimental program called Certified Boating Instruction. Designed to provide recreational boatmen the opportunity to acquire practical competence in boat handling through direct experience with skilled instructors, the program is being conducted on a test basis this season in the Milwaukee and Madison. Wis. areas. THE COURSE is offered in four sections—basic boat handling, advanced boat handling, launching and retrieving, and water ski tow boat operating. Students can take as many or as few lessons as they desire. Howard F. Larson, OMC vice president, said that no money paid for instruction is given to the company. In the test program in Wisconsin, the lessons are $5 per hour, paid directly to the instructor. "The company's sole interest is in making certain that the most capable persons are available as instructors and instruction is uniform," Larson said. "We hope that the public will subscribe to boating lessons as they have comparable training by experts in golf, skiing, tennis, etc." Larson said the program, with actual on-the-water instruction, was intended to complement the Coast Guard Auxiliary and Power Squadron instruction programs, which are designed solely for the classroom. YES! We'll Be Open Through the Month of August 6:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. C GAS LIGHT 1241 Oread Pakistan Becoming Door to China Officials of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) said it is scheduled to begin "package tours" of Red China in mid-August. They said the first group will be made up of 70 Germans. KARACHI, Pakistan — (UPI) — Communist China is lifting the bamboo curtain for foreign tourists in a bid to establish wider contacts with the Western world in view of the ideological dispute with Soviet Russia, observers believe. Airline officials said all nationals, except those of the United States, Israel, Spain and Nationalist China, will be eligible to participate in the PIA package tours. THE WESTERN observers were not surprised at Peking's action. Most had seen that the air agreement between Red China and Pakistan was a move by Peking to reach the outside world. Cambodia is the only other non-Communist country to fly into Red China. However, there are reports that Air France is planning to establish flights between Paris and Peking. France recently granted diplomatic recognition to Peking. A PIA official said passengers booked at Hong Kong may arrange to board airline flights at Canton without having Red Chinese endorsement on their passports. PIA officials said the package tours will run from 4 to 15 days and will cost about $20 a day, including hotel expenses, local transport and interpreter services. The tours will go to Peking, Canton, Shanghai, Soochow, Wusih and Hangchow. THE PAKISTANI government was reported seeking to establish automatic endorsement by Red China of all Pakistanis desiring to participate in the tours. For other nationals, the official Red Chinese tourist agency will arrange to facilitate visas through PIA. A visa office already has been established at Lowu, bordering on Hong Kong, to enable visitors to the British crown colony to fly PIA via Canton. According to a western businessman who recently visited Red China, Peking officials are acutely aware of the necessity to end the country's isolation in order to become completely independent of Soviet Russia. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers A SPECIAL SALE AT The Round Corner Drug Store Prince Matchabelli Cologne Sale One-half Dram of Perfume FREE with 2 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne-A $4.50 value for only $250 1 Dram of Perfume FREE with 4 oz. of Matchabelli Cologne-An $8.00 value for only $400 In All Matchabelli Fragrances Visit Our Store Today for Complete Friendly Service Round Corner Drug Store 801 MASS. VI 3-0200 MEL FISHER Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 31, 1964 Dollar Sales in Exports Below $6.1 Billion Total WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Johnson's recent announcement of record exports of $6.1 billion worth of U.S. farm products in fiscal 1964 did not mean that American exporters collected that much of the commodities sold overseas. Agriculture Department records show that actual dollar sales—cash on the barrelhead—accounted for $4.6 billion of the fiscal 1964 farm exports, a record total for cash receipts. Five members of the School of Journalism faculty will attend the convention of the Association for Education in Journalism at the University of Texas, Austin. Aug. 26-30. SALES UNDER the "Food-for-Peace" program accounted for slightly more than $1.5 billion worth of commodities. The foods exported under this program were for foreign currency, or were outright donations for famine or other emergency relief, barter, or long-term credit sales. 