Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2,1965 53rd Year, No. 6 Lawrence, Kansas $96,088 U.S. Grant Goes to Child Study A grant of $96,088 to the KU Bureau of Child Research, announced recently in Washington, D.C., represents a big stride in a program that could pay off in millions of dollars of savings to the state and nation. The grant from the U.S. Public Health Service is for the first year of a demonstration program for intensive training of institutionalized mentally retarded girls. Tentative commitments for four more years total $380,000. THE PROGRAM will be at the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center. Dr. Joseph E. Spradlin, coordinator for research at PSH and a research associate of KU, is the project director. Miss Patricia Divine, director of nursing services at PSH, is co-director. Dr. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, director of the Bureau of Child Research, explained, "In the past two years our research has developed some principles for successful training of severely retarded adolescent girls. "Now we are going to apply those principles with the goal of effective performance in a community and home environment. This will be in the area of personal, social, educational and occupational skills," he said. "The objective is to enable these girls to escape a lifetime in an institution and occupy a place in society." effects "Institutional care costs about $10 a day or $100,000 for a patient's lifetime. If this pilot program provides a pattern for the nation, the economic savings will be tremendous and the human values incalculable," he said. THESE GIRLS have IQ's of from 25 to 55. There are about 300,000 such persons in the nation and 800 such patients in Kansas, Dr. Schiefelbusch explained. The new demonstration program is the direct result of a seven-year joint KU-Parsons State Hospital research program begun two years ago. Initial funding by the Public Health Service involved a total of nearly $2 million. Supplements to that contract have brought the annual budget to a current $363,000 in the two cities and in Kansas City. Dr. Schiefflebush through the Bureau of Child Research now is involved with five research and training grants from federal agencies in the area of communicative disorders of retarded children. The budgets for this work at Lawrence, Parsons and Kansas City will be $619,000 in the new fiscal year. Holiday Union Hours The Parsons State Hospital and Training Center has other research and training grants not involving KU currently totaling about $350,000 a year. Building and food service hours of operation for the July 4th weekend have been announced by the Kansas Union: Building hours: Saturday—6 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday—6 a.m.-8 p.m.; Monday—6 a.m.-8 p.m. Book Store: Closed all weekend. Hawk's Nest: Saturday—7 a.m. 6:30 p.m. Sunday. Monday—closed. Cafeteria: Saturday—Closed. Sunday 8:30-9:15 a.m.; 11:30 a.m.-12 p.m.; 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Snack service available all day. Monday- 6:30-8:30 a.m.; 11 a.m.-12:20 p.m. 5-6:30 p.m. Snack service available all day. Prairie Room: Saturday—11 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday, Monday—Closed. Hawktet: Closed all weekend. Area Rivers on Rise KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI)—New torrents of rain poured into rivers and streams in flood-plagued Kansas and Missouri today and the muddy Missouri River spread over bottom lands. However, only rural areas were expected to be flooded. Fraser Bids Are Listed The B. A. Green Construction Co. of Lawrence was apparent low bidder for the construction of new Fraser Hall, with a bid of $1,222,900, as bids were opened Tuesday in Topeka. Apparent low bidder for the electrical work of the seven-story structure was Norris Bros. of Lawrence, with a bid of $152,700. The apparent low bid for the mechanical contract was $281,545, turned in by the U.S. Engineering Co. of Kansas City, Mo. This brought the total bids to $1,657,-145, within the original estimates of the cost. A summary report of the bids was sent to officials of the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation yesterday. Approval of these federal agencies is necessary because of funds to be contributed by them for the construction and furnishing of Fraser. The National Institutes of Health will contribute a maximum of $34.- 653 for the construction and $4,872 for equipment. The National Science Foundation has pledged maximum support of $362,465 for the construction and $25,350 for equipment. Construction of new Fraser Hall may begin about Aug. 1, Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, said Wednesday. He said construction of the new building could be done at the same time old Fraser Hall is being torn down. Tonight's Outdoor Films Tonight's outdoor movies will be "From France with Love," "Castle Country" and "Honeymoon in Copenhagen." The films will be shown east of Robinson Gymnasium. Forth Takes Library Job At Kentucky Dr. W, Stuart Forth, acting director of libraries at KU, will leave in August to become director of libraries at the University of Kentucky. KU's director of libraries, Thomas R. Buckman, will return then from a year's leave during which he held a Guggenheim fellowship for study of the book trade in Scandinavia, the Soviet Union and several developing African nations. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has announced several promotions in the University of Kansas libraries: John L. Glinka, assistant director and acting associate director the past year, to associate director; Earl Farley, library systems specialist, and Donald A. Redmond, science and engineering librarian, to assistant directors. Forth has been at KU since 1959, when he headed the undergraduate library, then became associate director and acting director this past year. For the past 18 months he has been a member of the faculty committee on objectives for the University's second century. He holds the doctorate degree in American studies from the University of Washington Glinka, with more than a decade of service in KU's libraries, was head of the preparations department for a half dozen years, became assistant director in 1959, and acting associate director this past year. Farley came to KU in 1953, after graduation from the University of Southern California Library School. After catalog work in the preparations department, he headed that department and since 1963 has been library systems specialist. In that capacity he has applied computer techniques to bibliography and index work. Redmond came to Kansas in 1961 after 12 years as director of the library for the Nova Scotia Technical College. He served one year as library director for the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey, a UNESCO project. Agee Prospective Journalism Dean Warren K. Agee, dean of the Evening College at Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, is expected to become dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information at KU. Official announcement of the appointment has not been made. Agee told the Summer Session Kansan that numerous details remain to be worked out. He called the report of his appointment made in yesterday's Topeka Daily Capital a "supposition." Religion Aide Is Appointed Agee would succeed Burton W. Marvin, dean of the school since 1948, who will direct a mass communications center at the University of Tel Aviv, Israel. The Rev. Hugh Stouppe has been appointed assistant to Dean William J. Moore of the Kansas School of Religion and has begun his duties. Stouppe, who has had overseas missions experience, filled several pastorates and worked in educational relations, for the past two years has served the Tonganoxie Methodist Church and been an assistant instructor in English at KU. He is completing requirements for the master of arts degree. Stoupe will handle administrative matters pertaining to routine operations and during the next six months assist Paul Shivel director of the Kansas School of Religion Development campaign. Beginning with the spring semester he will share time between the School of Religion and teaching duties and graduate study in the department of English. Stouppe holds degrees from Musk- ingum College and Boston University. For eight years he was a missionary in China and has filled Methodist pastorates in Worcester and Framingham, Mass., Pittsburgh, Pa., and Atchison. Dormitorv on Agenda The Lawrence Planning Commission will consider rezoning to permit another privately financed dormitory for KU students. AGEEWOULD come to KU with a broad background in communications. He has been dean of the TCU Evening School since 1962. Prior to that time he had been a member of the faculty of the TCU department of journalism from 1948-58, serving as chairman from 1950; dean of the school of journalism at West Virginia University from 1958 to 1960, and national executive officer of Sigma Delta Chi, society of journalists, from 1960-62. In the latter capacity he helped build Sigma Delta Chi to its present status in journalism, and visited many cities and schools and departments of journalism. HE ALSO was chief editorial consultant and business manager of The Quill, magazine of Sigma Delta Chi. Agee is 49, is married, and is the father of two children. His professional experience includes work on the Fort Worth Star-Telegram from 1937-48, as an account executive for Witherspoon and Associates, Fort Worth, in the summers of 1950-53, and copy editing on the Star-Telegram in the summers of 1955-57. He received the bachelor of arts degree in journalism and English from TCU in 1937; the master of arts in journalism and history from the University of Minnesota in 1949, and the Ph.D. in American studies from Minnesota in 1955. He has been a member of the American Council on Education for Journalism, president of the American Society of Journalism School Administrators, and president of the Association for Education in Journalism, which has its central offices at the KU School of Journalism. CHALMORE RIVER CITY HIJINKS—Tom Rea, KU's actor-in-residence, exuberantly plays his con-game in the River City, Iowa, of Meredith Willson's "The Music Man." The play's first performance was Wednesday night in University Theatre. Last two performances THE MOVIE BEEF are tonight and Saturday night. Sentiment is furnished by starryeyed female lead, Carol Wilcox, Kansas City junior. Her enraptured pupil (at right) is Laurie Crew, Groton, Conn., graduate student. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2, 1965 Exchange Editorial Student Loyalty Oaths Both the Senate and House have taken initial action on bills that would repeal the loyalty oath as a requirement for recipients of student loans under the National Defense Education Act (NDEA). This is good news for University students who may need the grants (up to $800 a year), loans and fellowships provided under the Act, but who find the oaths repugnant and insulting. The Senate version of the repeal measure, originally introduced in 1959 by the then Sen. John F. Kennedy, has been reintroduced by Democratic Sens. Joseph Clark of Pennsylvania and Robert Kennedy of New York. Clark has pointed out that the loyalty oath provisions are meaningless as a weapon against subversion. Legislation cannot stop lying. In addition, he contends, no such requirements are made for recipients of aid through the Small Business Administration and Soil Conservation programs. "We are willing to assume the loyalty of our businessmen and farmers," he argues. "We should be willing to do so for our youth." Besides, he says, such oaths are inconsistent with the traditions of free inquiry at universities. The bill would also eliminate a provision making it a crime for a person who belongs to a so-called subversive organization to apply for aid under the NDEA. Clark and Kennedy have allowed time for their colleagues to become co-sponsors of the bill. With some prodding from their student constituents, Minnesota's senators might be among the measure's vocal supporters. Minnesota Daily University of Minnesota June 22,1965 Honors Programs, the Stage and Drama Are Topics for KU English Conference From the stage visualization of drama to what the student should be reading in courses of literature, professors of English who taught in the Advanced Placement in English Conference at KU have treated key matters of interest to both student and teacher. One of the professors is Arthur Mizener, Cornell University teacher, writer and critic, who wrote "The Far Side of Paradise," perhaps the definitive biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Another is Walter J. Meserve, KU professor of English and author of "An Outline History of American Drama," to be published this fall. Still another is Kester Svendsen, chairman of the English department at the University of Oregon and authority on John Milton. Meserve used six KU theater majors to present a scene from Arthur Miller's "The Crucible" in two different ways. MESERVE KNOWS the stage visualization of drama is important to the literate interpretation, and that's why he used a unique technique to demonstrate the uses of modern drama in the classroom to some 200 high school and college English teachers, including distinguished professors and scholars, at the conference. "I want them to see entirely different interpretations of a scene, so they can visualize how this aspect of drama can be used to their advantage in the classroom of advanced students," Meserve explained. THE BEST of his talk was built around this visual illustration. He introduced the scope of American drama by tracing the major movements, such as the trend toward nationalism, the rise of realism and social comedy, the influence of Ibsen, and the spectrum of social drama following the two world wars. "Too many English teachers use only the historic perspectives and the literary value in their interpretation of drama. "There are differences when teaching drama in the classroom that was written to be produced on stage. English teachers need to be able to visualize the contributions of actors, directors, scenery, lighting, and costumes, more than just reading or hearing lines," Meserve said. Meserve considered the literary value as well, for this is his major interest and concern. MIZENER CONSIDERED what happens when the high school senior studies the novel "The Great Gatsby" or Milton's "Paradise Lost" only to discover that the book is the subject matter for a college freshman English class? "We're wasting his time, or his high school did," is Mizener's answer. Mizener and Svendsen were distinguished guests for the recent conference. Mizzen and Svendsen agreed that there is a great need for communication to alleviate overlap of material studied in the last years of high school and the first two years of college. "The term 'honors program' is often a misnomer," Mizener said. "If a high school really prepares a student for advanced placement in college and the data to rate the student includes a wide range of criteria, the college must still create advanced courses in different tracks for different bright students. "THERE WILL ALWAYS be some opposition from those who say a real honors program is not democratic to the masses, but the bright student is our most neglected one today. We must prepare him in high school, then have something geared to meet his needs and challenges in college," Mizener concluded. Mizener initiated the honors program at Cornell, which provides expanded sub-sections in major fields of interest after the master honors program the first two years. Svendsen believes high school teachers must know how to teach an advanced placement class if they expect their students to rate high on advanced placement tests. "Many students just sit attentively in the classroom and sponge up the brilliant insights of their professors. Teachers must instead stimulate them to do some original study and provide their own insights," Svendsen said. Formosa: Always a Hot Spot By Phil Newsom Little is heard these days from either side of the Formosa Strait. THE RED Chinese continue to lob shells against the Nationalist-held island of Quemoy on an every-other-day basis, but they seem more for the record than from any serious plan to attack. Since the 1960 break with the Soviet Union there has been little Red Chinese talk of seizing Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's refuge on the island of Formosa. As for the Nationalists under Chiang, they never have given up the dream of using Formosa as a springboard from which to recapture the mainland. THE BREAK with Russia forced them on their own agriculturally and industrially and in the development of their own atomic device which they successfully accomplished last October. SLOGANS painted on the buildings of Taipei remind them of it every day. They have, of course, been busy elsewhere. "They must know the techniques to make an English course challenging, and conferences such as these can teach techniques and coordinate high school programs with those on the advanced placement college level." Svendsen explained. They successfully carried out aggression against the borders of India, thus humiliating that nation in the eyes of other Asians. IN THAT EVENT, Taipei dispatches have reported that Chiang would be willing to make his forces available to a joint command with the United States either in Viet Nam or in a diversionary move against the Chinese mainland. IN ANY EVENT, lacking the equipment for a large-scale overwater operation, no Nationalist attack upon the mainland could be carried out without U.S. aid. And U.S. military aid to the Nationalists was predicated strictly upon the defense of Formosa. But as the years passed and the Chinese Communists successfully regimented the mainland's 700 million population, the hopes increasingly seemed only a dream. But as the war in South Viet Nam has escalated, the Nationalists are beginning to believe they see a change in their own situation, particularly if the Red Chinese should intervene in South Viet Nam. And with this thought in mind, a Nationalist Chinese division is receiving accelerated training in amphibious operations. 36-46, Jacke Thayer Managing Editor Tom Magur Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912. UN 4-3646. newsroom Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business 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 Saturday and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Published Tuesdays and Fridays during Summer Session. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. © JULY HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST "Yes, Goldtrunk, It's Special Agent GOO7P" BOOK REVIEWS DAVID WALKER'S APPEAL TO THE COLOURED CITIZENS OF THE WORLD (New York, Hill and Wang, American Century Series, 1965). This summer promises to be one of the most explosive in history in the fight for human rights. Thus many publishers are searching for various bits of history of the civil rights movement and early tracts for equality. This edition of David Walker's Appeal is only one of several published this year. David Walker was a free Negro who, not being able to endure Negro life in the South, went to Boston and established a small business, buying and selling sea clothing. With his own funds he first published his Appeal in 1829. Walker was a leader in the antislavery fight, along with Garrison and John Brown. A price was put on Walker's head, and in 1830 he was found dead outside his shop. In the words of the introduction to this edition, "it was Walker's ungentle probing that first laid bare the deep-seated schizophrenia of the South, where the right hand held the Bible and the left the bull-whip." THE COMPLETE TALES AND POEMS OF EDGAR ALLAN POE (Modern Library Giant, $3.95). This is it, in one volume. Poe goes on and on, passing through the literary fashions, becoming identified with various motifs, undergoing brief periods of obscurity, getting picked up by the Hollywood makers of horror movies, always there as the writer who probably has captured the fancy of more American readers than any other figure—and that includes Mark Twain. Modern Library Giants did not stint with this edition. You can find the marvelous, ringing, rhythmic poetry that your grade school teacher sang out to you (the tintinabulation of the bells and beautiful Annabel Lee). You can find the marvelously shocking stories of the house of Usher and the cask of Amontillado and the Red Death and the black cat and the tell-tale heart and of course the adventures of M. Dupin. There is even that imaginative "Balloon Hoax" that Poe dreamed up for the New York Sun in the 1840s. THE DIAMOND SMUGGLERS, by Ian Fleming (Dell, 50 cents)—Not a James Bond novel. Brief and sketchy, it's little more than a short story, describing international espionage, African diamond mines, and communism. Good for those drowsy summer afternoons. EUGENE ONEGIN, by Alexander Pushkin (Penguin Classics, $1.45) — The famous novel in verse, by the greatest of Russian poets, and a work that has become known to many through operatic form. The work dates to the early 19th century, and the story is of the love of Tatyana for the op. Eugene Onegin. Many regard this as the forefather of Russian novels, and this is an attractive new edition from Fenguin. REACH TO THE STARS, by Calder Willingham (Dell, 60 cents) — If your tastes this summer run to the adventures of a bellboy in a Hollywood tale, told by a man who always writes interestingly, then you might turn back to this 1951 novel brought back in paperback. The hotel is full of eccentrics, as many as normally inhabit Willingham's novels of the South, and there's nothing uplifting, but these days there isn't much in American literature that is. A PRIMER ON MONEY, BANKING, AND GOLD, by Peter L. Bernstein (Vintage, $1.95) — A handy guidebook by a man who wants to make understandable the questions of gold, paper money, bank credit, the Federal Reserve, the balance of payments, some of these topics that have emerged from the financial pages to become front page newspaper stories in recent years. The book is an original volume, designed more for the layman than the specialist. THE PILGRIM PROJECT, by Hank Searls (Crest, 60 cents)—The big thing today is the political story, one that seems to be right in the middle of current events. Hank Searls gives us one here that is in the school of "Fail-Safe" and "Seven Days in May." It's about the U.S.-Soviet race to the moon, and there are spies and assorted types involved in skulduggery. It should not surprise you to learn that there'll be a movie along one of these days based on the book. THE APRIL ROBIN MURDERS, bv Craig Rice and Ed McBain (Dell, 45 cents)—Here is a collaboration for mystery fans by two well known writers—the late Craig Rice, who had a long list of popular titles, and Ed McBain, who wrote the 87th Precinct series. This one is about skulduggygery in an old mansion which has a landlady as rich as Barbara Hutton and as beautiful as Marilyn Monroe. P VICTORINE, by Frances Parkinson Keyes (Crest, 75 cents)—The ladies love Mrs. Keyes, and they should, for she provides exciting and tearful interludes in her novels, most of which take place in the South. "Victorine" is about the rice-growing family of Brent Winslow in Louisiana, and about a young man named Prosper who is in love with a beauty named Victorine. Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Program of Sunday Concerts Concert Choir and Chamber Choir Clayton Krehbiel, Director Sunday, July 4 Sunday, July 4 3 p.m. Concert Choir Mr. Krehbiel, conducting Glory to God in the Highest ... Randall Thompson All Pleasant Things ... John Pozdro Behold! I Build An House ... Lukas Foss Stomp Your Foot ... Aaron Copland Mr. Knoblial conducts Frostiana ... Randall Thompson 5. A Girl's Garden Combined Girls Choirs 6. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening Combined Boys Choirs Mr. Krehbiel, conducting lank big history, the bank the lank in Sev the and your押歉 that that one of Chamber Choir ERS, (Dell, cation known who s. and 87th about ension ch as ful as Lobet den Herrn Alle Heiden ... Bach (Praise the Lord, All ye Nations) Tom O'Bedlam ... Jacob Avshalomov Mr. Krehbiel, conducting 12-Minute Intermission xinton ladies should tear- most South. grow-ow in man e with Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Evan Whallon, Guest Conductor Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Le Roi Dys, overture ... Lalo Mr. Carney, conducting Symphony in D Minor Franck Third movement, allegro non troppo The Walk to the Paradise Garden ... Delius Vorspiel, from "Die Meistersinger" ... Wagner Mr. Whallon, conducting Concert Band and Symphonic Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Evan Whallon, Guest Conductor Paul Shull, Guest Conductor University Th 7:20 p.m. Symphonic Band The Star Spangled Banner ... Sousa-Damrosch Polka and Fugue from the opera "Schwanda ... Weinberger Mr. Whallon, conducting O Sacred Head Now Wounded from "Three Chorale Preludes" ... William Latham Emperata Overture ... Claude T. Smith Armenian Dances ... Aram Khachaturian I. Allegro II. Moderato March to the Scaffold from "Symphonie Fantastique" ... Hector Berlioz Selections from the music of George M. Cohan Knightbridge March from the suite "London Every Day" ... Eric Coates Mr. Shull, conducting Concert Band Overture to “Candide” ... Leonard Bernstein Liebestud from the opera “Tristan and Isolde” ... Richard Wagner Finale to “Symphony No. 5” ... Shostakovich Mr. Whallon, conducting Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 Pictures at an Exhibition ... M. Mossorgsky American Salute ... Morton Gould Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting The Board of Regents has directed Dr. T. Howard Walker, director of KU Extension, to prepare an operating plan for the statewide coordination of general extension activities of the state colleges and universities. Extension Director Prepares Operating Plan for Regents Great Outdoors Is Geology Lab "He's in the field" is the answer to most callers for the scientific staff of the State Geological Survey. More than two dozen scientists have exchanged their indoor research facilities, be they microscopes or computers, for pick-and-hammer, outdoor studies in June, July and August. Field work on ground-water in southwestern Kansas and in the Neosho Valley, and on the clays of central Kansas, major rock strata of eastern and central Kansas and the sandstones of south central Kansas will take scientists into a majority of the state's counties. Perhaps the most unusual field assignment, however, is that of Frank C. Foley, director of the survey. the internationally recognized authority on ground-water geology is well into a three-month survey for a mammoth water and agricultural development in northern Saudi Arabia. He is one of specialists in several sciences preparing recommendations for the Saudi Arabian government. The project embraces 115,000 square miles, an area one-third greater than that of Kansas. Near famine conditions are prevalent. Foley, a fellow of the Geological Society of America and current president of the Association of American State Geologists, made a survey two years ago of the ground-water resources in the Ivory Coast and Senegal, West Africa. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers It pays to look your best. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Dr. Walker will devote half-time during the coming year to this assignment while continuing his KU responsibilities. Dr. Walker's appointment was proposed by a study committee headed by President James A. McCain of Kansas State University. Other members were Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and President Leonard Axe of Kansas State College, Pittsburg. The six institutions under the Regents operate general extension programs that are similar in services offered. The activities are generally self-supporting except for overhead contributions from each school's budget. The Regents have authority to appoint a statewide director of extension. It is assumed that Dr. Walker's "working paper" will serve as a guide for the director when he is chosen. Dr. Walker has headed extension activities at KU since 1953. Three from Logar Get Scholarships Recipients of first and renewal Dane G. Hansen Scholarships to graduates of Logan High School have been announced. Van Jansonius, Prairie View, a 1965 graduate of Logan High School, received a first year scholarship. Renewals of the scholarship for the second year were awarded to Roy Forssberg and Brian Fitzhugh, both of Logan. Hansen, a Logan businessman, has provided the scholarships since 1953 through an annual gift to the KU Endowment Association. Recipients are determined by an annual examination given to recommended seniors of Logan High School. The scholarships, renewable for four years, are awarded on the basis of academic record, need and potential as a KU student. Austin M. Lashbrook, chairman of the department of classics and classical archaeology, has been re-elected vice president and member of the executive committee of the American Classical League. Lashbrook Re-Elected Final Reductions Friday, July 9th. summer The University Shop will close for the University Shop ON THE HILL Shop Campus Police Face Problems With Summer Campers, Too By Dave Stone The Police Department of the University of Kansas has a difficult and major job this summer—protecting, assisting, and guiding the nearly 4,000 summer students, plus the extra 1,200 summer campers. The job, as you can imagine, is no picnic. Jobs which especially concern campus police range from traffic control—both cars and pedestrians—to checking University property for vandalism and theft. It's the job of the police to make sure that everyone is clear from the buildings at a set time and to make sure that all the campers find their way back to their respective dorms. Officer David Gallup holds the unique distinction of being a junior here at the University in science education and also being a member of the campus police. About the conduct of the campers thus far, Officer Gallup said: "All the campers have been quite satisfactory, and they have seemed very cooperative. Just keep up the good work." The campus police is special in its own way, because it has three commissions—from the state, the city, and the county. This means the police can perform their duty anywhere in this county, where most local officers are limited to a specific area. Rain Again Covering Fields Across State As of late Wednesday, the greatest harvesting activities were concentrated in northern Kansas counties and in the Garden City area in the southwest, the State Farm Placement Service said. TOPEKA—(UPI)—More rain fell yesterday on Kansas harvest fields, and forecasts called again for scattered showers and thunderstorms in some areas today. In other sections of southwest Kansas the harvest was nearing completion. skyrocket 65 UNIVERSITY THEATRE "THE MUSIC MAN" presents Friday—July 2 Saturday—July 3 Admission: $1.50 KU ID Redeemable at Box Office For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 Starts at 8:20 Coming July 6-10 "A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AN AUTHOR AND ESCURIAL" Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2, 1965 First Art Camp Exhibit Of Summer Begins Today Rv Mike Shearer The first in a summer series of art camp exhibits will begin today. Marjorie Whitney, director of the art division, and Arvid Jacobson, assistant director, will select a representative cross-section of camp art work for display in the exhibition gallery of Murphy Hall. The display will last one week and will be followed by weekly exhibits for the duration of the camp. The works displayed will represent the classes of four divisions of the art camp-painting, sketching, design, and commercial art. There are 250 art campers this year, and all will have something displayed in the summer's exhibits. Two All-State Gridders Sign Two all-state football players have signed letters of intent to enroll at KU. Coach Jack Mitchell announced recently that Michael Harris of Terre Haute, Ind., and William Hunt of Hackensack, N.J., will join the Jayhawk gridders this fall. Harris, "6'-3", 205, lettered four years as a halfback and fullback on the Paul Schulte High School varsity team. He was named to several all-state teams including the Catholic High School All-American squad and Indiana all-conference teams. In addition to football honors, Harris lettered four years in both basketball and track. He was listed on the Western Indiana Conference basketball teams for three years and took part in the state track finals, running the 440-yard dash. At 5'-10", 180, Hunt is also a three-sport prep star. He was named to the New Jersey all-state football first team on both offense and defense. A right halfback on the "go" team, Hunt was an outstanding safety man on defense. Captain of both the football and basketball teams during his senior year, Hunt was all-league in both sports. As a member of the track team he won several state awards in the 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash and the long jump. Eleven KU students from Rooks County have received Judge W. B. Ham Scholarships for 1965-66. The exhibition gallery is not as large as the art camp needs. Jacobson said the work will fill all the space available quite easily. RECORDS Ham Scholarships Listed for 1965-66 The scholarships are provided by income from 750 acres of land giver to the Endowment Association in 1950. The scholarships were established as a memorial to Judge W. B. Ham by his heirs. Judge Ham practiced law in Stockton for 49 years. Entering freshmen from Rocks County who received the scholarships are Jack K. Horner, Plainville; Rodger and Robert Taylor, Plainville; and Mark Osborn, Stockton. Jacobson noted that exhibits of past years have been quite well liked by the other campers and KU students. Jacobson teaches cartooning in the art camp and will exhibit a sample of camp humor in the exhibit. Renewal Judge W. B. Ham Scholarships were awarded to Nathan T. Becker, David Darnell, Larry D. Black, and Michael L. Nicholas, all of Plainville; Susan Marie Saindon and Phyllis Ann Saindon, Zurich, and Jeffrey S. Nichols, Stockton. Besides cartoons, there will be a generous display of water colors, oil paintings, fashion sketches, freehand drawings, designs, commercial art work, industrial designs, nature sketches, and pastel colors. The craft classes take a little longer to produce so they will be shown in later exhibits. Violence in Cab Strike NEW YORK—(UPI)—Nine taxi-cabs were damaged yesterday as vandalism and violence flared again in the fourth day of a drivers' strike for union representation. "Factors Affecting Pitch Discrimination" was the subject of a government-financed research study recently completed by John R. Bergen, assistant professor of education. RECORDS Bergen's findings, if accepted, would have their greatest practical value in the field of music education, where accuracy in pitch is basic and important. His studies also might be a step in the investigation of nonfactual learning processes, such as those used in music education, right now described by Bergen as slow. He said the theory is opposed to the traditional idea of memory as a "stimulus trace," which would be represented in Bergen's experiments as a constant repetition of a pitch, a period of silence, and again, ideally, remembrance. Recreation Planners Hold KU Conference The project concerned itself with "the nature of memory in respect to pitch," according to Bergen. The study has proposed a new theory of memory, that "memory is an identity response," an "imitation of the stimulus" or input of knowledge, in this case a pitch. In his experiments, this theory would be represented by a subject's exposure to a pitch, his immediate repetition of that pitch, and, ideally, remembrance after a period of silence. Pitch Factors Studied at KU Broadway Shows on Stereo Re-issued with Original Casts High Button Shoes Allegro Me and Juliet Brigadoon Pipe Dream Fanny New Girl in Town Wish You Were Here BELL'S 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Daily Deliveries Anywhere In Town OPEN NITES TILL 8:30 He also flew four Super Sabres to the Royal Danish Air Force at Karup, Denmark, and four others from Germany to the Kansas Air National Guard at Wichita. "What an impressive view—I wish I could have had more time up there." He described the band of colors at the horizon—browns and greens of earth merging with clouds and haze, with zones of light blue, dark blue and purple fading into space. He has more than 3,300 flying hours in more than 30 different types of aircraft, mainly jet fighters. IN JANUARY he was named among the country's 10 outstanding men by the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce. Engle spent four years flying the F-100 Super Sabres with the 309th Tactical Fighter Squadron at George Air Force Base, Calif. He made 10 transatlantic fighter flights to Spain, Italy, Germany, France and England. RECORDS His view stretched from San Francisco to Baja California below the Mexican border. The institute is part of a vast program to improve the teaching of science and mathematics. Merlin D. Harmony, assistant professor of chemistry, says the purpose of the institute is to train students in chemistry laboratory technique and to give the students an opportunity to learn the methods of research. Each student is under the supervision and direction of a faculty member on a one-to-one basis. The institute covers a 10-week period with a full week of laboratory training. The four main branches of chemistry, organic, inorganic, analytical and physical, will all be covered. A total of $18,200 has been provided the KU chemistry department in support of the summer institute program by the National Science Foundation. Purpose of the flight was to obtain precise measurements in infrared and ultraviolet wave lengths of the horizon. $18,200 Is Awarded To KU Chemists KU Alumnus, X-15 Pilot Is Youngest Astronaut Sixteen representatives of the Kansas Recreation Society met at KU this week with Prof. Larry Heeb, state recreation consultant, to plan the annual Kansas Recreation Conference to be held here Nov. 22. The educational program is a cooperative effort of the Society and University HE WAS CHOSEN for the X-15 program 10 days after graduation from the Aerospace Research Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base. Last September, at the convention of the Air Force Association, he was named the Air Force's outstanding junior officer for the preceding year. The program gained one student over last year's institute. There are 10 students in the chemistry division this year as compared to nine last year. A University of Kansas '55 graduate became the country's youngest astronaut this week when he flew more than 53 miles into space. Of his 11-minute flight, Engle said: RECORDS Engle also is featured on a new Air Force ROTC recruiting poster, whose general theme is "From Air Force ROTC cadet to X-15 pilot." At KU Engle was commissioned through the Air Force ROTC program. He also received a bachelor's degree here in aeronautical engineering. He is Capt. Joe H. Engle, who took off from Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., in an X-15 and reached 282,000 feet. Engle, an Air Force captain, hit a speed of 3,477 miles an hour, and is now both the 12th and youngest American to qualify for the pilot-astronaut rating by soaring past 264,-000 feet. SUA SUA FRIDAY FLICKS PRESENTS SUA BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S STARRING AUDREY HEPBURN AND MICKEY ROONEY Friday, July 2 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Friday, July 2, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 WED., JULY 7 THE RED DOG INN presents THE EVERLY BROTHERS Only one of the Great Summer Attractions at the Red Dog Inn. Keep Watching for more. PARTY BOYS FAMOUS WARNER BROS. RECORDING ARTISTS "Bye, Bye Love," "Bird Dog," "Walk Right Back" and "Ferris Wheel." EVERYONE WELCOME Doors Open 7:00 Admission: $2.00 (Tax included) Advance Tickets on Sale At Box Office One of great Summer Attractions Special every weekend Show Starts 8:00 AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2, 1965 102 Science Students Start Summer Work By Anita Wicke High ability high school students from more than 30 states began a 6-week summer science training program on Sunday. The 127 students were chosen from over 900 applications from all parts of the nation. Of the 127 students, 107 are firstyear science campers. The remaining 25 campers were exceptional students from the 1964 science camp. Under the guidance of the senior professors at KU, these latter students attend an 8-week research apprenticeship program. Among those attending the research program are Robert C. Colwell, Neodesha, physics; Cheryl Mae Craft, Richmond, K., yooology; Ronald Guy Fraass, Mankato, microbiology; George Carey Fuller, Knoxville, Tenn, physics; Robert Lee Harper, Charleston, Mo., chemistry; David Knox Hill, Nevada, Mo., mathematics: Kenneth K. Hickin, New Orleans, La, mathematics; Willa Jean Holmberg, Las Cruces, N.M., psychology; Barbara Helen Hughes, Ottawa, microbiology; Glen A. Kroeger, Ellis physics; Stephen J. Lucas, Thorntown, Ind, microbiology; Diana Marie McMahon, Valinda, Calif., microbiology; Jerome K. Osburn, Bentley, radiation biophysics; Geologist Makes Tour into Kansas The leader of the field trip for the November 1965 meeting of the Geological Society of America in Kansas City, Mo., is making his reconnaissance through west-central Kansas. Donald E. Hattin, summer member of the State Geological Survey, is spending about 10 days in the valleys of the Saline and Smoky Hill rivers in Ellsworth, Russell, and Ellis counties, and of tributaries in Trego, Gove, Lane, and Logan counties. Rock chalk, stone posts, fossils of winged reptiles, toothed birds and microscopic sea shells—all evidence of the Cretaceous area—will be featured on the field trip attended by geologists from over the nation. Hattin, during the academic year professor at Indiana State University, did detailed field work in the area last summer. Carol Sue Sabata, Brainard, Neb. zoology; Randall Lee Smith, Trenton, Mo., radiation biophysics; Michael James Sjeklocha, Indianola, Ia. mathematics; Richard W. Stone, Evansville, Ind., chemistry; Walter Rees Stromquist, Lawrence, mathematics; William Lee Thompson, Melrose, N.M., physics; Gary Lynn Trammell, Chanute, chemistry; James Pritchard Viney, West Covina, Calif., anthropology; Eric Francis Wieschaus, Birmingham, Ala., physiology; Paul Yarowsky, Kansas City, Mo., mathematics; Larry Franklin Yeager, Jacksonville, Ill., mathematics; Keith Brent Waldron, Denison, Ia., psychology Dr. Delbert M. Shankel, associate professor of microbiology, is director of the science camp. A grant made by the National Science Foundation covered about two-thirds of the cost of the program and provided some financial assistance toward the $150 all-inclusive fee. Science campers spent the first week of camp in a survey of eight scientific areas. Each student then selected two areas for concentrated study the remaining five weeks. The options and KU professors participating are—Sociology, Miss Joy R Gold; Microbiology, Dr. Shankel; Chemistry, Dr. Arthur W. Davidson; Mathematics, Dr. Arthur Wedel and Ted J. Suffridge; Physics, Dr. Richard C. Sapp and Dr. Robert Stump; Physiology, Dr. William M. Balfour; Radiation biophysics, Dr. Edward I. Shaw; Zoology, Dr. Charles A. Leone. The National Science Foundation grant requires that scholarships and admissions be administered on a national basis. Kansas leads in numbers with 7 of the 25 research apprentices and 22 of the 102 campers. Other states represented are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, California (8), Colorado (2), Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana (5), Illinois (6), Iowa (6), Kentucky, Louisiana (4), Michigan (3), Minnesota (2), Missouri (10), Montana, Nebraska (9), New Mexico (2), New York, North Carolina, Ohio (5), Oklahoma (5), Oregon, South Carolina (4), South Dakota, Tennessee (2), Texas (8), Utah, Washington, Wisconsin (2), and Wyoming. Grants Awarded To Microbiology Grants totaling approximately $10,000 have been given to the microbiology department by the National Science Foundation. The grants are given to various science departments by the foundation in order to promote scientific research. Delbert Shankel, professor of microbiology, said there are five undergraduate research students in the program at the present time. Another student is expected to join the program in the fall. The undergraduate researchers and their areas of study are Jeff Nichols, senior, nucleic acid synthesis by irradiated bacteria; Alice Cox, sophomore, genetics of rickettsial agents, especially Coxiella burnetii which causes Q fever. Each student is expected to spend 10 weeks in research during the summer. In return he receives a $600 stipend. During the fall the program is set up in much the same way. The students work in the laboratory 10 hours a week and receive a stipend of $100 per semester. Julius Jackson, senior, biochemical mechanisms of pathogenesis in listeriosis; Betty Arnold, junior, immunological mechanisms of pathogenesis in listeriosis; Karen Holland, senior, physiology of sulfur metabolisms in bacteria. Industrial Design Program Honored The industrial design curriculum of the School of Fine Arts has been invited to participate in the 1966 Alcoa Student Design Merit Award program. The invitation carries with it a $1,000 unrestricted grant for use in industrial design, which is directed at KU by Prof. Downer P. Dykes. Other aids to student participation in the design program include the supply of a thousand pounds of aluminum for models and prototypes, a technical library of Alcoa literature and product data, and at least two campus visits by Ronald D. Parks of the Alcoa industrial design department. The merit award program provides future industrial designers an opportunity to become familiar with the use of aluminum as a basic material. The Max Kade distinguished professor of German at KU in 1965-66 will be Dr. Heinz O. Burger, chairman of the department of German literature at the University of Frankfurt, Germany. German Named To 1965-66 Staff Dr. Burger, one of the leading authorities on classical German literature, is a member of the Goethe Archives at Frankfurt. He previously was chairman of the department of German and dean of the University of Erlangen, Germany. The Kade distinguished professorship filled by a visiting scholar carries the regular salary of a professor supplemented by a grant from the Max Kade Foundation of New York. The German-born Mr. Kade came to the United States in 1905. A successful manufacturer of pharmaceuticals, for the past 20 years he has directed his philanthropies toward German-American educational relations. This will be the second year for a Max Kade distinguished professorship at KU. Last year the post was filled by Dr. Gerhard Storz, minister of education of the Land Wurttenberg-Baden in West Germany. Washington Post Praises Davis Sensitivity and teamwork equal a good show, the Washington Post headlined the review of a recital played in the capital city last week by Michael Davis, British violinist who is visiting artist-teacher here this summer. Davis will play two faculty recitals at KU, July 7 and July 28, at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Both will be free to the public. The Post's reviewer, Charles Crowder, wrote: "Davis is a violinist who has relegated his main attention to the lower end of the dynamic range. The tone is not large but is filled with a finesse that is associated with world-renowned artists. It is rich, flexible, and capable of turning quixotically into the most luxuriant of tones as well as finding the suitable climaxes and points of relaxation as the flow of sound progresses." The 28-year-old violinist has performed widely in Europe and the United States. For the past five years he has divided time between teaching at the College of Wooster in Ohio and concert tours. Granada THEATRE•Telephone VI3-5784 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 ENDS TONIGHT — Disney's "CINDERELLA" Starts SAT. EVERYTHING HAPPENS IN... THE Yellow Rolls-Royce In Panavision* and MetroCOLOR INGRID BERGMAN REX HARRISON --- I Varsity Evening Only THEATRE • Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW SHOWING — THE AMOROUS ADVENTURES OF MOLL FLANDERS TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* A PARAMOUNT BELIEGE Sunset Starts At Dusk DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90 Tonight & Saturday — "MUSCLE BEACH PARTY" "FAIL SAFE" 2 Bonus Features Sat. Only Sunday & Monday — "KISSIN' COUSINS" "ADVANCE TO THE REAR" LOOK SMART and KEEP 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. © SCHWER INC. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE Summer Session- Kansan Page 7 Foreign Students Are Equipped Through English Center at KU The door to higher education in the United States is being opened to students from many lands through a new KU program. And though it's less than a year old, the University's Intensive English Center already has equipped 65 foreign students with the language skills they need to study at colleges and universities throughout the U.S. Another 46 are taking the full-time program this summer. "TM PLEASED with the success we've had during our first year," says Dr. Edward T. Erazmus, the center's director. He has reason to be, for in addition to a higher-than-expected enrollment, the center, in its first year, has: (1) Become self-supporting. (1) Come here for the University's remedial English program for foreign students. (3) Made plans to offer a master's degree program for American students wanting to specialize in teaching English to foreign students. The KU program is one of only two full-time English centers in the Midwest and one of only about 10 in the U.S. Initially established through funds from the University's Ford Foundation grant for international programs, the project was almost self-supporting in its initial year. Fees totaling $350 for the 15-week fall and spring semesters and $250 for the 10-week summer term have paid nearly all of the center's first-year instructional and operational costs. "OUR ENROLLMENT should double next year, so we'll be self-supporting from here on out," Erazmus says. Next year, foreign students entering the University for the first time who need remedial work in English also will study at the center. Last fall, about 90 of the 600 foreign students were recommended for the part-time remedial English program. Though plans haven't been completed, Dr. Erazmus says the center soon may offer a master's degree to The remedial program and the master's degree are not the heart of the center, which has as its primary task the full-time teaching of oral, writing, and reading skills to foreign students with little or no English background. So far, Erazmus, who directed a similar program at Michigan State University for three years before coming to KU last fall, and a staff of eight half-time assistant instructors have conducted the program. Next year, 14 assistants will be on the job to handle the expected enrollment increase. those interested in teaching in this area. FOR MANY of the enrollees, the University of Kansas is just a first stop in this country. Most come to the University specifically to study English-a prerequisite to their entrance in regular courses in colleges and universities across the nation. Others stay at the University for later study in many fields. The program, as its name implies, is an intensive one. Students spend four to six hours a day in classes in grammar, pronunciation, reading, composition, drill and laboratory. Outside assignments are stiff. In reading, for example, the goal is for each student to read one book a week on his own—in addition to his regular classwork. And in composition, each student writes four themes a week—three 20-minute impromptu essays in class and a longer homework assignment. That's 60 themes over a 15-week semester. "FIFTEEN IS the absolute maximum," Dr. Erazmus says, "and classes fo 10 to 13 are ideal because we can utilize individual instruction and recitation, both important in the students' language training." When students arrive, they're tested for ability, then grouped by proficiency in classes of about 12. The students' biggest problem? "Sophisticating their vocabulary," Erazmus says. Friday. July 2. 1965 VI2-2771 - Vegetarian Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 17 W. 9th - Oriental - Arabic CLASSIFIEDS Indian Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Session Kansan are offered to all students regardless of color, creed, or national origin. Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Complete one stop service Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM, Olive Oilvette, tierses. Xerox copiates. 104. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. FOR SALE Model 348 Beretta 22 caller automatic pistol 348, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 at 6:00 p.m. vi June Specials—1954 Chevy P.G. engine, $60.00; BucV-8 322 engine, $50.00. Good variety of used tires, $1.00 up. Plus lots of other quality used parts. Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, Ph. VI 3-1622. Open evenings. 7-6 Reg. German Shepherd Puppies Trans- 2 West. 's South of Eudora. 8-3 '56 FORD V-8, AT, R&H, completely overhaired, very clean, $250; '53 Plymouth, std. trans., good second car, $125; '52 Plymouth, std. trans., ready to go, $100. Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, VI 3-1626. Open evenings, 7-9 Sherwood AM-FM Monaual tuner, $75.00, was $140.00 new. Call VI 2-1467 after 6:00 p.m. 7-13 Epiphone Electric Guitar, Case and Amplifier. Also antique guitar cabinet. V3- 3-2042. 7-13 BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE STANDARD Fireworks Free Free 1 Free Mdse. with every purchase. No limit. Bob Benson Jr., 1902 Harper, North of 4-H Grounds. 7-2 Old Books For Sale. Sat, July 3rd, at 824 Ark., 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. 25c-75c. 19th Century Science, Religion, Education, History, Children's, Music, Novels, 7-2 VI 3-9897 ART NEASE Pollice Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tumable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tf 1961 Ford Galaxie, 4 door, 8 cylinder, 38,000 miles, automatic transmission, equipped with 8-speed manual and excellent shape, $80.00, 23-inch TV, one year old, excellent condition, wooden cabinet, $5.00. Columbia Masterwomen -Frm Radio, like new. $5.00. Phone 1-931-8301 1960 Nashua mobile home with washing room 5, Call M3-37888 - 7-13 45, Call C1-37888 - 7-13 601 Mass. FOR RENT FURNISHED APTS. — 2nd floor small bachelor type furnished apt, private bath and kitchen. Bills pd. except elect. $45.00 per month. Rogers' Real Estate Co., 7 West 14th, Bus. Ph. VI 3-0005. Res. Ph. VI 3-2929. Male Grad Student will share modern 2 bedroom, air-cond. apt, with same. $45.00 mo. plus $1/2 utilities, VI 3-8043, 6-7 p.m. 7-2 Clean 3 room apartment in quiet neighbor room with private bath. Bills paid: $75.00, VI 3-6281, 7-9 roommate, share large furnished 1-bed- room 2nd floor apt. with male grad. stu- dios in the building. Coat motel with bus- kers' Real Estate Co. West Plus, Bus. Ph. VI 3-205. Res. Ph. III 3-2929. 7-5 Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tf Available July 1st, furnished apartment. Pri. large living room and larger kitchen, bath with shower, parking. $45.00 per mo. till Sept. 1st, then $55.00. Located at 19 West 14th. Phone for appointment, VI 3- 3013. 7-13 Spacious older home for rent or for sale 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, country kitchen, large living room and dining room, corr- 5:30 p.m. 454 Ala. Call V1 3-6232. After For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. $1\frac{1}{2}$ blocks to Fraser Hall. Bake kitten fees. cool rooms. Utilities paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. Needed: illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various projects; provide portfolio and resume to the Daily Kansan. Box 10, as soon as possible. tf TRANSPORTATION WANTED Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will type all kind of report or these. Mail to Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. typewriter. CALL Ironing, family or individual. Phone VI 3-5735. 7-13 Experienced Typist would like typing in her history—term papers and let WL w. 3-261. I do baby sitting in my home between phone VI 3-2263 7-2 BAR-B-QUE—Treat yourself to some real B-B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B-Queue, Ribs, 11:00 am. Phone 2-91601. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. tt TYPING Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8595. tf MISCELLANEOUS DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken und essen German Style. Featuring students' light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwich ADDITIONED. PAR LIVELIABLE; Liter steins for sale. VI 2-9411, 14th & Tern Ride, riders, swap rides Bethel or Kansae area via near Hiway 40 Call G1 $_{7-2}$ 1887. SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable and fast. VI 2-1561. 45 Dependable Cars Driver to Kansas City Monday through Saturday. Will share call. Call 862- 0862 T-7-2 - Complete Auto Servicing Open 24 Hours If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! Wagner's Texaco 23rd & Lg. VI 3-0138 23rd & La. OPEN 24 HRS. Across From The High School VI 3-9631 19th & La. HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GREAT NEW YORK alterations For the best in — - reweaving - dry cleaning 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 RELAX 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 at the GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Patronize Your Established - Experienced Complete Center under one roof Kansan Advertisers FREE PARKING Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts Miniature Golf Supplementary Textbook Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. Features 912 Mass. COURT STREET Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY The TOWN CRIER Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday TRAVEL TIME LET Make Your Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ph. VI 3-0350 Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Crushed ice, candy Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds 616 Vt. LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Variety of grocery items OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING Prompt TV Color TV Antennae Electronic on Hi-fi Stereos Changers Service e Service All Radios RCA Transistors Car Radios Motorola Airline GE Makes - Zenith Silverstone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 2,1965 Education School Spring Honors List Shows 158 Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, has announced the names of 158 education students who achieved listing on the school's spring semester honor roll. Each earned a grade-point average of at least 2.5. Those included are the upper 12 per cent of the school's spring student body. Seventeen students earned "straight A" grades for a 3.00 average. They are: Diane U. Anderson, Omaha, Neb., senior; Victoria Berin, Bronx, Xi.; Mona U. Anderson, Mona, Mona; Janine Shari Davis, Lawrence senior; Ronnie Ann Eckmeyer, Prairie Village senior; Virginia Emerson, Bartlesville senior; Carol Anert Evert, Kirkwood, Mona, Mona. Danielle M. Goering, Moundridge senior; Lance H. Jeevis, Jesum, Denmark; senior; Barbara L. Kerlinger, Sedalia, Mo. senior; Jo Ann Kutz, Kansas City senior; Diane Elaine Magers, Shirene Mission senior; Jane Stone, Jane Stone; Jane Ann Tusten, Lawrence senior; Sharon Budd Weiss, Skagway, Alas, senior; Kathleen L. Withee, Independence, Mo., senior; Colleen S. Boggs, Denver, Colo., junior. Campers Work In Busy Week The first week of camp certainly was a busy one and the second week promises to be much the same. The leading events of the first part of the week were the movie "Bridge on the River Kwai" which was shown Tuesday in the Templin Cafeteria and "The Music Man" which was put on at the University Theatre on Thursday night at 8:20 p.m. Friday the Bowling League will play at 6:30 in the Jay Bowl while at 7:15 in the Templin cafeteria the movie, "The Mouse That Roared," starring Peter Sellers, will be shown. There will be a change of pace Saturday when the theatre, science and ballet divisions will go to Kansas City to the Starlight Theatre. And 300 other campers will take part in a "moonlight swim" at Holiday Park. There will be a Jewish service at 10 a.m. in the Hi-Fi room at Templin. Sunday, the usual late (8:00) awakening will be followed at 10 by the chapel service at Swarthout. Both concerts again will be held in the University Theatre this week with the choir and orchestra concert beginning at 3 p.m. and the band concert starting at 7:30 p.m. Monday the newly-elected Camp Council will hold their first meeting at 8 p.m. in Templin cafeteria. KU Ranks 23rd In Executives KU ranked 23rd among all colleges and universities in the nation in producing top officers for the 600 largest non-financial corporations, according to a study just published by the magazine "Scientific American." The study, "The Big Business Executive/1964," updates an important sociological study performed by Dr. Mabel Newcomer, former head of the department of economics at Vassar College, "The Big Business Executive—The Factors that Made Him: 1900 to 1950." Nine of the approximately 1,000 "big business executives" in the study received their undergraduate educations from the University of Kansas, placing it midway on a list of 45 colleges and universities which supplied five graduates or more to this group. KU ranked ninth among state universities. There were 18 state universities on the list, including six representatives of the Big Ten institutions and five representatives of the Big Eight. Voting Bill Advances WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The House Rules Committee yesterday cleared the way for House action next week on President Johnson's voting rights bill. The vote was 11 to 4. Others on the Honor Roll include Others on the Honor Roll include: Charlotte R. Almquist, Bridgeport senior; Mary Ruth Andes, Lawrence senior; Martha Ann Ashbaugh, Wichita senior; Patricia Sue Barnes, Osage City senior; Gloria Lura Barron, Rogers, Ark., senior; Barbara Anne Bauerle, Harlan, Ja, senior; Wanda Irene Beard, Janssan, Nancy Beth Beln, Claude- ninson junior; Lynette J. Berg, Claude Tex., junior. Helen Louise Berge, Sabeth senior; Carolyn V. Berneking, Lawrence senior; Belinda Sue Brown, Topeka junior; Nancy Rebecca Brown, Arcadia junior; Priscilla Bulkeley, Prairie Village senior; Betty J. Burgat, Topeka junior; Bonnie Marsh, Topeka Junior; Virginia M. Cannon, Kansas City, Mo.; Billie R. Carpenter, Pacific Palisades, Calif., senior; Margaret G. Carpenter, Udall junior. Stewart A. Carter, Oxford junior; Nancy March Caston, Scott City senior; Nancy Lee Cline, Wichita senior; Harold Walter Cox Jr., St. Joseph, Mo., senior; Donna Ann Craig, Kansas City junior; Gerald W Crispin, Barberton O., seni- tor; Janet Searle, St. Louis, Jean Marie Degrand, St. Louis, Mo., seni- jor; Joanne H. Dovishvich, Western Springs, Ill., senior; Virginia Lee Douglas, Crawfordsville, Ind., senior. Louis Ashley Elbl, Shawnee Mission senior; Janet Louise Evans, Wichita senior; Marjory C. Faeth, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Robert M. Fanning, Shawnee senior; Janet Mae Fassnacht, Overland Park junior; Karen A. Finfrock, Lawrence-Kirchridge junior; Mildred Fakes, Lawrence senior; Cynthia Sue Gallup, Overland Park senior; Mary Anne Garlow, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior. Susan Kay Griffiths, Chanute senior; Barbara M. Guenter, Wilmington, Del.; senior; Roy James Guenther, Breckenridge, Okla., senior; Linda B. Guyot, Wichita senior; Linda Sue Hale, Wichita junior; Martha Sue Harp, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior; Nancy L. Harrington, Oklahoma City, Okla., senior; Hawk, Lawrence junior; D. Holm, El Dorado Springs, Mo., junior; Kenneth M. Hibbard, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Karla Kay Hozelel, Kansas City. Mo. minor; Barbara K. Hoffmann, Shawneen senior; Joyce E. Houser, Howard senior; Daniel B. Warner, James K. Warnock; Donna Jane Hunt, Kansas City, Mo. minor; Myrna S. Iddings, Wichita senior; J安 E. Janentz, Hill City junior; Dianne Sue Karnze, Princeville senior; Kay Karmze, Prarieville Senior; Mary Kary Keempny, Lyons seniors Dennis Allan Klein, New York City, N.Y., senior; Marlan Jean Koepke, Topekaade, Janet M. Laffey, Mahwah senior; Madeline M. Laffey, Fredonia senior; Bonnie Lamontaine, Leavenworth senior; Linda F. Lance, Wichita senior; Rebecca J. Larson, Tulsa, Okla., Junior; Sharon Elhine Law, Kansas City, Mo.; Morgan J. Lientz, Shawnee Mission junior. Georgia Luetkemeler, Moline, Ill., senior; Barbara Anne Lupher, Kirkwood, Mo.; senior; Sally Ann Lytle, Kansas City senior; Patricia S. Manuel, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Irene C. Marinos, Maizeville, N.J.; senior; Wichita junior; Cheryl Annie Walker, Kansas City senior; Nancy Jane Speirs, Dodge City senior. Nancy A. McArthur, Hawarden, Ia. senior; Sharon R. McIlrath, Hugot senior; Judith M. McKlimey, Lawrence senior; Katie Kauzner, Jean E. Miller, Hawatah Junior; Judith L. Miller, Pittsburg senior; Lois Evonne Miller, Alma senior; Susan Kay Jr., Evonne Miller, Marilyn Jean Moffat, Great Bend senior; Mary C. Morrozo, Counsel Grove senior. Kala Amy Musiek, Minneapolis senior; Daniel A. Myers III, Kansas City senior; G. Ann Mills, Oklahoma senior; Nilsse Nielsen, Overland Park senior; Sharon Esther Nelson, Larned senior; Jill V. Newburg, Carmell, Ind., senior; John Sidney Nickels, Mission senior; John Sidney Mitchell, Joanne Olson, Omaha senior; Nancy J Padgett, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Kathel Ann Payne, Prairie Village senior; Gena Lewis Peters, Dodge City senior; Verne Ray Peterson, Lawrence junior; Jeanne Anne Phelps, Carpe Girardeau, Mo., senior; Sherri S. Plank, Bethel senior; Pat Postlethwaite, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Linda Lee Pin, Kan. Mo., senior; Kristen Randle Rancho Kansas City, Mo., senior; Rose Lee Ramirez, Lawrence senior; Elizabeth Muell Reed, Des Moines, Ja., senior. Helen A. Remington, Wichita senior; Colleen Anne Ryan, Shawnee Mission senior; Janice Ania Sajwj, DeSoto junior; Elijah Ciechanowicz, Robert Henckel, Herkimer senior; Judith Woelk Schrag, Newton senior; Marilyn M. Schutte, Kansas City senior; Sherryl Ann Selby, Belleville senior; Theresa R. Shannon, Kansas City senior; Linda Grace Simon, Overland Park seni- dor; J. Searcheil, Baxter Springs junior. Phyllis E. Sleeper, Overland Park senior; Kay Frances Smith, Newton senior; Linda Ann Spier, Phillipsburg senior; Stephen Pace, Hutchinson senior; Michelle D. Steele, Wichita city; Gwen Sue Stuart, Lawrence junior; Anna C. Stucky, Lawrence senior; Barbara Ann Trump, Kirkwood, Mo.; senior; J. S. Turrence, Independent; Cuney, Kansas city; Lee Scott Varner, Arlington, Va., senior; Doreen G. Voigt, Atchison senior; Carol Patrick Wagner, Kansas City senior; Kay Ann Walker, Edina Mn., senior; Gerald J. Wynne, Kansas city; Janice M. Whitaker, Little River senior; HerbertEdward White, Wakefield, Mass. senior; Karen Ann Wight, Tulsa, Okla. junio; Harriet Ellen Will, Memphis, Memphis; Michael Wood, wood senior; Janet Hunter Woerner; Oberlin senior; Mary Lynn Woodhull Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mary Je Zahradnik, Kansas city senior. Students Aid Blood Center Blood supplies in Lawrence and Ottawa hospitals received a strong shot-in-the-arm from KU students last year. Most students gave one pint, but 52 contributed two pints during the nine-month period. An additional 52 students not on the list tried to contribute, but were rejected for medical reasons. Figures released show 342 University students contributed 394 pints of blood to the region's Red Cross Blood Center—more than one-third of the 1,619 pints collected in the region between September and June. Judy McArthur, the center's chief nurse, termed the University donor program "the best ever by a long shot." Donations were boosted by mobile unit drawings at Templin Hall and several fraternity houses, but many were made individually at the center. The mobile donation program was coordinated through a Student Council committee. Hospitals supplied with blood from this region are Lawrence Memorial, Watkins on the University campus, and Ransom Memorial in Ottawa. The region provides blood to hospital patients without charge. Anthropology Student Honored for Paper Robert L. Bee, graduate student from Lawrence at KU, is the first prize winner in the student research paper competition of the Central States Anthropological Society. He received the $50 prize and citation for his paper on "Fottawatomie Teyotism—The Influence of Traditional Patterns." The future character of the United Nations and its ability to carry out peace-keeping operations may well depend upon the way in which it resolves its current financial dispute, an article published by the Governmental Research Center states. Financial Dispute Termed Key to Prospects of UN The article, "Deadlock in the United Nations," appears in the May issue of "Your Government," a publication of the Governmental Research Center, The University of Kansas. Until the deadlock is resolved, the article states, the General Assembly "will remain virtually paralyzed while the veto in the Security Council will prevent the consideration of important measures by the Council if the United States and the Soviet Union are not in agreement." The central figures in the dispute are the United States and the Soviet Union. The stand of the United States is that all UN members are obligated to help meet the costs of UN peace-keeping operations, whether these members approve of the operations or not. The Soviet Union, on the other hand, triggered the dispute by refusing to pay its share for two such operations which it opposed: peace-keeping operations in the Middle East in 1956 and in the Congo in 1961. While both the US and USSR couch their arguments in legal terms, "it is generally believed . . . that the legal arguments are not the real ones but merely faqades for the political differences they hide," the article states, "These differences focus on the role of the General Assembly and its authority to act in peacekeeping and other situations over the objection of a single major power. "The Soviets, and to a lesser degree the French, want to return control over peace-keeping efforts to the Security Council where they possess a veto over such action. The Soviet Union is using its refusal to pay as a method of reasserting its power to prevent actions from being taken with which it does not approve. The Soviet Union and France simply do not want the General Assembly to exercise authority for actions that they believe inimical to their national interests. "The United States, having initiated the 'Uniting for Peace' resolution in 1950 to circumvent the veto in the Security Council (by emphasizing peace-keeping authority on the part of the General Assembly), does not want the Assembly's freedom of action checked by the opposition of a single, or few powers." Underlying this stand by the United States, the article states, is its confidence that "its basic policies are mirrored in a majority of the General Assembly." Although it is likely that the conflict will be resolved, the dispute nevertheless probably will affect UN peace-keeping operations in the future. the study states. "Since neither the United States nor the Soviet Union (nor any of its members, now that Indonesia has withdrawn) wants to destroy the UN, there seems little doubt that some mutually agreeable solution will be achieved . . . But however the deadlock is broken, and whatever scheme is developed for future peace-keeping financing, it seems unlikely that the UN will extend its role in the vital area of keeping the peace to the same degree it did during the past decade." --- SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Summer Schedule July 7 Laurel & Hardy in "Way Out West" July 14 Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" July 21 Lon Chaney in "Phantom of the Opera" July 28 Italian Cine Classic (1914) "Antony and Cleopatra" Wednesdays Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) 7:00 p.m. Admission: 50c Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 Lawrence, Kansas --representative to the predecessors of the Big Eight athletic conference. He died in 1960. 53rd Year, No.7 WILD GROW THE WEEDS—This one—time natural beauty spot, located just below the east side of Watkins Memorial Hospital, is Prairie Acre; now a wilderness of weeds.—(Photograph by Dan Austin) 'Nature's Fashion' Is Not Sweet In Prairie Acre's Garden Now By Tanya McNaughten "Whereon is set this block Of Oread limestone to mark And preserve Nature's sweet Fashion of making her garden." These words are part of the inscription on the marker placed on the site of Prairie Acre in 1932. Prairie Acre, located on Mt. Oread just below the east side of Watkins Memorial Hospital, was set aside in 1030 to preserve the last bit of virgin prairie land on the campus. The land originally was part of the Robinson estate and was given to the University by the city of Lawrence. Tucked away in the sprawling expanse of the KU campus, Prairie Acre is intended to be one of the rare visible remains of the early days in this once-wild frontier territory. KU ALUMNI saw the value of preserving the last of this land. For them, and they hoped for future generations, the land provided an opportunity to look at the patch of bluegrass, the cottonwood tree, and the wildflowers native to Kansas, and return in imagination to the Kansas of the pioneers. Indians and buffalo. In 1840, the department of building and grounds built a fence for the land from limestone deposits near Potter Lake. This fence was to surround the land which had never been touched by a man-made implement for reshaping the earth's surface. For some time after this, a retired mail carrier, Sam Elliott, took it upon himself to take care of the acre and the limestone fence. However, with the passing of this man vent the care of Prairie Acre. NATURE'S FASHION of making her garden is no longer so sweet. The land is so covered with weeds that a student would find it hard to recall the days of the pioneers, Indians and buffalo, for thinking how much a good weed-killer might do for its appearance. Nor do the wildflowers flourish and bloom. Most of the original flowers disappeared long ago, and although it was hoped that they might be restored, there is no evidence of them. There are a few purple blooms to be seen if the campus tourist wants to "rough it." A LOOK AT the flowers can be achieved by walking around and over the stones of the broken-down fence (the weeds are too high to permit a walk through the field). The main argument against improving Prairie Acre is that the land should never be touched by plow or shovel because it no longer would be natural prairie. Yet, sewer lines have been installed across the area. The limestone fence is somewhat risky for casual sitting. According to Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor of operations, the fence is restored once a year. 'Tall Tales' Are on Tape Thirty reels of tape recordings of "tall tales" by one of Lawrence's greatest raconteurs for five decades have been presented to the Kansas Collection of the University of Kansas Library. THE GRASS has been burned and sewers have been dug. The fence is yet to be repaired, the weeds yet to be curbed, and the wildflowers yet to be restored. The story teller was W. W. Davis, former chairman of the history department, a KU teacher from 1910 to 1954, and perhaps best known over the state and area as KU's faculty Many of the stories involve hunting and fishing experiences of his boyhood in rural Gulf Coast Alabama near Mobile. But many others involve the Southwest and Geronimo, the Apache chief who fought so long against the white settlers. New Dean Excited By KU Prospects By Jacke Thayer Leaning back in his chair in the pink-walled office, Dr Warren K. Agee, who has been named dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, explained how he came to KU. "I heard about the job opening "I heard about the job opening when Burt (outgoing Dean Burton W. Marvin) resigned in October," Dr. Agee said. "We had been friends for many years and I was also acquainted with several faculty members." AGEE WAS INTERVIEWED for the post in May and paid his first visit to Lawrence then. "I have great admiration for the school and it has long been steeped in tradition," he continued. "My wife and I fell in love with the city of Lawrence and I'm proud of the school—or I certainly wouldn't be uprooting my family again." Agee was here Tuesday through today for briefing sessions with Dean Marvin. Marvin will leave in late August for a two-year term at Tel Aviv University in Israel to organize a school of mass communications. He has been dean for 17 years. AGEE, professor of journalism and dean of the evening college at Texas Christian University since 1962. has almost 30 years of journalism education experience behind the post he will officially assume Oct. 1. "I felt this background was going to waste in the evening college." Agee explained. "I was still connected with journalism through my work with Sigma Delta Chi (professional journalism society) and the journalism course I taught each spring and fall at TCU, but I was leading two lives for three years." AGEE ALSO has worked as president of the Association for Education in Journalism in 1958. Long-time secretary-treasurer of the organization is Elmer F. Beth, KU professor of journalism. The new dean also recently revised his journalism textbook on communications. He is an alternate member of the Accrediting Committee of the American Council on Education for Journalism. Agee said that when he visited KU in May he was impressed by the city, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Vice Chancellor James Surface, and members of the journalism faculty. "I felt this was the ideal situation for full use of my experience," he said. ONE OF THE major factors influencing his decision, Agee said, was the presence of an innovative and experimental atmosphere in the school. "I would like to develop some programs to bring our people back to the campus." Agee explained. "I've learned a great deal about adult and continuing education as dean of the evening college, and am concerned about the re-education of professionals. Too many of our graduates are separated from education when they leave the school." Dean Agee will be teaching two courses at the school under present plans: Communications in Society and Editorial Problems and Policies. Agee expressed an interest in communications research and seminar programs. "WE REALIZE the value of the old, established journalism schools," he explained, "but we are looking at new trends. In the past five or six years 30-40 journalism schools have put the word 'communications' into their titles." While he has no specific plans to revamp school curriculum, the new dean said he felt an orientation course in public relations should be added. He describes himself as a strong supporter of photo-journalism. "The main thing." Agee explained, "is that we will begin a continuing restudy of the curriculum, although I don't anticipate any major changes now. So many things depend on budget and availability of personnel." AGEE VIEWS the student newspaper as valuable from the school's viewpoint as a laboratory experience. (1) Warren K. Agee "I prefer this type of arrangement (the paper connected with the school), but it does bring some problems." Acee said. "My one major fear is that it can take too much of the students' time if it is not adequately staffed," he added. AGEE FEELS that professional journalism courses should occupy only 25 per cent of the journalism student's time. The remaining time, he said, should be spent acquiring background. "The journalism school should be the door to the university, not an entity unto itself." Agee said. "The student should take advantage of the many resources available in literature, history, political science, economics and other liberal arts subjects." The journalism graduates, Agee continued, "should be able to analyze and exercise critical judgment. "THEY NEED to be able to think for themselves," he explained. "Education should be a 'pulling-out' rather than a 'pouring-in' process. The student who learns only facts is not getting much of an education." "They should leave the school with an inward determination to continue their education." Agee concluded. Agee also is the likely successor to Marvin as director of the William Allen White Foundation, which he said "offers both problems and opportunities." He meets today with the foundation's president, Fred Brinkerhoff, editor of the Pittsburg Sun. AMONG HIS more fascinating jobs in the past, Agee lists his stint as U.S. Coast Guard combat correspondent in World War II. Also on the list is the work on his Ph.D. thesis in American studies on the use of the newspaper as a social instrument in reconstructing the life of two Texas cattle towns in the 1830s. Agee said he spent two summers reading the complete newspapers of the cities for a 10-year period in the late 19th century. THE THESIS, written in 1955, has never been published, but Agee plans to revamp it in the future. Agee, his wife and daughter, Robyn, will return to Lawrence in late July or early August. "Dr. Agee is a distinguished educator and a dynamic administrator." Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said. "He will carry on the outstanding traditions of the School and help it fulfill its unique prom- (Continued on page 10) Page ? Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 Negro Morality During the question period after nearly every speech I make around the country, there is always a statement from the audience about the problems of the civil rights movement and "Negro crime." They block traffic, violate the laws of trespass, engage an entire police force to control their freedom-riders, sit-ins, marches, and protests; and furthermore the arrests of Negroes for crime is vastly out of proportion to their numbers; etc.; etc. I do not believe that Negroes should receive preferential treatment when arrested for crime or when their conduct is challenged by authorities. It is necessary, however, to make the point that crimes committed by Negroes are usually the crimes of the poor, easily recognizable as the crimes of the slum and the ghetto. NEGROES HAVE NEVER scuttled a ship, or sank one without warning. They never looted a city's treasury, padded construction costs of highway or courthouse, or watered the milk; they never got a kickback for drugs sold to our own men in embattled Viet Nam; they never dispossessed a tenant and put his bedstead out on the sidewalk; they never sold faulty wire or bullets to their government during a war, or rigged prices, or hired call-girls to influence purchasing agents, or conspired to establish phony bids for government contracts; they never cornered the shares of Northern Pacific, nor watered the stock of the Erie Railroad; they never locked out their employees or called the National Guard to protect scabs and fire on pickets; and in all the history of the United States there is no record of Negroes ever having lynched a white man. Now it could be argued that they did not commit any of these crimes because they have been successfully separated from the open society, and that if they had had the chance they would have done all these things... Maybe. But at this point in our history no one can prove it. By Harry Golden, The Carolina Israelite July-August, 1965 Need for 'Classic Conservation' President Johnson's Message on Natural Beauty lifted the spirit of conservationists everywhere. There is hardly a detail of the message that a conservationist could quarrel with. Nevertheless, a nagging doubt persists. "Our conservation must be not just the classic conservation of protection and development," said President Johnson, "but a creative conservation of restoration and innovation." Restoration of areas already blighted by man is an increasingly important conservation objective, and deserves more attention. But "classic conservation" needs more attention too, and the president's heavy emphasis on de-uglification tends to de-emphasize the necessity of preserving areas that still remain in something resembling their natural condition. The emphasis on restoration as opposed to preservation was reinforced by the White House Conference on Natural Beauty in mid-May, which might more accurately have been called the Conference on Man-Made Blight. Grand Canyon — Proposals for one or more unnecessary dams within Grand Canyon proper, which would impair the national park and monument and threaten the integrity of the National Park System itself, are being pushed Without depreciating the importance of restoration, or denying the considerable conservation accomplishments of the Johnson administration, it must be noted that "classic conservation" projects of the utmost importance are hanging fire at the very time when the administration is making "natural beauty" a catchword. Consider: Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business office UN 4-3646, newsroom Jack Thayer Managing Editor Tom Magur Business Manager in mourir Business Manager University Daily Regular lar (former) founded 1889, bewickey 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. within the Johnson administration. Perhaps the most famous example of natural beauty in the nation, Grand Canyon can be saved but cannot be restored. This is a case of "classic conservation" or no conservation at all. North Cascades—An investigating committee of the Department of the Interior reported in 1937 that "the area is unquestionably of national park caliber, is more valuable used as such than for any other use now ascertainable, and should receive park status. . . It will outrank in its scenic, recreational, and wildlife values any existing national park and any other possibility for such a park within the United States." Today, 27 years later, this matchless area still awaits the protection of park status. There is less to be saved than there was 27 years ago—or one year ago. But there is more to be saved than there will be in another year, and what remains ought to be saved now. The scars left by logging and mining cannot be quickly or easily healed, if they can be healed at all. Redwoods—Our generation is the last one that can save fairly extensive stands of virgin redwoods for the nation. At the current rate of cutting, all unprotected virgin timberlands will be gone in 30 years. But President Johnson, who had earlier expressed his support for a redwood national park, asked only for "a study on the desirability" of such a park in his natural beauty message. While the administration studies, the subject of its study is fast disappearing; lumbermen are denuding whole watersheds in potential parklands. The temptation, of course, is for lumbermen to cut first and fastest where the "danger" of a park is greatest—taking what they can while they can, and perhaps inflicting enough damage to foreclose the possibility of a park altogether. Stands of virgin redwoods, once destroyed, are not restorable. The situation calls for "classic conservation" or capitulation. Programs to control man-made blight—air and water pollution, junkyards, billboards, overhead wires, and the like—deserve every citizen's support. But if either restoration or preservation is to get priority, the priority should go to preservation. Each passing year increases the opportunities for restoration, but diminishes the opportunity to save shrinking remnants of truly natural beauty. —Sierra Club Bulletin The People Say... Editor: In reference to pour recent column in the Summer Session Kansan (June 29) on KU track signees, I would like to make a correction and refer you to an omission. In this column you omitted from the article reference to Kenny Gaines of Kinsley, Kan., who was one of the top high school track stars in the state and one of the best high jumpers in the nation. It should be noted that in May, 1965, he signed a letter of intent to KU. You erroneously gave Ron Schrader the class "B" record at 6'-5". This is false as Kenny holds the class "B" record at 6'-7¼" which is the best jump ever in the state for any class. Also he holds the state class "B" record in the broad jump at $23'-4\frac{1}{2}$ and won the high hurdles for a third gold medal at the state meet which Kinsley won in class "B." His best time in the hurdles was 14.5. He also ran a 50.5 440 on the mile relay which placed third. ON THE weekend of June 20, Kenny went to Sacramento, Calif., to compete against the top high school high jumpers in the nation. He placed fourth with a jump of '6"-6". The omission of the name of a future great KU track star is extremely shocking. I hope that it will be corrected. An irate KU track fan. Science Camp member. (Ed. note: Our information was based on releases from the KU Sports Publicity Office. Sorry for any omissions or inaccuracies. We and the Sports Publicity Office stand corrected.) James Breedfeld Kinsley high senior Science Camp memb BOOKS THE GYPSY MOTHS, by James Drought (Crest, 60 cents). Among the young writers capturing attention of both critics and popular readers is James Drought. His "The Gypsy Moths" is a tense and exciting and shocking story of circus aerial performers. And he writes out of his own experience with such a group. In "The Gypsy Moths," Drought describes the day-to-day travels of the three-man circus as it travels through the farmlands of the Midwest, with tragedy at the end of the road. The audiences as well as the performers come under the scrutiny of the authors. AFRO-ASIAHS ARISE! ALGIERS CONFERENCE HERBALDIS THE WASHINGTON POST Ghost Town BOOK REVIEWS WE SHALL OVERCOME, by Michael Dorman (Dell, 75 cents). Thorough, documented, and, as the author himself admits, somewhat prejudiced, "We Shall Overcome" is a book that is entitled to a good many readers, even though it lacks the literary qualities that might have made it a significant work. It is the story of one year of racial strife, 1962-63, starting with the story of James Meredith entering the University of Mississippi and ending with three other Negro students—whose names will not go down in history like that of Meredith—entering the University of Alabama. The writer is a reporter for Newsday, that excellent daily paper on Long Island. Dorman does not write from the sidelines. He was there, through the Mississippi, Birmingham and Alabama riots. He interviewed the leader of the Ku Klux Klan. He was with the reporters who, taken with such organizations as SNCC, formed their own organization, SCREW, for Southern Correspondents on Racial Equality Wars. He observed Meredith and Cleve McDowell and the quiet young man who enrolled at Clemson and the three students who enrolled at Alabama. HE WAS IN THE TOWN of Faulkner, and this impressed him, for Faulkner's own attitude on the racial conflict was still being discussed, and Faulkner's writing brother, John, was still living and was expressing himself as a segregationist. But John Faulkner's own son was in the National Guard outfit that was federalized during the Oxford disturbances, and Dorman greatly admired him. It is inevitable that there are heroes and villains. Ross Barnett and George Wallace emerge as stained—self-stained—as ever. Bull Connor of Birmingham remains the very symbol of segregation. Nicholas Katzenbach, now attorney general, is a kind of hero, as are many of the reporters and the Negroes who play major roles here. It is a good piece of reporting. More than adequate journalism, as a matter of fact, and a book that could be read with profit by many Americans. Great praise attended the appearance of this novel recently, and it is one that genuinely merits such praise. For it is historical fiction at its best, not the "Forever Amber" or even the Thomas Cainstain kind of fiction but something closer to "Man on a Donkey" or "The Ides of March." Gore Vidal seemed the unlikely man for the job, such plays as "The Best Man" and "Visit to a Small Planet" being more in his line. "Julian" is Vidal's interpretation of the career of the pagan emperor who fought against Christianity in fourth century Rome. The style is smooth, the characterizations are believable, and there are pace and excitement throughout. JULIAN, by Gore Vidal (Signet, 95 cents). You'll find court intrigue, sweeping military victories, humor and vivid description. Readers should rejoice that the novel is available in this inexpensive edition. 