5 Faculty to Attend Journalism Meeting In comparison, fiscal 1963 farm One of them, Calder M. Pickett, professor, will present a paper in the historical research session, "A Paper for the Doughboys: Stars and Stripes in World War I." Other members attending will be Dean Burton W. Marvin; Elmer F. Beth, professor, and Mel Adams and Gale Adkins, associate professors. ENDS TONITE . . . Robert Walker "ENSIGN PULVER" Granada THEATRE...Telephone W 3-5901 Grarada THEATRE...Telephone N3-6000 exports totaled $5 billion—$3.5 billion represented dollar sales, and about $1.5 billion government-financed sales. ENDS TONITE . . . Robert Walker "ENSIGN PULVER" Grazada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1047 Starts SATURDAY! SLAM! BAM! HERE COMES SAM! ON UMUM PICTURES present JACK ROTTY LEMMON·SCHNEIDER "GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" on director Dorothy PROVINE·color and guest Edward G. ROBINSON & DIRECTED BY PRODUCER Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1043 FRI-SAT.-SUN. "Hey There, it's Yogi Bear" PULL-LENGTH·COLOR Plus Audie Murphy in "QUICK GUN" Open 7:00 Starts Dusk TONITE & SATURDAY "THUNDER IN CAROLINA" Plus "The GREEN HELMET" 2 Bonus Hits Saturday Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 SUNDAY — MONDAY 2 Great Comedy Hits! "OPERATION PETTICOAT" and "PILLOW TALK" Starts SATURDAY! SLAM! BAM! HERE COMES SAM! COLUMBIA HCURE presents Jack Ronty LEMMON·SCHNEIDER "GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM" on starring Dorothy PROVUE·color. and guest JIR Edward G. ROBINSON A CANDY CAN'T PUCKER The $6.1 billion value of U.S. farm exports in fiscal 1964 was the world market value—the value of the commodities at the shipping port. The world price is considerably below the U.S. price for some commodities, principally wheat and cotton. IN THE PAST 15 years, the United States has had a favorable balance of trade in agricultural products seven times and an unfavorable balance eight times. The department estimated the trade balance between the United States and the rest of the world for farm products for fiscal 1964 would be more than $2 billion in the United States's favor, the largest on record in 50 years. The trade balance is the difference between total sales and total purchases, regardless of dollar sales or government-financed programs. PITTSBURGH—(UPI)—The newest group of "researchers" at the Westinghouse Electric laboratories are children ranging from 3 to 8 years of age. The machine, a sophisticated "talking typewriter," has shown remarkable ability to teach young children to read and type. SLATE has three main systems—an electric typewriter operated by the student; a teacher-supervised control system overseeing the typewriter's functions; and a voice storage and playback system for pronouncing letters and words typed on the keyboard. The machine was designed and built by Westinghouse physicists after a Yale University study indicated that such a machine teaches language skills to pre-school children better than conventional methods. Varsity TREATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1063 The children are helping to test a new learning machine called SLATE for simulated learning by automated typewriter environment MOBILE. Ala.—(UPI)—It may not be long before products of the sunflower—the state flower of Kansas—form an important part of the American diet. scientists come to know of the plant's potential. The seed has more protein than soybeans or cottonseed. It also contains vitamin D, calcium, thiamine and niacin. When pressed, the seed yields oil for cooking, margarine and salad. Ground up, it produces flour. Kids vs. Machine In Learning Test This is the opinion of the Rev. Robert Owens-Howard, a Jesuit biologist, who says the once-rejected sunflower is enjoying a new vogue. FATHER OWENS-HOWARD says Americans have chewed the nut-like seed for years without realizing its food value. Only recently have FRI.-SAT.-SUN. "Hey There, it's Yogi Bear" FULL-LENGTH·COLOR State Flower Is Boomed As Potential Food Giant THE SUNFLOWER, if properly cultivated and efficiently harvested, “is a highly nourishing and potentially great food source,” says Father Owens-Howard. And it tastes good, too. The Jesuit, who has made special studies of the plant, found there are nutritional benefits to be derived from almost every part of the sunflower. The sunflower has no waste. The stalks can be made into food or processed into paper or fertilizer; the roots of one variety can be used for baking or in salads. There are more than 100 varieties of sunflower plants. At present there is no mechanical equipment to harvest it. He thinks industry could develop new and adequate equipment or scientisis could develop a smaller plant. "In a generation or so," Father Owens-Howard said, "the plant could be one of the world's most important food crops, especially since it grows almost anywhere the sun can reach it and the temperature does not get too cold." "The time may come," he says, "when the United States can offer a handful of sunflower seed to an impoverished country rather than millions of U.S. dollars." ACTUALLY, THE JESUIT says, the sunflower is too much of a good thing. It's difficult to handle commercially because of its size, often more than six feet tall. Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90 acme acme acme acme acme acme Quality laundry and dry cleaners - 10% discount for cash and carry service - free pick-up and delivery (VI3-5155) - 3 convenient locations — Hillcrest Shopping Center — Malls — 1111 Mass. Page 7 Mississippi Vote Laws Do Effective Job Of Disfranchising Many Negroes in State By Tom Coffman There is a badly worn racist joke about a Mississippi Negro who went to the courthouse to take the literacy test so that he might vote. The voter registrar handed the Negro a newspaper and asked, "What does that sav?" Summer Session Kansan A poor joke, but not one to be forgotten—for the state's voter laws and their application are as effective as the Chinese newspaper to disfranchise a Negro of the right to vote in much of the state. Indeed, more legal requirements stand between the citizen and the ballot box in Mississippi than in any other state. The newspaper was printed in Chinese characters, but the would-be voter studied it carefully, pondered a moment, and replied, "This say they ain't going to be no black folks vote in Mississippi this year." THE LEGAL ASPECT of disfranchisement has a weird and tortuous history, beginning in 1890. The main suffrage-limiting laws which still exist today are: - A requirement of two-year residence in the state and one-year residence in the voting district. - Registration four months before the election. (This law makes it impossible for anyone registering after July 3 to vote in the next election. Note that a Negro who might have registered successfully as part of the Mississippi Project registration drive will not vote in the upcoming election.) - A payment of a $2 poll tax, plus possibly an additional dollar to be levied at the discretion of the local registrar. (Poll tax as a prerequisite to voting in a national election was recently made illegal by the 25th Amendment to the Constitution. Several southern states, including Mississippi, quickly passed a law which retained poll tax payment in state elections.) (Sections 19 and 20—the catchalls which obviously could eliminate anyone—have been declared unconstitutional by a three-judge federal panel in Panola County. The case is now on appeal in Federal Circuit Court, and the two sections remain as requirements for the present.) - A LITERACY requirement. Applicants are given a copy of the Mississippi constitution, and one section is designated for them to read and then be copied on a blank sheet of paper. In other words, it is a test which requires the voter to prove his ability to read and write. - A comprehensive test of the Mississippi constitution. In this section (Section 19), the applicant must give a written interpretation, in his own words, of any section of the constitution which the registrar designates. Since the question is totally subjective, it is up to the registrar whether the applicant passes or fails. - An understanding of duties of citizenship (Section 20), which requires the applicant to state in writing what he believes to be his duties as a citizen of Mississippi and the United States. - Conviction of certain crimes disqualifies a potential voter. The list includes arson, bigamy, bribery, burglary, etc. IN ADDITION, state law requires that the name of anyone who takes the test must be published in the local newspaper three times during a period of two weeks. Civil rights workers of the Mississippi Project say that only Negro applicants' names are published. In reality, this particular law assures the white community the chance for reprisals against the Negro applicant—threats of violence, actual violence, firing a man from his job, cutting off buying credit, and other forms of coercion. As one Mississippi white put it, a black man who tries to vote is "no longer considered a good nigger." HISTORIANS NOTE that since 1890 the number of Negro voters, always