3 p.m 70 O Ma Regir A Ps THE POEMS OF FRANCOIS VILLON, translated by Galway Kinnell (Signet Classics, 75 cents)—An attractive little volume that gives you the French version on one page and the English on the facing page. The book is both for the sentimentalist who still thinks Ronald Colman and Francois Villon are the same guy and for those who love lavish romantic poetry, this dating to five centuries back. Miser (fo) How (C The I Six I Psalr The BREAKTHROUGHS IN PHYSICS, by Peter Wolff (Signet Science Library, 75 cents)—An original edition that goes back for 23 centuries and provides selections from seven great men who brought on scientific revolutions. The names: Archimedes, Galileo, Pascal, Newton, Huygens, Von Helmholtz and Einstein. Sunday Concert Programs s). some- tled to es that with with ississippi will not rarity of not daily Page 3 through oved the taken ization, hears. He ing man rolled at ed him, ing dis- ing and er's own ring the Concept Choir and Chamber Choir Clayton Krehbiel. Director Sunday, July 11 Warner Lawson, Guest Conductor University Theatre plays as his line. emperor the style is pace and umor and available Barnett er. Bull vegation. o, as are is here. away Kin-ume that fish on the till thinks for those ries back. ently, and fiction Costain or "The alism, as ply many Net Science for 23 cem- 勘 on escal, New- Concert Choir O Magnum Mysterium ... Vittoria Regina Coeli ... Mozart A Psalm of Praise ... Mabel Daniels Mr. Lawson, conducting Ensemble Choir Psalm CXIV ... Roberto Carmano The Gettysburg Address ... Mark Fax Mr. Louson conducting Chamber Choir Misericordias Domini ... Durante (for double chorus) How Shall I Fitly Meet Thee ... Bach (Christmas Oratorio) The Last Words of David ... Randall Thompson Six Love Songs ... Brahms 12-Minute Intermission Mr. Lawson, conducting Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Michael Zearcott, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger The Masks ... LoPresti Symphony No. 1 ... Sibelius First movement, andante and allegro energico Mr. Carney, conducting Symphony No. 4 ... Schumann Ziemlich langsam—Lebhaft Romanze Scherzo Finale, Lebhaft Egmont, Overture ... Beethoven Mr. Zearott, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Sunday, July 11 Michael Zearott, Guest Conductor Charles Martyn, Guest Conductor Outdoor Theatre Summer Session Kansan 7:30 p.m. Symphonic Band Folk Song Suite ... Ralph Vaughn-Williams March—"Seventeen Come Sunday" Intermezzo—"My Bonnie Boy" March—"Folk Songs from Somerset" Mr. Zearrott conducting Prelude in B Flat Minor ... Bach Ballet Parisiene ... Offenbach Overture Valse Finale Catherine Calderón-Marshall Alexanders The Sinifonians Clifton Williams Sequoia Homer C. LaGassey Finale from "Symphony No. 1 in G Minor ... Kalinnikov-Bainum Storm King .. Finlayson Mr. Martyn, conducting Concert Band Mr. Bloomquist, conducting Water Music Suite ... Handel-Kay Allegro Air Minuet Hornpipe Finale Divertimento for Band, Opus 42. Vincent Persicetti March from "First Suite in E Flat" ... Holst Symphony for Band ... Robert E. Jager Andante Espressivo Alla Marcia Largo Espressivo Allegro Con Fuoco Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting SUA SUA PRESENTS "THE GRASS IS GREENER" STARRING CARY GRANT, DEBORAH KERR ROBERT MITCHUM, JEAN SIMMONS Friday, July 9 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Friday, July 9, 1965 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. TWO SHOWS Admission 35c Read and Use Kansan Classifieds SCW.ING IT'S CLEAR SAILING THROUGH THE SUMMER... When you let Lawrence Laundry take care of your summer laundry and dry cleaning needs. This week, call for our fast, convenient, pick-up and delivery service, or drop your clothes off at our plant. You'll be pleasantly surprised at the results. launderers and dry cleaners LAWRENCE 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE sigma Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 Many Nuns, in Many Areas, Are Students at KU By Shelley Bray Noticeable among the brightly colored garbs and chattering of KU summer students is the soft rustle of the black and white habits of nuns. Most of the nuns studying here this summer will assume teaching positions at Catholic high schools across the country in the fall. Some of them do not as yet know where they will be teaching, according to Sister Mary Cecelia, a Sister of Charity from Leavenworth. A NUMBER of different orders are represented among the nuns. Attending the Latin workshop are nuns from 10 orders. Among them are two Dominicans, two Benedictines, two Sisters of the Adorers of the Most Precious Blood, one Ursuline, a Sister of the Saints Cyril and Methodius, a Sister of Notre Dame, a School Sister of Notre Dame, a Sister of Notre Dame de Namur, a Sister of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and a Sister of the Congregation of the Most Precious Blood. SOME OF THE nuns are here for a Latin workshop, sponsored by the American Classical League. The workshop is a conference to study methods of teaching Latin. These nuns come from various sections of the Midwest—Indiana, Ohio, Missouri, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Most of those attending the Latin workshop are living in Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Among them are Sister Huberta, Sister Mary Valeda, Sister Martin de Porres, Sister John Damian, Sister Rose Constance, Sister Mary Alfred, Sister Mary Hildebrand, Sister Rose Agnes and Sister Helen Clare. Each order can be identified by its habit. The difference in habits is largely in head coverings. In the recent movement to modernize habits, only one order on the campus has been affected, the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth whose bonnets have been changed. A. J. H. M. One of many nuns on the KU campus this summer is Sister Mary Imogene, S.N., Sister of Charity of Nazareth (Kentucky), who teaches in Nashville, Penn. The nuns on campus are studying a variety of subjects. In addition to the Latin workshop, some are taking courses in music, mathematics, science, art education, history, education and Greek. MOST OF THE NUNS live in dormitories, but some are staying in private homes. Another group, five Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth are staying in the convent of St. John's Church in Lawrence. They are Sister Raymond Mary, who is studying at the history institute; Sister Marie William, studying Greek; Sister Scholastica, also studying Greek, and Sisters Mary Cecelia and Mary Earnest, both in art education. The nuns attend classes just as The nuns attend classes just as Business School Offers Training KU's School of Business is entering an interim period in its executive training program. The program, which began June 13, is divided into two sessions. The first, for any executive who wishes to attend, ends today. The second is solely for member executives of the United States Independent Telephone Association. It begins Monday under the joint sponsorship of the U.S.I.T.A. and the business school. Frank Pincet, associate professor of business, heads the program and is assisted by Kent Tool, a business administration instructor. The purpose of the program is to help the executives to do more effective jobs in their present positions and to help them gain experience and skill in handling various problems. SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Summer Schedule other KU students do. In addition, they rise to attend mass as early as 5:45 a.m. daily. They also enjoy concerts, recitals, and theater productions, and the recent performance of "The Music Man." July 14 Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" July 21 Lon Chaney in "Phantom of the Opera" July 28 Italian Cine Classic (1914) "Antony and Cleopatra" Sister Huberta, S.S.C.M., commented that she was impressed by the friendly spirit and graciousness of the people on the campus, and awed by the beauty and expanse of KU. She added that the nuns were especially grateful to the people who stopped to offer them rides to chapel. Wednesdays Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) Research Center Lists Changes 7:00 p.m. Admission: 50c The Center for Regional Studies at KU boasts a new name, a new director, and new objectives. Formerly the Center for Research in Business, the new research center will include studies of business, economics, and the social and physical sciences. David L. Huff, who has taught business at the University of California at Los Angeles for the last five years, will arrive in August as director of the center and visiting professor of business administration. He is widely known for his research in marketing and regional studies. Dr. Huff was a Fulbright lecturer at the University of Aix-Marseilles, France, in 1963-64, and has taught at Central Oregon College and the University of Washington. Weejuns are a way of life! (and remember, only Bass makes Weejuns!) Hootenanny or record hop, in Weejuns you're in perfect tempo. Only Weejuns can make you feel so exactly right — with their comfortable, classic elegance, poised casual styling and hand-sewn moccasin detail. The only thing "just like" Weejuns is another pair of Weejuns. You're so smart not to settle for less! Vecturs THE COWBOYS ARENSBERG'S 819 MASS. VI 3-3470 t as sentiment. arch iss. surer wills, caught the The Night of the Iguana Will Be Shown July 13-18 Page 5 170 The play is about a defrocked Episcopalian priest in Mexico. Jack Eroking, professor of speech and drama, will direct the play. Tennessee Williams' "The Night of the Iguana" will be presented by the University of Kansas Theatre July 13-18. student; Arturo Jiminez, Monterrey, Mexico, graduate student; Barry Schmidt, Lawrence freshman; Mary O'Connell. Lawrence senior; Jack Braun, St. Catharines, Ont., graduate student; Connie Tanis, Palos Park, Ill., senior; Carole Calano, Herinaton junior; Ed Gilham, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, and David A. Clark, Shawnee Mission junior. For the past year he has studied at the Merrill Palmer Institute of Human Development and Family Life in Detroit. Dupre received his Ph.D. in human development from the University of Chicago and taught at Hanover College, Indiana, before joining Grinnell as associate professor of psychology. He has been active in human relations training and consultation, having worked with industrial, church and civic leaders in a variety of management programs. The cast includes Richard Kelton, Miami, Okla., senior; Julia Callaham, Baldwin graduate student; Nancy Vunovich, Arkansas City graduate Vladimir A. Dupre, formerly of Grinnell College in Iowa, will inaugurate in September a program of collaboration between the University of Kansas human relations department and the Mental Health Foundation of Kansas City. Mental Health Program Set Dupre, who this year has held a post-doctoral fellowship in clinical psychology, will divide time as associate professor of human relations on the Lawrence campus and as chief psychologist for laboratory training at the Mental Health Foundation in Kansas City. Syracuse 65 UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents "Night Of The Iguana" Tuesday, July 13 Through Friday, July 16 Admission: $1.50 2.401 KU ID Redeemable at Box Office For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 Starts at 8:20 Last Time Tonight "A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AN AUTHOR" AND "ESCURIAL" Summer Session Kansan Mrs. Phyllis Hayford Hutchings, visiting professor of astronomy, died at 12:20 Wednesday afternoon as she was sitting inside her parked car in the Joseph R. Pearson Hall lot on the Mount Oread campus. Visiting Professor Dies Wednesday Friday, July 9.1965 Mrs. Hutchings became ill as she walked from Lindley Hall to the parking lot, Dr. Schwegler said, and she was taken from the parking lot to the hospital by a friend. She was 61. Survivors include her husband, W. L. Hutchings, professor of mathematics at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington and a daughter in Washington, D.C. She was taken to Watkins Memorial Hospital and was reported dead on arrival, according to Dr. Raymond A. Schwegler, acting director of student health services. Cause of death is not known. Dr. Schwegler said Sue was participating in the earth sciences institute. Religious Seminar Group Discusses Church Union Hope Campus religious groups are discussing the pros and cons of church union this summer every Tuesday night at Canterbury House, 1116 Louisiana. The summer seminar deals mainly with church union and reform. The Rev. Thomas Woodward and the Rev. Richard Doolan are the speakers at the seminar. Participating churches are the Episcopal, Presbyterian, Methodist, United Church of Christ, Discibles of Christ and others The evening consists of readings and two 20-minute presentations on selected topics. Afterward there is free discussion on either of the topics. Topics in the past have been "Why Church Union," "Catholic Reform," and "Ministry." Next week's topic will be "Scriptures and Tradition." The main purpose of the seminar is to inform students of national happenings of all churches and to create an open mind among students. Fr. Woodward said that with such seminars students will be able to vote intelligently when the question of church union is put to congregational ballot. Wins Rutgers Degree George W. Taylor, who was graduated with highest distinction from KU in 1963, has received the master of science in electrical engineering degree from Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Formerly from Independence, Mo., he has been making his home at Jamesburg, N.J. ladies— summer sale! 1/3 to 1/2 off! entire summer stock The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass. TOUR THE NELSON ART GALLERY IN KANSAS CITY SUA will sponsor the trip TUESDAY, JULY 20 Cost: $1.00 Sign up at Information Desk at the Kansas Union before July 17. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 Pride in KU's First Century Ref The building is still under construction, with steel beams and concrete slabs forming its exterior. The roof appears to be partially completed, revealing the interior space of the building. The surrounding area includes trees and open land. NEW GYMNASIUM is nearly past the halfway mark on Sunflower Drive. Bv Kit Gunn KU will begin its 100th year this fall. Duringg this past century an average of approximately one building, addition or remodeling job has been completed each year. However, this average is highly misleading; more than one-third of the construction at KU has occurred since 1950. This "construction boom" has not abated. In fact, it shows every sign of increasing in the near future, and a good deal more urgently than was previously planned. THE STATUS of Fraser Hall, now the oldest building on campus and the subject of fierce controversy in recent months, has been considered by the University for a number of years. As early as 1958 it was stated that Fraser was either to be remodeled or replaced. Until 1962 it was thought that remodeling would be feasible, but in that year it was decided that construction of a new Fraser Hall would begin in 1965. The old building would remain in use until about 168; then it would be torn down. But Fraser was only one segment of a complex plan of expansion. While new Fraser Hall was being built, a new gymnasium was to be completed to replace Robinson Gym. A little later a Biological Sciences building was to be constructed south of Malott and east or Summerfield Hall to replace Haworth Hall. Haworth then would be razed and a new Humanities building would rise on the site of Robinson and Haworth in time to be in service when old Fraser was removed. Projected for 1963 and 1964 were the removal and replacement of Blake Hall and major additions to Watson Library. They were built as scheduled. BUT THE REST of this plan was not to be: early this year studies indicated that old Fraser Hall could not stand the shock of construction of new Fraser, which was to be built less than 50 feet away. This was due in part to the fact that the foundation of the old building was only partially dug into the underlying shale; several feet of the soft rock remained underneath. The shifting of this shale weakened old Fraser considerably, in spite of efforts to halt the process. Certain parts of Fraser, such as the towers, had even been closed before the true danger had been revealed. It finally was decided that old Fraser would be razed before or at the same time the new building was being erected. THIS DECLARATION brought about a violent outpouring of protest from several quarters. Many architects, students, historians, and private citizens pleaded for the preservation of Fraser and castigated the design of its replacement. Bumper stickers reading "Don't Build It" and "Redesign Fraser" appeared. Bernard (Poco) Frazier, professor of architecture and sculptor in residence at KU, created what he considered to be an alternate plan. "Letters to the Editor" columns reverberated with arguments pro and con. In response to these appeals Gov. William Avery upheld the decision of the Board of Regents to replace Fraser Hall. But not all disturbance at the end of old Fraser was for sentimental or aesthetic reasons. The loss of Fraser meant the loss of at least two years of the use of its classrooms and offices. The orderly construction scheme that had been planned would no longer meet the needs of the University. New Fraser Relieves Bind New Fraser Relieves Bind BY FAR THE MAIN agent for relieving this bind is to be new Fraser Hall. The building, to be constructed just east of old Fraser, was designed by James C. Canole, state architect. T.R. Griest of Topeka was design consultant, and Brown and Slemmons of Topeka did the working drawings. The new building, closer to Danforth Chapel than old Fraser, will have more than twice the usable floor space of the old building. Having 29 classrooms, new Fraser will possess 96,000 square feet of research, teaching, and office space, compared with 41,000 square feet for old Fraser. New Fraser will be seven stories tall, with red roof and twin towers reflecting the design of the building it is to replace. It will reach a height of 127 feet, the flagpoles boosting the total to 147 feet. The top of old Fraser's flagpoles are 124 feet above ground level. HOUSED IN NEW Fraser will be departmental offices, faculty offices, classrooms and laboratories for the departments of psychology, anthropology, and sociology. For convenience, all the classrooms in new Fraser will be on the first two floors. Elevators will service the facilities on the upper stories. The cost of the structure was estimated at $2.2 million. For this, $1,-750,000 was appropriated from the state educational building fund, and $450,000 in grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation. However, actual bids ran somewhat below this estimate. The apparent low bid for the general construction work was $1,222,900, made by the B.A. Green Construction Co. of Lawrence. Apparent low bidder for the electrical work was Norris Bros, of Lawrence, with a bid of $152,700, and the apparent low bid for the mechanical contract was $281,545, made by the U.S. Engineering Co. of Kansas City, Mo. AS FEDERAL FUNDS are to be used to help finance the project, the bids for the construction of new Fraser Hall were submitted to officials of the contributing organizations for approval on Thursday, July 1. Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor for operations, said he hoped approval would be given sometime next week, so that construction can start at The bids were opened Tuesday, June 29, in Topeka. Kansan Photos by Dan Austin at No Kramer 36th July 1975 TARGET DATE for completion of the new gym is February, 1966. least by A might not Accordin will be contract is This would target date Bids for will be re in Topeka days to a constructive removal or simultanee PLANS the preser mental ar saved are exterior d all orname from the wood win mental wi ironwork; plaster stc and mold stones fr doorways; from the wood mo Museum; (14) those be re-use The sal distributee Lawton, ment, of o items wiit urgent ne items will be time to proper dis Aside f Fraser an Fraser, a mains to bion of st the lands To be reo trian wall Tennessee half of L and remo scaped. Li THE E2 will become a new di hawk Bou of Time-Trace UNION ADDITION makes more space for activities and b Friday, July 9, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Reflected by Construction Boom --- CHRISTIAN SCHOOL OF PHYSICIANATURAL SCIENCE PLANS FOR NEW FRASER caused a stir, but building will provide needed room. least by Aug. 1. He stated that this might not occur, however. According to plan, new Fraser will be completed 540 days after the contract is awarded, Lawton said. This would make Jan. 1, 1967, the target date for completion. Bids for the razing of old Fraser will be received at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Topeka. It may take about 30 days to award the contract. The construction of new Fraser and the removal of old Fraser may occur simultaneously. PLANS HAVE BEEN made for the preservation of items of sentimental and historic value. To be saved are (1) all interior doors; (2) exterior doors on east entrance; (3) all ornamental hardware; (4) railings from the main stairways; (5) all wood window shutters; (6) ornamental windows; (7) all ornamental ironwork; (8) all wooden corner plaster stops; (9) some door frames and moldings; (10) arch and key stones from certain windows and doorways; (11) all exterior stone from the upper two stories; (12) wood mouldings from the Wilcox Museum; (13) all slate chalkboards; (14) those modern fixtures that can be re-used in other KU buildings. The salvaged materials will be distributed later as seen fit. Said Lawton, "The urgency of the moment, of course, is not to dispose of items within old Fraser Hall. The urgent need is to determine which items will be saved. Later there will be time to make decisions regarding proper disposition of these items." New Fraser Scheduled Next Landscaping Changes THE EAST HALF of Lilac Lane will become a two-way street, with a new diagonal connection to Jayhawk Boulevard from just south of Aside from construction of new Fraser and the demolition of old Fraser, another separate job remains to be done. This is the relocation of streets and sidewalks, and the landscaping of the Fraser area. To be reoriented is the main pedestrian walk from Alumni Place and Tennessee Street. The entire west half of Lilac Lane will be closed and removed, and the area landscaped. Danforth Chapel. A new turnaround will be constructed in front of Watkins Hospital. The original lilacs on Lilac Lane will be preserved as much as is possible. After completion of Fraser, the hedge will be supplemented as is necessary. The Pioneer Statue will be moved from the center of the Lilac Lane oval to a new location directly south, between Blake and new Fraser. These additional jobs will cost approximately $75,000, according to Keith Lawton. He pointed out that this is a very minor part of the projected work. Since the removal of old Fraser was not included in the original plans for the new building, the landscaping, which was to have been done after the 1968 razing of old Fraser, will be a separate contract. AS OLD FRASER had to be evacuated before work could begin on the new building, a number of faculty members were without offices. To remedy this situation, Carruth-O'Leary Hall was converted from a dormitory to temporary office space, displacing about 200 students into other housing. However, the major disadvantage of the premature loss of old Fraser was that construction of the Humanities Building could not be delayed until after the construction of both the new gymnasium and the Biological Sciences building. Because of the "Fraser emergency," the State Legislature appropriated one-half of the money to build the Humanities building. Humanities Building Next Thus, as soon as the gymnasium is finished and Robinson can be razed, one section of the Humanities building will be constructed. After the Biological Sciences building is completed and Haworth is removed, the Humanities building can be finished. IN THIS MANNER the early loss of Fraser has speeded up the KU building program, said Lawton. SERVICE for activities and bookstore. When completed, the Humanities building, to be situated directly across from Strong Hall, will be KU's primary classroom center. It is possible that the classrooms will be on the lower floors and the offices on the upper floor like in new Fraser, but it may be some time before any definite plans will be made. The planning of the Humanities Building is now in what is known as the "program of work." This is the first stage in the construction of a building, when the planners decide what the building is generally to consist of. When this is finished, the rough specifications will be turned over to the architects for design. Before the first segment of the Humanities Building can be begun, Robinson Gymnasium must be removed. This can be done only after the completion of the new gymnasium, currently being constructed east of Allen Field House on the old intramural fields. BEGUN LAST OCTOBER, this building is also to be built in sections, like the Humanities Building. The general contractor is the B. A. Green Construction Co., with Norris Bros. handling the electrical and mechanical contracts. The total projected cost of the first part of the gymnasium is $930,557. The new gymnasium, scheduled for completion in February, 1966, will contain two large gymnasiums, each containing two basketball courts, offices for the physical education department chairman, offices for five male instructors and four female instructors, a staff locker room, staff shower rooms, men's and women's locker rooms and shower rooms, six classrooms, a study room, a weight-lifting room, two exercise gyms, intramural offices, and three handball courts. Natatorium Has T-Pool Also under construction is a natatorium containing a T-shaped swimming pool, 75 feet 1 inch wide, with a glass underwater viewing window to aid swimming coaches. Also in this section will be additional men's and women's locker rooms, seating for 694 spectators at the pool, and a terrace measuring 95 feet by 60 feet. The pool is to be connected with the terrace by large sliding glass doors. A SECOND PHASE of the gymnasium, to include additional recreational and intramural facilities, is planned for the future. Old Robinson Gymnasium probably will be razed later in the spring of 1966. Keith Lawton stated. The final section of the Humanities Building is to be built after the elimination of Haworth Hall, to be replaced by a Biological Sciences Building. This structure, the planning of which has only recently been turned over to the architects for designing, is to be located east of Summerfield Hall on Sunnyside Ave. It will contain laboratories and classrooms for the biological and life science department. CURRENTLY UNDER construction on the southwest corner of the Kansas Union is a small three-story addition. With a tentative completion date of Aug. 15, the addition will house the student activity office on the top floor and will enlarge the bookstore in the bottom two. The B. A. Green Construction Co. of Lawrence is the prime contractor for the job, which will cost $66,000. It is financed by a four-year loan from the KU Endowment Association, to be paid back with interest from the Union income. Union operations are self-supporting. Now nearing completion is McColum Hall, to be the largest dormitory on the KU campus, housing a total of 976 students. The big, T-shaped building is estimated by the office of the director of dormitories to be 99 per cent complete, and is sure to be fully operational by the beginning of the fall term. THE GENERAL contractor for McCollum Hall is Coonrad, Waltz, & Bollmer Construction Co. of Wichita. Other contractors are Kendall Plumbing Co. and Wichita Electric Co. The cost of the building will be approximately $3,800,000. Future dormitory expansion will occur in the vicinity of 19th Street and Naismith Road. Already slated for construction, one in 1966 and one in 1967, are two 650-man dormitories. A third dormitory, not yet approved, is considered a possibility. No dormitory expansion to the west of Iowa Street is planned in the foreseeable future. Dorms Built by Fees While academic buildings at the University are financed by the educational building fund of the Kansas legislature, with some federal aid, dormitories are paid for by the residents. A small, separate fund of state money is kept for initial payments on dormitories, but the bulk of the financing is done through long-term loans, repaid with the fees charged the occupants. HOWEVER. IN the near future large-scale student housing may be conducted independently of KU. Now just getting underway across the street from the prospective university dormitories at 19th and Naismith is the first major privately-financed student dormitory at KU. Financed and to be constructed by Allen Bros. & O'Hara, Inc. of Memphis, Tenn., the dormitory is estimated by Lawrence lawyer Milton Allen, representative of the company, to cost between $2 million and $3 million. The building will house 504 students, and is scheduled to be completed by the fall term of 1966. Zoning and legal difficulties have slowed the progress of the dormitory, but the area between Naimshi Road and Arkansas Street, 18th Street and 19th Street, where the dormitory is to be built, is now zoned C-1 (high-rise apartment), and a recent court victory by the company will seemingly allow the necessary area to be cleared. ALSO UNDER construction at KU is an addition to the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house. Estimated to be 75 per cent complete, the addition will enlarge the capacity of the house from 72 to 95. The addition is scheduled to be completed by fall. The addition is designed along the same lines as the main section of the house, built in 1942. The interior style is different from many fraternities and sorority houses in that two-man bedrooms plank each fourman study room, rather than having them in two separate sections. The addition also will contain a 125-man dining room. The B. A. Green Construction Co. is prime contractor for the structure, which will cost a total of about $200,000. The addition is financed by donations from alumni, sale of bonds, and first mortgage financing. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe is an alumnus of the ATO fraternity. While work progresses on present projects, long-range plans are in the making. For example: A NEW UNIVERSITY Extension building between Mississippi Street and the entrance drive to Zone X. (University Extension is currently housed in the former Pi Beta Phi house.) Remodeling of Green $ \mathrm{H a}^{11} $ An addition to Watkins Hospital. An addition to Watkins Hospital. A second biological science building. A fourth story to be added to the west wing of Malott Hall (a project for which funds have already been appropriated). Replacement of Strong Annexes by a permanent addition. Remodeling of Marvin Hall. An addition to Lindley Hall to replace Lindley Annex. An art and architecture addition to the new Engineering Building. An engineering administration building directly east of the Nuclear Reactor Building. Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 (1) $m\sqrt{3} + n\sqrt{2}$ $A_n \cap Q_n$ (2) $m^2 + n^2 < 64$ THE HAWK'S NEST Serving good food throughout the day. Whether you want a full meal, a snack, or a refreshing drink, the Hawk's Nest is the place to enjoy it in cool, air-conditioned comfort. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 7:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Saturday 7:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Closed Sunday The Hawk's Nest KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Friday, July 9, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Camp Week Again Lively Page 9 The week of July 9-12 promises to keep campers busy. This week's activities begin for the bowling league at 6:30 Friday, followed at 7:30 by the movie "The Misadventures of Merlin Jones," being shown in Templin Cafeteria. Sunday will be normal with the chapel service at 10 a.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall and Jewish service at 10 a.m. in the Templin Hi-Fi Room. The day will maintain the "status quo" with the choir concerts and orchestra concert starting at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre. The only difference is that the band concerts will, weather permitting, be held in the Outdoor Theatre. Saturday the campers will have a chance to show their creativity with the annual "Sadie Hawkins" dance. Girls will invite the boys to this dance and will call for them at Templin Hall. Prizes will be awarded for the best costumes. Monday the big event will be the trip to the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City where "The Music Man" will be seen. The bus will leave at 6 p.m., but tickets must be bought by today. Campers are urged to get ticket for "The Music Man" to keep them from getting "cabin fever." Monday, Camp Council meetings at 8 p.m. and the regular Monday evening dorm meetings are at 9 p.m. Samson Receives Sabbatical Leave Frederick E. Samson, chairman of the comparative biochemistry and physiology department, has left on a year's sabbatical leave. Samson will be working under Prof Francis O. Schmitt at the neurosciences research program in Boston. The program is sponsored by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Boston. Before attending the research program, Samson will go to Europe for a month to attend the International Neurochemical Conference in Oxford, England. KU One of Five State Schools Given Grants Five Kansas universities and colleges will receive institutional grants totaling $175,180 from the National Science Foundation for strengthening their programs in science education or research. The 1965 formula was 100 per cent of the first $10,000 of applicable grants received and 10 per cent of the amount from $10,000 to $1,000,000. Declining percentages above one million did not apply to the Kansas grants. The formula indicates the University of Kansas received $812,760 in qualifying grants during the 12 months, and Kansas State University. $465,100. Each school will have freedom of action in using its grant, which is based on the total of National Science Foundation grants to it for basic research or research participation in the 12 months ending March 31, 1965. KU and K-State ranked second and third, respectively, among member universities of the Big Eight conference. The NSF institutional grant to the University of Colorado led with $109,855. The University of Kansas will receive $90,276; Kansas State University, $55,510; Kansas State Teachers' College, Emporia, $12,580; Washburn University, $10,680; Kansas State College, Pittsburg, $6,134. Forty-two institutions received more than $100,000. The University of Kansas was one of eight others receiving more than $75,000. Today's Outdoor Movies Summer recreation movies will be shown on the lawn east of Robinson Gymnasium at 8 p.m. today. This week's selections are "Mexico: Land and People," "The Four Seas," and "Spring Love: Scandinavia." In case of rain, the movies will be shown inside Robinson. Friday and Saturday Men's Shoes Nunn-Bush Freeman Sherbrook 20% Off Entire Stock Included $10 to $35 Royal College Shop 837 Mass VI 3-4255 When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified THE Red Dog Inn Come to THE RED DOG INN Saturday, July 10 Listen to the sounds of THE KRAZY KATS DOORS OPEN AT 7 p.m. Friday, July 9 - Big KEWI Teen Hop Page 10 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 RECORDS A man is climbing a steep cliff. He is wearing a hat and sunglasses. The sky is dark and the ground is covered with vegetation. IVY GOES FIRST—Fraser Hall shed its 90-year-old cloak this week when workmen began tearing the ivy from the stone walls. The ivy is the first step in the demolition of the oldest building on the KU campus. The interior memorabilia of the building are being removed this week. —(Photo by Hugh Tessendorf) RECORDS Broadway Shows on Stereo Re-issued with Original Casts High Button Shoes Allegro Me and Juliet Brigadoon Pipe Dream Fanny New Girl in Town Wish You Were Here BELL'S 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Daily Deliveries Anywhere In Town OPEN NITES TILL 8:30 RECORDS RECORDS Fraser Razing Bids Requested The invitations were mailed by the Office of the State Purchasing Director. A legal notice calling for bids by July 13 also has appeared. Invitations to bid on the razing of old Fraser Hall have been received by prospective contractors. Bids for the construction of new Fraser Hall were opened last week and were within cost estimates. Federal agencies which are providing part of the funds for construction are reviewing the bids prior to a decision on award of construction contracts. Specifications for the razing of old Fraser Hall require the contractor to remove items of possible sentimental value. Other items of practical value already have been removed from the building by buildings and grounds employees and stored for use in other construction. Three major events, a dance and two feature movies, are being sponsored by Kansas Union this week. Union Events Fill Another Week The first is a film at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Forum Room. Admission to this classical Laurel and Hardy movie, "Way Out West," is 50 cents. The last activity is the weekly Friday Flicks, held in Dyche Auditorium at 7 and 9 p.m., admission 35 cents. The movie, "The Grass Is Greener," starring Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr, Robert Mitchum, and Jean Simmons, will be shown. The second event is the dance being held in the Trail Room at 8:15 p.m. open to all KU and summer preview students. New Dean of Journalism Excited by KU Prospects ise. The University of Kansas was fortunate in being able to persuade a man of Dr. Agee's abilities and experience to take on this challenging assignment." (Continued from page 1) Agee will head a school which was founded in 1944 upon the death of William Allen White. a one-time student at the University of Kansas whose career in Kansas journalism began in the 1880s. Journalism courses at the University go back to 1891 and a department was founded in 1911. Science Teaching To Be Stressed Jerry Milligan of the KU School of Education will teach the Elementary Science Workshop for two hours graduate or undergraduate credit. Each teacher will receive an overview of objectives, concepts, experiments, materials, and methods of teaching science at the elementary school level. Latest techniques in teaching science to young children will be the goal of teachers enrolling in a twoweek workshop at the University of Kansas Wichita Center August 9-20. A member of the Fort Worth Star- Telegram editorial staff from 1937 to Emphasis will be placed on experiments through which boys and girls should acquire an understanding of the basic concepts of physical, biological, and earth sciences. Enrollment details may be obtained from the University of Kansas Wichita Center, 352 North Broadway, Wichita. See Our Daniele Italian Barefoot Sandals Espadrille Sandal Many styles to choose from 4.99 to 9.99 Selected Patterns in Sandals Now Sale Priced 3.90 and 4.90 1234567890 McCoy's SHOES 813 Mass. VI 3-2091 1948, Agge headed the Texas Christian University department of journalism for eight years. He served as dean of the West Virginia University School of Journalism and as national executive officer of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism society, before returning to TCU in 1962. AGEE IS FORMER president of the Association for Education in Journalism, and of the American Society of Journalism School Administrators. He is one of five members of the National Council on Public Relations Education and is an alternate member of the Accrediting Committee of the American Council on Education in Journalism. In addition to teaching, Agee directs an adult education program at TCU involving 160 instructors and 250 courses conducted on campus and at Carswell Air Force Base, General Dynamics/Ft. Worth and at Ling-Temco-Vought, Grand Prairie, as well as 50 special short courses offered throughout the year. Dr. and Mrs. Agee have two daughters, Kim, 19, a senior at TCU, and Robyn, 7. Granada THEATRE·Telephone V1 3-5786 ENDS TONIGHT "THE YELLOW ROLLS ROYCE" Starts SATURDAY... A Tension-Packed Drama Of Espionage and Intrigue! I LOVE THEM BOPHIA LOREN GEORGE PEPPARD·TREVOR HOWard·JOHN MILLS RICHARD JOHNSON·TOM COURTENAY OPERATION CROSSBOW Cont. Sun. From 2:30 Varsity Evening Only THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! ends SATURDAY ... Frankie Avalon Deborah Walley "SKI PARTY" Starts SUNDAY . . . JERRY LEWIS PLAYS 7 WACKY ROLES! WESTERN LIGHTING COMPANY THE FAMILY JEWELS Sunset Starts DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 At Dusk TONIGHT & SATURDAY... "Invitation to a Gunfigher" Plus "633 Squadron" 2 Bonus Features Sat. SUN. & MON. SUN & MOON Cary Grant—Audrey Hepburn "CHAR ADE" Gina Lollobrigida "WOMAN OF STRAW" Friday, July 9, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 11. Summer Intramural Play Goes into Second Week The summer session intramural program is well into the second week of its five-week duration and progressing smoothly, according to Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department and coordinator of the summer intramural activities. Book by Harris Is Published Errol E. Harris, the Roy A. Roberts distinguished professor of philosophy at the University of Kansas, now has a second book published by the Muirhead Library of Philosophy, London. Harris received his copy of "The Foundations of Metaphysics in Science" before leaving to spend the summer in England. The Muirhead Library is an old, distinguished and highly selective philosophy series. "This is a great honor for Dr. Harris, and his book is a significant addition to the Muirhead collection," Edward S. Robinson, chairman of the KU department of philosophy, commented. Originally planned as a two-volume book, the metaphysical study will be followed by a sequel on the structure of scientific theory. Harris' first book published by the Muirhead Library was "Nature, Mind and Modern Science," in 1954. It is understood his newest addition has been favorably reviewed in the London Times. Harris' appointment as a distinguished professor upon coming to KU in 1662 carries the additional income from a $100,000 endowment created by Roy A. Roberts of the Kansas City Star. All the second-round elimination matches have been completed in the tennis and handball divisions and the third round results are coming in rapidly. The final round of competition already has been reached in the badminton division, and Steve Heeren will meet Rob Miller for the championship. The softball action is drawing most of the interest and already a few teams in each league are beginning to emerge above the others with unblemished records. Last Wednesday was an especially active day. The Pharm-Chem team met the Delta Functions; last year's champs, the Firebirds, played Ellsworth I, and the Scrogs-Subwalls game was played Wednesday rather than the scheduled Thursday, because of exams. In the slow-pitch league yesterday, Elsworth II clashed with the Speed Rats and the Question Marks met the chemistry department. The English department is scheduled to meet the Faculty Fossils in fast-pitch action this afternoon at 4:30 on the intramural fields. Softball standings are as follows: Fast-pitch W L Delta Functs. 2 0 Subwals 2 0 Faculty Fosls. 2 0 Firebirds 1 1 Sage 1 1 Elsworth I 1 1 English 0 2 Pharm-Chem 0 2 Slow-pitch W L E Phi GAMES 3 0 Chemistry 3 0 Question Mks. 2 0 CB&P 1 1 Elwishorl II 0 1 Speed Rats 0 2 Psychology 0 3 Given Marine Post Col. Richard R. Amerine, KU alumnus and former football star, assumed command as director of the Sixth Marine Corps District July 1, with headquarters in Atlanta. Business Directory Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store Oriental Vegetarian 17 W. 9th VI2-2771 Indian Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10:7:30 - Arabic Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 Complete — one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS FOR SALE New corrugated boxes—for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. fox Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM, Olympia Olivette, Hermes. Xerox. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI 3-3644. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies, Transparent Apples and Honey, 8 miles South 2 West, $ _{1/2} $ South of Eudora. 8-3 2 sets of bongo drums and 1 set of Maracas. Call V1 3-7047 after 5:00 p.m. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic motor NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6:00 p.m. Vf '56 FORD V-8, AT, R&H, completely overhauled, very clean, $250; '53 Plymouth, std. trans., good second car, $125; '52 Plymouth, std. trans., ready to go, $100. Benson's Auto Sales, 1902 Harper, VI 3-1626. Open evenings. 7-9 Epiphone Electric Guitar, Case and Amplifier. Nearly new. Also antique walnut pin cabinet. VI 3-2402. 7-13 Sherwood AM-FM Monaural tuner, $75.00, was $140.00 new. Call VI 2-1467 after 6:00 p.m. 7-13 VI 3-9897 Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tt 1960 Nashua mobile home with washing towels and 2 bedrooms *Call V1.3-3788.* 7-13 601 Mass. For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. 112 blocks to Fraser College and University. Utilities paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8544. tt Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 3-2475. tf Spacious older home for rent or for sale. 3 b-droom, 2 full baths, country kitchen, large living room and room to cord- rice 5:30 p.m. Ala. Call VI 3-0826. Attn: 714-291-8811. FOR RENT Topcake students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and accustomed to electronic typesetting. Also available on phone call. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topcake. ifa TYPING Accurate typing by experienced typist. Appropriate for presentations. Reasonable and fast, VI 2-1581; Available July 1st, furnished apartment. Pri. large living room and larger kitchen, bath with shower, parking. $45.00 per mo. till Sept. 1st, then $55.00. Located at 19 West 14th. Phone for appointment. VI 3- 3913. 7-16 Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will answer questions on theses. Experienced. Electric typewriter. CAI Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Clean 3 room apartment in quiet neighborhood Bills paid: $75.00, v1 3-6281, 7-9 Cash paid: $75.00, v1 3-6281, 7-9 Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various publications, portfolio and resume to the Daily Kansasan, Box 10, as soon as possible. SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! PATRONIZE YOUR - Dependable Cars Open 24 Hours - ADVERTISERS - - Complete Auto Servicing MISCELLANEOUS If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! 23rd & La. Wagner's Texaco 23rd Ft. Lo. VL 3-0138 Ironing, family or individual. Phone VI 3-5735. 7-13 WANTED Experienced Typist would like typing in her home. Theses—term papers and letters. VI 3-2651. tf DER BIERSTUBE; Singen, trinken und oen German Style. Featuring students' favorite dark bev. and students' favorite light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwiches. AIR-CONDITIONED. Party room available; Liter steins for sale. VI -9441, 14th & Tenn. New York Cleaners Merchants of COSMOPolitan Will do typing for reports, theses, manuscripts, etc. Experienced typist, efficient service. Call VI 2-0439. tf - dry cleaning - alterations * reweaving For the best in — Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8995. tf BAR-B QUE—Treat yourself to some real B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B Que, Ribs,icken 11:00 a.m. Phone I 2-9510. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. _if VI 3-0501 926 Mass. Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers HONN'S OPEN 24 HRS. HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING VI 3-9631 Across From The High School Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Miniature Golf TRAVEL TIME Greeting Cards, Gifts 19th & La. Reading Material Supplementary Textbook Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. Features Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. RELAX at the FREE PARKING Complete Center under one roof Established - Experienced 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 1000 JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY Make Your Summer Reservations Now! LET Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 912 Mass. MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY DAILY—Including Sunday Ph. V1 3-0350 Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds 616 Vt. Crushed ice, candy Variety of grocery items The TOWN CRIER HAVING A PARTY? OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Chips, nuts, cookies Ice cold beverages We are always happy to serve you with Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios RCA Motorola Airlite - We Service All Makes Airline GE Zenith Makes - Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. - Lawrence, Kans. Page 12 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 9, 1965 Second Exhibit of Art Is Ready in Murphy Hall The second art exhibit of the summer goes on display today in the Murphy Hall art gallery. It will be one of five to be held during the camp session. Arvid Jacobson, assistant director of the art camp, said the first show was hard to compare with last year's first exhibit. He felt that the exhibit was generally liked by those who had visited the gallery. Other persons who have attended the art camp before echoed Prof. Jacobson's feeling that the show RELIGION DEAN'S ASSISTANT —The Rev. Hugh Stouppe, former missionary and pastor of the Tonganoxie Methodist Church, is the newly appointed assistant to the dean of the Kansas School of Religion. Stouppe has been an assistant instructor in English at KU. Beginning with the spring semester he will share time between the School of Religion and the department of English. was good. A light survey indicated that the areas of fashion design, figure sketching, and cartooning were unusually good. David Green, a returning am camper from Kermit, Tex., said "I think the first exhibit compares favorably with the first exhibit of last year." "It was a general assumption," said Mick Thompson, another returning camper from Lapeer, Mich., "that the fashion designs and figure sketches were superb." The water colors and oil paintings were possibly not as good as those in past years. Last year Walter Hatke of Topeka produced some water colors which dominated that section of the exhibit. He was elected the best boy art camper and is spending this summer preparing for a one-man show. Jacobson noted that there will be more oils and water colors displayed in the remainder of the exhibits. He said that in those two areas, as in the areas of crafts, more time is needed to determine the amount of talent. The display being put up today will show more of the areas of the camp. There also will be more articles shown representing the various areas. It pays to look your best. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 Kamper Kansan Off Press Today By Cyndee Burnett Reporting, editing, and publishing the Kamper Kanan is the job of 20 summer journalism campers. This is experience for the campers on working on a high-school type paper. The staff consists of 10 editors and assistant editors and 10 reporters and writers. page insert in the regular Summer Session Kansan, which is distributed all over the campus. It also will be given to the campers and 2,000 copies to the heads of the camp divisions to be used as publicity and mailing. The paper will be published every three weeks, making two issues, and the first issue will be distributed today. This paper will be a four- The staff for the first edition is: Stan Otelie, editor in chief; Martha Teitelbaum, assistant editor in chief; Anita Wicke, news editor; Hugh Tessendorf, assistant news editor; Dave Stone, editorial editor; Frances Galawas, assistant editorial editor; Christine Howard, feature editor; Mike Shearer, assistant feature editor; Mike Holder, sports editor, and Bruce Erickson, assistant sports editor. Writers and reporters are: news, Robert Lovelace, Jonathan Block, and Cyndee Burnett; editorial, Kit Gunn and Tanya McNaughton; feature, Shelley Bray, Kim Freshwater, and Philip Higdon, and sports, Mike O'Hara and Danny Partner. ♠ SUA ♥ Bridge Tournament Wed., July 14th 2:00 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union TROPHIES WILL BE GIVEN C PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Official Kansas University Ring Available in yellow and white gold . .10 dwt., 10 k. Choice of three stones. Red-synthetic ruby, Blue-Blue spinel, Black onyx. Ladies' size ring also available. Drop in to see samples on display. SNV 85 KANSAS UNIVERSITY 1865 UNIVERSITY 65 PRICES BEGINNING AT $30.50 kansas union BOOKSTORE Vol. SR We cone door Russc Camp The the were In p were Hoch Mr NO cone tinue as Lo Philh with 3 p.m. cone tinue threally co D H Sp this Dr. coac seve Dr next tiona to o camp univ mait was the Kamper Kausan Vol. III, No. 1 Lawrence, Kansas Friday, July 9, 1965 Sunday Band Concerts To Return to Outdoor Format Rv Stan Oftelie Weather permitting, the Sunday concert series will return to the outdoor format this week, revealed Russell L. Wiley, Art and Music Camp director. The first two concerts, featuring the concert band and orchestra, were held in the University Theatre. In past years all Sunday concerts were held in the stands between Hoch Auditorium and Haworth Hall. NO OTHER major changes in the concerts, format are planned, continued Wiley. Guest conductors, such as Leo Kucinski of the Kansas City Philharmonic, and "split sessions" with the choirs and orchestra at 3 p.m., and the symphonic band and concert band at 7:30 p.m. will continue to remain the same, unless threatening weather forces the weekly concerts indoors. Mr. Wiley commented that the Don Parson Heads Speech Speech campers are being taught this year by a new speech director, Dr. Don Parsons, former debate coach at Minnesota University for several years. Dr. Parson, who will continue next year at KU, has also had additional experience at camps similar to ours, having taught at summer camps at Minnesota and Wisconsin universities. He remarked that the main difference between the camps was that here the students reside at the camp, while at Minnesota most of band and orchestra had been shaping up well. "The different sections have been coming along," stated Wiley, "The first concert went as well as I expected." FEATURED in the 3 p.m. concerts, FEATURED in the 3 p.m. concerts the students commuted and attended classes only during the morning Prof. Russell Wiley Dr. Parson has many plans for the speech students. The main areas of study are: debate, extemporaneous speaking, oratory, discussion, and oral interpretation. During the fifth week, contests will be held in each section. Debate teams will vie for championship during the six weeks. Finally, a program of the best of each division is planned. Parson said that the camp seemed very well organized and that the students seemed to adjust very quickly to their new schedules. the concert and chamber choirs have been highlighted by solos, rounds, and such favorites as "Jinny Jinkins," "I'm Goin' to Sing" and "She Dwelt among Untrodden Ways." Conductor James Ralston stated his satisfaction with the entire program. Particularly outstanding thus far have been the solo performances of Mary M. Miller and Randy Porter in "Three Epitaphas" and the concert band's rendition of "Entry of the Gods into Valhalla" from the "Rhinegold" McBeth's "Chant and Jubilo" highlighted the symphonic band's performance. Solo instruments have sparked each concert. Green Card-Lewis; Pink Card-Templin A major step has been taken in improving the eating arrangement for the Midwestern Music and Art campers. This year the meals are being served in both Lewis and Templin cafeterias. The new method has improved the condition of the lines of students waiting to eat so that they progress smoothly. EACH CAMPER WAS given a meal ticket when he enrolled and the two colors of tickets, green and pink, correspond to Lewis and Templein cafeterias, respectively. There are approximately 300 eating at Lewis and 600 at Templin. The meal schedule is posted on the bulletin boards in the dorms and should be checked often for any changes. Except First and Last No More Camp Meetings AUTHORITY WHATTAYA MEAN? Campers rehearse for upcoming play "Lliom." For further details, see page 2. There will be only one more camp meeting if everything goes as planned, Prof. Russell Wiley, camp director, said. When asked about the reason that there is only one more meeting scheduled, Professor Wiley said that many times last year there were meetings scheduled when "there was just nothing to discuss." Sometimes things were discussed that "just didn't concern the whole camp" and the meetings were just "a waste of time." HAVING ONLY THREE MEETings this year will save four nights. As an experiment, the divisions will hold their own meetings and the rest of the news will be passed by the counselors at floor meetings. The final meeting will be "recognition night for the students of the camp." The best student in each division will be recognized. The leaders in their respective divisions may be given letters of commendation although nothing definite has been decided. A national music fraternity will give two $25 awards to music students. Prof. Wiley still reserves the right to call an unscheduled meeting if the need arises. Although this is just an experiment, those who have had experience with camp meetings find these floor meetings a much better idea and hope this current system will continue. my Title ever To the Company TAKING A BREAK between numbers at a recent concert, this camper shows obvious pleasure in his performance. --- Better, Bigger Camps In Future Years Russell L. Wiley, director of the Music and Art Camp, is a very busy man. He has been busy since 1934, when he first came to the campus of KU. Very dedicated to his work and to the students whom he instructs, Mr. Wiley has been with the Music and Art Camp during its entire existence of 30 years. He said the camp is a year around job and the fact that he is already planning for the next summer camp verifies this. Mr. Wiley was also the concert director from 1949 to 1952 during the regular KU sessions. MR. WILEY reports that the Music and Art Camp enrollment will not be limited in the future, but that it will continue to grow. He is willing to expand facilities and dormitory space as long as it is necessary. There are also possibilities that more divisions will be added to the camp. Mr. Wiley feels that the engineering division should be brought back to the Camp for next summer's session. Unfortunately the theater department holds some restrictions in that there are a limited amount of parts and jobs for theater students to take. Mr. Wiley reported that this summer's students are a very gifted group. They continue, as campers in past years have, to meet their goals and to show much advancement in their fields. The individual student, Mr. Wiley said, gets what he wants out of his classes on the grounds of what he puts in. OVER THE PAST 30 YEARS Mr. Wiley has watched many campers benefit from the program. They have benefited in the knowledge that they have gained and in the experiences that they have had. "Without a doubt," said Mr. Wiley, "I have been rewarded not only by watching the campers mature in their various fields, but also as men and women." He went on to say that the young people of our time are more advanced than those of 20 years ago. Certainly they have more opportunity; the enlightening point is that they reach out and grasp it. When asked about his plans for the future, Mr. Wiley replied optimistically, "Build better and bigger camps." Mr. Wiley is a very busy man who takes great pride in his work and wants to make sure that it entails advancement of the young people of America. Junior High Camp Enrolls 275 For the first three years of its existence, the Junior High Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp made its presence felt by a sudden increase in the population of Lewis and Templin Halls, and by its rehearsals, held in Lewis cafeteria. However, beginning last year, the entire Junior High operation has been held in Corbin Hall: the campers live, eat, sleep and rehearse there. But while it is less conspicuous, the Junior High Division is now the second largest in the camp, boasting an enrollment of approximately 275. THE JUNIOR HIGH CAMPERS registered last Sunday and will remain two weeks, the final concert being Saturday, July 17. Courses offered in the Junior High Division are band, orchestra, and chorus. Each camper is requested to take two of these, and one private lesson a week in addition. (This is included in the $85 fee for the camp.) THE BAND IS CONDUCTED by Richard Brummett, of Winfield, who is also a camp supervisor. The orchestra is directed by Loren Crawford, of Ogden, Utah, and the chorus is conducted by James Hardy, of Wichita. Supervising the living quarters of the junior high campers are Mr. Darrell Nelson, who will teach in Topeka next year, Gary Watson of Oskaloosa, and Don Eubank, of McLouth. 2 Kamper Kansan Goodbye, Anna Maria; Hello Bert, River City "This year the production we will see will be 'West Side Story.'" These words by Mr. Herbert Duncan on the first night of camp, excited all the campers, and all eagerly awaited the bus trip to Kansas City and the Starlight. A WEEK later, it was announced that because "West Side Story" was during the last week of camp and transportation would be difficult, the trip had been moved to an earlier date, so that the show they will see is Meredith Willson's "Music Man." will see is herbert Witney. They wanted to see "West Side Story." They wanted to see Anna Maria Alberghetti. They did not want to see Bert Parks. Another factor is that the University Theatre is presenting "Music Man," and some campers feel that they will be hearing "Seventy-Six Trombones" in their sleep. However, this can not be helped. "MUSIC MAN" is the type of musical which can be seen and enjoyed over and over again. We will see Bert Parks chase some librarian named Marion all over River City, and most of us will have a great time. This is a fantastic opportunity. The camp is not forced to go to the trouble of arranging the transportation, the meals, and all the minor" details. The camp wants to do this for us. They feel it is an enriching experience. And we feel they are right. Most of us hate to miss Miss Alberghetti. Most of us love the Jets just as much as we love River City. Or maybe you love the Jets more than you love River City. But Meredith Willson has given us something special to enjoy. And we are happy to enjoy it. As that "other musical" said, it is "supercalifragilisticexpialidacious." Very Trite, Very True-- All the Camp is for You Whether one can call a one-year-old practice a tradition or not is open to debate. It is, nevertheless, usual to publish in the first Kamper Kansan editorials, the message that is essentially: don't abuse your privileges nor spend all your time in fun and games. Moreover, it is reasonable to assume that there will continue to be enough campers who do not observe this seemingly obvious principle to make such editorials likely in the future. HOWEVER. reasonably prudent behavior does not alone insure that the Midwestern Music and Art Camp is being used to maximum advantage; there are subtler ways to fail to make the most of the camp. "Sins of omission," while not as flagrant, can be as damaging as clearly censurable conduct. It is not enough merely to perform, or write, or dance, or speak, or research, or build, or do whatever your particular line of learning requires. Whatever division one is in, there are eight other divisions, and it would be a serious mistake to ignore them. The Midwestern Music and Art Camp offers almost unprecedented cultural opportunities to those participating in the various areas of study. The music campers learn about music, the art campers learn about art, the ballet campers learn about ballet. But equally important, a camper can learn about things outside of his specialty. By attending concerts, by viewing exhibitions, by watching performances, a camper can greatly broaden his experiences. THUS the camp essentially serves two functions: to provide intensive study in a particular field, and to provide a modicum of what university administrators are fond of calling a "liberal education." Not to utilize the opportunities of the camp to the utmost is to waste what cannot be regained. WE'RE GREAT "Do you suppose they're Texans or science campers?" Drama Camp Puts on Play As the debut of "Lilium" approaches, the stage crews of the theatre campers are bustling between prop rooms, preparing for the gala event. The theatre division of the camp has 50 persons enrolled to take part in putting on the annual camp pag- cant. Director of this year's theatre camp is Prof. Bill Kuhlke who will be working with the actors and crews until July 26-28 when three performances of the drama will be presented. "LILIOM IS THE HIGH DRAMA version from which the musical, "Carousel," was derived. The drama concerns a rough side show barker named Lilliam, who cannot seem to express love. He falls in love with Julie only to hurt her more than he hurts others. The tragedy of the romance is that he hurts people without meaning to. The story has some interesting final happenings. The play will be given in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall on the three consecutive nights to make the production available to as many as possible. The tickets to "Lilium" will be made available to all campers, free of charge, at the University Theatre box office. THE THEATRE CAMPERS' INTERESTS range from acting to technical production. Many of the 50 theatre campers have their schedules so designed as to omit any acting classes of labs so that they may concentrate on the back stage duties. In the past two years the theatre division of the camp has presented "Romeo and Juliet" and "Bye, Bye, Birdie." This year's play is of an entirely different type. Kamper Kansan By Journalists "Smile, you may be in the 'Kamper Kansan!'" This exclamation will reveal the presence of one of the 20 campers from the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. THESE REPORTERS SPEND most of their time walking around the campus trying to find buildings on their beats and timidly interviewing department heads. These are part of their duties for the "Summer Session Kansan" and the "Kamper Kansan." The students may also take elecive courses. These include work on the Tempo, photography techniques, and a course in creative writing in which the students are writing novels. The journalism students are members of the staff of the "Summer Session Kansan." They cover various beats such as divisions of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, the University Theatre, the KU Medical Center, Campus Police Force, the various deans, and social and political organizations. The "Summer Session Kansan" is published twice weekly under the direction of editor Jacke Thayer, Prof. Calder M. Pickett, and photographer Dan Austin. DIRECTOR OF THE JOURNALism division is Prof. John Knowles who also teaches some of the courses. The course in advertising and business management is taught by Prof. James E. Dykes. Prof. Darrel Holt teaches radio and television. In this course the journalists will write the script and produce their own television show. Under the guiding hands of Roy Imman, the students learn photography. Lens-hunt on 7 South Have you ever looked for a contact lens? Well, don't try it unless you have such good eyes that you will never need them. Alas, the girls on 7 South tried and a birdseye view of their efforts resembled a large crib of babies, crawling on their hands and knees. Finally, when all good eyes had failed, the eyes using those very same lenses spotted their missing friend. Bridget E. Moore, a retired nurse who served with the United States Army during World War II, is shown here in 1975 preparing to deliver a speech at a memorial service. Mrs. John Laughlin, who is the head dietitian at Lewis cafeteria, prepares the bacon which is to be served to students at dinner Mother's Care In Lewis Cafeteria Have you ever wondered who prepares the meals you eat at Lewis Hall? Have you ever wondered who makes sure the meal is well planned and prepared? Have you ever wondered who is "chief cook and bottle washer?" The answer to the above questions can be said in one name: Mrs. John Laughlin, Mrs. Laughlin, who is in charge of the Lewis cafeteria, enjoys her work very much. She likes to prepare food for young people, and she should know how; she has two of her own. Her two daughters may be attending the camp in the near future, so Mrs. Laughlin prepares the food with a mother's care. "I ALWAYS TASTE THE FOOD before it is served. If it is something of inferior quality, I send it back. I won't ask anyone to eat anything I wouldn't eat," said Mrs. Laughlin. The manner in which the food is prepared testifies to her belief. Mrs. Laughlin said that her main problem in the summer is getting the cafeteria helpers oriented as to the locations of certain equipment, since most of the help have previously worked elsewhere. She wishes that she could have closer contact with the campers, but the nature of her job makes this hard. Mrs. Laughlin, an attractive brunette, has a warm personality and any student could benefit from an acquaintance with her. ALTHOUGH THE FOOD in the cafeteria is exceptionally good, Mrs. Laughlin says that she hears mostly gripping, if anything at all, about the food. "When any cafeteria hears a compliment on the food, it boosts the morale a lot," said Mrs. Laughlin. "If a student has a suggestion to make, we will be glad to hear it and give it thought." Book Review—"Lisa and David" LISA AND DAVID, by Theodore Isaac Rubin (Ballentine Books). Lisa and David is a short and Kamper Kansan This is the third annual edition of the tri-weekly newspaper, "Kamper Kansan." The news it contains was written and edited by the students of the Journalism Department of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Staff Editor-in-Chief ... Stan Oftelie Assistant Editor-in- Chief ... Martha Teitelbaum News Editor ... Anita Wicke Assistant News Editor and Photographer ... Hugh Tessendorf News Reporters ... Robert Lovelace Jonathan Burnett Editorial Editor ... David Stone Assistant Editorial Editor ... Frances Galawas Editorial Writers ... Kit Gunn Tanya McNaughten Feature Editor ... Christine Howard Assistant Feature Editor and Staff Artist ... Mike Shearer Feature Writers ... Shelley Bray Kimberly Freshwater Philip Higdon Sports Editor ... Mike Holder Assistant Sports Editor ... Bruce Erickson Sports Reporters ... Danny Partner Mike O'Hara poignant book, a case-report on two young mental patients and the problems they overcome to start on their road to recovery. DESPITE ITS BIZARRE BACKground, this book has the pattern of a classic love story, told with beautiful love and tenderness. An extraordinary book that combines psychiatric training and the novelist's creative understanding of the mind and soul, Lisa and David is an authentic pattern of the slow return toward health made by two mentally ill adolescents. David is a brilliant boy who is obsessed by the necessity for painful cleanliness and is convinced that the touch from another human can bring death. Lisa on the other hand is divided into two entities and talks only in nonsense rhyme and must jump and skip ceaselessly to get rid of her overload of energy. Both live in a terrified world of a cage and are equally afraid to leave them. THE AUTHOR OF THIS BOOK, Dr. Theodore Isaac Rubin, is a practicing psychiatrist and is affiliated with the American Institute for Psychoanalysis and the Karen Horney Clinic. In Lisa and David, Dr. Rubin has created an all together different kind of literature, successfully both as scientifically accurate case histories and as novels. This book was made into a vibrant motion picture that was picked by Time Magazine as the Best American Picture of the Year. Kamper Kansan 3 ia. er. main setting as to ment, previwishes contact rure of Mrs. e. has student instance in the Mrs. mostly but theears aests theests theughlinotion toear it id” Ballet Camp Offers Daily Floor Show on two prob in their Now how many summer camps are there in this world that feature "cultured" floorshows with dinner, or for that matter, entertainment at any time of the day for those who wish to attend? ACK- tern of oeaeuti extra- osychi- s crea and and enthicte toward illy ill Shelley's Schlmeals Not only do students get a fine education in whatever their own subjects are, but their diets are also supplemented with achievements of o is ob- painful that the n bring Bv Shellev Brav divided only in mp and of her we live in a are BOOK, a prac- affiliated for hen Hor- toghet, Dr. together success- accurate This mant mo- by Time ean Pic- Judging from the outfits observed on the KU campus, the Midwestern Music and Art Camp is destined to soon become the fashion capital of the world. Since the campers come from such far away and exotic places as New York, California, and Kansas, a wide variety of fashion trends can be found here. The best way to identify the part of the country from which a camper hails is by noticing that popular garment known as the sweatshirt. These usually proclaim a nearby college. Of course, some sweatshirts may be misleading as in the case of a girl wearing a Yale insignia. Then there are some people like the journalism students who must surely be from "Easter Bunny Land." CLOTHING ALSO SERVES TO identify the various divisions from which the campers come. Ballet campers usually seem to have pink or black legs. Art campers wear color-splattered shirts that must have been swiped from their fathers. Various fads from across the country have converged on the KU campus. One of the more popular is the wearing of sandals. This may be for comfort's sake rather than the desire to be up on high fashion. SUNGLASSES ARE BIG ON THE scene also. Even on cloudy days they are still evident, used either as headbands or to protect contact lens wearers from the wind. Another fashion trend noticed among the girls is the shell. No, boys, it does not come from a little sea animal. A shell is a sleeveless sweater, which may owe its popularity to the fact that it needs no ironing. The most popular current fad among the boys cannot be seen here at camp. The wearing of shoes without socks is outlawed for the male campers. Perhaps the most popular item in men's clothing, judging from the boys around here, is the surfer shirt—a collarless knit (boys like to iron even less than girls do). These shirts are often paired with Madras shorts. Madras is not confined to shorts, however. Shirts, sport jackets, and even Madras hats are blossoming forth-on girls as well as boys. A wide variety of hairstyles are evident on the campus. Long, straight hair with bangs is a current favorite. "Is your hair real?" is a question asked of many girls who wear their hair "up" making use of a braided switch. VARIOUS FADS ARE NOTICEable in girls' jewelry and cosmetics. Pierced ears are in, displaying tiny pearl or gold earrings. Charm bracelets display souvenirs of memorable events; many bracelet wearers may leave here bearing miniature Jayhawks. In cosmetics the "pearlized" look is popular. Frosted fingernails (and toenails peeking out of sandals) and "slickered" lips are everywhere. THE "LITTLE GIRL LOOK" is in vogue, as pigtail wearers prove. Boys' hairstyles are as varied as the girls'. Beatle cuts make it difficult to distinguish boys from girls. Some boys must roll their hair up every night. Lady Clairol is also big among boys. "Do blonds really have more fun. boys?" You can hardly tell boys from girls around here. They all wear sweatshirts and cut-offs, surfer shirts, and Madras, long, bleached hair, and play guitars on skateboards. their fellow campers—the ballet division. The educational diets of the ballet division are also supplemented, according to one of the ballerinas, by "the good experience of having an audience and their many times helpful criticism." Director of the ballet division, Marguerite M. Reed and her partner, Larry Long, are the propagators of the "new form of recital." In order to prepare for their performance at 8 p.m. July 31, in the University Theatre, the ballet students must rehearse for five hours each weekday, plus attending one or more of the regularly scheduled classes. The formerly mentioned "entertainment" takes place in Lewis Hall cafeteria, as all who eat there know, and it seems those "roosting" there at the tables are feeling shy about even sitting down in front of these obviously dedicated workers, let alone eating in front of them. For the beginners, and more especially for the "getting restored" students, the torture of being watched is doubled if they are audience shy. Unfortunately, there is no other place for them to practice that is adequate. They are much happier cool and watched, than hot and hidden. If anyone is interested in other than mealtime entertainment, they will find the after-dinner rehearsals are truly delightful for anyone but the participants. All types of dancing practice are generally long and arduous. Those girls and boys have aching feet, tired arms, strained legs, stiff necks, sore backs, and all other injuries known to be caused by strenuous motion. They still glide, whirl, and leap again and again and again until they achieve worthwhile execution of their routine. Since all this work may tend to cramp the social style of these 63 girls and three boys, they fear that they will be unknown by their fellow campers unless the community as a whole makes an effort to seek them out for friends. One very efficient way, they feel, is to attend at least one after-dinner rehearsal. Even those who are not connoisseurs of "that sorta stuff" have been known to enjoy it. What these wildly enthusiastic young people were cheering for was the mere mention of the name of Dr. Delbert Shankel and the science camp which he represents. Dr. Delbert Shankel The ballet campers finish their morning's practice in Lewis Hall cafeteria while some campers begin to arrive for lunch. WHAT MADE THESE SCIENCE Director of Science Camp Cheered Enthusiastically Camp Blossomed From Dream By Mike Shearer The divisions have come one at a time and each has grown slowly. The science camp has a fixed membership of 125 teenagers who were selected from nearly 1000 applicants. The selection was made by scholas- It was not hard to tell the reason for the science campers' enthusiasm for their director. Dr. Shankel is a very personable man. Thirty years and 1,513 campers ago, Russell L. Wiley witnessed the assembling of 17 pioneer music campers for the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. When asked about Dr. Shankel, science campers said, "He's a cool guy" and "He's great." Music campers of today would be amused at the sight of the original 17 campers intermingled with 18 persons whose main task was making it possible to call the group a 35 piece band. Contrasting those dated figures with this year's is sufficient evidence that the camp has been a success. In one exciting instant, they jumped from seats all over the auditorium; they roared, cheered, clapped, and whistled. No, they were not cheering for a last-second, game-winning basket; they were not cheering for the nomination of a favorite son; they were not even cheering for the announcement that recevele would be at noon instead of at six. This year's music division boasts two bands, an orchestra, and two choirs with a total enrollment of 700. Prof. Wiley, who started alone, is now assisted by Gerald M. Carney and weekly guest conductors. JOINING THE "BAND-WAGON" in 1949 was the art division which, like the music division before it, had trouble getting started. The art division has experienced changes since it was begun by Prof. Wiley, Prof. Marjorie Whitney, and Prof. Arvid Jacobson. Miss Whitney and Mr. Jacobson welcomed 255 campers to the art division this year. campers so enthusiastic about their camp and about their question? Dr. Shankel listed three reasons as to why these people are so enthusiastic about their camp. Dr. Shankel said, when asked about how he felt about his science campers this year, "They're a real bright bunch. We try to keep them happy and interested." "MANY OF THE CAMPERS are from out of state and are pleased to find that the campus here is not what they expected. They found beautiful buildings on a beautiful campus instead of some buildings stuck in some wheat fields." "The science apprentices thought it would be nice to get organized cheers and get enthusiasm," was his explanation. "This was derived from the apprentices who must have enjoyed last year, or they wouldn't have been back this year." Dr. Shankel indicated that most of the enthusiasm was generated by the science apprentices, who are back for their second year. Another reason for their elation was the fact that they were lucky to be here. The 100 science campers who are here were chosen from over 900 who had applied. tic achievement. Prof. Delbert Shankel is director of the science camp. The ballet camp is again headed by Marguerite Reed of the Tulsa Opera Ballet Company. The 63 ballerinas are also being taught the grace of their art by Larry Long, choreographer and ballet master. Prof. Wilmer Linkugel is director of the speech camp which has 30 orators enrolled this summer. Presently preparing for the production of "Lilium" are the 50 theatre campers under the direction of Prof. Bill Kuhlke. "Lilium" will be presented July 26-28. THE YOUNGEST CAMP is the journalism camp which is in its third year. The journalism division is headed by Prof. John Knowles and has an enrollment of 20. Mr. Wiley supervised the first camp by himself. The vast increases in the camp population have enlarged the supervisory staff to include eight. The staff is headed by C. Herbert Duncan, who teaches at Normandy High School in St. Louis. Enrollment Grows By Marti Teitelbaum Every Monday night at 9 p.m., a solid mass of about 40 campers sit in a huddle and discuss rules and problems with their counselors. These meetings are called floor meetings. The floor meetings were started because of the growth of the Mid-Western Music and Art Camp. Its present enrollment of over 1,500 students is too large to have weekly meetings of the entire camp. Therefore, the floor meetings were established to relay information from the supervisors to the campers. OFTEN PROBLEMS ARISE from the floor meetings. If two wings have their meetings in the lobby of their floor, neither group can get much done. Many floor wings have solved this problem by holding their meetings in the hall of their wing. There are many cases of girls having to go to bed with wet hair because of lack of time after the floor meeting to set and dry their hair. When the counselors walk up and down the hall, crying, "lights out!" the girls in the midst of doing their hair emit loud screams and wails, and then proceed to try to set their hair in the dark. THE BOYS don't have the same problem, but one boy complained that the meetings are too long. He explained that the counselors often go over things that the campers can read well in the weekly activity bulletin. However, during the announcing of these activities, students have the chance to ask questions, and they take advantage of this opportunity to clear up points they don't understand about the week's activities. On June 28, the floors had elections. Each wing selected a social representative, a recreation representative, and a student council representative, Mr. Duncan is in his 13th year with the camp. He is assisted by George Neaderhiser who teaches at Topeka High School and Richard Brummett who teaches at Winfield, Kan. This is Mr. Neaderhiser's seventh summer with the camp and Mr. Brummett's fifth. The girls' dorm is under the supervision of Mrs. Frank Spurrier who during the school year is housemother at Stephenson Hall. This will be the last year with the camp for Mrs. Spurrier who has been here for four summers. Much a part of the camp is the junior high division which is under the supervision of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Watson. There are 300 two-week campers who are residing in Corbin Hall while studying music under Mr. Brummett. MR. WILEY'S 17 CAMPERS in '35 lived in a leased sorority house. Today three of the newest and largest dormitories house the campers. The dormitories provide private food service which replaced eating at the Kansas Union a few years ago. The annual camp trip to the Starlight Theater in Kansas City has been scheduled for July 12. "Music Man" to Be Camp Starlight Trip The program presented at that time will be "The Music Man," a musical comedy starring television personality Bert Parks. IT HAD BEEN ORIGINALLY announced that "West Side Story" would be seen, but transportation difficulties made this impossible. "Transportation in the summertime is at an extreme premium because of the army transporting all its reserve troops to camps," C. Herbert Duncan, camp supervisor, explained. "So, we have to take buses when we can." "The Music Man" concerns a midwestern "con" man around the turn of the century who attempts to swindle the town of River City, Iowa, by passing himself off as a "Music Man," although he knows nothing at all about the subject. The show contains such songs as "Seventy-six Trombones," "Till There Was You," and "Gary, Indiana," all written by Meredith Willson. "The Music Man" will have already been shown here at the University by KU students, but Mr. Duncan explained that the experience of seeing it done by a professional group at the Starlight will make it seem like a brand new show. "In the past years this has been one of the highlights of the season because it is a change from the routine of camp." Mr. Duncan stated, and added, "Many have not seen an outdoor theater of this magnitude." SEVENTEEN BUSES WILL BE available for camp use during this trip and Mr. Duncan indicated that this would be sufficient for all who wanted to go. The cost will be $4.25, covering transportation and admission to the theater. 4. 4. 307 Kamper Kansan Intramural Program Is Better Than Ever Before Rv Mike O'Hara The Summer Music and Art Camp's recreation program is now in full swing with all first round eliminations complete in the various tournament divisions. The tournament schedules were drawn up by Mr. Darrell Nelson, head of the camp's recreational, social and religious programs, and a council made up of recreation directors from each floor. These schedules cover six sports in Templin's program: basketball, softball, volleyball, ping-pong, tennis, and chess. They cover five programs in Lewis: softball, ping-pong, tennis, volleyball, and chess. PRE-TOURNAMENT interviews with both boy and girl campers established some favorites and roused many comments, both critical and complimentary of the recreation program. In Templin, the basketball favorite seemed to be 2 North, which had two returning veterans, Steve Lucas and Brent Waldron, from last year's championship team. In tennis, last year's runner-up, Dave Hill, and Mike Holder, a veteran varsity tennis player, have to be rated as two of the top contenders. In ping-pong there are three or four top players and it would be hard to pick a top participant, according to Larry Yeager, who played in last year's tourney. All the other divisions are wide open; chess, volleyball, and softball have no established favorites. There will be no football this year. Mr. Nelson said, for the camp "hesitates to encourage contact sports." Along with these activities, there are numerous other games available to all campers, such as Monopoly, Scrabble, and Parchesi. CONCERNING THE PROGRAM itself, the boys interviewed seemed to exhibit more enthusiasm than the girls, for obvious reasons. All boys interviewed felt that this year's program was improved over last year's. As one put it, "There's a lot more things going on." The majority of the girls' views on last year's program, as revealed in last year's Kamper Kansan, seemed to be "What program?" But one girl interviewed this year, Barbara Rundle, said she thought this year's program was improved over last year's. She thought the big problem concerning the recreation program at Lewis was its lack of publicity. She felt it was the "most important, but the least stressed." Other new activities were added this year in an attempt to make the program better than ever. For the boys, there is a pool tournament and instruction was initiated; and chess, volleyball and softball are also new. For the girls, new additions are chess, softball, and volleyball competition, with the 12-team bowling league a new addition for both boys and girls. Mr. Nelson said he has tried to arrange these games so that all would be included, both outdoorsmen and others less athletically inclined. SWIMMING IS HELD EVERY night from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Robinson Pool, but attendance is limited to 25 a night, due to the size of the pool. However "Midnight Swims" are held in local pools, such as the Holiday Park Pool and up to 300 campers are then able to use the facilities. Another new idea, which comes under both social and recreational departments is the "hootenanny." Mr. Nelson has observed many campers gathered around singing, and has noted that the only thing impeding complete participation is lack of knowledge of the words to the songs. So lyrics to popular songs have been printed up and will be made available to the campers for their use at these informed songfests. Mr. Nelson is also head of the junior high camp's recreation program. He said that their activities are much the same as their older comrades, but noted two big problems he faces. One is the lack of space and the other is the tremendous energy exerted by the youngsters, or as Nelson phrased it, "They don't walk, they run, and they don't talk, they yell." The Column By Michael Holder After viewing their warped ping-pong table the boys on third floor Templin voted to take down the net, fill it with water and conduct sailboat and scuba diving lessons. By the way, if you are interested, the lessons are a dollar a piece, but you have to be able to swim three laps first. For you mountain climbers, KU has provided all that is possible . . . the biggest hills in Kansas. Of course, you have noticed the trees across the street in front of Templin. Those serve a purpose, also . . . to keep you from saving time by taking short cuts. They also make a perfect spot during deer and bear hunting season. (No guns allowed, so watch the foot traps.) Everyone agrees that the lighted tennis courts are great; they also agree that it is too bad we never get any time to use them. I was really excited when I heard that all campers could use the big KU pool. By the way, where is the pool? Using these wonderful featherweight basketballs has become a challenge for our science campers. Everytime you shoot you have to give a three mph wind, five feet lee-way on a 15-foot shot. So I am told by our camping brain children. Open house at the Jay Bowl turned into a great night with fun, games, and contests for all. I bet you cannot get 1200 kids into your local bowling alley and pool hall either. After one week of intensive research I finally found out that Robinson Gym is right next to Flint Hall where all my classes have been. Since viewing the facilities I have decided that I wish I hadn't found it. The bowling league is going to be tremendous. Every Friday night while the other kids are out having fun, bowlers will be in the Kansas Union beating their heads and hands on the walls and pillars that surround the alleys. The only thing the new steps to Lewis Hall will do is put the boys further away from Templin. I'm sure, however, this won't bother the boys in the least. Jim Ryun Heads For Russia By Bruce Erickson The nation's fastest miler, the fabulous Jim Ryun from Wichita East, has chosen KU as the place to further his education and continue his astonishing running career, according to Bob Timmons, head track coach. Jim's latest achievement rated banner lines in every news media around the nation; it was a searing 3:55.3 timing at the 77th annual AAU Track and Field Championships at San Diego, Calif. The performance astounded the athletic-minded public; their attention was focused on the veteran runners, not the young, "un-and-coming" miller. At San Diego, he ran against Jim Grelle and Peter Snell, both of whom he has had to compete with before and always was a few tenths of a second behind. In this race it was Jim who dominated the lanes, with every indication he would still continue to do so. He modestly adds, "I was fortunate to have won." Taking first in this race qualified Ryun to compete in the United States-Russian dual meet along with Jim Grelle on July 31. After this dual, meets in Poland and West Germany dominate his itinerary. Because of his competing in the meets abroad, he hasn't set the date as to when he will attend the KU previews, but added, "I'm interested and very happy about attending KU." Coach Timmons, who worked with Ryun in high school before becoming assistant track coach here, expressed joy and appreciation about Ryun's latest victory and gave credit to his present coach, J. D. Edmiston. Rvun and a classmate, Mike Petterson, were recruited by Timmons. Petterson is considered the fourth fastest high school miler in the United States and can consistently place second to his teammate Petterson's performances include a 1:55.2 half-mile and a mile clocking of 4:12.2. When competing in the Kansas Relays, Jim performed below his standard and still posted a record-breaking 4:04.8. On the second day of the event, he brought the crowd of 14,000 at Memorial Stadium roaring to their feet as he anchored Wichita East's two-mile relay team when they set a new national record. He completed his 880 stretch in a scorching 1:477.7. Jay Bowl Holds Its Open House Peter Snell, probably Ryan's most serious threat in several races, exiled. "Ryan's got it," the quality which goes to make a champion." On Friday, the same program was offered to everyone on campus sponsored by Activities Advisor, Katherine Giele. The open house, which was attended by people of all ages, was supplemented by showings of the movie "The Notorious Landlady" starring Kim Novak and Jack Lemmon. There was also entertainment on the third floor terrace by pianist Larry Robinson. An open house for campers was held Thursday evening in the Jay Bowl of the Kansas Union building. The open house, which lasted from 6:30 p.m. until closing time, featured free pocket billiards, bowling, snooker, and ping-pong for the campers who presented their identification cards. Along with the refreshments served at the open house, the Prairie Room featured a $1.50 steak dinner. LA 57 Jim Ryun, the nation's fastest miler and future KU thinclad, recently captured the 77th annual AAU title. Nelson Heads Recreation What would the Midwestern Music and Art Camp be like if the campers just went to their classes, ate and slept? It would be very dull and not much fun. The man who is responsible for the organization of the recreation that is getting started at the camp is Mr. Darrel Nelson. MR. NELSON was brought up in Scandia, Kansas, a small town in north central Kansas. He graduated from KU with a Bachelor's degree in Music Education, and has had a half year's graduate work in guidance and counseling. At the present time Mr. Nelson is teaching vocal and instrumental music in Overbrook, Kansas High School. He also teaches psychology and is the counselor in Overbrook. He was a camper in 1954-55, and a counselor in 1961-62. He has been an assistant supervisor with the camp since 1933, in charge of chapel, organizing recreation and planning social activities. He will be the dorm supervisor for the junior high boys when they arrive the last three weeks of camp. IN THE FUTURE Mr. Nelson is going to teach in the Topeka school system in junior high. He will teach vocal music and be a counselor. What is really fun, by personal experience, is to go down to the basketball courts to practice. A couple of guys come along and ask to play, being ignorant of their background you say yes. After being slaughtered, it makes you feel better to find out the guy you played against has won a full basketball scholarship and is here for KU previews. If you are wondering what the purpose of this column is, don't worry because I haven't found out either. If you have any complaints, don't come to me. After all, I only wrote it. That doesn't mean I'm responsible. I hope. If you didn't think this is a funny column it's all right because I'm not very funny anyway. Movie Schedule Is Announced July 9—Misadventures of Merlin Jones 13 & 14 — Adventures of Tom Sawyer 16—At War With the Army 20—Bon Voyage 23—Have Rocket Will Travel 27—Never Put It in Writing Dance Joins Groups A patio dance was held Wednesday of the first week of camp on the Lewis dorm patio, and was for many campers the first contact each had with the other divisions. Music was furnished by records selected by both counselors and students. An informal affair in both dress and organization, campers were not confined to the patio alone, but danced also on the grass surrounding the dorm. Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 13, 1965 53rd Year. No.8 Lawrence, Kansas K LAW STUDENTS AT WORK — An innocent lamb walks before the den of wolves—KU's students who spend their leisure time viewing the female specimens who happen to pass by Green Hall during the day. This long-held tradition is viewed with much chagrin by some of the specimens. Green Hall was built in 1905 and its steps have been burdened with girl watchers, lo these 60 years. Apparently Business School efficiency experts have never compiled any statistics concerning the amount of time the perspective barristers waste in this endeavor. Certainly the Speech Department has never made any studies relative to their remarks. Johnson Reported to Be in Jubilant Spirits Over Success of His Program in Congress By Merriman Smith UPI White House Reporter JOHNSON CITY, Tex.—(UPI) President Johnson, "deeply heartened" by the first year results of the Civil Rights Act, is reported nothing less than jubilant about the way foundation blocks of his administration's legislative program are proceeding through Congress. His pleasure over congressional action on the voting rights bill and the $7.5 billion medical care and Social Security benefits measure that went through the House and Senate was evident throughout the weekends. AND TO ADD to his sense of executive well-being was a report that in the first year of its existence, "compliance with the letter of the Civil Rights Act is being achieved, perhaps, faster than the drafters dared hope." "The next step," said the report to the President, "is to achieve compliance in spirit. It is not enough for a Negro, for example, to win admittance to a previously segregated restaurant; he must be welcomed. "Curiously, reluctance to make him feel welcome is now being expressed increasingly in the north, perhaps in reaction to pressures for open occupancy in housing. It is this dimension of the problem—the psychologically imprisoning aspects of prejudice—that needs to be attacked next, and on a massive scale." AFTER STUDYING the report, Johnson said the first-year response to functions and purposes of the Civil Rights Act represented "considerable political and social maturity on the part of the American people." And to underscore his own feelings about the place of the Negro in American life, Johnson over a leisurely weekend at his ranch named a Negro to an important federal judgement in the District of Columbia, added a Negro West Pointer to the White House military aide staff and among other guests, took a Negro secretary, Jerri Whittington, from his White House staff to church with him here Sunday. KU Dean to Coordinate Latin America Programs An assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences soon will leave for his latest task, coordinating a program in the social sciences and humanities for five Central American universities, in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Salvador and Guatemala. And, although Gale is a "norteamericano" by birth, one of his sons claims dual Costa Rican and United State citizenship by birth. RETURNING TO KU, Gale served this year as assistant director for the annual KU Seminar on Higher Education in the Americas, which was host to 24 distinguished Latin American educators concerned with the role of the university in regional and national development. He also helped to plan an exchange backstop program with the University of Oriente in Venezuela. The KU-Costa Rica Peace Corps project was among the first to be initiated, staffed and administered by a U.S. institute of higher learning. It also numbered many KU graduates as volunteers. GALE WILL LIVE for about two years in his second homeland, Costa Rica. This is where son Thomas H. Gale was born in 1961, when Dean Gale was director of the KU-Costa Rica Junior Year Abroad program. Young Thomas Gale has until age 21 to decide which country to claim as a native. He is Thomas M. Gale. he supervised the eight weeks training here, then left to direct the project and teach at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose for 1963-64. A Latin American history specialist, Gale also has been a Fulbright lecturer at the University of San Marcos, Lima, Peru. THE NEGRO aide was Maj. Hugh Robinson, Army Corps of Engineers and a high ranking member of the class of 1954 at the U.S. Military Academy. He will be the army representative on the military aide staff. Senior aide of what now becomes the armed forces aide staff will be Maj. James U. Cross, USAF, who was named Saturday to replace Maj. Gen. Chester V. Clifton. In 1962, Gale was on the KU campus to plan for the KU-Costa Rica Peace Corps program. As coordinator Goulet to Appear In Oct.30 KU Show Robert Goulet, baritone who swept to nationwide fame when he appeared as Sir Lancelot in the Broadway musical, "Camelot," will appear with his company of musicians and entertainers in the Homecoming concert Saturday, Oct. 30, in Allen Field House. Viet Forces Set at100.000 WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The number of American troops in South Viet Nam is expected to exceed 100,- 000 before the end of the summer, but the Defense Department apparently has no plans to call up reserves or increase the draft calls now. The possibility of such action was raised by the disclosure over the weekend that the U.S. commitment in Viet Nam would increase by at least 33,000 men during the next two months. There are now 67,000 American troops there. Asked about published reports of a possible callup of reservists, the Defense Department said: "There are no plans at this time to call reserves." Any early increase in draft calls had been ruled out previously by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara. The buildup in Viet Nam is openended, however, and some military experts believe there will be a manpower strain within a few months despite the 2.7 million Americans now in uniform. If President Johnson should decide to call up reservists, he could either declare an emergency or ask Congress to approve a joint resolution to authorize his action. When reserves were called during the 1961 Berlin crisis, the late President John F. Kennedy submitted a congressional resolution. - The Goulet concert will be sponsored by Student Union Activities and will conclude the Homecoming celebration, which will be marked by the football game with Kansas State University. GOULET BECAME a star in the 1960-61 season when he appeared with Richard Burton and Julie Andrews in the Lerner-Loewe musical based on T. H. White's "The Once and Future King." He was raised in Lawrence, Mass., but spent much of his youth in Canada, where his mother took him on the death of his father. As a schoolboy in Edmonton, Alberta, he began to make singing appearances, and he became a disc jockey on Edmonton station CKUA. In the winter of 1954-55 he came to Broadway, hoping for success, but the best job he could get was one selling stationery in a department store. GOULET RETURNED to Toronto, and the Canadian Broadcasting Co. gave him the leading male role in a television production of "Little Women." He then had a leading role in Canada's annual stage satire, "Spring Thaw." Then he obtained a co-starring role in Canada's television variety show, "Showtime." He was on that show three years. Lerner and Lowe had auditioned more than 20 singers for the role of Lancelot in "Camelot," and at a party they learned of Goulet, who came to New York on their invitation. Since "Camelot" he has become a recording star for Columbia, has appeared on television and in concert, and has been in two movies. Pratt: Grid Star. Actor, Politician By Dan Partner One of the best known men on the KU campus has been near the school since he was born. Richard Pratt is, in effect, a son of KU, because he was born at the Medical Center. Nearly everyone on the KU campus is familiar with the name Rich Pratt: he is a grid star on the KU team, and is the vice-president of next year's senior class. Pratt lives in Olathe, Kan., 30 miles southeast of Lawrence, which put him near the University to see the KU grid squad in action long before he actually played for it. He came to KU on a football scholarship, after playing for a successful team at Olathe. MAJORING IN MUSIC, Pratt plans to make it part of his career in future years. However, his first ambition is to play professional football. He has received letters from the majority of professional teams, AFL and NFL. The team he chooses to play for, he says, will be the one that offers the most in regard to security, both present and future. Music would enter the picture during the off-season, when he would like to play his drums in a band similar to Skitch Henderson's on the "Tonight Show." He also would like to start a night club and open a music studio where he could teach percussion. Pratt is not just a musical football player and politician. In addition he enjoys woodworking as a hobby. He has made furniture for his home and has entered his work in a national contest. HE IS ALSO an actor, traveling to the Orient on a USO tour, playing in a musical comedy, "The Boy Friend." Pratt also has used his talents in the Rock Chalk Revue, taking a role in a slapstick comedy, "From Topeka with Love," a takeoff on a James Bond thriller. Speaking about KU football this coming season Pratt said, "We'll have a real fine football squad." He thinks that the toughest games will be Nebraska, MU and OU, but, "we'll fool a lot of people." I am grateful for the opportunity to learn and grow. I will continue to be a positive influence on others, both within my community and beyond. Richard Pratt . . . familiar KU face. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 13, 1965 Fiery Youth, Hot Summers Summer, one of our youthful journalistic opinion-makers the other day, is apparently the time for placid editors. There may be things to grumble about, but not in the Summer Session Kansan, please. No civil rights demonstrations on the second floor of Strong. Fraser's walls are going to come tumbling down and there's no point in fighting it. And it gets too hot in Kansas to get excited about issues. Student editorials, apparently,cannot be bland. Hell has got to be raised. For almost a year this writer has been dragging himself through the files of Ed Howe's famous Atchison Globe and later publication called E. W. Howe's Monthly, and the notes suggest that Howe usually got most riled up about things when the wind shifted to the north and the corn fields didn't look so blasted hot. (He was like student editors, actually, though moral indignations are there in the blazing summer, too.) AS OLD MAN HOWE became old Ed Howe his indignations simmered down somewhat, too. That normally happens to people, even to college editors who once aimed to reform the world in one semester. It's no secret that liberals often become conservative when the juices begin to dry up. William Allen White was an exception, and so is Walter Lippmann, though Lippmann has jumped around on the ideological spectrum like the bouncing ball we used to see in those movie shorts in the thirties. (Note to students: you can let that one pass, because it would be as difficult to explain as it is to tell why we liked Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy and Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler.) What I am laboriously trying to get down on paper is that youth shouldn't expect quite so much of its elders, even those elders who still consider themselves pretty youthful. The young people who have the advantage of being only 20 should accept the fact that their elders' brains are wearing out or their responses slowing down so that they don't quite see the need for getting steamed up about Johnson (if you're a liberal or a conservative), Bobby Baker (if you're a nonsimmer), the war in Viet Nam, the latest march on Bogalusa, or whatever it is that's getting young people steamed up these days. THAT SAME OLD Ed Howe whose name appeared several typewritten lines ago was rough on the reformers, and he told about some lady reformers who were concerned about suffrage and the New Thought and Taft and the tariff. These ladies were meeting at the home of Mrs. Lysander John Appleton, and Mrs. Appleton (whose busy fingers were in every reform movement) asked one of them what problems of the day seemed to be obsessing her. Came the timid reply: "Well, what I'm worried about most is what to fix for the next meal." Well, some of us don't have to fix the next meal, but we have problems that keep us from the kind of earnest consideration we should be giving to escalation in Viet Nam (there seems to be a national political-journalistic compulsion to use the word "escalation," so there it is). As we get older there are minor body ailments, crabgrass in the bluegrass, watergrass in the crabgrass, financial woes, considerations of better jobs or at least better climates, wilt in the lilacs, worms in the tomatoes, cars that ought to be traded, lessons to prepare. And for this member of the older generation a book on old Ed Howe that's got to be written one of these days. Plus what to fix for the next meal. (On the barbecue grill, that is.) THOSE OF US who don't really dig what's on your young minds deserve a little tolerance. We thought (some of us) that Johnson was a good president because of his successful legislative program. We thought Roy Wilkins was a forceful civil rights leader but learn that he (and maybe Martin Luther King, too) is an Uncle Tom. We thought the twist was a new dance step. We thought creweats (or whatever you call them) were stylish, and we were proud of our narrow lapels, not knowing that the old double-breasted jobs we bought in 1946 might be considered cool one of these days. And some of us who were proud of our liberalism find that liberalism is irrelevant. One of my students told me last spring, when I asked him to comment on the basic nature of man, "What man is doesn't matter. All that counts is what he does." Another told me that my good will toward the civil rights movement at KU was unimportant, that I wasn't with it unless I went to Louisiana and helped to register Negroes or build bombed-out churches. WELL, FOUR MORE WEEKS. The corn is still ripe in north Lawrence, watermelons are coming on, the countryside is green, there are evenings ahead at the Starlight, and bright young journalism students are here to help with the Summer Kansan. Bear with us, you youth of great courage and moral indignations. Mrs. Lease favored raising less corn and more hell. How she was able to advocate such a platform in pre-air-conditioned Kansas is one of those deep mysteries a Ph.D. candidate in history may fathom one of these years.-CMP "I Have Returned" Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business office UN 4-3646, newsroom Jacke Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Murag ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) founded 1889, became weekly 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. CANDIDATE FOR SENATE IN 68 STATEMENTS ON VIET NAM NEW POLITICAL ORGANIZATION GOLDWATER BOOK REVIEWS REGIONALISM IN AMERICA, edited by Merrill Jensen (University of Wisconsin Press. $2.50). One of the distinctive forces in American political and social history has been regionalism, and this excellent book, newly available in paperback, discusses the phenomenon from several standpoints. Students of American history, literature and civilization should find it particularly valuable. The editor has chosen to select writings that illustrate the question through the following: the concept itself, and its role in history; some selected historic regions of the United States; regional aspects of our culture; the concept of regionalism as a practical force, and the limitations as well as promise of regionalism. THE EDITOR IS A PROFESSOR at the University of Wisconsin; his writers include such figures as Merle Curti, also of that university; Gordon R. Clapp, famed in the history of the Tennessee Valley Authority; William B. Hesseltine and Fulmer Mood, who have written extensively of regionalism and the Civil War; E. P. Richardson, the art historian; Francis Butler Simkins, southern historian, and many others. Regionalism is viewed as a force of definite significance in our history, for Fulmer Mood considers the sectional concept as it developed in the 19th century, its place in the conflict between the states, and in the movement westward, its role in our understanding of American life (how many of us still think of the country in those regional terms we learned in grade school courses in geography?) It is viewed through such selected areas as the South, the Spanish Southwest, and the Pacific Northwest. Obviously other regions might have been selected; these have been definitely marked for us. A southwesterner in Colorado is quite different from a southwesterner in New Mexico; a child growing up in southern Idaho is much more a part of the Rocky Mountain culture than that of the states to the West. IN OUR LITERATURE, in our painting, in our architecture, regionalism has been marked, so marked that California architecture in Lawrence looks out of place, so marked that one can identify readily the regional school of painters of the thirties (even though it is unfortunate that they chose to identify themselves more as regionalists than as individualistic painters, which they were.) In our literature there has been nothing as distinctive in the 20th century as the literature of the South—Faulkner, Caldwell, McCullers, Eudora Welty, Willingham, Tennessee Williams. There also has been the California work of Steinbeck, or the New England writing of Hawthorne a century ago, or the many regional writers of late 19th century who gave so much to our tradition—Eggleston, Garland, E. W. Howe, to name only a few. The editor has done a special service in pointing to regionalism in such mighty ventures as the TVA, or such still unattempted ventures as a similar plan for our own part of the country. These have been epochal thoughts, needed for a country that is "national" but that still has its distinctive sections that have particular problems of their own. Here is a remarkable kind of book, consisting of what Aniela Jaffe, the editor, put down in a series of conversations and interviews—and Jung monologues—with the great—but very reticent—psychologist-philosopher. Today's deep interest in Jung is likely to give this book a good deal of popularity. MEMORIES, DREAMS, REFLECTIONS, by C. G. Jung (Vintage, $2.45). The interviews began in the spring of 1957, and they come out as a kind of autobiography, set down by the editor. Jung himself wrote down recollections of his childhood, at his own suggestion. He later wrote additional chapters. Other chapters were created from conversations Jung had with other doctors and from a seminar that was held in 1925. The author observes that the book is the only place in Jung's writings where he speaks of God and his personal religious experience. He came to his religion through several routes—curiosity, his conscience as a physician, childhood visions and beliefs. I AND MY TRUE LOVE, by Helen MacInnes (Crest, 60 cents)—A novel of suspense that starts out with some atrocious grammar in the title. Helen MacInnes normally drops the reader into some mess in Europe; this time the setting is Washington, the situation is diplomatic intrigue. Like her other stories, this one has excitement that will brighten a summer afternoon. STORIES MY MOTHER NEVER TOLD ME, presented by Alfred Hitchcock (Dell, 50 cents)—Hitchcock (or somebody who does the work for him) is now in print with several Dell collections, and the reader will find this an entertaining group of horror stories. Most of the names are not well known, but many readers are likely to recognize the names of Gerald Kersh, John Collier, Shirley Jackson and, obviously, F. Scott Fitzgerald. The stories are several cuts better than what the old master hands out on his television program. MURDER IN MESOPOTAMIA, by Agatha Christie (Dell, 45 cents); THE BIG FOUR, by Agatha Christie (Dell, 45 cents)Two about Hercule Poirot that go back to 1935 and 1927, respectively. For years Agatha Christie has been the favorite of many readers of mysteries; these are two of the standards. SEX: THE UNIVERSAL FACT. by Herman B. Chase (Dell Laurel, 50 cents)—A biologist's description of what it's all about. Not for the pornographic-minded. Though the detail is largely from a biological standpoint. Chase freely admits that he has placed a great stress on sex as the dominant fact in life. The author is chairman of the department of biology at Brown University. Page 3 Sunday Concerts Receive Praise from KU Camper Tuesday, July 13, 1965 Summer Session Kansan The third weekly concerts presented by the Music Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp were held Sunday, July 11. The afternoon concert, which was in the University Theatre, began with three pieces by the Concert Choir. The first was called "O Magnum Mysterium" by Vittoria. It was sung well although this reviewer found the soprano section a bit shaky. The Concert Choir ended its concert with "A Psalm of Praise" by Mabel Daniels, in which they were assisted by three trumpets, tympani, and percussion. It was an exciting piece and the instruments seemed to arouse the choir. By Jonathan Block THE NEXT GROUP to sing was the Ensemble Choir, which was made up of members of the other two choirs. They sang "Psalm CXVI" by Roberto Carmano quite well for a small group. It is hoped that either the same small ensemble or a similar one will be on a program in the future. The choir portion of the program was ended in the traditional way by the Chamber Choir, which did four pieces. They started with "Misericordias Domini" by Durante. While the Latin pronunciation was better than the Concert Choir's, I found the male parts somewhat weak. The best part of the Chamber Choir's portion of the program was "The Last Words of David." The words were easily understandable and the parts were sung accurately and spirited. After the "12-minute intermission" the Orchestra started its part of the concert with the theme song. The cellos sounded very good this week. The tone was very clear and the whole section was strong. THE NEXT PIECE was "Symphony No. 1," by Sibellius. In this, the violins repeatedly answered solos by the principal clarinetist, Steven Hartman, who has been excellent in all three concerts. The next two pieces were directed by one of this week's guest conductors, Michael Zearott, who was interesting just to watch. With his footbeat one could foretell the impending action. Everything by the orchestra was done rather well except for Schumann's "Symphony No. 4," which just seemed too difficult for the orchestra to learn in one week. AFTER THE USUAL break for dinner, the concerts resumed in the Outdoor Theatre. The Symphonic Band was first and I'm afraid that it was a disappointment. It was not as good as last week. One reason was that they played very mechanically. Their notes were, for the most part, correct, but that's all. They just played notes. The most disappointing of all was the "Ballet Parisienne," by Offenbach, where at the end of the number I felt let down. The Symphonic Band just didn't build enough. There was just no climax. In one part of the program even the famous KU Brass Choir tried to help by playing, hidden by the bushes and trees near Hoch Auditorium, but even they couldn't stay with the Symphonic Band and the result was a mess made up of a clear sounding brass choir and a not so clear sounding Symphonic Band. BUT ALAS. I'm afraid that I'll have to join the Concert Band fan club. I found them best again this week. Special congratulations are due to Kenneth Heath, who played several clear, concise, trumpet solos and Earle Drumler, Russell junior, who did a fine job sitting in for the first oboist, who was taken ill and could not perform. The Concert Band's performance was spirited, inspired, and exciting. The clarinets did an excellent job of playing together, especially in "Divertimento for Band, Opus 42," by Persicetti. It almost sounded like a single clarinet throughout the whole composition. Another section which has been doing consistently good work is the brass section, both upper and lower. They are definitely one of the strongest links of the band. The University of Kansas Theatre will open its presentation of Tennessee Williams' "The Night of the Iguana" tonight. It will run through Friday. 'Night of the Iguana Begins Run Tonight "Pop" art is definitely not popular in the art camp, or at least it isn't present in the art exhibits. "Pop" art has not played a major role in this year's art camp. The oil paintings and water colors which are now on display in the second art camp exhibit show that the camp artists definitely prefer realism or moderation in one of the more popular forms of art. Exhibit Shows 'Pop Art' Fails To Send Youths Bv Mike Shearer The KU artists annually invite all Kansas high school art students to the campus for the KU art survey. The annual conference is held every spring and usually draws quite a large number of high school artists. At that time the college art is displayed and the dominant style has been "pop" art. Last spring among the many oil paintings displayed not one even approached realism. This sharp contrast between high school and college art is unexplainable. Many of the campers will be going to art colleges all over the nation. Some will be coming here to KU to study. Will the college trends toward the abstract change their styles or will their styles change the college trends? The art displays are in the exhibition gallery of Murphy Hall and are open to the public. The second display of the summer, which is now on view, was described by one art camper as "twice as good as the first." The exhibit displays color designs, oil paintings, water colors, fashion sketches, figure sketches, nature drawings, cartoons, pastels, and other select decorations. Evidence on Minutemen Leader Given to Jury KANSAS CITY, Mo. --(UPI)—Evidence in the case of Robert Bolivar DePugh, leader of the militant right-wing organization known as the Minutemen, was presented yesterday to a Jackson County Grand Jury. DePugh is charged in a state warrant with kidnapping two young women who said he tried to induce them to join his organization as seducers of Communists. JACKSON COUNTY Prosecutor Lawrence Geepford declined to outline his case against DePugh—but witnesses presumably will include the two complainants, Miss Linda Judd, 16, and Miss Patricia Beal, 21. Mrs. Cyndra Ellen Cindy Melville, 20, and Jack Cannon, of Independence, Mo., both free on bond as material witnesses, also were expected to testify. Mrs Melville has been described by DePugh as his confidential secretary for the past several years. Cannon operates a printing shop, where he and his wife also maintain living quarters and which Gepford said served as headquarters for certain Minuteman operations. OFFICERS WHO went to the shop during a search for DePugh confiscated an assortment of weapons. DePugh later surrendered voluntarily. A private detective, George W. Robinson, said Mrs. Melville's mother, Mrs. Freida Sanders of Kansas City, attempted to employ him two years ago to investigate DePugh and the Minutemen organization. He said she told him she believed the Minutemen had captured the daughter or at least were restraining her from contacting her mother. ROBINSON SAID that at the time he regarded Mrs. Sanders' story as so fantastic that he declined to take the case. He said Mrs. Sanders told him she also had consulted with members of the police department and with the FBI but felt they were "giving her no help." "Of course I don't know what was in their minds but possibly they also thought the story too fanciful to credit," Robinson said. Medicare Hope Voiced by LBJ WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Johnson administration hopes to have the medicare bill signed into law by July 31, with the nation's elderly beginning to reap the dividends in September. Senate passage of the legislation by a 68-21 vote last Friday assured a major congressional victory for the President and enactment this session of the measure, a far-reaching plan to provide medical care for 19 million Americans 65 and over and to raise all Social Security benefits. The House passed a similar bill April 8. It now goes to a House-Senate conference committee, which will work out a compromise version, starting Wednesday. The administration was confident the differences would be ironed out. The biggest difference stems from the fact that the House bill would cost $6 billion to provide the expanded Social Security benefits and the medical health care features of the program, while the Senate measure would cost $7.5 billion. Senate spokesmen privately conceded that many of the extra features written into the Senate bill will be eliminated and the final measure will be closer to the House version. Red Dog Inn is open EVERY WEEKEND Featuring TOP ENTERTAINMENT PLUS The Students' FAVORITE BEVERAGE COMING THIS SATURDAY ONLY BOOKER T. & THE MG'S "GREEN ONIONS" and "BOOTLEG" also THE CHARMELLES – THE MAD LADS-"Tear Maker" – JANET JOY KILLER KARL KUNNINGHAM-"Death Rattle" DAVID PORTER-"Can't See You When I Want To" e 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 13, 1965 IF YOU ARE PLANNING A DINNER PARTY GROUP LUNCHEON BANQUET RECEPTION TEA or COFFEE Have It Catered The Kansas Union Food Service Offers a Complete Catering Service For Any Occasion. For Appointment Call UN-4-3509 OFFICE HOURS 10:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Catering Service KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Tuesday, July 13, 1965 Summer Session Kanean Page 5 Archeologists Probe Ancient Worlds This Summer University of Kansas archeologists are used to thinking in terms of centuries in their search for clues to the ways of life of ancient civilizations. But days and weeks are their chief concern this summer. Three teams of University archeologists are in the field—and each is battling to uncover skeletal remains and cultural artifacts of early Indian civilizations before they're lost forever under the water of reservoirs and rivers. The work is supported by National Science Foundation, National Park Service, and University grants. Ft. Riley Force Is In Viet Nam SAIGON —(UPI)— Soldiers just arrived from Ft. Riley, Kan., swarmed ashore at Cam Ranh Bay yesterday. The first men of a contingent of nearly 4,000 debarked from the transport ship USS Gordon at a crude dock constructed last month by U.S. Army Engineers. They established a bivouac area near the beach. U. S. jets streaked overhead on the alert for any Communist harassment as the troops began landing under bright skies at 9:40 a.m. The soldiers, along with artillery units, will guard an ammunition and fuel storage depot being built at Cam Ranh by the Army Engineers. Cam Ranh, 185 miles northeast of Saigon, also will be the axis of an improved railway system over which war supplies will be shipped to the front in the central Highlands of Viet Nam. PERRY RESERVOIR is the site of what Carlyle S. Smith, curator of the archeological section of the University's Museum of Natural History, terms a "crash salvage program." Smith heads a crew of 12 students digging in areas which soon will be destroyed by reservoir construction. So far, rains have slowed work, but Smith hopes to "sample several sites before we're through." Pottery, arrow heads and various cutting tools, and bones from animals hunted by Indians are among the archeologists' first prizes. RICHARD McWILLIAMS, graduate student from Oklahoma City, is in charge of the team excavating a site at Kirwin also threatened by water. An Indian village between 1,000 and 2,000 years old was located there, but this is the first time the site has been explored. Because many potentially productive sites are doomed at Perry, the Smith team has professional company this summer. KU archeologists now working at Kirwin Reservoir in western Kansas will set their stakes at Perry in about two weeks, and the Kansas State Historical Society also is excavating there now. The Kirwin work is under the general supervision of William Bass, associate professor of anthropology, who is personally engaged in a project in northern South Dakota. He, too, is working on a "crash basis" at two sites. Bass and students went to South Dakota to dig in an Indian burial area at a reservoir construction site. Then last week they learned of a burial site along the Missouri River which had been exposed by erosion. "Since exposed sites are popular among souvenir hunters, immediate action was necessary to save the remains for scientific purposes," explained William Argersinger, associate dean of faculties for research. 118 Engineering Students Make Spring Honors Listing One hundred eighteen students earned places on the spring semester honor roll of the School of Engineering and Architecture. The honor roll included the top 10 per cent academically of the School's spring enrollment. Ten of the honor roll designates earned all-A grades for the semester. They are: Thomas N. Aiken, Lawrence sophmore; Kermit W. Dyer, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; Thomas Flynn Edgar, Bartlesville, Oklahoma,莎莉a, Kansas City,Mo.; senior,Worth sophomore; John Edward Lastle, Kansas City senior; Rodney Clyde Lovett, Neodesha freshman; James A. Roberts Jr., Chanute junior; Charles Wendell app.app; more; John A. Torkornin, Horton sophomore; Gene Ward Wester, Mankato junior. Others on the Honor Roll include: William B. Anderson, Overland Park sophomore; J. Douglas Ashley, Ailing sophomore; J. Douglas Ashley, Long Long Beach, Calif.; senior; Edward D. Benson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Jesse Otto Betlak, Leo senior; Romel Cary, Rachel Cary; Carl Hughes, Brainerd, Shawnee Mission freshman; Stephen J. Brasher, Hawes- ville, Ky., freshman; Lawrence H. Brown, Lawrence, Mitchell A. Brown, Lawrence sophomore. James E. Esler, Shawnee Mission freshman; Brian Leger, Skewnee Inpope, Pomona freshman; Wily W. Flew, Pomona freshman; Max Eugene Foole, Paola freshman; Robert S. Foster, Kansas Freshman; Jeffrey J. Wellington, Wellington freshman; Joseph L. Fromne, Hoxie freshman; Stanley A. Garlick, Littleton, Colo., freshman; Frank E. Edward C. Gorman, Shawnee Mission junior. LAWRENCE E. Eurienne Bryan, Quenemoe senior; CILINO Cleo Case, Colby senior; Peter WaiChang, Sao Paulo, Brazil; freshman; Pao Ping Chang, Jackson Heights, N.Y. sophomore; Marion Dean Clark, Larned sophomore; Howard N. Cohen, Flushing, N.Y. senior; John David Dawson, R. Dreebelbs, Woodland Hills, Calif.; sophomore; Michael Allan Duncan, Olathe sophomore; Stephen L. Elmore, El Dorado senior. Lansin Gurpinar, Adapazari, Turkey, junior; Thomas E. Gustafson, LaGrange, ll; senior; Dean W. Halderson, Bartlese, Oka, Oklahoma; Hale, Hal Hall, Alabama Mo. senior; David Lee Hanz, Albuquerque, N.M., sophomore; Robert Joseph Harrop, Topeka freshman; Robert J. HeFFERon, Baltimore, Md. freshman; Richard A. Hemphill, Lawrence Mo. junior; Calvin O. Hodge, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Richard W. Holmes, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Daryl Loyd Hughers, Waverly sophomore; James Nelson Ingram, Tucumcari, N.M.; senior; Robert C. Karnes, Westfield, N.J.; senior; Richard Cooper King, Overland Park senior; Harold W. Knapheide, Quincy, Sophomore, A. Mission senior; Theodore A. Larkin, Great Bend senior; Gerald Earl Lawson, Norcatur senior; Jane Lerner, Overland Park freshman; Lennar, Overland Park freshman; William Leuenberger, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Dwayne Lee Littert, Moran school; Marvin O'Connor, Paul B. MacRoberts, East Aurora, N.Y.; Thomas Otis Maser, Dog City sophomore; Thomas McBride, Lawrence coach; Thomas H. McCrackin, Kirkwood, Wood, sophomore. James Daniel McGee, Protection sophomore; Larry George Meeker, Garden City sophomore; Leslie Duar Meyer, Kirkwood, Mo. senior; Darry Lupton, Garden City senior; Robert O. Moore, Topeka junior; Joseph D. Morello Jr., Plainview, N.Y.; senior; Donald C. Morris, Parkville, Mo. junior; Steven W. Murray, Colorado Springs, Colo. junior; Gary Jan Nichols, Leavenworth junior; Gary Ian Nielmoyer, Kansas City, Mo. senior. Roger Lee Ratzlaff, Rose Hill senior; Jerry Donald Rees, Amarillo, Tex.; senior; Edward J. Robertson, Kansas City freshman; Steven J. Robertson; City Mo. senior; Rafik El Saheb, Beirut, Lebanon; senior; Franklin L. Scammar, Tarkio, Mo., senior; Steven L. Schneider, Wauwitosa, Wise, senior; Charles C. Schooler, Leawood senior; Robert C. Schweitzer, Kansas City seni- er,ennis Lynn Shaver, Lawrence senior. Richard F. Obenchain, Pittsburgh, Pa. junior; Dennis O. Offutt, Lamar, Mo. junior; Bernd F. Ostermann, Holstein, Germany; senior; John B. Lebron, Los Angeles; Arabic; Jacobi Palmites, Caracas, Venezuela; junior; David B. Peterson, Prairie Village freshman; Larry Peterson, Kansas City, Mo. fifth year; Chi Hung Poon, Kokoun, Germany; fourth year; Governor Prather, Walnut Hill, Ill., senior; N. L. Rapagani, Mission junior. Walter Wesley Sley, Ottawa junior; Stephen K. Stearns, Prairie Village junior; Lloyd Takemori Sueda, Honolulu, Hawaii; senior, Larry Lee Suket, George Tarr, George Tarr, Bartlesville, Oka., sophomore; Grega Thompson, Benin City, Nigeria; senior, Terry Neal Tykson, Ft. Madison, Ia.; junior, Allen Leroy Vick, Kansas City junior; Donald W. Vollmer Booon-St. John University Vonder Bruegg St. John, Mo. Jr. Charles A. Warnock, Uniondale, N.Y. freshman; Wilson G. Weisert Jr., Glendale, Mo., freshman; Richard M. Wheeler, Lawrence senior; Clarence W. White, Eudora junior; Whitney White, Brian D. Donnell P. Wilkes, Bellehem, Pa., junior; John R. Worland, Orange, Calif., senior; George W. Woster, Mission freshman. IN A MATTER of hours, Bass had an "emergency" $1,000 grant from the National Park Service to hire three extra men and had begun digging to save the site for science. His findings and those of the others will be brought back to the University to help piece together a growing picture of the early American Indian and his ways of life. Some of the artifacts will be displayed in the Museum of Natural History next year. Others will find their way into other museum and teaching collections. ♠ SUA ❤ Bridge Tournament Wed., July 14th 2:00 p.m. Jayhawk Room Kansas Union C TROPHIES WILL BE GIVEN SUA FRIDAY SUA FLICKS PRESENTS "THE HUSTLER" STARRING PAUL NEWMAN, JACKIE GLEASON. PIPER LAURIE Friday, July 16 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 13, 1965 KUSeason Football Tickets Are Expected to Sell Well High sales estimates of season football ticket sales are being made by the KU Athletic Department this year. Monte Johnson, assistant athletic director, said last year's total of 15-610, including public sales and faculty purchases, could be surpassed if the present trend continues. Johnson said that as of now the athletic department has sold approximately 10,000 public season tickets, compared with the 12,041 total for last year. Fund to Assist Birth Studies Attempts to understand how the complex machinery of a new life is put together before birth—normally and sometimes abnormally — will continue at the University under a renewed research grant of $44,419 from the National Foundation-March of Dimes. Continuance of the study, begun in 1962, was announced jointly by Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, chancellor of the University, and Basil O'Connor, president of the foundation. Byron S. Wenger, associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, is project director. THE KU STUDY is one of several March of Dimes-supported projects probing the mysteries of growth and development which sometimes occur abnormally to cause birth defects. The growth of a new life, animal or human baby, from the first single fertilized egg cell to a billion-celled entity ready for birth is more than cell multiplication. The process requires cell differentiation and specialization on a precise time schedule, directed by genetic factors and influenced by environment. Wenger and his colleagues hope to pinpoint the role of certain enzymes which are responsible for nerve cell differentiation in the early growth of chick embryos. THEY WILL CONCENTRATE their studies on chicks with an hereditary crooked neck defect and stunted growth. It is possible to duplicate this abnormal condition in other chicks by injecting the yolk sac with nicotine at the proper time. The investigators hope to compare the chemical processes involved in differentiation in the two similar conditions, one produced through heredity and the other through environmental influence. This basic research at the University of Kansas is considered important in efforts to throw light on body chemistry processes that may sometimes go awry and cause birth defects. 'Right to Work Battle Looms WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The congressional battle over President Johnson's proposal to eliminate "right to work" laws in 19 states is heading for a showdown in the House, with both sides predicting victory by an eyelash. Intensive lobbying and letter-writing campaigns are being waged by the AFL-CIO, principal supporter of the measure, and the National Right-to-Work Committee, spearhead of the opposition. Spokesmen for both groups say they do not expect any dramatic developments before House debate begins July 26. The President, who has given only subdued backing to his request for repeal of Section 14-B of the 18-year-old Taft-Hartley Act, is not considered likely by either side to play a major public role during the debate. His bill would nullify state laws banning the so-called "union shop." A government official who is playing a leading role in the fight, said he was confident of an administration victory. Last year KU students bought 10,-018 season tickets. This year Johnson believes the number will surpass 11,000. The number of faculty-staff tickets sold this year is to be at least equal and perhaps surpass the number sold last year, 3,500. A sellout for the Missouri game, the big game on the schedule, is expected by Sept. 1. Ticket sales for the other games are moving well and good-sized crowds are expected at each game. Johnson said many people are buying season tickets to ensure them a ticket to the Missouri game. He added that that was the surest way to get one. He said interest has been excited and that several crowds of 44,000 and up are expected to fill the KU stadium. Busy Week Planned At Kansas Union The Kansas Union will be a busy place this week, with a dance, two movies, and two tournaments. On Thursday, a dance will be held in the Trail Room open to all summer students. On Wednesday another movie in the Classical Film series, "The Gold Rush," starring Charlie Chaplin, will be shown at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room. Admission is 50 cents. Wednesday at 2 p.m. a bridge tournament will be played, as will a table tennis tourney that evening. On Friday the Friday Flicks will be shown as usual. By transferring data on Kansas water wells to computer programs, two KU geologists will be saving thousands of man hours for their fellow workers. KU Geologists Working on Water Studies And because of their work, Charles O. Morgan and Jesse M. McNellis of the groundwater division of the U.S. and Kansas Geological Surveys have received cash awards of $350 for superior service from the Department of the Interior. "Four hours of clerical work and five minutes of computer time will now give us information that previously would have taken two months for a professional geologist to compile," said Robert Dingman, head of the groundwater division. Data on such aspects as water quality, location, and depth of Kansas wells were programmed by the two geologists at the University's Computer Center. Each spent about one year—much of it on his own time—on the project. Morgan and McNellis will report on their work during a seminar at the University Aug.16-21. Geologists from 12 states will meet at the Computer Center to learn how to develop similar programs for groundwater in their states. Morgan has been in Lawrence since 1963. Before that, he was assigned to a post with the U.S. Survey in Louisiana. McNellis joined the staff here in 1959. Derl Sherman Treff, a February 1965 graduate of KU, has joined the engineering department of the Boeing Co. in Wichita as a design progress estimator. Treff earned the B.S. in business degree. Joins Staff at Boeing Overland Park Girl, 19. Named 1966 Miss Kansas PRATT, Kan.—(UPI)—A 19-year-old Overland Park beauty representing Kansas City is reigning as the 1966 Miss Kansas. Miss Deborah Bryant was crowned Miss Kansas by Gov. William Avery Saturday night, ending a three-day competition among 30 Kansas contestants. MISS BRYANT, at 5-foot-6 weighing 115 pounds, completed her second year at Christian College in Columbia, Mo., and plans to continue her studies toward becoming a pediatrician at the University of Kansas. She will compete in the Miss America Pageant at Atlantic City Sept. 6-12 and receives a $1,000 scholarship to continue her education. 1st — Miss Narka Marie Frink (Miss Eudora), 21, of Lawrence, a senior at the University of Kansas, $450. scholarship. Runnerups were: 2ND—MISS PARMELEE BATES (Miss Lawrence-KU), 18, of New York, a sophomore at the University of Kansas, $350 scholarship. 3rd — Miss Joan Lynn Broadie (Miss Wichita), 24, of Wichita, a graduate of Southwestern College at Winfield. $250 scholarship. 4th—Miss Jacklyn Jo Settles (Miss Garden City), a graduate of Cimarron High School, $200 scholarship. Miss Bates won the Margene Savage Memorial Award as the outstanding vocalist. Miss Savage, the 1965 Miss Kansas, and her mother were killed in an auto accident May 2. View of the Beatles NEW YORK —(UPI)—A letter to the editor published in the New York Daily News offered the following tongue-twister for fans of the Beatles: "Modern moronic mopheads making musicless magnified mad mumbled moanings." Miss Bonner Springs, Lois Ann Satterfield, was voted Miss Congeniality by the other contestants. Flood Areas To Be Toured DODGE CITY, Kan.—(UPI)—A congressional subcommittee on flood control, headed by Rep. Ed Edmonston, D-Okla., was expected here last night to begin a tour of flood ravaged areas of the Arkansas River Valley. The committee will tour damaged areas near Dodge City early today before flying to McConnell Air Force Base at Wichita to inspect areas near Augusta. The committee will conduct a public hearing at 3 p.m. today at the Sedgwick County Courthouse before returning to Washington. Rep. Bob Dole, Garner E. Shriver and Joe Skubitz, all Kansas Republicans, will accompany the subcommittee. Bride Having Trouble With Wedding Gowns NEWTON STEWART, England — (UPI)— Sybil McGuffie, 22, has ordered two wedding gowns for her wedding Wednesday—and it looks like she may have to buy a third. The first one disappeared while being shipped by train from the maker in Dundee, Scotland. The second disappeared while going back to Dundee for alterations—by rail. SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Summer Schedule July 14 Charlie Chaplin in "The Gold Rush" July 21 Lon Chaney in "Phantom of the Opera" July 28 Italian Cine Classic (1914) "Antony and Cleopatra" Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) Wednesdays 7:00 p.m. Admission: 50c Su 110 Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5724 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:10 FROM SOPHIA LONEN GEORGE PEPPARD • THERNA HOWARD • JOHN MILLS RICHARD JOHNSON • TOM COUNTENAY OPERATION CROSSBOW "W the very word Loga KU, his s Granada THEATRE...telephone VI 3-784 Th swim dent thirc scho jum 1961 and rollr Next . . . "WHAT'S NEW PUSSY CAT" H C] TH due start access sion Varsity Evening Only THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 NOW! 7:00 & 9:00 JERRY LEWIS in "THE FAMILY JEWELS" B A wee acci NEXT . . . McHALE'S NAVY JOINS THE AIR FORCE" and "World of Abbott & Costello" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 60 Starts At Dusk Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.. "THE LIVELY SET" and "RIDE THE WILD SERF" Tuesday, July 13, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Summer Law Sessions Attract 110 Prospective Barristers Rv Dave Stone "We here at the school of law at the University of Kansas enjoy a very high national rating." These words, spoken by Dean James K. Logan of the school of law here at KU, sum up the Kansan pride for his state concerning the study of law. The school of law is now in full swing here, with 110 summer students. These students represent one-third of the student body of the school, which has taken tremendous jumps in the last four years. In 1961, the school had 139 students, and now has almost doubled its enrollment with 277. THIS RAPID GROWTH could be due to the interest this generation is starting to take in the legal field. The accelerated program is now in session, in which a student takes 10 Highway Crashes Claim 60 in U.S. By United Press International At least 60 persons died over the weekend in multiple fatality traffic accidents. Seven persons, including three children, died Sunday night in a head-on crash of two cars on a rural Minnesota highway. Authorities said five of the victims were from the same family. The worst toll so far recorded occurred Saturday night when a freight train crashed into a pickup truck carrying Lumbee Indians to a baseball game near Maxton, N.C. Nine were killed. Asleep in a Laundry hours during the summer, and then usually 15 hours during the regular session. RICHMOND, England — (UPI) An all-night self-service laundry here now closes at 11:30 p.m. because a girl was found sleeping in a spin dryer. These students can graduate in two full years, and three summers. For example, the students enrolling this fall could graduate in February of 1968. "Thirty students have started this accelerated program, and possibly eight will completely finish in the three summers," said Dean Logan. "Some students will start out this program, stop for a semester or so, and then resume studies when they find it best suited for them." When asked what the high school student should major in during college to prepare himself for the School of Law, Dean Logan said: "Take anything tough. By this I mean take the courses that you find difficult, because in law you are involved with every possible field. Make sure you take as broad an education as possible, with English composition being stressed. A lawyer spends more of his time writing than speaking. Also take some social and political science courses. Even psychology or economics is a very useful major for pre-law students." The KU school of law holds what are called "Moot Courts," which give the student an opportunity to argue hypothetical problems in realistic court room situations. For the advanced students, competitive trials are held between the students, with cash prizes given to some of the best argumentators. "The field of law is one of the most vast of all occupations," said Dean Logan. "A lawyer can choose his own hours, be his own boss, and still be able to have contacts with partnerships and companies." "The job of the lawyer," Dean Logan finished, "is to be a specialist in human situations." Business Directory- Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store VI2-2771 17 W.9th Hours: Mon. 2-8 - Oriental Vegetarian stop service Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 Complete one Thurs. 10-7:30 - Arabic Indian Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE STANDARD ART NEASE FOR SALE Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. New corrugated boxes—for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. tk@royds.com Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM. Olympia Olivette, Hermes. Xerox cooper Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., tf 3-6441 Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol. NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6 p.m. ff 2 sets of bongo drums and 1 set of Maracas. Call VI 3-7047 at 5:00 p.m. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies, Transparent Apples and Honey. 8 miles South. 2 West. $ \frac{1}{2} $ South of Eudora. 8-3 Sherwood AM-FM Monaural tuner, $75.00, was $140.00 new. Call VI 2-1467 after 6:00 p.m. 7-13 Epiphone Electric Guitar, Case and Amplifier. Nearly new. Also antique walnut pie cabinet. VI 3-2402. $7-1^2$ Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tf 1960 Nashua mobile home with washing room; 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, "Call VI; 3-3788. 7-13 Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 Motorcycle, 1965 Yamaha, 250 cc., Y D S 3 Big Bear pears and scramble sprocket; under 1.000 miles; carefully broken in. Call VI 3-9080 between 7-5 p.m. 7-13 MISCELLANEOUS BAR-B-QUE—Treat yourself to some real B-bar-B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B-Ribs, Ribs. 9 a.m. p.m. Phone I 2-9510. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. tf DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken und eassen German Style. Featuring students' light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer DINING+NORDED. Room available: Liter steins for sale. VI ?-9441, 14th & Tenn. WANTED Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be permitted to use these or otherwise pertened. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8595. tf roning, family or individual. Phone VI I-5735. 7-13 Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to 10 commercial illustrations for various various magazines, a small portfolio and resume to the Daily Kansan, Box 10 as soon as possible. tt TYPING Will do typing for reports, these manus- service. Call VI 2-0439. Topека students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers on topics in history, literature, or writer by experienced typist call letters. COOK, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topека. tf E SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Complete Auto Servicing - Dependable Cars Classified Ad Phone in your Experienced Ttypist would like typing in experience—term papers and letters, VI 3-2641. **if** Open 24 Hours Spacious older home for rent or for sale. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, country kitchen, large living room and dining room, cor- rison lot, 845 Ala. Call VI 3-0326. After 5:30 p.m. FOR RENT Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable and fast. VI 2-1561. For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. 