negligible, has varied in a pattern corresponding to the fears and hatred of the white community. Recent census statistics bear out this theory. In 1950 there were about 22,000 registered Negro voters. Apprehension of civil rights action began in the 1951-1953 period with a subsequent reaction, which was catalyzed by the 1954 Supreme Court ruling on integration of schools. By 1960 there were only about 8,000 Negro voters remaining on the roles. Before the great migrations to the North the majority of Mississippi were Negro (once 55 per cent, now 43 per cent), and during the days of Reconstruction Mississippi had a Negro governor and a legislature dominated by Negroes. When Reconstruction was ended a process of terrorism and intimidation began which eliminated most of the Negro vote long before the disfranchisement acts were set out in the 1890 Constitutional Convention. Needless to say, the student civil rights volunteers who trudge through the heat and dust of the Negro communities this summer are not meeting with overwhelming success in terms of producing Negro voters. Pastore a Tough Senate Leader By United Press International Pastore earned his debating honors in one of the toughest clubs in the world—the U.S. Senate, where every member considers himself an expert. Sen. John O. Pastore, the keynoteer for next month's Democratic national convention, is a little man with a big voice. Friday, July 31, 1964 Bouncy and energetic, the 5-foot 5-inch Pastore is the first Italian-American to sit in the Senate, and he did it the hard way. The son of an immigrant tailor, he was left fatherless at an early age. He helped support his family, while at the same time managing to work his way through high school and the Northeastern University Law School. Next he took on Rhode Island politics with the same strategy—start at the bottom. He was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1934, re-elected in 1936, was named fifth assistant state attorney general in 1937, assistant state attorney general in 1940, lieutenant governor in 1944, governor in 1946 and US senator in 1950. Since coming to the Senate, Pastore has made a name for himself as chairman of the House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee, and as second ranking Democrat on the Senate Commerce Committee. He is a staunch administration backer. The 2.150 prospective freshmen at previews represent more than a 25 per cent increase over 1963 figures. The attendance of about 400 transfer students is a 14 per cent increase. Previewer Total Sets New Record A record high of 2,556 prospective freshmen and transfer students attended the 11 KU Previews this summer, an increase of about 500 over 1963. Processing of applications is not far enough along to determine how much of the record Preview attendance is from greater popularity of the 2-day orientation or from a larger number of applicants. However, the September new student total, which also will include new graduate and law students should set a new record of more than 4,000. KU Selects Holton as Setting For Study of Aging Question No one knows what will happen. Not even the folks of Holton, who will give their ideas and energy to the venture. Not even the University of Kansas, which is providing the staff to shepherd the venture. Holton was named this week as the setting for the undertaking, a three-year research and demonstration project aimed at mobilizing resources of aging people for community service. Sixteen other Kansas communities had been considered. A grant to the KU department of social work from the National Institute of Mental Health, United States Public Health Service, is financing the project. HOLTON WAS CHOSEN for a number of reasons, all of which will benefit the project, explained Mary L. Wylie, project director and KU instructor of social work. FINALLY, HOLTON was chosen because a significant proportion of its population is in the 65-year-and-over age category. Nearly 25 per cent of its total population falls in this group, compared with 11 per cent for Kansas. The state ranks eighth in the nation in percentage of persons in this category. "There is a certain community pride in Holton," she said. "The people have a tradition of attacking community problems in unique and effective ways." As examples she listed Holton's early establishment of a city manager program and community efforts to attract industry. The project is an outgrowth of observation made in a community aging project completed last fall in Marion County, Kansas. It was sponsored by the Ford Foundation and directed by Esther E. Twente, professor of social work and a co-director of the Holton project. Also, Holton is near the resources of the University of Kansas and other state agencies which will contribute their help if it is needed. "The Marion County project demonstrated that many of a community's elderly citizens possess an array of talents which are not being utilized by their community," Miss Wylie said. THE MARION PROJECT also noted a dwindling productive population group in many of the state's smaller communities, she said. At the same time a growing number and proportion of aging residents are having an increasing influence on all community decisions. "When involvement by the aging does take place, many of the expressed needs of the aging are reduced," she continued. In the light of the Marion County project, the Holton project will have as its goal the involvement of aging residents in community planning efforts. -Classified Ads- TYPING Experienced typist would like to do typing in her home. Call VI 3-5139. Experienced typist will type term paper. Call VI 3-0875. 7-31 Experienced typist. Former secretary will be required for administrative work. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Duplicating machine. McEldowney 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 8568. Accurate export typist would like typing a prompt service, Call VI 3-2886 and these Prompt service. Call VI 3-2886 Accurate and experienced typist-Wants typing of any Kind-Very reasonable rates-Contact Mrs. Jacque Kaufman (Mrs. Robt.) 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See at 1102 W, 19th Terr. 7-31 Furnished 4 room basement apartment- private entrance and shower, utilities paid-$62.50, 227 W. 22nd St. Call after 3:30. VI 3-1930. tt Two bedroom duplex~Stove and refrig- ticiency~VII~3-2281 tricity furnished~VI 3-2281 extra nice bachelor apartment. Cool and comfortable. Private bath and parking. Very close to KU. Also 2-bedroom furnished air-conditioned apartment. Close to KU. Private parking -automatic washer. For appointment VI 3-8534. tf TRANSPORTATION Bride wanelt out to West—Prefer to Sam away for the day. Aug 7 of Aug Almur Egemen at VI 3-3944. What: Ride wanted Where: Out to west preferably to San When they day within first half of August When they Egeen ... VI 3-3944 7-31 Friscoe When: Any day within first half of FOR SALE 1961 TR-3 with 2 tops and tonneau CAiL after 5.30 p.m. VI 2-3527 7-3I 3 bookcases, utility plywood table, T.V. artist paper cutter, large clothese hamper. Call VI 3-0844 or come to 2350 Ridge-court, Apt. 3. 7-31 Stereo tape recorder. Almost new Roberts 770. Save over $150.00. Used Webcor Regent Stereo playback tapdeck, $65.00. Call VI 3-3251. 7-31 Registered Dachshund Puppies, 845 Ala. VI 3-0326. 7-31 Magazines for Sale - Complete file of Life Magazines, excellent condition write University Daily Kansan, Box 99 Lawrence, Kans. 7-31 Western Civilization Notes. Extremely comprehensive covering of 1963-64 read- Publications, Box 131, Florham Park, New Jersey. Allow one week for delivery. Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electrics. Olympia, Hermes, Divetti, Royal and Smith Corona porta- tibles. Typewriter, adder, rentals and service. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. St., VI 3-3644. tf 1962 Ducati motorcycle. Perfect condition. $450. See at 931 Louisiana. 7-3L Vespa 2-seater $150.00 motor scooter for sale. Has large utility basket on back and is in good condition. Call John room 243, VI 2-1200. 7-31 LOST Straw purse lost at Lone Star star area. Away from school in New York. Return questions asked—Reward 7-31 MISCELLANEOUS Woman wanted to share home with working mother & school aged children in exchange for flexible hours of child care. To begin on or before Sept. 1st, Call Mrs. Millikens for interview. VI 3-5920. 7-31 HELP WANTED Wanted: Student (prefer graduate) to work on apartments, painting & etc. May be part or full time, Call VI 3-8534. 7-31 CLASSIFIEDS Bring Quick Results -BUSINESS DIRECTORY- RISK'S Shirt Finishing Laundry Wash & Fluff Dry 613 Vt. VI 3-4141 NEW YORK CLEANERS REPAIRS — LEATHER REFINISHING ALTERATIONS — RE-WEAVING Delivery Service 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 STUDENTS Grease Jobs . . $1.00 Brake Adj. . . . 98c Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m.-11 p.m. PAGE CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE 1819 W. 23rd 7 a.m.-11 p.m. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. OPEN 24 hrs. a day BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP ...right off campus 1144 Indiana (12th & Oread) VI 3-3034 Closed on Monday REAL PET Shopping Center Under One Roof Free Parking GRANT'S DRIVE-IN Pet Center Sure-Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921 Fraternity Jewelry Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals Balfour 411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER G GB B Recording Service and Party Music tapes: recorded or duplicated records: cut or pressed 1619 W. 19th St. VI 2-3780 Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 31, 1964 Santa Fe Plans Its Fiesta On 352nd Anniversary SANTA FE, N. M.—(UPI)—For anyone who is looking for a really old American city, Santa Fe, N.M., was doing business 10 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. This year marks the 352nd anniversary of the unusual and colorful city of the Southwest, and its citizens have opened their doors to what is expected to be a record number of visitors. number of visits they are welcoming, they also are pointing out that the Royal City of the Holy Faith of St. Francis, as Santa Fe originally was labeled, was a thriving Spanish capital in 1610. The San Miguel mission was built in 1621, a decade after the completion of the Santa Fe Palace of the Governors. The church and the palace are still both in use. SANTA FE—called the "city different" by the locals—prides itself on its Spanish-Indian heritage. It stubbornly refused progress over the years until today neon signs are almost non-existent and narrow, unpaved streets stay that way. picked streets The old buildings made of adobe are most impressive to tourists. When territorial governor Lew Wallace arrived in Santa Fe in 1878 to spend three years writing his famous book, "Ben-Hur," his residence, the Palace of Governors, already was 270 years old. The Palace had been home for Spanish dons, captains and even admirals and a royally-appointed sergeant. Sgt. Francisco Gomez governed New Mexico from 1641 to 1642. Indians later took over the Palace in a revolt against Spanish rule and commanded Santa Fe for 12 years. IN 1821 Mexican rulers took over Santa Fe from Spain—the same year as the first American trader, William Becknell, arrived with a wagonload of merchandise and Yankee know-how. Before the United States took over New Mexico rule in 1846, the Santa Fe Trail was well known to frontiersmen as Route 66 is today to the tourist. After the Confederate army occupied Santa Fe briefly in 1862. New Mexico finally came under the rule of the federal government, and Santa Fe became a state capitol in 1912. France claimed the music was written by her famous composer, Lully (who actually was an Italian), in honor of Louis XIV. A publisher in Denmark printed the song in 1790 under a long title which, translated, means "Song for the Danish subject, to be sung on his King's birthday." This later became the Danish national anthem. Santa Fe's annual Fiesta in September celebrates the historic reconquest of New Mexico by the Spaniards after the Indian revolt. The four-day fiesta—religious, historic and Mardi Gras in style—began in 1712, and is lauded locally as the oldest celebration in America. But music experts generally agree on one point—whoever wrote it was an Englishman and the original title was "God Save the King." MEANWHILE. GERMANY lay claim to the music under the title of "Heil dir im Siegerkranz" (Hail Thee in Victor's Crown). They said it was an old German folk song. Dean Burton W. Marvin of the School of Journalism has been elected to a second four-year term on the Methodist Commission on Public Relations and Information.Members of the nine-man commission held their annual meeting last week in St. Louis with the director and associate directors of the nationwide Methodist Information staff. When the cry went out for a national anthem, "My Country 'Tis of Thee' was a front-runner. It was nosed out in the finals, however, because "The Star Spangled Banner" was claimed to be a superior song—and because of the bothersome existence of another song of the same tune that is England's and Denmark's national anthem. Psychologist Finds 'Hidden Traits' AKRON, Ohio—(UPI) —Ever hear a patriotic song entitled "Ode for the Fourth of July"? Or "Hail Thee in Victor's Crown?" Group Elects Marvin Few persons except music researchers could identify the tune to fit these titles, but every American over six years of age knows it well because another title is "My Country 'Tis of Thee." 'My Country Has Owned Many Names Digging into the archives of songdom to support Goodyear's "Great Songs of America" record album, which contains 18 of the nation's most beloved melodies, researchers found the music was composed about 1740 by English songwriter Henry Carey under the title, "God Save the King." During the Revolutionary War, English soldiers went to war against the Colonists singing their new national song, "God Save the King." The Colonists liked the music, so made up a variety of lyrics of their own. Otto was not discouraged, however. A number of behavioral scientists have suspected "that the average healthy or normal human being is operating at approximately 15 to 25 per cent of his capacity." If that were true, then how people would benefit if they could learn to tap the unused 75 to 85 per cent of their personality strengths and resources! this test could be applied to persons who have retired or are facing retirement. These are the persons who particularly need to know their personal resources and to learn to realize their potentials, he said. ONE OF AMERICA'S greatest patriotic songs has had a long and adventurous past, has been sung to many different words, and really isn't an American original. He has been at his exploring for four years and now is reporting the results piecemeal to other scientists. To the American Geriatrics Society, he described experimental techniques which enabled people to discover strengths and resources they didn't know they had. NEW YORK—(UPI)—When Dr. Herbert A. Otto, a psychological scientist, first began exploring for the strengths and resources of the human personality, he naturally wanted a look at what his scientific predecessors had turned up. THE SCIENCES directly involved with human personality—psychology, psychiatry and sociology—bandied about words which seemed on the target, to be sure, but they didn't even agree on meanings of these words such as "ego-strength," "personality strength" and "personality assets." predecessors had But he found very little to look at. They had made not a single "construct," even though they had been responsible for a proliferation of constructs dealing with personality disorganization, pathology, and breakdown." Otto also has developed a psychological test that has 176 "strength items" and covers 18 "strength areas" which is intended to provide an "inventory of personal resources" of the person tested. Other psychologists now are checking it experimentally to establish its validity. get A THIRD WAS "assigned strength roles." A person volunteered to accept the assignment of a "strength role." The class decided which of a number of roles would strengthen him the most, but only after extended discussion. The volunteer then tried to live the role. Another was "strength bombardment." A class member volunteers to be "it" and becomes the "target." He told the class what he considered his strength and resources. The others then said what they saw as the strengths and resources of the "target." One technique was the "action program." Each member of the class selected a program he thought would "faillitate the development of strengths or utilization of potential" and tried to carry it out. Once a week he reported to the entire class on progress. THEY WERE STUDENTS, business men, retired persons and housewives who had enrolled in Otto's "extension" course at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, called "Developing Your Personal Resources" and designed to be, Otto said, "a living laboratory." As of now these persons are neglected by social sciences, in his opinion. You can believe, he said, that "there is a widespread need to deny that the aged have the capacity for self-realization or that they have abilities and powers. It almost seems as if, by denying the presence of strengths and resources in others, the individual is enabled to excuse his own lack of self-realization." CAIRO-(UPI)-Black nationalist leader Malcolm X charged here yesterday that American Negro leaders Roy Wilkins and Martin Luther King "have sold themselves out and become campaign managers in the Negro community for Lyndon B. Johnson." Malcolm X Blasts Negro Moderates To the Geriatrics Society he emphasized how these techniques and Malcolm X, who left the Black Muslim movement to head his own group of black nationalists, made the charge after learning that the Negro leaders had called a halt to civil rights demonstrations until after the presidential elections and agreed to work for the defeat of Sen. Barry Goldwater. --- Oaks Apartments 24th & Ridge Court THE OAKS features quality living at a real bargain price; prices start at only $70 per month and Water, Heat, and Air Conditioning can ALL be paid for only $10 per month. Every Detail is provided for your comfort and convenience; Vanity-Dressing area separate from the bath area and featuring 6-foot mirror and overhead storage area, Large Walk-in Closets, and Beautiful Kitchen with built-in eye-level equipment. 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