11's blocks to Fraser Hall. Private kitchens, cool and comfortable facilities in study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. Call tf Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tf If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! 23rd & La. Available July 1st, furnished apartment. Prtl. large living room and larger kitchen, bath with shower, parking. $45.00 per mo. till Sept. 1st, then $55.00. Located at 19 West 14th. Phone for appointment. VI 3- 3913. 7-16 Wagner's Texaco - alterations alterations New York Cleaners Martha's of one avenue. - reweaving For the best in — - dry cleaning 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Kansan Advertisers Patronize Your OPEN 24 HRS. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING Across From The High School GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center 19th & La. VI 3-9631 Established - Experienced Complete Center under one roof 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 FREE PARKING Reading Material Supplementary Textbook Miniature Golf Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy.59 by KLWN Rd. Features Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts RELAX Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. at the Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY P The TOWN CRIER TRAVEL TIME LET Make Your Summer Reservations Now! Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Ph. VI 3-0350 HAVING A PARTY? Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. Crushed ice, candy Ice cold beverages We are always happy to serve you with ICE COLD BEVERAGES Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Hi-fi Stereos Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios - We Service All RCA Motorola Airline GE Makes - Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service 1. PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 13, 1965 Two Project Head Start Programs Are Underway The University of Kansas is engaged in two Project Head Start programs this summer. Just completed is the two-week orientation for 100 Wichita teachers, principals, counselors, nurses, home economists and social workers. These trainees now are initiating their own Project Head Start for disadvantaged pre-school age children in Wichita. Project Head Start is part of the federal anti-poverty program to prepare children from low income families for a better start in school life Fraser Work Bids Sought in Topeka Bids for moving laboratory equipment from Fraser Hall to Carruth-O'Leary Hall will be accepted in the office of the State Purchasing Director in Topeka at 2 p.m. July 22, according to Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations at KU. At 2 p.m. today, bids for razing of Fraser Hall will be received in the office of the State Purchasing Director. It is anticipated to take 30 days to award this contract. Aug. 1 is the date set for beginning construction on the new seven-story Fraser Hall which will be located east of the present Hall. The razing and rebuilding are expected to occur simultaneously. Installing equipment used by the family life department in Carruth-O'Leary and the remodeling of classrooms and faculty offices also will be included in the bids. Lawton said these offices, which presently are occupied by former Fraser Hall occupants, will be outfitted with new lighting and bookshelves. A photographer now is making controlled drawings of Fraser Hall, to be preserved in the University archives for future study. These drawings are made by special cameras which produce photographs in exact dimensions this fall. KU is one of four orientation centers in Kansas to train local personnel for the program. Margaret Cooper, instructor in family life, was director and the KU Extension Center the sponsor for the Wichita orientation. The second phase involves KU's own Project Head Start for 24 local children who will enter kindergarten this fall. The eight-week program is conducted by the department of human development and family life. Frances D. Horowitz, acting chairman of the department, is director of the project, which has a grant of $5,878 from the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity. Children in the Head Start program meet five afternoons a week at the Nursery School. Regular summer session faculty will assist with the project, which has laboratory applications to KU's teaching program. Miss Cooper defined the four emphases of the Project Head Start program as medical, relationships with existing social service agencies, education for the pre-school children, and involvement of parents. Georgian Signed For KU Football Coach Jack Mitchell has announced the signing of another allstate football player headed for the University of Kansas. Thermus Butler of Columbus, Ga., 6-2, 192, has returned his letter of intent to enroll with the Jayhawks. Butler, a flanker back and end under Coach Robert Sanders, was named the most valuable player at Carver High School. He was named to all-conference, all-city and all-state first teams. In addition to football honors Butler won varsity letters in basketball and track. He was listed on the Georgia all-state basketball team last season. The 18-year-old athlete also received prep All-American honorable mention awards for basketball. Whittington Set For Job in Denver H. G. Whittington, M.D., has resigned as director of Community Mental Health Services in Kansas to accept a position as director of psychiatry for the Department of Health and Hospitals in Denver, starting in September. Whittington was director of the KU Student Mental Health Center until 1961, when he joined the staff of the education department at the Menninger Foundation. While there he was a consultant to Washburn University, Emporia State Teachers College, and to Community Mental Health Services. In June 1962 he was made director of Community Mental Health Services. In announcing the resignation, Dr. R. A. Haines, director of the Division of Institutional Management, said, "As director of Community Mental Health Services for the division, Whittington has been responsible for coordinating community mental health services. During his three years of leadership, the number of centers has grown from 14 to 22. Weekly manhours currently provided by professional staff members in the centers is approximately double the 1962 total. "Whittington has, in addition, directed mental-health and mental retardation planning projects initiated by the federal government and has had the responsibility for planning the administration of federal funds for construction of mental health and mental retardation facilities in Kansas. The Board of Social Welfare has accepted his resignation with regret." Hackney Scholarship Awarded to Senior Patricia Ann Hackney of Wellington will hold the $300 Mabel Rogers Hackney scholarship at KU for her senior year in 1965-66, it has been announced by Bob Billings, director of aids and awards. Miss Hackney, who is majoring in psychology, held this scholarship the past two years. She also has held a residence scholarship in Sellards Hall for three years. TOUR THE NELSON ART GALLERY IN KANSAS CITY SUA will sponsor the trip TUESDAY, JULY 20 Cost: $1.00 Sign up at Information Desk at the Kansas Union before July 17. Mammals of Wyoming' Book Published by Museum at KU A 205-page book on "The Mammals of Wyoming" was published today by the Museum of Natural History. Charles A. Long, the author, is assistant professor of zoology at the University of Illinois. A native of Pittsburg, Kan., Dr. Long worked on the book from 1959 to 1963 while a graduate student here. Long recorded 167 kinds of mammals native to Wyoming. This large number is due to the fact that Wyoming is the home of two aggregations of mammals, those of the Rocky Mountains and those of the Great Plains, Long said. THE BOOK, WHICH is technical in nature, may be obtained at cost,$3.25, from the Museum of Natural History. "The University of Kansas was the best place to write the book," Long said. "Two-thirds of all the study specimens saved from Wyoming by natural history museums of the world are in the KU museum." Wyoming was used as an "outdoor laboratory" for the advanced KU students for seven consecutive years. The large collection of study specimens was one result of the training E. Raymond Hall, director of the museum and Summerfield distinguished professor of zoology, explained the choice of Wyoming. The topographic diversity allowed students to become familiar with animals of five life-zones ranging from sagebrush desert to arctic-alpine areas above timberline. No other equally satisfactory area was nearer Kansas, and little information was on record about the animal life of Wyoming. program. "WHATEVER WAS learned would fill a gap in zoological knowledge," Hall said. "Dr. Long has completed the project by studying the specimens and field records, organizing the data, and publishing the information that is new," Hall said. "This enables the scientists of today to take up where those of yesterday left off." Hall and A. B. Leonard, chairman of the zoology department, led the first field party to Wyoming in 1945. The work was continued through 1951, when the collecting phase was completed, by museum staff members E. L. Cockrum and Russell H. Baker. "Night Of The Iguana" Tuesday, July 13 Through Friday,July 16 Admission: $1.50 KU ID Redeemable at Box Office syrreet65 presents Starts at 8:20 For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 UNIVERSITY THEATRE Last Time Tonight "A DAY IN THE LIFE OF AN AUTHOR" AND "ESCURIAL" Summer Session Kansan 53rd Year, No.9 Friday, July 16, 1965 Lawrence, Kansas Famed Silver Coffee Pots Being Shown By Hugh Tessendorf The Museum of Art is displaying, for the first time in a university showing, the Folger Coffee Co. collection of antique English silver coffee pots. A. Bret Waller, curator of the museum, said: "This collection is among the finest collections of its kind in the country, or anywhere." MISHAH TAHAR MOHAMED RABBIN There are more than 200 pieces of silver in the collection, representing the great age of English silversmiths, so far as coffee service goes. Some of the greatest silversmiths are represented in the collection, along with 114 other smiths of the time. THIS SILVER dates from 1700 to 1830, during which time designs and styles were set and have not been changed over the many years. One of the many reasons that the style has evolved is that when the French Huguenots came to England they also brought their silver styles and patterns with them. Some of the better-known silversmiths represented are William Charnelhouse, smith of the Queen Anne coffee pot, London, 1704; Thomas Gilpin, who formed the George II coffeepot in London in 1750, and Hester Bateman, the leading woman silversmith during the 18th century. Other women represented in the collection are Dorothy Sarbit and Rebecca Eames, Paul de Lamerie and Paul Storr have numerous pieces in the collection. T THE COLLECTION also includes more pieces than just coffee pots but has small novelty items such as miniature coffee pots. These $2\frac{1}{2}$-inch tall pieces of silver were made either for children to play with or as models of the particular silversmith's work. Waller said he did not know the value in dollars and cents of the collection but did say it was quite valuable. Even though he did not know the price, he said, he could make a rough estimate but that the dollar sign appears in the picture and reduces the value of the silver for its beauty. GEORGE III COFFEE SERVICE—These antiques, made in the late 18th century, are part of the Folger Coffee Co. collection of antique English silver coffee pots now on display at the KU Art Museum. Park Plaza South Is Racial Drive Focus By Phil Higdon A major focal point of the drive against discrimination in off-campus housing is the Park Plaza South Apartments, 1912 West 25th. The situation began in January when Robert L. Reynolds, a KU sophomore, issued a complaint that the manager of Park Plaza South had refused to rent him an apartment on the explicit grounds that he was a Negro. A series of telephone calls and negotiations between the local chapters of CORE and NAACP and the owner of Park Plaza South, Jim Vestering of Burns, followed the initial complaint. Unsatisfied with the results of their meetings, CORE and NAACP decided to picket the Park Plaza South office in April. They continued picketing until recently. RICHARD L. BURKE, professor of human relations and Lawrence CORE chairman, stated that, as far as CORE was concerned, the situation had not changed. "We're still attempting to negotiate with them to change their policy." Burke said. He added that they were in a fact-finding and planning phase and that they would continue the project in early fall, although he did not say what action would be taken. Burke said there were reasons for stopping the picketing. Because of the summer vacation they felt there wasn't sufficient manpower to picket. Also, he said, other projects were taking the time of CORE people still in Lawrence. "WE FELT most of the tenants of the Park Plaza South knew how the situation was," Burke said, "and they weren't getting many new applications in the summertime." The human relations professor also said there was a "news blackout" in the Lawrence Journal-World, which "afforded no publicity in the wider community." Burke also stated that they had received information that it probably was a much much larger problem than they had originally assumed. He said it was his understanding that Vestering and a group of others owned a group of other apartments as well as the Park Plaza South and that the problem was not limited to just this one establishment, but extended to many of their apartments south of 23rd Street. "WERE ALSO upset that a new social sorority at KU has agreed to live in one of those apartment buildings while the apartment complex is maintaining its discrimination policy," Burke said. "Our hope would be that the management of Park Plaza South would, on its own accord, stop the discrimination policy in Park Plaza South and in their other apartment buildings." Burke concluded. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Supple, managers of Park Plaza South, assumed their duties the first of July, and are new to the situation. Supple said he knew nothing about the problem. SUPPLE SAID he felt that the situation would have to be "taken in stride" when it came. However, he added that he had no discriminatory feelings toward Negroes. He said that while the situation was strictly up to Vestering, the owner, he himself would not object to renting apartments to Negroes. "We would not discriminate against anyone," Mrs. Supple added, When Vestering was called in Burns he denied that he had any interests in other apartments. "THE OTHER apartments are owned by entirely different groups," he said. "We have an inter-relationship-share common interests, but they have their own property, and I have mine." Vestering said. He also objected to being "singled out." "I think CORE has singled us out and that the Kansan has, too," Vestering said. "The record speaks for itself. This is a problem among all the different apartments. I don't like being discriminated against any more than they do." he added. Vestering suggested that the prob- (Continued on page 6) Guest Conductor at KU Is Dedicated to Music for Youth By Mike Holder Ever since the Midwestern Music and Art Camp began, it has prided itself in the great guest conductors it has been able to obtain for the students of the camp. Most of the arrangements for these conductors in the past and present were made as early as October and most were completed by January. Conducting this Sunday's concert will be Harry John Brown, music director and conductor of the Milwaukee Symphonic Orchestra. Brown has instructed the Orchestra, Concert Band, and Symphonic Band all this week in preparation for the Sunday concert, which is expected to be one of the finest ever to be presented at the camp. When Brown was five, his mother, a former prima ballerina of the Chicago Opera, gave him a baton. With a musical score spread before him on the living room floor, he would "conduct" the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts. WHEN HE WAS 13, he organized a band of his schoolmates, and by the time he was 15, the group had grown into a 65-member orchestra. At 16 he won a New York Philharmonic Young Composer's Award for a tone-poem entitled "Arizona," and when he was 17 the Eastman School of Music awarded him a composition scholarship. In 1942, when he enlisted in the Army, Brown's command of languages (German, Czech, French and Russian) earned him a place as a frontline interpreter and interrogator. Later, his work as director of the famous G.I. Symphony, which followed a 500-concert tour of a choral group, The Gleemen, which he organized and conducted, led to guest appearances conducting the Nuremberg, Munich, and Vienna orchestras. All this was by the time he was 21. AFTER THE WAR Brown completed his studies at Eastman, won his master of arts degree from the University of Chicago, and studied during the summers with Koussevitzky at Tanglewood. In addition he found time during the winter to conduct orchestral and choral concerts in Chicago and direct the Elmhurst College Music School. He also became conductor of the Tri-City Symphony in Davenport, Iowa, where for five seasons he pioneered in community orchestra work. He later became the first musical director of the Evansville, Ind., Mesker Memorial Amphitheatre, guest-conducted the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and was associated with Helen Traubel as conductor and arranger. IT WAS WHEN Brown was making a guest appearance with the Boston Pops Orchestra in Boston's Symphony Hall that Arthur Fiedler came back at the intermission to engage him as associate conductor for the Boston Pops Tour Orchestra. In the two seasons he was on the road with that group, Brown conducted some 45 to 50 concerts in as many cities. Following this experience the Manhattan Concert Orchestra was formed for him, and several coast-to-coast tours averaged more than 25 cities a month. These tours included concerts in Mexico and Canada. In the spring of 1958 he was closely associated with the homecoming of the famous Texan, Van Cliburn. His rehearsal of the orchestra prior to Kondrashin's arrival in this country was no small contribution to the success of the concert in Carnegie Hall. A CONCERT in the Milwaukee Auditorium, with Cliburn as soloist and Brown as conductor, brought the latter to the attention of the president and board members of the Milwaukee Orchestra and led to his engagement as music director and conductor of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. Although he puts in a 14-hour day, seven days a week, in the interest of the Milwaukee organization, he found time to conduct seven Firestone programs on nationwide TV during the 1962-63 season. While he has done work in building a major orchestra for Milwaukee's music lovers, it would seem that the happiest phase of Harry John Brown's musical life is that which he dedicates to bringing music to young people. Everywhere he goes Brown arranges for special concerts for them, starting at the age of three. IN DAVENPORT, Iowa, and Moline and Rock Island, Ill. he established a children's series, going to the outlying schools when the children could not be transported to the urban centers. When he was associated with Arthur Fiedler he conducted many of the young people's concerts, and now, in Milwaukee, he is determined that no pre-school child shall be untouched by the great spell of music. By going into the schools and talking to the young people (he addresses some 40,000 of them annually) Brown successfully transfers his own enthusiasm to them. As an alumnus of Interlochen, Mich., Summer Music Camp he returned this year, upon invitation of Dr. Joseph Maddy, to the newly established academy to conduct a Spring weekend concert. It would be hard to determine who was more thrilled by the experience, the group of young musicians or Harry John Brown. THERE IS NOTHING pedantic about Brown's approach to music for young people. They first must enjoy what they see and hear—the instruments, the rhythms, the melodies. Analysis of the music will come later. A Christmas Kinderkonzert in Milwaukee is a never-to-be-forgotten sight. On Nov. 4, 1963, it was announced that there would be a concert for small children on Sunday, Dec. 22. Before the day was over the tickets were sold out and a second concert was scheduled for the same day. Early in December the second concert was sold out, with a long list of disappointed applicants for tickets. Most exciting of all was the fact that the children were loath to leave the magical land of music. THE REGULAR young people's concerts, sponsored by the city of Milwaukee, are presented the day after each Pop Concert. Mr. Brown has introduced such artists as Yehudi Menuhin, Ruggiero Ricci, Richard Tucker, Eileen Farrell, Rise Stevens and Frances Yeend to these audiences, never playing down to them but rather respecting the fact that they are ready for the very best. It is the hope of Harry John Brown that every child, every teenager, every young adult will be reached in some way, in some place by the divine "sound of music." Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 16, 1965 Be Tolerant of Us... Fiery youth in hot summers, topic of an editorial in the July 9, 1965, Kansan, was a treatise of nostalgic bewilderment on the activism of college youth. The sentiments expressed were representative of most disillusioned, forty-ish liberals. But the author committed the eternal sin of adulthood: he generalized about youthful activists. FROM TIME ETERNAL every human movement has had its extreme on right and left. Personalities have always tainted the motivation and morality of a cause. Yet, in retrospect, none of us would condemn the abolitionists, the suffragettes, the humanists and untold generations of "reformers" for the clearer image of justice they have given us. And they certainly had their share of rotten apples in the personality barrel. Disillusioned liberals and confused elders, we ask only that you see our motivations and goals. Be tolerant of us. For, like the Church, our humanity may put us in error, but human and divine morality are on our side: (1) For the first time in history, the younger generation has time to be concerned with the state of human injustice and poverty. We have full stomachs, cars, education and unlimited possibilities for skilled jobs. There is no depression and the nation is not embroiled in war. The major dangers to life and limb are reflected by highway statistics and the draft call.And we have plenty to say about the morality of the latter concerning Viet Nam. WE CAN AFFORD to be human beings before we are knee-deep in crabgrass, diapers and mortgage payments. (2) Contrary to public myth, most of us youthful activists have a creed. We are Christians, humanists or existentialists. And it makes no difference if we are "deciding for the whole world," concerned for the welfare of our fellow man, or heeding Christ's call to discipleship—our beliefs commit us to social involvement. We need no apologetics for that commitment. (3) We see the tragedy of your situation and hope to escape it. Your motives were more economic than moral, and a depression and a warmuted your ideals. Many of you became embittered cynics; others were lulled into nostalgic reminiscence about their hell-raising days. PERHAPS YOUR dampened enthusiasm also came from your lack of numbers. More of our generation is involved, and most of those who aren't give us their passive support. That's what morality does for a movement. We can thank you disillusioned liberals for the heritage you left us. But we're saddened because you left us. THEREWOULDNT be nearly so many battles left to fight if you had kept the drums beating. And perhaps your bewilderment about my generation wouldn't be as engulfing and guilt-ridden. If you had stuck to your guns, you see, we wouldn't HAVE to be a Generation of Causes. Jacke Thayer The Voice of a Generation To most of the present university generation, Adlai E. Stevenson was our chief ambassador to the United Nations and a man historically known to have run twice against Dwight D. Eisenhower for the presidency. To some of us a little older he was the most inspiring political leader of his time. We mourned and bemoaned the fact that the American voters did not have what we termed "the good sense" to choose him over Eisenhower. Many Americans preferred him in 1960 to John F. Kennedy, and some of them tried to put him over at the Los Angeles convention. Stevenson came to us in 1952 as something refreshing after the platitudinous Republican convention that had just nominated Eisenhower and the worn-out years of the Truman administration that were just ending. He gave us an education in government in the 1952 campaign. He made us see that there was nothing inherently disgusting or disgraceful about being a politician. His wit and his good taste were the high points of the entire election campaign. Someone, probably his advisers, tried to put him over in a different way in 1956, talking common sense to us over the barnyard fence, that sort of thing. We could believe it when Eisenhower talked about parity as he caressed a cow's back. With Stevenson it made him look uncomfortable, and it made us feel uncomfortable. We thought he'd go on forever, hole in shoe and all. American life—and certainly American politics—are lessened by this good man's passing from the scene.-CMP U.S. Is Chinese Target, but So Is Soviet By K. C. Thaler United Press International United Press International LONDON - (UPI) - Communist China's anxiety to get the United States out of Viet Nam is being matched increasingly by Peking's determination to remove the last Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business office UN 4-3646, newsroom Jakee Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager ...girl Business Manager University, Daily Kick-Ass regular session) founded 1889, been 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. remnants of Soviet influence from Southeast Asia. RUSSIA IS NOW being accused of secretly passing to the United States detailed lists of its arms supplies to Communist North Viet Nam, and of aligning its strategy with that of the United States behind the backs of its Communist friends and allies. China's anti-American designs in Asia have been discernible for some time, but lately its propaganda machine has been geared to an all-out effort to undermine Moscow's prestige in Asia. It is as if the United States accused Britain of co-operating secretly with the Communist Viet Cong in South Vietnam Nam. Albania in its official organ has gone on repeating the charges against the Kremlin's alleged ganging-up with the American "imperialists." The enormity of the charge is self-evident and its potential damage to Russia incalculable. AS IN THE PAST, Peking is using tiny Albania, its staunchest ally, as the mouthpiece for its attacks on the Soviet. The Russians seem helpless against this type of campaign. All they have been able to do is to reiterate their willingness to help the North Vietnamese. An even tougher battle is being waged currently in the diplomatic sphere, in Hanoi itself. DIPLOMATIC REPORTS from the North Vietnamese capital say Peking is pushing openly for the elimination of what remains of Soviet political influence over the regime of Ho Chi Minh. Without really giving North Viet Nam a great deal of concrete aid, Peking has managed to intimidate the North Vietnamese government sufficiently to counteract politically the more sizeable Soviet assistance. The Kremlin staged a comeback in Hanoi earlier this year when its leaders flew there for confidential talks. But the success was short-lived. Despite the fact that Soviet supplies have since been stepped up, Moscow's political influence in Hanoi is waning again. THE LATEST indications from Peking point to Red China's firm determination to eradicate Russian influence from Southeast Asia and, more immediately, to prevent the Soviets from establishing themselves in Viet Nam as either a political or military factor. This is yet another reason why Red China is opposing a Viet Nam peace conference. Peking fears Russia would play a key role at the conference table, along with the United States, and it does not want Russia to become once again one of the major guarantors of a political settlement of South East Asia, as it was at the 1954 Geneva conference on Indochina. RUSSIAN GOVT. MAO U.S. GOVT. GERALD FORD ©1945 HERBLOCK "Don't Be Chicken —— Let's Have Some Action!" BOOK REVIEWS DREISER, by W. A. Swanberg (Scribner's, $10). So far, W. A. Swanberg has picked some of the most unlikeable of subjects for his biographies—dirty old Jim Fisk, the extravagant publisher William Randolph Hearst, and now Theodore Dreiser. And the author, who gave you some feeling for liking Hearst, never seems to suggest that his current subject is a man of stature, someone worth admiring. Or the relationship of Dreiser, himself, to Clyde Griffiths, hero of "An American Tragedy." Dreiser's cheap and materialistic values were those that finally brought disaster to Griffiths. Yet the man never really received the education or the family environment necessary to escape personal tragedy of his own. Then came success—of a sort. "Sister Carrie" was published but held back, for the most part, for almost a decade. The censors gave Dreiser considerable trouble, especially for the semi-autobiographical "The Genius.'" Dreiser made friends, notably H. L. Mencken, but didn't know how to keep them. A POOR FAMILY, a pious father, a gay and loose-living mother, hard times, drifting from city to city, and Dreiser always looking for the quick, impressive, easy kind of job—this is the pattern. There was good fortune in a teacher who sent Dreiser to Indiana University. There was valuable experience on newspapers in the beginning days of yellow journalism. Probably the people who read Dreiser's novels today are mainly students in American Lit. classes. There they plow through the awkward constructions and the ghastly grammar and the cumbersome paragraphs, but they still come out with (or they should, at least) an overpowering feeling for the man's strength and insights. "DREISER," FOR THE MOST part, is not a conventional literary biography. It's about the man, not the books. Scarcely a plot line of the novels is provided, though we are led through the maze of Dreiser's dealing with publishers and fighting to get "Sister Carrie" recognized and suing Paramount Pictures for ruining "An American Tragedy." And we are pointed to real-life parallels—Dreiser's careful documentation of "Tragedy" and the relationship of "Sister Carrie" and "Jennie Gerhardt" to Dreiser's own sisters. Yet always a giant in American letters. How his books call for the copy pencil! But the copy pencil might have ruined the substance of this hulking, unlovely giant, as it might have ruined Thomas Wolfe. Swanberg's biography gives us a nearly full picture of the man, and readers should find this a book worth reading and keeping.-CMP HE HAD ONE LOVE affair after another. His marriage was a failure. He was a plagiarist. He was vain and grasping and domineering and selfish. He was politically naive, joining the Communist party late in life. THE THIRD DAY, by Joseph Hayes (Crest, 60 cents). The pattern actually is familiar; bright young man who suddenly realizes he doesn't know who he is and has the job of finding out. There's enough excitement here to last most readers through a summer evening of reading-if you can bust yourself away from the TV reruns. Psychological thrillers are the standard thing these days, and Joseph Hayes, who wrote "The Desperate Hours," is one of the best practitioners of the genre. "The Third Day" has something else in its future—a big push because of the movie version coming soon. WHAT NEXT, CHARLIE BROWN?, by Charles M. Schulz (Crest 40 cents)—Another collection of delightful episodes from "Peanuts," which is probably the best—and funniest—thing going in the comics today, and that includes "Dick Tracy." So D The cover statel bassy the s collar Wedn LOI venso joined men i bier c untim ed the Vic rey gation to bri States He s about STH 34; B silent with John Am stood falqu masse TH incom group or so Davi stairs The ficial London the s to W in Na A rine, up p Briti The bassy and build THE ter f book were In that ond- Unit fill t vens Pli ambapost A ton i appe until gani curr knov point then A is a 1932 Friday, July 16, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 3 eable gant And beems eone mainly in theumber-dd, atights. leryan one of size of arrie" american care- Car- zero of values man nec- ed but its gave graphencken, other, ing for There niver- ning was a domi munist y, and the best use in its all for ostance homas of the keep- diddenly ing out. a sum- the TV (Crest manuts," comics © ARNOLD NEWMAN Adlai Stevenson . . . mourned by millions. Sons, Leaders Mourn Death of Stevenson LONDON —(UPI)— Adlai E. Stevenson's three griefstricken sons joined American and British statesmen in mourning at the flag-draped bier of the eloquent diplomat whose untimely death shocked and saddened the free world. The coffin lay atop a catafalque covered with purple velvet in the stately lobby of the American Embassy here not far from the place on the street outside where Stevenson collapsed and died of a heart seizure Wednesday. STEVENSON'S SONS — Adlai III, 34; Borden, 32; and John, 29—stood silently at the bier, their faces filled with bereavement. Adlai III and John linked arms with their wives. Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey led the official Washington delegation assigned by President Johnson to bring the body back to the United States for funeral services and burial. He stood with his head bowed for about 30 seconds. American and British service men stood vigil at each corner of the catafalque. Flowers, mostly white, were massed at the foot of the bier. THE STEVENSON sons, almost inconsolable with grief, stood as a group behind the coffin for a minute or so, then joined U.S. Ambassador David E. K. Bruce in his office upstairs. The family, Humphrey and the official American delegation arrived at London airport at 6:20 a.m. EDT on the sad mission. The plane flew back to Washington for the funeral today in National Cathedral. A mixed guard of U.S. Army, Marine, Air Force and Navy men took up positions around the bier. Two British servicemen joined the guard. The two American flags at the embassy entrance were draped in black and the Stars and Stripes above the building flew at half staff. In Washington it was announced that Francis T. P. Plimpton, the second-ranking U.S. diplomat at the United Nations, would temporarily fill the void left by the death of Stevenson. THE PUBLIC was permitted to enter from a side entrance to sign a book of remembrance, but mourners were not allowed to view the bier. Plimpton, 64, is the deputy U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, a post he has held since 1961. A LAWYER by profession. Plimpton is not expected to be required to appear before the United Nations until September, when the world organization is scheduled to end its current recess. Officials said it is not known whether Johnson would appoint a successor to Stevenson before then. A graduate of Harvard, Plimpton is a native of New York City. From 1932 to 1933, he worked for the Reconstruction Finance Corporation in Washington. But most of his career has centered around the law firm of Debevoise, Plimpton, and McLean. Buckman Elected To Library Post Thomas R. Buckman, director of libraries at the University of Kansas, has been elected to a four-year term as director-at-large of the Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association. Buckman for the past year has held a Guggenheim fellowship for the study of the book trade in Scandinavia and certain developing nations in Africa. He will return to KU at the end of the summer. Roy L. Kidman, former science librarian at KU and associate Librarian at Tulane University, is the new chairman-elect of the ACRL section on agriculture and biological sciences. He is now biomedical librarian for the University of California at San Diego. The "apparent low bidder," according to Lawton, was the Champney Wrecking Co. of Topcake. Its bid of $28,670.37 has been "taken under advisement," which means that the administration will have 30 days in which to decide whether to accept the bid. Bids for the razing of Fraser Hall have been received and released by Keith Lawton, vice chancellor of operations. Fraser Razing Bids Are Received Other bids received were from the Ace Wrecking Co., Kansas City, Mo., $39,754; from the B&G Wrecking Co., Kansas City, Kan., $52,750; from the Amalco Wrecking Co., Kansas City, Mo., $54,464; and from the Parker Wrecking Co., Oklahoma City, Okla., $62,380. It pays to look your best. Sunday's Program of Concerts Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 Concert Choir and Chamber Choir James Ralston and Clayton Krehbiel, Directors Sunday, July 18 Gene Kenney, Guest Conductor p.m. University Theatre Concert Choir Hodie Christus natus est ... Poulenc No Man Is an Island ... Berger Evening ... Kodaly Go, Lovely Rose ... Stevens Four Slovak Folksongs ... Bartok Listen to the Mockingbird ... Kubik Mr. Kenney conducting Chamber Choir Salve Regina ... Lassus The Eyes of All Wait Upon Thee ... Berger Three Shakespeare Songs ... Vaughn-Williams Full Fathom Five The Cloud-Capp'd Towers Over Hill, Over Dale Rainsong ... Bright It is Good to be Merry ... Berger Mr. Kenney conducting Orchestra 12-Minute Intermission Gerald Carney, Director Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Symphony No. 2 ... Pozdro Third movement, Allegro Rondo Giojoso, for string orchestra ... Pozdro Mr. Carney, conducting Toccata and Fugue in D Minor ... Bach-Stokowski Firebird Suite ... Stravinsky Introduction and Dance of the Firebird Rondo Infernal Dance Berceuse and Finale Mr. Brown, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Harry John Brown, Guest Conductor m. KU Outdoor T Symphonic Band Mr. Brown, conducting Polonaise from the Opera “Christmas Night” ... Rimsky-Korsakov-Duthoit Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring ... Bach-Cailliet King Orry ... Haydn Wood Music for a Carnival ... Grundman Crown Imperial ... Walton The Battell ... Byrd-Jacob The Trumpets The Buring of the Dead The Marche to the Fighte The Flute and the Droome The Souldier's Dance St. Lawrence Suite ... Gould Commemoration March The Klaxon ... Fillmore Mr. Bloomquist conducting Concert Band Jubilation Overture ... Ward-Leist Royal Fireworks Music ... Handel-Sartorius Overture Bouree La Paix Menuet Allegro Shepherd's Hey ... Grainger Finlandia ... Sibellus-Cailliet Mr. Brown, conducting St. Michael Archangel from "The Church Windows" ... Respighi-Pendergraft Excerpts from "Manzoni Requiem" ... Verdi-Mollenhauer The Purple Pageant ... King Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley, conducting --- SUA FRIDAY FLICKS PRESENTS SUA "THE HUSTLER" STARRING PAUL NEWMAN, JACKIE GLEASON PIPER LAURIE Friday, July 16 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 16, 1965 Fine Arts School Lists Three New Professors Three professorial level appointments to the School of Fine Arts have been announced. J. Bunker Clark, who taught last year at the University of California at Santa Barbara, will assistant professor of music history and literature. New Albrechts Due on Campus The Albrechts are coming to KU. But Dean William P. Albrecht of the Graduate School isn't guilty of negotism in the appointment of two unrelated Albrechts to the University of Kansas German faculty. Dr. Erich Albrecht, the better known of the two, will be a full professor. He has been chairman of the department of German at Tulane University since 1957, is an authority on 18th century German literature and German-American literature, and is editor of the American section of the Standard German Literary Bibliography. He is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University and taught at the University of Nebraska and Wittenberg College before going to Tulane. Fritz Albrecht, who will be a lecturer in Swedish, has been lecturer at the University of Lund at Uppsala, Sweden. Wichitan to Receive Hackney Scholarship William L. Burnam, a Wichita junior majoring in chemistry, has been awarded a $200 Ed T. Hackney scholarship for next year. The award is financed through a $5,000 gift to the Endowment Association by the late Mabel C. Hackney of Wellington in memory of her husband, a KU alumnus. Burnam, who also held a Hackney scholarship last year, has held a residence scholarship in Pearson Hall his first two years at KU. Ernesto Lejano, a visiting lecturer last spring, becomes visiting assistant professor of piano. The "visiting status stems from his Philippine citizenship and not from temporary appointment. Edward L. Kottick, who has taught at several conservatories of music and Alma College and the University of Iowa, will be visiting lecturer in music history and literature. He will handle the courses of Dr. Milton Steinhardt, who has a Guggenheim fellowship for musicological research in Europe. Clark received bachelor and master of music and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan in 1954, 1957, and 1964. He was an instructor at Stephens College, 1957-59, held a Fulbright fellowship to Cambridge University in England in 1962-63, and then taught at California. Lejano received the bachelor of music degree from Santo Tomas Conservatory in Manila in 1954 and taught there for four years. He also holds the diploma from the Royal Conservatory in Madrid, Spain, and the master of music and Ph.D. degrees, the latter in 1965, from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester. Kottick received the B.A. degree from New York University in 1953, the M.A. from Tulane University in 1959, and the Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina in 1962. To South Dakota Post Carrol M. Mickey, holder of two degrees from the University of Kansas, will return to the University of South Dakota faculty this fall as chairman of the department of sociology. He previously had headed the department from 1955-61 before undertaking special assignments in the area of gerontology. Mickey attended Metropolitan Junior College in Kansas City, Mo., and received the A.B degree from KU in 1936 and the M.A. degree from 1941. Three conferences for continuing education and service to the public are highlighting the University of Kansas extension program this week. Three Extension Sessions Are Held The United Steelworkers of America have gathered from several states to consider union matters of organization, legislation, arbitration, changing technology and world markets. Speakers have included Ted Ruhig, assistant director of labor education, Roosevelt University, Chicago; Raymond G. Dickow, managing editor, Educational & Benevolent Association, Inc., Chicago; Emery Bacon, director of education, United Steelworkers of America, Pittsburgh; Henry Wade, Washburn University, Topeka; E. C. "Bill" Buehler, KU professor emeritus of speech and drama; Dan Hopson Jr., KU professor of law, and representatives of the United Steelworkers of America. The institute ends today with a Labor Management graduation dinner featuring Lloyd McBride, director. District 34 of the United Steelworkers of America. St. Louis. Also this week, county welfare directors and case supervisors from over the state held a three-day Social Welfare Workshop. The focus was on new dimensions in the public welfare administrators' role and new methods of tapping community resources. Speakers were Thomas G. Bell, executive director, Colorado State Department of Public Welfare, Denver; Mrs. Mildred Johnson, sales executive, speaker and author, Prairie Village, and Marvin E. Laron, director, Kansas State Department of Social Welfare. Engineers and architects studied the design of steel framed high-rise buildings at a KU conference this week. The lecture series introduced new methods of designing such buildings on the advice of leading consulting engineering offices. Speakers included Kenneth H. Lenzen and Nicolas Willems of the University of Kansas engineering faculty. Ballet Camp to Present Campus Concert July 31 The 1965 ballet camp session, under the direction of Mrs. Marguerite Reed, ballet mistress and choreographer with the Tulsa Opera Ballet Company, and Larry Long, guest artist, choreographer and teacher with Ruth Page's Chicago Opera Ballet, will present its annual concert July 31. A La Baroque (Long), Handel, THE DANCES that will be presented are listed, with the choreographer's and the composer's name following, respectively: This production will present the students on a professional level. Their work will be a representative of different musical and choreographical stages. Bach, Mozart; La Plus Que Lente (Long-Reed), Debussy; Incredible Magician (Long), Piston, L'Image (Long), Ravel; Der Rosenkavalier (Reed), Strauss; Radical 6.000 (Long), Povlene; Beautiful Galatea (Reed), Von Duppe; Rhapsody (Reed), Rachmaninoff-Paganini; Soiree Militaire (Long-Reed), Saint-Saens; Americana (Reed), Gould; Reverence (Reed), Grainger. Mrs. Reed said these may be subject to change. The concert will be held in the University Theatre, with music under the direction of Gerald M. Carnev. This production will be taped for television as has been done previously. "THE MUSIC MAN" Original Cast Recording Mono or Stereo BELL'S 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Daily Deliveries Anywhere In Town OPEN NITES TILL 8:30 THE RED DOG INN is open EVERY WEEKEND featuring TOP ENTERTAINMENT PLUS The Students' FAVORITE BEVERAGE THIS SATURDAY ONLY BOOKER T. and THE MG'S 'GREEN ONIONS' and 'BOOTLEG' also CHARMELLES – THE MAD LADS- 'tear maker' – JAN KILLER KARL KUNNINGHAM- 'death rattle' DAVID PORTER- 'can't see you when I want to' Friday, July 16, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 UNIVERSITATIS KANSAS STATE UNIV. Treat Yourself to the Luxury of Pewter-like Mugs-for only $4.95 The Kansas Union Book Store has just received a shipment of Pewter-like Mugs for you to enjoy. Why not get your mugs and ashtrays today while the supply lasts. They'll make great gifts and naturally you'll want one for yourself. A pewter-like mug is only $4.95 and matching ashtrays are $2.10 at the Kansas Union Book Store. You'll find these mugs have all the characteristics of pewter, but are more durable and reasonable in price.And they become cold in 10 to 15 seconds when immersed in ice or ice water. kansas union BOOKSTORE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 16, 1965 --- Evening Din Signals Summer Recreation The din of little children shouting can be heard atop Mt. Oread every week-day starting about 7 p.m. and quieting about 9:30 p.m. The activity is a regularly held and supervised recreational session just east of Robinson Gymnasium, intended especially for the elementary age children of anyone who wishes to bring them and even to participate themselves, according to Reginald Straight, associate professor of physical education and coordinator of the activity period. The children and other persons who participate are not the only Heliopsis, Not The Helianthus Laymen in this area might mistake the Heliopsis for the Helianthus, but KU botanist Dr. Andrew M. Torres wants the one that resembles the sunflower but isn't. Helianthus is the sunflower family, and Heliopsis is a similar Kansas wild flower that is smaller and more orange. Torres will be gathering the Heliopsis around Lawrence to compare with Philactis seeds and stocks he collects later this summer in Mexico and Guatemala. His purpose under a National Science Foundation research grant for $27,900 is to determine any relationship between the Kansas and Mexican Heliopsis and the Mexican Philactis. Torres will culture seeds from the two species in the KU greenhouse and attempt to cross them genetically. He also will make biochemical comparisons to determine any common compound patterns. Determining the relationships between the two will lead to a more accurate taxonomy or classification. In a three-year study, Torres will use techniques which have proved successful in his earlier research on zinnias and may tie in to a broader group classification from prior research. Torres said the gross morphology and chromosome pairing numbers indicate the Philactis and the Heliopsis may be related. He will be accompanied on the field trip to Mexico by Raymond C. Jackson, professor of botany, who is doing research on the evolution of the Haplopappus. The Haplopappus is a Helianthus, or member of the sunflower family. Park Plaza一 (Continued from page 1) Icm could best be solved by working with all the apartments of the area collectively instead of individually. He pointed to an upcoming meeting of the Off-Campus Housing Placing Committee, and said he felt that groups like this could work better with the problem. "Id be much more co-operative if CORE would work with all the apartments and not just Park Plaza South," he said. VESTERING emphasized that he felt no prejudice against the Negro race. However, he also said that he believed he would have lost some other tenants if he had rented to Negroes. Vestering also indicated that he believed the new managers of Park Plaza South could make a difference. Earlier, he had said the former manager, Mr. Amess, was a major block in the situation because of his attitude toward Negroes. "If the situation could be worked out." Vestering said, "I'm sure they (the new managers) could be of help." "This is a mutual problem," he concluded, and again emphasized that the problem was not peculiar to his establishment. KU Graduate to Teach At Illinois University Harold E Boyd, a June graduate, will join the faculty of Illinois State University at Normal as assistant professor of art in September. The school is near Bloomington. ones who benefit from the activities. One purpose of the playground is to serve as a laboratory for elementary school physical education students under the direction of Straight. The playground activities class, which numbers about 30, is separated into groups of six or seven students each. They receive experience in supervising and working with the youngsters as part of their class work. The youngsters take part in games of low-organization, or those involving only a few rules and the basic athletic skills. Anyone else who wishes to participate, young and old alike, can take part in shuffleboard, volleyball, aerial tennis, badminton, horseshoes, or croquet. A special feature of the playground is the outdoor movies held each Friday beginning at 8 p.m. The movies are of an educational nature, featuring a number of topics concerned with sports or travel. The evening recreational activity is not a new activity on the campus scene. It was started about 30 years ago by former basketball coach and director of athletics, Forrest C. "Phog" Allen. Square dancing was an important and popular part of the program then. Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 ENDS TONIGHT — "OPERATION CROSSBOW" Starts Saturday . . . Peter Sellers Peter O'Toole Romy Schneider Capucine Paula Prentiss and least but not last Woody Allen and guest star Ursula Andress What's New Pussycat? Released thru UNITED ARTISTS TECHNICOLOR* THIS PICTURE IS RECOMMENDED FOR ADULTS ONLY Ursula Andress What's New Pussycat? Varsity Evening Only TEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Tonight & Saturday "MCHALE'S NAVY JOINS THE AIR FORCE" "World of Abbott & Costello" GUF Recognized For Alumni Gifts Starts At Dusk Starts SUNDAY... BURT LANCASTER in "THE TRAIN" It will carry you to the peak of adventure! The Greater University Fund of the University of Kansas has won recognition for the second time in three years from the United States Steel Foundation and the American Alumni Council. TONIE & SAT... "I WAS A Teenage Frankenstein" "FRANKENSTEIN 1970" DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 “THE GREAT ESCAPE” "McCLINTOCK" TONITE & SAT... Sunset Sunday & Monday — The KU fund received an honorable mention award and cash prize of $125 for sustained performance of alumni giving among public institutions for the year 1963-64. Indiana University and Douglass College were other public institutions recognized for sustained performance. In the 1962 national competition, the KU Greater University Fund won the grand award for improvement of alumni support among public institutions. The American Alumni Council determines the honores through its Survey of Annual Giving and Alumni Support. The United States Steel Foundation provides financial support for the program. Tonight's Movies Three movies will be shown east of Robinson gymnasium at 8 p.m. today. They are "Ireland: Ile Sports," "A Million Lites Shall Glow," and "Fishing Fantastico." Robert R. Sokal, professor of statistical biology in the entomology department, will be wearing thin the cement from the housefly genetics laboratory to the computation center. Professor Will Continue His Study of Housefly Luckily it's not a long campus distance between the two, and Dr. Sokal has made the trip often in past years to coordinate several different research projects at once. This fall Sokal will continue study on the genetics of the common housefly. This 15-year project to determine heredity factors which make the housefly resistant to insecticide control has been largely supported by U.S. Army Research contracts. In addition to this $19,636 renewal contract, Sokal has received a National Science Foundation grant of $6,900 for one year's study on the methods for the analysis of geographic variation data. The primary purpose of this grant is to bring K. R. Gabriel, lecturer in statistics at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, to KU for three months' research. IN 1956 the University and the office of the surgeon general, Department of the Army, established a housefly genetics laboratory on the KU campus. This is the only such laboratory in the United States, and only two others exist in the world, one each at universities in Japan and Italy. THIS CONTACT was established when Sokal was a Fulbright lecturer at the Hebrew University in 1963. Although Sokal is primarily interested in geographic variations which apply to insects, he knows these variables can be applied as well to studies of human population, weather prediction and other research. Already Gabriel's geographic rainfall variation studies have led to successful Kansas rainfall predictions, and they expect more applications after further computer analysis. Sokal is internationally known for his pioneer work in numerical taxonomy, a statistical method of classifying biological species which has aroused much controversy in the scientific world. He will be assisted in the housefly genetics study by Frank Sonleitner, assistant professor of entomology; Edwin H. Bryant, National Science Foundation pre-doctoral fellow, and two technicians, Mrs. Margaret Schweda and Mrs. Bernice Lillegrave. He Carefully Considered All The Facts And Then Chose Once Laundry Our exclusive SANITONE dry cleaning proved unequaled in benefits. SANITONE flushes away embedded soil that wears out fibers . . . adds special fabric finishes for softness . . . and removes stains scientifically. SANITONE is the only method of cleaning recommended by clothing manufacturers. Why don't you look into it? LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 1 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 CIA Calls College Youth With Sense of Dedication By Robert Lovelace "Your successes are unheralded—your failures are trumpeted . . But I am sure you realize how important is your work, how essential it is—and in the long sweep of history how significant your efforts will be judged." These are the words of the late John F. Kennedy, speaking to the personnel of the Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA calls for young men and women with a high sense of patriotism to their country. Their responsibilities are to collect, digest, collate and interpret the great amounts of intelligence material gathered from all parts of the world. The task of the CIA is to synthesize what is known, study the facts and to present the truth so it may be used to form the policies of the United States. THE KU CAMPUS is not without its own branch of the CIA. Like many colleges and universities across the country, KU has a CIA recruiting staff. The recruitment is open to graduate students in such fields as science, languages, history, political science, economics, administration and other fields. The job of the recruiter is to seek out interested graduate students who specialize in needed fields. After an interview with the recruiter, the student goes to Kansas City to take preliminary tests. If the applicant is successful in these tests, he is taken to Washington, D.C., where he will undergo a battery of tests for three days. The first two days the applicant will take both oral and written tests on language aptitude, intelligence and general knowledge of history, business and politics. On the third day the student will be in hearing with a psychiatrist, who will determine his character and motives. Friday, July 16, 1965 CIA WORK is highly confidential and continually under review by the President and the sub-committees of the Senate and House. The material of the CIA plays a major role in the formation of policy. The Career Training Program offered by the CIA is directed toward graduate students and college seniors who have completed their military service. It also is aimed at the graduates who now are employed in other fields but wish to attain a career in intelligence with the CIA. It provides for two years of basic training and controlled, on-the-job training. To apply for an appointment with the CIA recruiter a student should contact the College Office. Nearly 250 art campers went by bus to Kansas City Wednesday to visit Swope Park and the Nelson Art Gallery. Prof. Arvid Jacobson and several of the art faculty accompanied the camp artists on the all-day field trip. They spent the morning sketching "captive" models—the animals of the Swope Park Zoo. Many campers took pen and ink and sketch books but most confined themselves to pencil sketching. Art Campers Visit Zoo and Gallery They ate prepared lunches in the park picnic area before boarding the buses to visit Nelson. After a guided tour of the gallery, the campers spent an hour viewing the gallery on their own. Business Directory Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store Vegetarian Arabic - Indian - Oriental 17 W. 9th VI2-2771 Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri. Sat. 10-6 stop service Complete one Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE VI 3-9897 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. MISCELLANEOUS Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thu-Fri. or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8595. tt Have an apartment? Looking for a roommate to share expenses for the 1965-66 year? Grad. student in history would like to hear from you. Contact Darrel Bigham, 1252 Tremont St., Roxbury, Boston, Mass. 02120. Tel. 617-4854-883f. BAR-B-QUE—Treat yourself to some real Bar-B-QUE at Mich. St. Bar-B-QUE, Ribs, Ribs, Ribs, Ribs, Ribs. 11:00 p.m. Phone IV 2-9510. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. tf DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken und essen German Style. Featuring students' light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwiches ADDITIONED. PAD available; Liter steins for sale. Vi 2-9441, 14th & Tenn. WANTED 2 sets of bongo drums and 1 set of Maracas. Call VI 3-7047 after 5:00 p.m. Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various magazines, portfolios and resume to the Daily Kansan. Box 10, as soon as possible. tf 601 Mass. A tutor for modern Greek. Need right away. Call VI 2-0084. 7-20 FOR SALE New corrugated boxes--for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. tku@univie.edu Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol 348, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6:00 p.m. Vf Typewriterists—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM, Empra Oliveille, Hermes. Xerox copiers 10c. Encurement Typewriter, 700 Mass., t. 3-644. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies Trans- 2 West, 1/2 South of Eudora. 8-3 Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tf Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 Large Electric SMC 400 typewriter with carbon ribbon—like new—will sell for $1/2 price—accept reasonable trade up to $100.00. Excellent for theses. VI 2-1546. VW SED, 1963, all equipment, new sale. So now any VI. 2004-78 Sed. So any time. VI 2004-78 1960 Opel sedan. Body damaged but in mechanical condition. $125 C. 7-30 2-2265 7-30 FOR RENT Available July 1st, furnished apartment. Prl. large living room and larger kitchen, bath with shower, parking. $45.00 per mo. till Sept. 1st, then $55.00. Located at 19 West 14th. Phone for appointment. VI 3- 3913. 7-16 Nice apartment, very near camps for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tf Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable and fast. VI 2-1561. ff For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double, 1½ blocks to Fraser Hall. Private kitchens, full-size paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. Spacious older home for rent or for sale. 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, country kitchen, large living room and dining room, cor- fice. 454 Ala. Call VI 3-0286. After 5:30 p.m. Experienceienced Typlist would like typing in terms—term papers and letters. VI 3-2651 SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! - Dependable Cars Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers - Complete Auto Servicing Open 24 Hours If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! 23rd & La. Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I, VI 3-7485. Waqner's Texaco VI 3-0138 Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher, WHI passed theses and pierced. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at VI 3-8262. if Will do typing for reports, theses, manifi- service. Call VI 2-0439, efffected Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers are asked to write for a writer by experienced typist, call Mrs. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sipea, Topeka tf HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. NewYork Cleaners for the best in — - dry cleaning - alterations - reweaving For the best in— VI 3-0501 Across From The High School 19th & La. 926 Mass. VI 3-9631 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. V1 3-2921 Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Supplementary Textbook Reading Material Greeting Cards, Gifts Features Established — Experienced Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday The TOWN CRIER Miniature Golf RELAX at the 912 Mass. 图示:飞机在空中飞行。 JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Make Your Summer Reservations Now! TRAVEL TIME LET MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Ph. V1 3-0350 HAVING A PARTY? LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY We are always happy to serve you with 616 Vt. Chips, nuts, cookies ice cold beverages Variety of grocery items Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Crushed ice, candy OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changer Changers Radios Transistors Car Radios RCA - We Service All Makes - Motorola GE Airline Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 16, 1965 SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW—The old lamps on the KU campus are being replaced. Harold Timperly, workman for the Capital Electric Co., Leavenworth, replaces the old lamps with the new. Light Fixtures Changed at KU Another new modern architectural advance has been made on the KU campus. The old campus light fixtures along KU streets and sidewalks have been exchanged for new ones. The new lamp fixtures are of a modern design and are termed "mushroom light fixtures," according to Harold Timperly, Seneca, Kan., who is employed by the Capital Electric Co. of Leavenworth, Kan. Capital Electric was commissioned to change the 74 light fixtures. Among the reasons given for the change were that the fixtures would be more efficient and more modern, would require less maintenance costs, would permit better ventilation, the bulbs would be easier to replace, and they would offer better light. Week Outlined For Campers Many events will keep campers busy July 16-19, beginning with the movie "Cimarron," which will be shown in Templin cafeteria at 7:15 p.m. Friday. All campers are invited to the junior high concert Saturday afternoon in the University Theatre; concert attire is worn. It will begin at 2:30. At 8 p.m. a change of pace will be provided when a hootenanny is held on the all-purpose court. Sunday holds the usual events: 10 a.m. chapel in Swarthout Recital Hall; a Jewish Service (time and location will be announced in the dorms); the Choir and Orchestra concerts beginning at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre; and the Band concerts beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Outdoor Theatre. Next week will begin with the Camp Council meeting at 6:15 p.m. Monday in the Templin Hi-Fi Room followed by floor meetings at 9 p.m. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS TOUR THE NELSON ART GALLERY IN KANSAS CITY SUA will sponsor the trip TUESDAY, JULY 20 Cost: $1.00 Sign up at Information Desk at the Kansas Union before July 17. Three KU Students Killed In Car-Truck Collision Three KU students were killed Tuesday when their motor car and a tractor-trailer truck collided about a mile east of Linwood in Leavenworth County. The three, all 22 years old, apparently were returning from Lawrence to their homes in Kansas City. They were on a wide, level stretch of K-32 highway. DEAD AT the scene were the driver, Lonnie L. Manuel, graduate student, and a passenger, Terry L. Matthews, graduate student. The third, Terry L. Smith, senior, died on the way to St. Margaret Hospital. sidedwipe the compact car, striking it about at the driver's door. All three were graduated from Argentine High School and were friends through their KU careers. Matthews and Manuel were graduated June 7. Matthews was contracted to begin teaching English at Wyandotte High School this fall. Eldon Miller, highway patrolman, said the truck driver reported he pulled up behind a farm tractor, then swung into the eastbound lane to pass. The flatbed trailer truck MILLER SAID two tow trucks worked about an hour to free Manuel and Matthews. Smith was the first one removed, but died on the way to the hospital. Funeral services for Matthews are being held this morning at 10:30 at the Simmons Chapel, Kansas City, with burial in Chapel Hill cemetery. The Smith services were held at 2:30 p.m. Thursday, with burial in Chapel Hill Memorial Gardens. Services for Manuel are at 1:30 p.m. today in Maple Hill cemetery. Law Graduate Given National Recognition Wayne E. Wallace of Wichita, a June graduate of the School of Law, has been awarded the Bureau of National Affairs subscription for the most consistent progress in his final year of study. The "United States Law Week" year's subscription is valued at $120. UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents "Night Of The Iguana Last Time Tonight Admission: $1.50 KU ID Redeemable at Box Office square 65 Starts at 8:20 For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 Thursday - July 22 POLISH TOUR GROUP Friday — July 23 HIGH SCHOOL SHOWCASE Summer Session Kansan 53rd Year, No.10 Tuesday, July 20, 1965 Lawrence, Kansas No Time to Just Rest In Summer on Oread For many, summer is a time of rest and recuperation, but KU continues to function throughout June, July, and August. Summer enrollment is up about 18 per cent to 5,250—approximately 40 per cent of the previous fall's enrollment of 12,344. An additional 5-206 persons are attending 51 workshops, clinics, and conferences for no academic credit—teachers, bankers, steelworkers, clergy, legal secretaries, peace officers, school bus drivers, and hospital administrators to name only a few. They meet on campus for periods ranging from a day to a week to three months. SUMMER INSTITUTES and workshops supported by federal grants totaling $257,368 are being conducted for high school and college mathematics teachers, radiation biologists, history and geography teachers, and outstanding student scientists. Summer also is the camp season, and the University's Music and Art Camp is providing six weeks of intensive training for about 1.400 junior and senior high school youths, talented in the sciences, ballet, journalism, speech, theater, music, and KU Orientation Center Begins The oldest foreign student orientation center in the United States opened Saturday at the University of Kansas for 57 students from 19 lands. The 8-week program is financed by a $39,000 contract from the U.S. State Department. The visitors will study the English language, the U.S. educational system and American civilization to prepare for a year or more of study at some U.S. college or university. J. A. Burzle, chairman of KU's department of German, is center director, as he has been since the program was placed here in 1950. Thirteen students from Japan, 12 from Okinawa and seven from Egypt are on the roster. Other lands represented are Honduras, Afghanistan, Tunisia, Haiti, Congo, Somali, Paraguay, Ecuador, Chile, Yemen, Colombia, Nepal, Cameroon, Thailand, Turkey and Viet Nam. Other eight-week orientation centers this year are at Bucknell University and the University of Arizona. Shorter sessions are scheduled at Texas, Hawaii, Indiana, Minnesota and Yale universities. Assisting Burzle is a staff of 12, all from the University of Kansas except Gordon Bennett of Gustavus Adolphus College and Miss Catherine Zeliff of the University of Wisconsin, a KU graduate from Baldwin. MU Boys' State Chief Has KU Scholarship The 1964 governor of Missouri Boys' State and delegate to Boys' Nation has been awarded an Ed T. Hackney scholarship to KU for 1965-66. He is Joseph Cornelison, Maryville. Mo. TERRAL, Okla. — (UPI)— Linda Gunter, 18, was pleased as punch yesterday with her new title as queen of the Terral Watermelon Festival, except for one thing. She is allergic to watermelons. The $200 award is income from a $5,000 endowment created by the late Mrs. Mabel C. Hackney of Wellington, Kan., in memory of her husband, a KU alumnus. Mrs. Charles R. Bell of Maryville, Mo., is a daughter of the Hackneys. Problem for a Queen art. Sunday afternoon and evening concerts are a popular campus attraction for parents and visitors. Four theater productions, led off by "The Music Man," are being well attended. THE YOUNGER SET have their activities, too — an evening playground open each week night east of Robinson Gymnasium. Thirty to 50 youngsters are attracted nightly to the play opportunities, which serve as laboratory training for University students taking a school recreation course. Another 3,000 of the more than 4,000 new undergraduate students who will be enrolling at the University next fall are attending KU Previews this summer to take placement examinations and discuss their programs with advisers and administrators. Summer also is a time for visiting, and KU gets its share of persons dropping by to see the campus and to browse through the popular museum exhibits. THE TRAFFIC office reports that 3,211 drivers obtained visitor's passes at the five traffic control stations during June, about 1,000 more than the average during the regular school year. The Museum of Art entertains about 500 visitors a week during the summer, and the Museum of Natural History has about 250 guests each weekday and between 700 and 1,000 on Sundays. A major summer activity is constructing new and remodeled facilities for future influxes of students. Work is progressing on a $1.45 million physical education building and matatorium, a small addition to the Kansas Union and a 680-student residence hall. McCollum Hall, a new 976-student facility, is being readied for occupancy by students returning in September. BIDS HAVENT been received yet, but work is expected to start later this summer on a new $90,000 botany research building and a major remodeling of chemical engineering facilities in Lindley Hall. Laboratory and technical equipment plus classroom and office space for the family life department will be installed in Carruth-O'Leary Hall. And bids for razing old Fraser Hall were received July 13 to make way for the new $1.65 million Fraser. Faculty offices are being renovated, and new roads and sidewalks are under construction. Everything is being rushed toward readiness for an enrollment surge to nearly 14,000 students at Lawrence. Summer is a busy time, but the fall promises to be even busier. Kansas Peace Officers Will Come to KU School Lawton Says Stall-Permit Plan Is Fair By Shelley Bray Students who lament the lack of parking spaces have no cause for complaint, according to Vice Chancellor Keith Lawton. According to figures released by the Traffic and Security Office, there were 4,930 parking permits issued this year, and 4,590 parking spaces on the campus. However, Lawton stated, this is as it should be. LAWTON SAID the car owners are never in the same place at the same time, and thus more parking permits can be issued to accommodate a greater number of parkers. "We don't sell space, just access to a lot," Lawton continued. "If a lot is full, and the car owner must park elsewhere, he is not penalized. If he is given a parking ticket in such a case, he may take it to the Traffic Office and it will be remitted." According to the Traffic and Security Office, parking permits are issued because space around buildings is limited, and the state will not finance parking areas. To establish lots, maintain them, and maintain traffic control stations, it is necessary to charge for the use of the lots. SALE OF PARKING permits and revenue from parking tickets provides funds for the maintenance of traffic facilities. Sale of parking permits pays the salaries of clerical help in the Traffic and Security Office, maintains the traffic control booths, and buys such supplies as flashlights, files, forms, and permit stickers. In the 1964-65 fiscal year, $48,932 was obtained from sale of parking permits for these uses. Revenue from parking tickets provides the maintenance of parking lots and control booths. Sometimes this money is used to construct new parking facilities. Last year $32,777.75 was collected from parking tickets. Coup d'Etat at KUOK [Picture of a man with short hair and glasses, wearing a suit and tie.] Members of the journalism division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will take over KU's radio station, KUOK, Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 8:30. The camp broadcast will be heard in Lewis and Templehalls only. Darrel Holt, assistant professor of speech and drama, will supervise the youngsters. Dan Partner Sr. Dan Partner Sr., news editor and space military affairs writer for the Denver Post, will address the Journalism Camp Thursday. Denver Editor To Give Talk Partner will arrive early in the morning to speak to the 20 journalism students. Partner's son, Dan Partner Jr., is attending the camp. Partner is a graduate of El Dorado High School and Kansas State University. In college Partner was a varsity letterman in football. Following his graduation from K-State, Partner worked for the Manhattan Mercury-Chronicle in Manhattan, Kansas. In 1938, Partner went to work for the Kansas City Star as sports editor. He served in the Navy as an officer during three of his years with the Star. Partner has worked with the Denver Post since 1946. He started as a sports writer and was sports editor, general assignment man, rewrite man, picture editor, assistant news editor, news editor, and has held his present post since 1960. Apology to Museum The Folger Coffee Co. collection of antique English silver coffee pots will be shown Aug. 6.Sept.26 at the KU Museum of Art, and is not now on display, as was reported in the Friday, July 16, Summer Session Kansan. In connection with the showing a reception will be held at the museum from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 19. A week of school begins July 26 for about 150 peace officers at the University of Kansas. It is the 19th annual Kansas Peace Officers Training School for law enforcement and correctional officers sponsored by the Governmental Research Center and University Extension and the Kansas Peace Officers Association. The program, which will draw its participants from Kansas and surrounding states, is divided into three sections: Applied Police Science I, Applied Police Science II, and the Correctional Officers Seminar. APPLIED POLICE Science I will be offered to law enforcement officers with less than four years' experience and no equivalent training. It is broad in scope and covers subjects important to new officers, including accident investigation, arrest procedures, and preservation of the crime scene. Applied Police Science II is an intermediate course for officers with several years of experience or previous training. It includes forgery investigation, supervision methods, and interrogation of suspects. The keynote address for the police sessions will be given by Chief Clarence K. Kelley of the Kansas City, Mo., police department, who will speak on police ethics. OTHER SPEAKERS will include Atty. Gen. Robert Londerholm of Topeka; Dr. Karl Neudorfer, Wichita pathologist; Lt. Col. Allen Rush of the Kansas Highway Patrol in Topeka; Carl White of the National! Automobile Theft Bureau in Chicago, and Frederick Knoblich, supervising inspector of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in Kansas City. Speakers will include Dr. Harold J. Mandl, a clinical psychologist from Topeka; Hubert H. Raney, a federal jail inspector in El Reno, Okla.; Glenn C. Peterson, director of supervisory training for the Bendix Corp. in Kansas City, Mo., and Clifford Lobel, director of nursing services, Division of Institutional Management in Topeka. The Correctional Officers Seminar for prison and jail personnel will cover such subjects as transportation of prisoners, supervision problems, and managing disturbed persons. The case study approach will be combined with small group discussions. The seminar will be held for the first three days of the school and will be conducted in cooperation with the Director of Penal Institutions. HRC exists,but Its Rights Role Is Still Evolving Bv Kit Gunn Civil rights activity almost invariably attracts publicity. This is certainly true for KU; recent demonstrations have thrust to prominence such groups as CORE, the NAACP, the CRC and the official University UHRC. But at least one organization has failed to rise in influence during the long, hot summers and discontented winters: the Committee on Human Rights of the All Student Council. The HRC, as it is abbreviated, was formed as a permanent committee of the ASC by Bill No. 19, passed March 7, 1961. The bill was signed by Lynn Anderson, then president of the ASC; Jan Wise, then secretary of the organization; and W. Clarke Wescoe, chancellor. THE BILL STATES that "the purpose of this Committee shall be to work alone or in cooperation with such organizations in the City of Lawrence as are appropriate to study the various and complex problems involving personal liberty and Human Rights." Whether the HRC has indeed done this is difficult to ascertain, as records of the organization are scanty. Apparently the major recent work of the HRC was a comprehensive survey of student attitudes on matters including racial problems. Titled "An Experimental Attitude Survey," the project was conducted in 1963. The last remaining copy of the report on this survey disappeared last year. Leo Schrey, Leavenworth junior and president of the ASC, has attempted to locate this copy but has not as yet succeeded. WHILE THE MAIN projects of the past are missing, the routine records of the HRC seem to be nonexistent. The HRC bill specifies that the organization shall publish a report at the end of each operating year stating the committee's findings. This report, to be published by the publications committee of the ASC, was to be kept in "Watson Library, the ASC Office, and the Dean of Student's Office." Copies of a mid-year report of either 1962 or 1963 and a few other documents of the HRC are in the ASC files. None of these publications nor any other publication of the HRC can be found in either the Dean of Students' office or Watson Library; neither staff was aware that anything was ever published. DEFINITELY NO report was published for the 1964-65 operating year, said Schrey. The reason for this, Schrey stated, was that virtually no business was conducted these last two semesters. Irving's concept of the HRC is as a mediator rather than an organizer. But the future may not be as dismal as the past, according to Jeff Irving, Lionia, N.J., graduate student and chairman of the HRC for 1965-66. While he admits that the HRC has "stayed behind" in the civil rights field, he is optimistic about the prospects for development. The committee should be the place for the first hearing on cases of discrimination, acting as a "clearing ground" for complaints, he said. Then its function will be to "study and suggest" to the ASC and the administration's UHRC. "OUR COMMITTEE will have to work more closely with the UHRC." Irving stated. He said that relations with the administration had been "good but not frequent enough." He explained that the first task before the organization was to become better coordinated with the UHRC, and to be represented on it. The HRC has no seat on the UHRC. Irving is the only ASC member on the committee. The other members, appointed from the student body, are Charles Turpen, Omaha senior; Mary Halloran, Topeka junior; Penny Prill, St. Louis junior; Jerry Bean, Abilene sophomore; Dan Austin, Salina sophomore, and Charles Joseph, Potwin sophomore. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 20, 1965 The Perils of Criticism We're in trouble again, here on the Kansan. They (the complainants shall remain unidentified) don't like some of the things one of our young men has been saying about the Sunday concerts. Now this young man is named Jonathan Block and, like our complainants, he has opinions. He hasn't liked the Symphonic Band as much as some of the other things he hears on Sunday. Jonathan's views seem sound enough: opinionated, but then he's supposed to be. He doesn't seem wildly irresponsible. He has a little trouble with his commas and subject-verb agreement, but then that's a familiar ailment of the race, afflicting even some students in the gifted student program and probably touching a Fine Arts major now and then. We understand that he can read music, which puts him a notch ahead of some people who set out to review concerts, and some who criticize newspapers, for that matter. JONATHAN NEEDS to know that he's not the first person to get us in trouble. Over the long years on Mt. Oread (I soon go into my 15th) the Kansan, which is, after all, only a student newspaper, has made many people unhappy with its criticisms, including some members of the journalism faculty. But we've felt that criticism is one function of the press, so we keep letting our students review plays and concerts. We suppose there's some complaint because Jonathan isn't old enough. We'll say to that, first, that it seemed healthy for a member of the Midwestern Music and Art (and now Journalism, by the way) Camp to try his hand at criticism of his peer group (good sociological term). We'll say, second, that our observation would be that for some folks a critic is old enough to criticize only when he says the right things and doesn't make anyone unhappy. This means that Brooks Atkinson, who has retired from criticism, never was old enough. Nor, we suppose, was Bernard Shaw. THE WAYS OF A CRITIC are troubled. But occasionally he comes up with a nice way of saying things: Like Eugene Field: "So-and-so played the king. He should have played the ace." The New Yorker, reviewing a book called "The Sooner to Sleep": "Most prophetic title of the year." Time magazine, reviewing "Huckleberry Finn," a 1939 movie: "Mickey Rooney vs. Mark Twain." He also can say some stupid things: Like a student I once knew, commenting on "A Streetcar Named Desire": "It stunk." Or a Kansan reviewer of "Richard III": "The cast did as well as it could with the stupid play." THEN THERE'S Walter Winchell, who had spoken too harshly of plays at the Shubert theaters. "I have been denied tickets to openings at the Shubert theaters. Now I can wait a night and go to their closings." Or John Steinbeck, who bought ads in the New York newspapers to protest the critical shutout (deserved, in all likelihood) of a Steinbeck play called "Burning Bright." Jonathan, perhaps, can be denied seats at the Sunday concerts. How, we don't know, but the thought might be percolating somewhere. That would deny him, of course, the opportunity to hear some good music. Or maybe some bad music, too, because the fine young people who blow horns and things in the bands and orchestras are likely to hit sour notes on occasion. Or have trouble with their semicolons when they write their English themes. WELL PROBABLY go on reviewing plays and music, and getting nasty phone calls and nasty letters. We remember what a speech professor said once last winter: "We're not asking for nice reviews. We just want someone from the Kansan to review our shows so the kids'll know what somebody else thinks." Now there's an attitude we'd like to frame. Come back, Gordon Beck! We need a friend. -Calder M. Pickett, Professor of Journalism Our Finest Spokesman I felt a little like I did November 22, 1963. The difference was that I hadn't expected my sorrow to be quite this deep when Ambassador Adai E. Stevenson died. He, and President Kennedy before him, were only men—but the imprint each has etched on history is as sharp and clear as that of a mighty army. Their army was a philosophy of justice, peace and good will. They were condemned for being "unrealistic and impractical." But both served by inspiring a coming generation and molding the ideals of pragmatists after their time. Together they have left a heritage of truth and beauty to nations of children yet unborn. "America has lost . . . her finest spokesman." It is not yet too late for America to hear his voice. — Jacke Thayer Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telophone UN. 4. 2398 businesses Telephone UN 4-3198, business UN 4-3646, newsroom Jacke Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager Jake Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. WELCOME TO TOXIC JUNCTION CAUTION: THERE'S A POSSIBILITY OF INJURY HERE CONGRESSIONAL COMPROMISE © JF HERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST Warning BOOK REVIEWS THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME, by Victor Hugo (Signet Classics, 75 cents). In unabridged form comes a paperback edition of one of the greatest novels of all time. Some prefer to use the title Hugo gave the novel, "Notre Dame de Paris." Under that title it is able to convey much more the probable intent of Hugo, that of depicting the great cathedral and the medieval church. "The Hunchback" is the popular and familiar form, made even more so by the frequent film versions of the story. As in "Les Miserables," Hugo provides considerable French history and social comment. For "The Hunchback" is more than a story of the bellringer of Notre Dame, the gypsy dancer, and Claude Frollo the priest. It is a well-rounded story of medieval Paris, with all its drama, excitement and viciousness. Hugo masterly gives us a picture of a mob action, the torment of the deformed Quasimodo, the color and light of the city and the cathedral. Some classics seem unreadable to the modern reader; this one deserves the wide audience it has had for so long. LAST LETTERS FROM STALINGRAD, translated by Franz Schneider and Charles Gullans (Signet, 60 cents)—Part of the contents of seven bags of mail from the remnants of Hitler's 350,000-man Sixth Army at Stalingrad. These letters were seized by the German high command, which found them too damaging to the Nazi cause to be delivered. After the war the letters were captured, and 37 of them have been translated and collected in this interesting new volume. Gen. S. L. A. Marshall writes, "These letters bare for us the soul of the combat soldier in his worst hour. Amid the encompassing blackness, there is also a tenderness hardly less than sublime. The writers were Germans, in that hour our enemies. But who may read and not weep for them?" Vintage, which has brought out other volumes of O'Neill's plays, provides here six of those short plays that for the most part preceded the great era of O'Neill in the American theater. SIX SHORT PLAYS, by Eugene O'Neill (Vintage, $1.65). "Before Breakfast" dates to 1916-1917, "The Dreamy Kid" to 1918 and "The Straw" to 1918-1919. "Gold" and "Diff'rent" appeared in 1920, when O'Neill was bursting forth on the New York stage, and Welded" appeared in 1922-1923, after he had arrived. That O'Neill was our major theatrical talent is probably unnecessary to say, even in an age that is more interested, perhaps, in Albee or Williams. These plays, unfortunately, do not reveal the true greatness of O'Neill. But even in his weaker plays there were strength and power, as is apparent in these curiosities. They believe that the general reader also will find much in this book. This is possible; it is not likely that such a reader will turn to this when he can turn more easily to television or to the latest novel by Irving Wallace. But all readers could find insights here into how men of other ages have tried to deal with the troubling problems of their times. Here, largely for the scholar, is a book of readings in Epicureanism, Stoicism, Skepticism and Neoplatonism. The editors are of the department of philosophy at San Jose State College. Their aim is to offer a convenient introduction to the four philosophies of what they deem the first "Age of Anxiety" in the western world. JOHNSON'S DICTIONARY: A MODERN SELECTION, by E. L. McAdam Jr. and George Milne (Modern Library, $2.45)—The famous dictionary of Dr. Samuel Johnson that is so delightful to scan through it could almost eat up the time required by reading a novel. The editors, in fact, seem to have sensed that the entertainment value is as high as the scholarly value, and offer it to the reader in that vein. Johnson does a special service, too; in defining words he takes examples from the masters of literature: "dogcheap. Cheap as dogs meat; cheap as the offal bought for dogs. 'Good store of harlots, say you, and dogcheap? Dryden.'" H. M. Burton has selected writings of Shaw and has provided an introduction and notes to go with them. He has chosen from Shavian commentaries on education, music, theater, religion, politics, and his youth. BERNARD SHAW: A PROSE ANTHOLOGY, edited by H. M. Burton (Premier, 75 cents). HELLENISTIC PHILOSOPHY, edited by Herman Shapiro and Edwin M. Curley (Modern Library, $2.45). Bernard Shaw was more than playwright, as the fascinating prefaces to his dramas attest. He was satirist, essayist, critic, philosopher and wit, and he challenged many of the standards and values of his day. THE VIKING, by Edison Marshall (Dell, 75 cents)—Wild nonsense by a writer who has turned out a full shelf of historical nonsense. The hero is Ogier the Dane (Kirk Douglas, say); the heroine is a Welsh princess, Morgana (Sophia Loren, maybe, and forget the Italian accent). There are excitement, savage fighting, passionate love, mythology, fantasy, adventure, and all in all a lot of amusement before hero and heroine set forth for "the new world" of America. SECRETS OF THE HEART, by Kahil Gibran (Signet, 60 cents)—The Lebanese poet who wrote the widely popular "The Prophet" also wrote this largely autobiographical work, in poetry and prose, which shows the reflections of Gibran relating to life and its meaning. He attempts to point the way to peace and serenity by blending the tasks of life with man's endless search for truth. Summer Session Kansan Page 3 Tuesday, July 20, 1965 his tory collo l its at of ca this anz* con- nem se to them them mume al of iterers d not lays. pre- 1918 ed in and un os, in true were 1 Ed- mean- of the is to they 760 Students Are Named to Spring Semester College Honor Roll a this turn to novel o how tons of E. L. the fa- scar novel. nment der in birds he heap as carlots, . Bur- nating bilos- values ded an haviian s, and consense consense. one is a detect the visionate ement merica. ents)— prophet" l prose, mean- lending A total of 760 students earned places on the spring semester honor roll of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dean George R. Waggoner announced recently. Dean Waggoner said 14.5 per cent of the College student body earned honor roll places by having a grade point average of 2.26 or higher on a scale of 3.0 for A and 2.0 for B. Sixty-five students in the College earned all "A" grades for the semester: They are: David C. Adams, Wichita senior; John Robert Alderman, Lyons sophomore; Peter H. Arngersinger, Lawrence senior; Rex Hen Bare, Wichita senior; Lanora G. Bishop, Kansas City junior; Walter S. Bliss, Omaha, Neb. Junior; Paul Louis Louise Booth, Abilene freshman; Mary Louise Booth, Abilene freshman; Kenneth W. Boyer, Hemple, Mo. senior; Henry S. Brzyski, Philadelphia, Pa. junior. Stanley E. Craven, Ft. Lee, Va. freshman; Margaret L. Crist, Breckenridge, Wichita junior; John Brooks Dean, Overland Park junior; Judith A. Despain, Winnipeg, Wichita freshman; Arthur W. Douville, Overland Park junior; Christa Elsa Dueser, Eida Germany, junior; Beverly W. Emmick, senior; Michael L. Fawcett, Neddae State senior. George William Friek, Muskegee junior; Cordon N. Gephardt, Muskegoe, Okla. freshman; Carl Russell Gibson, Lawrence junior; Edward C Gordon, Ft. Scott freshman; Kenneth R. Gray, Ulysses freshman; Barbara Jo Hall, Kane City, Kan., junior; Karen in Hall, Mellerson freshman; Glenn Hamilton freshman; Carl Edward Hane, Leavenworth senior; Donna M. Hannesman, Junction city senior. Sara Louise Harvey, Overland Park sophomore; Karen Lymn Holland, Salina senior; Martin Robert Holmer, North Carolina City Kan, Kansas City Kan, sophomore; Roy Joe Irwin, Lyons junior; Margaret A. Jeter, Hays senior; Neil E. Johnson, Kansas City Mo., junior; Charles F. Lanning, Lawson III, Arthur B. Leonard II, Lawrence senior. Beatrice S. Machunze, Buenos Aires, Argentina junior; Also Ron Bauer, Terry Alan Biller, Terry Arnold Springs senior; Stephen Roger Munzer, Salina junior; Sara Nan-Patty Laura Powers, Laura Powers, Salina freshman; Martha Quade, Kirkwood, Mo., freshman; Marjorie L. Reaka, Wilson senior; Everett H Rowson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman Roger P. Schmidt, Abilene junior; Ellen Faye Schurle, Green freshman; Pamela Self, Seville senior; Shan Shuhn, Wichita sophomore; Robert Edwards Shenk, Brown senior; Anne E. Shontz, Kansas City, Mo.; senior; John Stanley Shultz, Bartlesville, Oka; senior; Dorothy Ann Sloan, Norfolk; senior; Philip Howard Smith, Onaga senior. Timothy Sommerville, Lima, Peru, senior; Patricia G. Squires, Olathe freshman; Billel G. Gene Thompson, Ballwin, Mo.; Daniel K. McCormick, Lodge freshman; Gary Clinton Walker, Wichita senior; Bruce Newman Warren, Emporia sophomore; Ronald Ray Williams, Overland Park sophomore; Victoria A. Williams, Shawne sophomore. Others on the honor roll are: Bruce W. Albright, Haven junior; John W. Aldis, Fort Scott sophomore; Roger K. Alexander, Wichita freshman; Jon J. Alexiou, Mission senior; Lonna L. Allan, Wichita junior; Lawrence S. Allen, Overland Park freshman; Mary Cain, Aen Rockey; Barbara B. Arkansas, Kansas City, Kan; freshman; Carl A. Anderson, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Carol M. Anderson, Leawood senior. David H. Anderson, Clifton freshman; Sharon R. Anderson, Topeka senior; Barbara R. Anderson, Towson Ard. Wichita freshman; Ann Argersinger, Wichita freshman; Betty D. Armold, Hoisington sophomore; Kathryn J. Axe, Bartlesville, Okla. sophomore; Kathryn J. Axe, Ayers, St. Joseph, sophomore; Selvia B. Babec, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore Marsha Babicki. Leavenworth junior; Thomas K. Bagby, Coffeville senior; Sharon Bahner, Topica freshman, Willingham senior; Frank S. Bangs Jr., Wichita senior; B. George Barisac, Kansas City, Mo.; Patricia J. Barker, Wellington freshman; Deanna D. Bartcher, Wichita sophomore; B. Karuch, University City, Mo. junior Jane Breeckenridge, Louisburg senior; James D. Brenner, Parsons sophomore; Janice M. Brenner, Parsons freshman; Robert O. Brodble, Winchester freshman; David J. Brown, Wichita sophomore; Ced C. Brown, Swainnee Mission sophomore; Sue C. Brown, City Kan, freshman; John P. Brown Berkeley, Calif., junior; Sharon M. Brown, Iola senior; Stephen M. Brown, Leawood junior. Brebeca L. B. Lauer, Highland freshman; Pamela J. B. Bayless, Mission sophomore; Terry K. Beach, Hays sophomore; Norman E. Beal, Independence senior; Cynthia J. Beard, Meade freshman; Garry Beauchamp, Beauchamp junior; Mukogee, Okla., freshman; Karl E. Becker Jr., Wincilla senior; Robert C. Beeke, Kansas City, Mo., junior. Anne E. Beeson, Prairie Village freshman; Steven R. Bell, Salina freshman; Momil B. Beloit, Topeka freshman; L. Belot, Lawrence freshman; C. Bengel, Independence freshman; Kathleen S. Bennett, Pittsburgh junior; George S. Benson, El Dorado senior; Robert M. Bengel, Topeka junior; M. Berg, Leawood junior; Calvin B. Berggren, Topeka sophomore. Daniel C. Brune, Lawrence junior; Timothy G. Buchan, Fairfield, Iowa; senior; Robert P. Buchman, Parsons senior; Monica Buchwald, Chevy Chase, Md. sophomore; Rebecca M. Buckalo, Parke- mo, Mo.; sophomore; Frances Bullock, Shreveon, a freshman; Robert Burch, Shawnee Mission, Mo. Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore; James P. Burns, St. Joseph, Mo.; senior; Rosa B. Burns, Caldwell freshman. Robert A. Boyerlein, Phillipsburg senior; Michael A. Dierl, California, Mo.; freshman; Barbara A. Herberch, Mo.; freshman; Richard R. Richards, D. Bishop; Kansas City, Kan.; senior; Lee Bittenbender, Lawrence freshman; Linda L. Blackledge, Tulsa, OK., freshman; Sara Ann Bly, Kansas City, freshman; Doug-Lynne Central, Central Ohio; Merle R. Bolton, token senior. David M. Borel, Prairie Village sophomore; Suzanne M. Bowersock, Leawood senior; Richard S. Bowman, Merriam senior; Dwight R. Wright B. Doran sophomore; Michael L. Morrison F. Fred B. Bramble, Independence senior; Ellen R. Brandon, Independence senior; Mercia A. Braun, Mission sophomore; Mercia A. Braun, Kansas City, Kan. senior. James V. Burt, Owatonna, Mlnn., senior; Natalie J. Butcher, Baldwin sophomore; Margaret A Bybee, Kansas City, Mich.; Dana Gaynor, Kansas dence junior; Judith Cady, Beloit freshman; John Caldwell, Dallas, freshman; Cheryl A. Campbell, Kansas dence junior; sophomore; John H. Campbell, Fort Scott junior; William J. Campion, Liberal senior Michael S. Cann, Russell sophomore; Marc Carlson, Lawrence freshman; Mace E. Cleveland, Chayla Kan, Kan, freshman; Cranston Cederlin; Shawnee Mission sophomore; Gloria Schoenfeld, Cedric Patricia, Patricia Chain, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Mo Wah Chain, Saigon, South Viet in, freshman; Ronald M. Chatfield, Brian Chatfield, Chayla Chatland, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Mary Ann Cheatham, Tulsa, OKa. junior; Robert Chovitelli Jr., Wichita (Mary Ann Cheatham), Wichita, sophomore; David H. Church, Glenclew, II., sophomore; William J. Cibes Jr. (Mary Ann Cheatham), New York, Mo., sophomore; Craig Cleaves, Leaworth junior; James Clopton, Pratt freshman; Lawrence D. Cloutman, Minneapolis sophomore; Alice L. Clovis, Salina sophomore. Barbara Cochrane, Hoisington freshman; Ione Coffe, Harper junior; Barry Colehinson, juniper; James Colehinson, freshman; James Colehinson freshman; James Concannon III, Garden city freshman; John Conderman, Iola junior; Ivan D. Conover, Saulimore; Bart Cook, F. Worth, Texas, senior; James D. Cooley, Salina sophomore. Susan Corson, Shawnee Mission freshman; William Cookham, Wellsville freshman; Wayne Courtney, Merriam freshman; Patricia Cowen, Junction City sophomore; Ronald Craver, Carole Craver, Kirkwood, Mo., senior; Ronald Craver, Ste. Foy, Quebec, freshman; Robert Crosser, Lawrence senior; Ronald Crouch, Shawnee Mission sophomore. John D. Crowell, Ottawa junior; Loren A. Crown, Bethel sophome; Patricia E. McCann, Lincoln sophome; T. Curry, Pratt sophome; Kathryn E. Curtis, Arlington, Va.; senior; Mary J. Doyle, Wilmington, Va.; junior; Kansas City, Mo.; freshman; Elizabeth A. Cushing, Downs freshman; Sherrill F. Daniels, Smith Center junior; Karen A. laughtery, Wellsville, Ohio; sophome. Susan M. David, Parkville, Mo., sophomore; Meade O. Davis, Wichita senior; Richard C. Dearth, Parsons junior; Ronald G. Decker, Mission freshman; William R. Deever, Spokane, Wash.; freshman; John H. Brennan, Spokane; freshman; Danine L. Detert, Wichita freshman; Robert D. Detter, Haven freshman; Paula S. Dickens, Newton sophomore. Michael H. Dickerson, Prairie Village freshman; Richard J. Dickerson, Dodge Junior; David P. Dickerson, Moy. David Denish, Dale P. Donate Johnson junior; Jimmie D. Doll, Joplin, Mo. sophomore; Charles E. Doubleday, Shawnee Mission junior; Richard W. Duckett, Mayfield James; James P. Dowell, Hayland sophomore; Ronald S. Downs, Leoti freshman. Eileen R. Duggan, Niles senior; Janet S. Duncan, Ottawa senior; Barry K. Wucas senior; Owaty M. Great Bedford M. E. Malon; Wichita freshman; Elizabeth C. Eckels, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Gerald M. Edmonds, Prairieville village freshman; Ronald P. M. Forsythe, Bay City, David W. Eidt, Bay City, Mich.; junior, Carol A. Ekey, Spring Hill sophomore. Douglas M. Elder, Topeka senior; Lynda L. Embree, Chicago, Ill., sophomore; Katherine G. Gillespie, sophomore; William W. Emnnot, independent sophomore; William D. Engber, Wichita senior; Howard D. Engleman, sophomore; Grace C. Gandack, Gandack E. Erbe, Liberal sophomore. Barbara L. Erickson, Urbandale, Iowa freshman; Barbara L. Ericsson, Lawrence Wisconsin; Carol S. Evans, Fremont, Neb. sophomore; Jean A. Evans, Bartlesville, Nevada; Brian C. Evans, Lindsey, Lindsburg freshman; Jonet L. Farber. Prairie Village sophomore; William H. Farrar, Arkansas City junior; Russell F. Kaufst, Memphis Tenn.; sophomore K. Fauert, Memphis Tenn. Evelyn T. Fearing, Lawrence senior; Shirley J. Fields, Overland Park senior; Nicole L. Reed, Overland Park senior; B. Fink, Jose Calif., sophomore; Howard L. Finney, Ferguson, Mo.; senior; Gwendolynn F. Fisher, Topeka seni- rior; Ann Barry Fllood, Topeka seni- rator Kirk E. Flury, Prairie Village sophomore; Tamia A. Foord, Prairie Village freshman; Charles R. Foster, Bartleson Overland; Kristina J. Foster, Kentan Overland; Kristina J. Benson, Kansas City Franklin, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Marcia A. Frederick, Hugoton freshman; Frederick A. Freeman, Kansas City Junior; Robert M. French, Kansas City Kan., junior. Alan L. Fries, Manhattan sophomore; Larry J. Friesen, Clay Center freshman; Nathan J. Gallwein, Manhattan freshman; Michele E. Gamble, Kansas City, Kan.; junior; James A. Gammon, Leawood senior; Gary L. Garrison, Chanute senior; Jessica G. McDade, Madoka Janice E. Geitz, Horton sophomore; Jon E. Getz, Hoxie sophomore; William A. Getz, Newton senior; Elizabeth A. Gibson, Independence freshman; memantine A. Gibson, trailing village freshman; Toni A. Gibson, township freshman; Bobby M. Gilbert, Lawrence senior; John H. Gilbert, Seneca sophomore; Nyla M. Gilkerson, lawrence sophomore; John M. Gilkerson, lawrence sophomore; Samuel A. Gill, Sterling freshman; Vicki A. Gillespie, Indiana, Iowa, junior. Marilyn L. Godwin, Ness City sophomore; Susan S. Godwin, Ness City sophomore; Robert T. Goetzinger, Olahfreshman; John R. Goherm, Independence senior; James S. Gough, Chanute senior; Calyptra Grabert, system sophmere; Foces Gough, system sophmere Springs, ill, freshman; Leon B. Graves, Ottawa sophomore; Harold Green, Greenwater sophmere; Gary E. Grorg, Coldwater sophomore. Margaret T. Gregory, Lawrence freshman; Michael J. Gresser, Rossville freshman; Bennie K. Rewling, Lawrence senior; Mary K. Griffin, Brush Prairie, Wash., senior; Joyce A. Crist, Glitcha freshman; Steven C. McKinnon, Andrew E. Grossmann, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Carol M. Gurley, Kirkwood, Mo., freshman; Kathryn J. Habenstein, Columbia, Mo., senior; Patricia Hackney, Wellington junior. Carolyn B. Hadley, Tulsa, Okla., freshman; Edmond Q. Haggart, Salina sophomore; Mary F. Haldeman, Hutchinson sophomore; E. Harper, Salina sophomore; Rachel, Anne Hall, Parsons sophomore; Roger William Hall, Overland park sophomore; Virginia Lynn Hall, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Mary Alene Halloran, Silver Lake sophomore; Charles Hamilton, Kirkwood, Mo., junior; Sonia M. Hamann, Potsdam, N.Y., sophomore. Betty Jean Hansen, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; Kay B. Hanson, Phillipsburg freshman; Ronald E. Hanson, Shawnee mission sophomore. Cynthia Wood Hardin, Lincoln, Neb. freshman; Richard Layne Harp, Lawrence sophomore; Daniel Aaron Harper, Pittsburg junior; Daniel F. Harrington, Russellville, Terre Haute, Terre Haute, Ind., sophomore; James Craig Harris, East St. Louis, Ill., sophomore. Bette C. Harrison, Upland, Calif., senior; Virginia Harstad, FT. Leavenworth freshman; Franklin Dickson, Frankick Hartman, Overbrook junior; John Powell Hastings. Topica sophomore; Ruth Alice Hateh, Evansville, ind., sophomore; Robert Gene Hawk, Carlyle junior; Larry V. Hays Mission junior; Loren Hazelwood, Salina Mary Elizabeth Beck, Osage City junior; Marcia Ann Heichen, Dodge City Shop Bell's at the Sidewalk Bazaar Thurs., July 22 Records, Sheet Music, Radios 9:30 to 8:30 BELL'S 925 Mass. VI 3-2644 Daily Deliveries Anywhere In Town junior; John Lee Hendricks, Overland Park senior; Hans J. Hennecke, Lawrence freshman; Betty Lou Henrie, Toomey sophomore; Gwen Hentsch, Lawrence sophomore; Susan O'Bibbard, Kansas City, Mo.; freshman; Bonnie J. Hill, Lawrence sophomore. OPEN NITES TILL 8:30 Justin D. Hill Jr., Lawrence junior; Jack G. Hills, Independence senior; Lober Lee Hindman, Neodesha senior; Bearman Lee Mills, Josephsen; Alan Benkley Hart, Lawrence sophomore; Gerald Lee Holcomb, Sharon Springs junior; James R. Holiday Jr. Suzanne J. Koch, Gwenneth E. Ahn, Prairie Village junior; Gray Dee Holmes, St. Joseph, Mo. senior. Christopher R. Hood, Salt Lake City, Utah, senior; Charles Ruffin FHook, Glen Head, N.Y., sophomore; John Martin Hoover, Stafford sophomore; Patrick James Horay, Mission sophomore; Daniel L. Hornbeck, Overland Park freshman; William A. Horton, Chanute sophomore; Mary M. Macdonald, Sophomore; sophomore; Richard J, Hoskins, Bonner Springs sophomore; Donald D. Howard, Wichita senior. Phyllis Jean Howard, Gardena, Calif., freshman; James Walter Howatt, Ft. Leavenworth freshman; Judith Mary Lower, Hirschie, Ill., sophomore; Paul Hubbell, Leavenshard freshman; Cynthia S. Hubert, Leavensworth freshman; Patricia Ann Hudson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Margaret D. Hughes, Ottawa jun- nely Noney J. Hull, Sedgwick freshman; Short K. Humphries, Leawood sophomore. Michael H. Hurtt, Shawnee Mission freshman; Anne D. Hutchinson, Prairie Village junior; Lynda J. Hutchison, Chanute freshman; Theodore M. Hylau. Vandergift, Pa., senior; Robert Malcolm Igo, Wichita sophomore; Raymond P. Imre Jr., Overland Park sophomore; Gene E. Ireland, Shawnee Mission sen. Hertt J. Irwin, Johnson freshman; Julius H. Jackson, Kansas City, Mo., senior. Max Guy Jaekson Jr., Marion freshman; Patricia K. Jackson, Hyattville, Md.; freshman; Joseph R. Jacobs, Leawood freshman; Robert E. Jacoby, Topeka freshman; Stephen C. James, Iola senior; Ronald Craig Jantz, Halstead senior; Bing Kint Jap, Semarang, Indooroopalu; Danny Belliesville, Okla., sophomore; Margaret A. Jeter, Hays senior; John G. Jewell, Newton Square, Pa., freshman Dennis Martin Johns, Johnson freshman; Conni Lynn Johnson, Leawood sophomore; Doris E. Johnson, Luray freshman; Michael E. Johnson, Iowa, freshman; Neil E. Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Shirley Jean Johnson, Mission sophomore; Margaret A. Johnston, Prairie Village freshman; Gary J. Jones, Newton sophomore; Janine Jones, Wichita sophomore; Susan Henrietta Joe, Carthage, Mo., sophomore. Matsha Elaine Joyce, Topeka sophomore; Katherine Mary Kaye, Rose Heights, Y2, freshman; Sydnie Kampshroder, Gardner City Mortor, Daniel M. St. Joseph, Mo. sophomore; Kathleen E. Keller, Los Altos, Calif.; freshina Linda Rae Keller, St. Francis sophomore; William B. Kerfoot, Lawrence Jamey, St. Louis; Richard Lee Keus, Krusley sophomore; Charles J. Kifef, Scott City sophomore. (Continued on page 4) skyrocket 65 UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents Thursday - July 22 POLISH TOUR GROUP Friday - July 23 HIGH SCHOOL SHOWCASE Starting Tues., July 27 "LILIOM" PERFORMANCES 8:20 Tues. through Fri and 3:00 Wed. & Fri. Admission: $1.50 KUID Redeemable at Murphy Hall Box Office Starts at 8:20 For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 20, 1965 760 Students Are Named to Spring Semester College Honor Roll (Continued from page 3) David Allen Kikel, Bedford. Ohio, freshman; Sara V. Kirtland, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Steven T. Perry, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Mary Jill Kleinberg, Lawrence sophomore; Stephen H Klemp, Lawrence senior; Mary Ella Kline, Wichita senior; John Bauer, Charles Walter Koch, Wichita junior; Marian Jean Koerner, Boulder, Colo., sophomore. John Koetting, Prairie Village sophomore; Sally Ann Knock, Kirkwood, Mo.; freshman; Martha Lisa Kopper, North ta sophomore; Robert Kirk Kelly, North Roger Dean Kreibbel, McPherson junior; Thomas Lee Kruse, Galva junior; Susan Kay Kurtz, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Carolyn Ann, Katy, sophomore; Paul LaFollette, Overland Park senior; Clifton Arthur Lake, Spokane, Wash., junior. Barbara Sue Langbehn, Belleville freshman; Merle K. Landgon, Fall River sophomore; Barbara Langenwater, sophomore; Anne Wade, Springfield, Mo., sophomore; Martha H. Lanning, Lawrence freshman; Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence junior; John Wallace Lathan, Atchison sophomore; Shiela Roberts Latha, Elkhorn, Neb., junior. Robert Lee Lauber, Dodge City junior; Jane E. Laughlin, Garden City freshman; Daniel K. Hollins, Garden City freshman; Richard Alden Lee, Mission freshman; Robert Paul Lee, Teopka junior; Robert S. Foster, Mission junior; David C. Leonard, Lawrence freshman; Bronwen Ann Lewis, Emporia senior; Richard Ray Lichte, Raytown; Michael J. Cornelius, Jordan Lindsay, LaGrange, Ill., freshman. Rochleine M. Listrom, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Fred Nellioo Littcoh, Hutchinson senior; Richard A. Lobdeli, Salina sophomore; Anne Shelby Lockhart, Wichita sophomore; Robert R. Love, La Plata, Mo.; freshman; Richard S. Loved, New- desha freshman; Kristen F. Newman, newcomer K. Lauers, Independence, Mo., sophomore; Judith Rae Lumb, Charles City, Iowa, senior; Donald L. Maddox, Ozark, Mo., senior; Marcia Maechleni, Wichita sophomore; Robert L. Magnuson, Salina senior; John C. Maloney, Lawrence senior; John D. Macleary, Marshall junior; William D. Marbourg, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Frederick E. Marsh, Prairie Village senior; Liona June Marshall, Fort Scott freshman; Edward Dana Martin, Topeka junior; Marilyn L. Martin, Merriam junior. Jonathan Cynthia J. Martindell, Huteninson sophomore; Judith Anne Marvin, Blue Springs, Mo. senior; Cynthia Mason, Kansas City, Elmer Ellen Mason, Kansas City, Mo. junior; Nancy D Matthews, Neodesha freshman; Ruth Elaine Mawdsley, Pratt sophomore; Elize John Warren Mays, Lyons senior; Robert James McAdoo, Larned sophomore. William P. McArthur, Mason City Iowa, senior; John Wayne McArtor Webster Groves, Mo., senior; James True James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James James Marilyn Ethel McKee, Mission freshman; Laura freshman; Laura D. McLaughlin, Lawrence sophomore; Mark Allen McLelland, Pratt sophomore; Carol Meehan, McMahan, Paka junior; Veronika L. Meinow, Ashbach, W. Germany, freshman; Charles Meier, Katherine J. Melcher, Newton freshman; Roger L.Melltren, Leaward junior. Janiece K. Menderhall Wichita fresh- freshman; Robert L. Meredith, Barlies freshman; Robert L. Meredith, Barlies ville. Okla., freshman; Susan Kary Meredith, St. Joseph Mo., freshman; Tassie Ruser, D. Meyer,ATCH senior; Stephen M. Meyer, Leavenworth sophomore; Karen Anne Miller, Omaha junior; Mary J. Williams, Neb. freshman; William E. Miller Jr., Mission junior. Gary Leon Mitchell, Independence junior; Susan L. Moebus, Emporia freshman; Walter Harold Mooney, Wichita sohoee Mission freshman; Mooney, Sohoee Mission freshman; Roger M. Morrison, Salina senior; Lenna Jean Mueller, Glendale, Mo. freshman; Barry Law Murphey, Glendale, Mo.; Jake Tewksbury, Topeka freshman; Janice Rae Nelson, Shawnee Mission freshman. Samuel Edward Nevius, Spring Hill sophomore; Charles R. Newton, Grainfield junior; Michael H. Nicholas, Pennsylvania Mo. junior; Jeffrey S. Nichols, Stockton junior; Kenneth M. Nicoly, Mission sophomore; David William Mcen, Pratt University freshman; Pamela Jean Lansing, Bornish; Benith Kay Norris, Horton junior. Judith A. North, Clinton, Iowa; senior; Ronald Dean Novotny, Stockton senior; Connie Lynn Obertino, Prairie Village freshman; Michael Lee O'Brien, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Ronald D. Oel- slager, Marion Lee O'Brien, Sharon Olander, Mission freshman; Sharon Lee Mission sophomore; David Joseph Pack, Wichita junior; Peggy Ruth Paintney, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Dennis Earl Pankratz, Marion senior. Howard John Pankratz, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore; Roger Walter Park, Wichita senior; Lucille Parker, Council Merwin, Mo.; freshman; Katherine Patterson, Newton Square, Pa., sophomore; Carol Sue Patton, Pratt sophomore; Carol Madden, Pratt sophomore; Calvin Paul, Miltonvale junior; Lynn Jeanine Payer, Wichita sophomore. J. Thomas Payne, Salina junior; Shelley Boyd Pearce, Topeka sophomore; Lynne M. Pedicord, Wamego sophomore; William Pennlage Jr., Tulsa, Oklahoma; Gary Elliott Penner, Storrs, Conn; freshman; James Donald Perkins, Prairie Village sophomore; Kyle Lawrence Peterson, Newton freshman; Kathie A. Phillips, Bartlettville, Okla., freshman; Margaret A. Phipps, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. Michael M. Pierce, McPherson sophomore; John Richard Pine, Lawrence sophomore; John C. Piper, Parsons senior; Paul Edward Pearl, Parsons junior; Donna Mary Polster, Wichita sophomore; Karen Kenny, Duluth sophomore; Donald Eugene Potter, Chanute freshman; Kathleen E. Powell, Garnett junior; Kent Douglas Powell, Wichita freshman; Steven D. Pratt, Hays senior; Lucy Jean Price, Lawrence sophomore; Wichita freshman; James Jones Priest, Baxter Springs sophomore; Mary K. Pringle, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Louise E. Proctor, Augusta senior; Patricia Lynn Pruitt, Topkea freshman; David E. Rallsback, Bangdon sophomore; Ransham sophomore; Ronald Lardin, Lewood senior; Michael C. Rasmussen, Lawrence freshman. E. Dianne Ratchford, Frairie Village sophomore; Nancy L. Razak, Wichita junior; Rajkert Jr., Owen Johnson Jr.; Topeka junior; Joyce B. Reckart, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Dale Rodney Regier, Lawrence sophomore; Barbara Lynn Renz, River Forest; Robert W. Rossfield, Fort Hearst Osawatomie sophomore; Don W. Rhoades, Storm Lake, Iowa, senior; Philip S. Rhoads, Overland Park senior; Alice M. Rice, Kansas City, Kan.; Patrick S. Rhoads, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Caroline Richardson, Leawood junior; Carlana Mary Rickel, Basehor freshman; Roger Alan Rieger, Hawaiian sophomore; Sophia Rieger, Hawaii freshman; Beverly Ann Rindt, Fredonia freshman; Sharon L. Robertson, Silver --for these fine cosmetics Lary Allen Robinson, Iola freshman, Anna L. Rodelander, Shawne Missions city freshman; Shawne Missions city freshman; Janice Lynn Rogers, Shawnee Mission freshman; Myra Kathleen Rose, harbor city freshman; Barbara Colo, Colo city freshman; Janet Lynn Ross, Arkansas city freshman; Randle Lee Ross, Pratt freshman; Abraham Robert, Robert H. Rocke, Stanford, Kennth R. Rouke, Stamford,Conn., senior. City, N.M., sophomore; Correll Robinson III, Topeka senior. Donna Jean Rund, Overland Park sophomore; Franklin G. Rupp, Ness City sophomore; Allan A. Russell, Scottsluift Neb., freshman; Earl W. Schuster, G. Rutherford, Chillicothe, Mo., sophomore; Carol Jann Ryan, Burlington junior; Phyllis Ann Saindon, Zurich sophomore; Larry Raymond Salmon, Winfield sophomore; William Jamieson,ampsophomore; Pauline Lee Webster Groves, Mo. freshman; Nancy P. Sanders, Lawrence sophomore. Gary N. Schrader, Marion junior; Margaret R. Schroder, Leavenworth senior; Robert Alan Schuler, Bartleys freshman; John R. Schultz, Overland Park senior; Katherine Hooker, Missouri senior; Billie Ann M. Searcy, Cupertino, Calif.; senior; Andre Sedriks, Osatwake junior; Charles A. Seibel, Hutchinson senior; William Max Self. Larry F. Sandlin, Olathe senior; Ilyse Emalle Sauer, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Steven E. Schaefer, Wellington; Stephen E. Meinecke, Springs Christian; Carol Jean Schlegel, Holsington sophomore; Karen Jean Schlueter, Omaha, Neb., freshman; Clinton Ray Schmidt, Peabody sophomore; Roger P. Schmidt, Abilene junior; Theodore A. Schmidt, El Dorado senior; Nanfane Schoenback, St. Louis, Mo., freshman. Martha L. Selfridge, Wichita freshman; Nicholas A. Sharp, Lawrence junior; Constance A. Shaver, Lawrence freshman; Karen E. Shoop, St. John senior; Donald A. Shrader, Salina junior; Leila M. Shultz, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; Anne Marie Sigmund, Wichita freshman; Michael Jon Sims, Clovis, N.M., freshman; Linda Kay Sleffel, Norton freshman. SIDEWALK BAZAAR SPECIAL NAME YOUR OWN PRICE Frederick K. Slicker, Tula, Okla. senior; Valerie Jean Masalai, Kansas City, sophomore; Kenneth Lee Smith, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Robert Smith, Shawnee Haven sophomore; Terry Jay Solander, Garnett freshman; Arthur Kean Spears, Lawrence H. Thompson, Prairie Village sophomore; Sally Cozier Tuesday, Kirkwood, Mo., freshman; David Lee Twain, Jr., freshman; Tissie Tischin, Winnetka, Ill.; freshman; John Robert Toland, Iola junior; George R. Townsend, Pittsburg freshman; Sara Kay Townsend, Atchison freshman; Roberta Ann Treat, Ferguson, Mo., sophomore; Terry Dale Truax, Kansas City, Kan., senior; John Muller Tulloch, Bartlesville, Okla., James Alan Tharp, Meadville, Mo. freshman; Jaquelyn S. Thayer, Ellsworth sophomore; Virginia R. Theimer, Colby sophomore; Lawana Jan Themsen, Topea senior; Martha J. Thielen, Satanta freshman; Charles H. Thomas Jr, Rockfield school; Rickson Salina freshman; Ronnie Dale Thomas, Ullysses senior; Charles S. Thompson, Halstead senior; David P. Thompson, Topea senior. ★ Dorothy Gray Kansas City, Kan., senior; Andrea Frances Speer, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Anne Mehan Spencer, Loveland, Colo. senior. Jack Merrill Speyer, Wichita freshman; Elizabeth A. Spray, Lawrence freshman; Fielding B. Staplen, Ft. Scott freshman; Richard S. Dearborn, Rick S. Starkey, Mission senior; Lynn Eugene Steele, Muncie junior; Melvin R. Steiner, Hoisington sophomore; Thomas P. Steiner, Geneon non Gene Stigge, Washington freshman; John Burke Stinson, Topeka sophomore. ★ Worth of Paris Robert E. Twinehamb, Merriam sophomore; Jonna Sue Tyler, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman; Douglas H. Ubelaker, Everon, freshman; Marian O. junior; Richard G. Vancele, Salma junior; Anita L. Van Gaasbeek, Nortonville freshman; M. F. ★ D'orsay Intoxication Fantastique Vanlandingham. Excelisior Springs. Mo. senior; Michael G. Vineyard, Wymore. Neb. junior; Whitney Lee Vinzant, Wichita sophomore. Claude Dwight Sutton, Wichita senior; Carol Jean Swain, Manhattan freshman; Thomas B. Swale, Sparie Village freshman; Michael Vance, Kissimmee City, Mo.; freshman; Edward James Sweaney, Lee's Summit, Mo.; sophomore; Stephen Albert Swift, Dallas, Texas; freshman; Paula Diann Tangman, Newton freshman; Jonathan Sullivan, sophomore; Mary A. Taylor, Junction City freshman; Oneta F. Taylor, Kansas City, Kan., freshman. ★ Harriet Hubbard Ayer Complete Line Must Go Susan Jane Stoever, Carbondale, Ill. Marion Stuart, Carbondale, Ill. son sophomore; M. E. Stolzenbach, Lawrence senior; David Wyman Storer, Lawrence senior; Phillip Stratemeler, Leawood sophomore; John McLewitt, Leawood sophomore; Constance M. Stuckey, Lawrence freshman; Glen Lewis Shailer, Lawrence freshman; John P. Sullivan, Empire junior; Mary Ann Sutherland, Prescott sophomore. ★ Seaforth Complete Men's Line John Logan Vratil. Larned sophomore; Robert A. Wadda Jr., Newton freshman; Robert A. Wadda Jr., Newton freshman; Iowa, senior; Carroll F. Wainwright, Syracuse sophomore; Debra L. Walcher, Leawood freshman; Leawood freshman; Darryl Lewis Wallace, Dodge City junior; Loren Sidney Walter, Great Bend senior; Robert Barnett Ward, William Henry Ward, Wichita freshman. Larry Wrey Yackle, Paola freshman; Susan A. Yamamoto, Alakekaue, Hawaii; freshman; Thomas W. Yergovich, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore; Charles Craig Yockey, Lyndon freshman; Brenda C. Yoshimoto, Kekahu Kaui; Nancy Hutchinson, Hutchinson senior; Charles Harvey Zerr, Independence senior; Bernhard F. Ziegler, Buakissingen, Germany, junior; Jane Anne Zimmerman, Ft. Scott sophomore. Drug Store Claudia Lee Williams, Topeka sophomore; Donald L. Williams, Great Bend senior; Glen Darryl Willis, Chilihecite, Mo. seni; David Lee Wilson, Hutchinson senior; Julie E. Winkler, Caney senior; Douglas S. Musk, Lewain, freshman; Colleen A. Lynch, Warren, freshman; Darryn Wonn, Independence freshman; Linda R. Wulfkuhle, Lawrence freshman; Patricia Cowen Wyka, Russell senior. Round Corner Priscilla L. White, Clay Center freshman, Howard W. Wilberg, Wiberg, Topeka Junior; Judy Myers Wicklund, Columbus, Ohio; senior; Howard L. Willex Jr., Lawrenceville; Howard J. Willex Jr., Lawrenceville; Jamison L. Wilkerson, Kansas City, Kan.; sophomore; Arthur O. Wilkenson, Wichita freshman; Barbara Ann Williams, North Kansas City, Mo., sopho- Music Editor Dies Richard B. Warner, Lawrence sophomore; Jo Elizabeth Waylan, Nashville freshman; Michael C. Weaver, Kansas Freshman; Michael D. Weaver, Great Bend freshman; Marilyn June West, Lawrence freshman; David Glen Wheeler, Joplin senior; James Aleson Jr., North Carolina freshman; R Whitaker, Tulsa, Okla, freshman; Alice Virginia White, Wichita freshman. VI 3-0200 801 Mass. NEW YORK — (UPI) — Edwin Hughes, 81, well-known pianist, music editor and teacher, died Saturday at his home. SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES Summer Schedule July 21 LON CHANEY "Phantom of the Opera" July 28 Italian Cine Classic (1914) "Antony and Cleopatra" Wednesdays Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) 7:00 p.m. Admission: 50c Tuesday, July 20, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 Songs, Skits, Dancing At Camp Hootenanny Midwestern Music and Art Camp students held one of America's favorite indoor or outdoor sports Saturday evening—a hootenanny complete with guitars, banjo, and bass. Dennis Smith, the only banjo player present, and Steve Sexton and Alvin Felch crooned "Mountain Dew," and Journalism camper Dan Partner returned with a song by folk writer Bob Dylan. "The Times They Are A-Changing," followed by "Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man." THE GIRLS then regained the floor with Michele Sweney playing the guitar and singing another Peter, Paul and Marv hity, "500 Miles." AN ADDED attraction to the hootenanny was a skit, "Liza and Henry," performed in fitting costume by Liessa Liepi and Pat O'Neale, who sang "There's a Hole in the Bucket." Art student Dick Patterson then sang a Trini Lopez number and a humorous ditty called "Shame and Scandal on the Family," which he asked the audience to listen to carefully. The boys continued with another group—Dan Partner, Larry Yeager, Gary Burge, and Huck Walding—singing "This Train," which was one of the songs printed on the word sheet handed out to the audience so that they could sing along in "the traditional way." The show, for which the students had been rehearsing about a week, started off with Ann Sisk and Beth Butler, both playing their guitars, singing "Jimmy Whallen" and "Long Chain On," followed by Ann accompanying Ellen Butler in two more numbers, varying from the slow and sweet to the rollingick. THE HEN THE BOYS decided to demonstrate their talents—a group including student recitalist Randy Porter, Robert Harlas, Jr. Bruney Gary Burge, and Barry Buchele, assisted by two guitars and a bass. After their "slave song" ("Follow the Drinkin' Gourd") and a Peter, Paul and Mary number, Huck Walding sang "The Girl From Ipanema" backed by his own guitar. Bv Kim Freshwater Next Claude Boyd sang "All on a Beautiful Morning," and "Flora" and Larry Yeager sang "The Springhill Mine Disaster" and "Tomorrow Is a Long Time." Alvin Felch, Dennis Dan Partner sang "House of the Rising Sun," followed by a ventriloquist, Ken Leech, and his recalcitrant dummy, Billy, who sang "Froggy Went a Courtin", helped by Felch, Smith and Sexton. Smith, Steve Sexton and Gary Burge then came back with more sing-along, "Good News" and "Michael Row the Boat Ashore." Max Bickford, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents, will be host for the group, which is composed of secretaries and executive officers of boards which control all of the state-supported degree-granting institutions in a state. About 50 persons are expected to attend the meeting. The final was a sing-along by all 19 performers, "When the Saints Go Marching In." All the campers were served root beer and pretzels, and dancing was provided by the camp "dance band." It pays to look your best. Executives Set Campus Visit The Association of Executive Officers will visit the University of Kansas for a dinner meeting July 29, during its three-day 12th annual meeting at the Town House in Kansas City, Kan., July 28-30. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. The first secretary of the Board of Regents, the late Hubert Brighton, was one of the founding members of the organization and served at one time as its president. It is meeting for the first time in Kansas. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will address the group. Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 SUA FRIDAY FLICKS PRESENTS SUA "IF A MAN ANSWERS" STARRING SANDRA DEE & BOBBY DARIN Friday, July 23 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS SCW, INC. For Finest Quality Shirt Service, Visit Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners Your summer shirts should be laundered to preserve and protect their colors and fabrics. Our service is known for its thorough cleaning and fine care. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Pick-up & Delivery Service Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 20, 1965 CORE Key Force In Racial Protest By Phil Higdon The Lawrence chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) has provided a strong voice in the cry of indignation against racial discrimination and disharmony, both here in Lawrence and in other troubled areas of the nation. Human relations professor Richard Burke, chairman of the Lawrence CORE chapter, outlined some of the projects the chapter has undertaken both long-range and for the summer. Another major project will be the organization of the Lawrence Negro community into community and political action. ONE OF the major projects has been the drive to eliminate racial discrimination in off-campus housing for University students. One apartment building has been picketed, with further action being planned. CORE also is in the process of working with some Lawrence beauty parlors in an attempt to stop segregation, which Burke described as "not only immoral, but against the new Kansas law." BURKE SAID there was a great amount of discrimination in Lawrence, especially in jobs and education. Many Negro neighborhoods, he said, lack paved streets and sanitary facilities. Burke also pointed to many problems in the Negro community. "There is a great amount of apathy and defeated quality among a large number of Negroes in Lawrence, partly because they've been discriminated against and beaten down for so long, and partly because of the lack of effective leaders within the Negro community." Burke said, adding, "There is a tremendous need for Negro leadership here." THE LOCAL chapter also has undertaken projects of a more national nature as well. The Lawrence chapter was represented in Durham, N.C., at the national CORE convention July 1-5 by Eileen Wilcox, KU student. Twenty-two people from Lawrence CORE, including a reporter for the Kansas, worked in Louisiana over spring break. Two Lawrence people worked there for a much longer time. Pam Smith has been in Louisiana Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Charles K. Feldman presents "What's New Pussycat?" Released thru UNITED ARTISTS TECHNICOLOR* THIS PICTURE IS RECOMMENDED FOR ADULTS ONLY Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Evening Only NOW! Shows 6:45 & 9:00 BURT LANCASTER in "THE TRAIN" Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40 Starts At Dusk Starts TONIGHT ... JERRY LEWIS in "THE PATSY" Plus "The Big Parade of Comedy" Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! Shows 7:00 & 9:00 Charles K. Feldman presenta "What's New Pussycat?" Released thru UNITED ARTISTS TECHNICOLOR* THIS PICTURE IS BECOMING USED FOR ADULTS ONLY the card catalogue, records under the categories of drama, jazz, and musical shows are listed. since spring, and Geraldine Maddox until recently worked in the CORE Southern Regional Office, supported by Lawrence CORE. and the librarian is Julia E. Stuart, and in charge of the library's administration, Dr. James C. Thomson, associate professor of history of music, and Milton Steinhardt, professor of history of music. DR. MILDRED Dickeman, Don Rhodes, and Rick Mabbbutt have been all over Louisiana with CORE. Prof. Burke emphasized the fact that the Lawrence chapter is open to anyone, not just KU students. Record Library Place of Repose "This is one of the quietest libraries on the hill," Donald Stuart, employee at the KU Music Library, says of the place where he spends part of his time. Bv Jonathan Block The Music Library provides a relaxing atmosphere in which students can study or complete assignments. To aid the students in their study, there are 31 turntables, and several desks in a well lighted room. The library, located on the fourth floor of Murphy Hall, contains more than 3,000 records and innumerable scores. Most of these records have Not only does the library have the complete works of Beethoven, Bach, and many others, but it also has a great many modern compositions. In The music library allows the scores to be borrowed for three weeks and, although the records themselves cannot be taken from the room, they can be taped. been purchased by the library, al although some have been donated. While many college libraries have scores available, the KU Music Library combines scores and records to a very effective end so as to give the students the greatest possible benefit. The library is open to all students, including members of the Music and Art Camp. Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m., and 7-9 p.m.; Friday 8 a.m.-4 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. to noon. TERM PAPERS FINALS REPORTS 15 DAYS TOGO WE HAVE, FOR YOU... OUTLINES...ALL KINDS...PAPER BINDERS,PENS,COVERS, TYPEWRITERS,TOO... kansas union BOOKSTORE Tuesday, July 20, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 Economic Insights Given Clergy at KU Session A unique conference to acquaint selected members of the Kansas clergy with economic leaders and problems of agriculture, business and labor is being held at KU through Thursday. This will be the fifth year for the Kansas Clergy Economic Education Conference at KU. It is sponsored by the state foundation of the same name and University Extension. This year three nationally known academic economists will provide the core instruction for the five-day conference. Presentations and reactions from representatives of agriculture, business and labor will provide open discussion of the issues with the clergy. Purpose of the annual conference is to present a comprehensive analysis of the American free enterprise system for the economic education of clergy of all faiths. The foundation awards scholarships covering the conference costs to clergymen recommended by their church leaders. THOSE WHO HAVE attended past conferences give endorsement to the program, noting that economic education is necessary for the understanding of critical issues, such as war, peace and democratic survival, which are economic in nature. GUEST SPEAKERS will include Prof. William T. Hogan, director of research, Fordham University, Bronx, N.Y.; James A. Papke, professor of economics, Purdue University; Dr. Dordon Haferbecker, academic affairs, Wisconsin State University; Del Roskam, president, Cessna Aircraft Corp., Wichita; Clarence Rupp, Kansas Farm Bureau, Manhattan; Frank W. Turner, senior vice-president, Home State Bank, Kansas City, Kan.; and Chic St. Croix, research director, Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union, Denver. The Kansas Clergy Economic Education Foundation is directed by an executive board of agriculture, business and labor representatives. Officers this year are Lynn Whiteside, Boeing Co., Wichita, immediate past president; Joe Smerckel, Kansas Farm Bureau, Manhattan, president; Thomas Pond, General Motors Corp., Kansas City, Mo., and Floyd Black, Kansas State Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO, Topeka. vice presidents. Sixteen KU architectural students are now on an eight-week European tour, studying key examples of continental architecture. Europe's Buildings Are Tour Object The students are traveling through Germany, Italy, France, England, and Belgium as part of an intensive study, with major emphasis being placed upon analysis of architectural examples from the Renaissance to modern times. The program is more than a "grand tour," but is a six-hour credit course, complete with papers and examinations. The tour, which will end Aug. 6, was organized under the sponsorship of the newly formed Summer Architectural Institute with aid from the United Nations' Council on Student Travel, of which KU is a member. The conductor of the tour will be David Hermansen, associate professor of architecture at KU. -Business Directory- Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store - Arabic - Indian - Vegetarian 17 W. 9th VI2-2771 - Oriental Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed, Fri, Sat. 10-6 Complete — one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE ART NEASE 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS MISCELLANEOUS Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8595. tf B-B-QUE—Treat yourself to some real Bar-B-QUE at Mich. St. Bar-B-QUE, Ribs, 11:00 p.m., Phone 2-9150. Closed Sunday and Wednesday, 515 Mich. St. tf DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken und essen German Style. Featuring studie- tion, a light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuriering sandwiches available; Liter stools for sale. VI- 1-9441, 14th & Tenn. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Classical Guitar instructions in technique and musicmanship. Beginners and more advanced pupils. VI 2-0002. 8-3 3rd KYU-Karate wants instructor for advancing through 1st KYU-Karate. Call VI 3-8803 after 5 p.m. 8-3 FOR RENT For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. 12 blocks to Fraser Hall. Private kitchens. Artistic facilities paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8F34. Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tf FOR SALE Slanese kittens. Blue point and seal call. Point VI 2-1484 at 4:30. 8-8 Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tf Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 Large Electric SMC 400 typewriter-with carbon ribbon—like new—will sell for $1 price—accept reasonable trade to $100.00. Excellent for the vires. VI 2-154-7-360 VW Sedan, 1963, all equipment, new price. See any other VI 2-900-7400. Price. Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM, Oclor Olivette, Hermes. Xerox copies. Observer Typewriter. 700 Mass., ff. 3-3644. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies Trans- 2 West. 5% South of Eudora. 8-3 TYPING Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol 348, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6:00 p.m. tf 1960 Opel sedan. Body damaged but in good mechanical condition, $125. Call VI 2-2265. 7-30 Topeca students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers using a typewriter. Topeca typetaker by experienced typist call Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeca tt. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will be used on these exercises or these pre-employed. Electric typewriter. CALL Mrs. Marsh at V3-8262. CALL ff A tutor for modern Greek. Need right away, Call VI 2-0084. 7-20 New corrugated boxes—for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. fc Have an apartment? Looking for a roommate to share expenses for the 1965-66 year? Grad. student in history would like to hear from you. Contact Darrel Bigham, 1252 Tremont St., Roxbury, Boston, Mass. 02120. Tel. 617-484-8843. tf Dependable Cars - Complete Auto Servicing SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various portfolio and resume to the Daily Kansan, Box 10, as soon as possible. tt Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Open 24 Hours Will do typing for reports, theseis, manu- service. Call VF 2-0439 If we don't have what you want— we'll call it! FOUND WANTED VI 3-0138 23rd & La. Wagner's Texaco Lady's wrist watch in Lindley Annex parking lot, Zone C. Call anytime at VI 3-6319. 8-3 Experienced Typist would like typing in term papers and term papers and letters. VI 3-2651. Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook. 2000 R. L., VI 3-7485. tf Accurate typing by experienced typist Instructions. Reasonable and fast, VI 2-1581; instructions. HONN'S OPEN 24 HRS. NewYork Cleaners Merchants of new york COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING - alterations - reweaving Across From The High School - dry cleaning 19th & La. VI 3-9631 For the best in — 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center Patronize Your 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Established — Experienced Complete Center under one roof FREE PARKING S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Reading Material Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Supplementary Textbook Features Greeting Cards, Gifts Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday The TOWN CRIER 912 Mass. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Miniature Golf RELAX at the JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY Jayhawk Fun Fairway CITIC AIRLINES Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. Make Your Summer Reservations Now! LET Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE TRAVEL TIME HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ph. V1 3-0350 Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Variety of grocery items 616 Vt. LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY Crushed ice, candy OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Prompt Electronic Service TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Charges Changers Radios Transistors - We Service All RCA Car Radios Motorola Airline Makes - GE Zenith Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 20, 1965 Changes Mark Emphasis in KU Art Education Rv Mike Shearer "We are trying to lead the direction of emphasis in art education." Prof. Phil H. Rueschoff of the art education department said. Explaining the frequent changes in art education, Rueschoff said many changes are made in the art education program every year because of experimental research conducted by college graduates. New and better techniques are constantly being discovered. up all over the nation," Rueschoff commented, "but the population is not being prepared by education for them. This is what makes the fine arts a status symbol." "CULTURAL CENTERS are going Rueschoff said a well-rounded education was becoming necessary in the field of art education. In the KU program, 50 hours of liberal arts are required and extensive study in all of the areas of art. "ONE CANNOT record visually, through painting, the culture in which they live if they are not well acquainted with it," Rueschoff said, emphasizing the necessity for study in areas outside of art. He said art faculties now are being trained in the latest techniques available. Despite the mass movement across the nation in art education, Rueschoff said he feels that changes are still not fast enough to meet the current trends. Most art teachers were educated twenty years ago and have not become informed of the latest discoveries in teaching. "CHANGES BY research and changes in research are our main tools for advancing. We have a reorientation in teaching methods every year." Rueschoff explained. "The purpose for art education." Rueschoff said, "is to develop independent and creative thinking in youngsters. It is also to keep the public informed and capable of using cultural centers intelligently." THERE ARE 37 graduates working at KU on their master's degrees in art education at this time. Graduate work is one of the most valuable forms of research in use. The research includes working with children and descriptive work. "We are not training the students to teach now but rather to teach in the future. The very latest in methods is always taught. This is the only way to establish an interested public," Rueschoff concluded. Brando's Father Dies HOLLYWOOD —(UPI) —Marlon Brando Sr. 70, father of the actor, died Saturday night in St. Vincent Hospital following a brief illness. The Trade Development Committee Of The Lawrence Chamber Of Commerce Invites All It's University Friends To Our Biggest And Best SIDEWALK BAZAAR Thursday, July 22nd 9 A.M. To 8:30 P.M. Downtown And All 3 Shopping Areas ART, MUSIC, PRIZES and DANCING IN THE STREET! - LOADS OF SALE Merchandise Displayed On The Sidewalk! FREE MOVIES At The Granada 1 & 2:45 P.M.! ORIGINAL ART On Display In The 1100 Block On Mass. SURPRISE EVENTS All Day Followed At 8:30 With Square Dancing At 10th And Mass. And A Real Wild Rock 'N' Roll In The Street At The Red Dog And It's FREE! LOTS OF FUN AND BARGAINS GALORE! 0 0 - 53rd Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 23, 1965 Lawrence, Kansas 53rd Year, No. 11 图 Clifford S. Griffin . . . probes history of KU KU Professor Looks Into University Past By Tanya McNaughten What is a university? What intrigues, political issues and ideals combine to form an institution called the University of Kansas? Dr. Clifford S. Griffin, associate professor of history, is seeking answers to these questions as he writes the history of KU. Formal Set For Saturday By Cyndee Burnett The annual Midwestern Music and Art Camp formal dance will be held Saturday in the Lewis Hall Ballroom from 8 to 11 p.m. Monday night the candidates for king and queen of the camp were nominated by the occupants of their respective wings at the floor meetings held in the dorm. Nominees from the girls' dorm are 2 North—Polly Gambel, 2 South—Debbie Quick, 3 North—Liz Harris, 3 South—Cindy Menendez, 4 North—Tanya McNaughten, 4 South—Gina Eikales, 5 North — Shay Slack, 5 South—Joan Wood, 6 North—Mary Gale, 6 South—Patty Ashley, 7 North—Linda Schreiber, and 7 South—Vicki Johnson. The boys nominated: 2 North-Mike Sjeklocha, 3 North-Dave Stone, 3 South—Steve Smith, 4 North-Tom Hasker, 4 South-Richard Laws, 5 North-Paul Gilbert, 5 Scout, Frank Bibb, 6 North-Tom Potter, 6 South-Harold Keen, and 7 North-Burt Stoekerer. Two South and Seven South are unoccupied. The campers will vote for the camp royalty when they arrive at the dance. The king and queen will be crowned by Prof. Russell L. Wiley and Prof. Gerald M. Carney at a ceremony at the dance. Campaign posters and publicity line the walls and hang from the ceilings of Lewis and Templin halls. Everyone is out to support his candidate. Campaign skits will be Thursday night at 7 on the all-purpose court. ___ Steamy Weather Invades Midwest By United Press International Hot and muggy air has moved back into the Midwest. Isolated showers fall in upper Michigan and Colorado. Temperatures remained in the 80s throughout Iowa and Missouri during the night, higher than daily maximum temperatures during the week. Wichita Falls, Tex., recorded its 16th consecutive day of temperatures of 103 degrees or higher Wednesday. Griffin's book will be published by the University Press and will appear for sale next spring, coinciding with the University's centennial. THE BOOK WAS started in 1960 with the centennial in mind. Griffin said he wanted to research a different field of history, and the University's history caught his attention. "I asked different people about it and there seemed to be a lot of interest." Griffin said. Griffin read all he could find concerning the history of KU. He found that most of the books were written from an emotional viewpoint and the authors were closely connected with the University. More often than not, Griffin said, the book was written for propaganda purposes. GRIFFIN WAS never a KU student, and he said this might enable him to write a book somewhat free of prejudices for or against the University. "I don't care what people use my book to say." Griffin said. One of the most valuable sources of information has been a set of letters by (and among) various University leaders over the years. These letters, stored in a vault under the steps of Strong Hall, gave Griffin a more personal look at the institution. He feels these letters give insight into the reasoning behind crucial administrative decisions. "I AM TRYING to avoid a stock history book by attempting to make it more interesting," Griffin said. "I haven't emphasized dates. It is a continuing narrative, written with the reader in mind." He describes his approach to the book as "critical in the sense of being objective." HE HAS INCLUDED topics and issues, including civil rights, which have affected the University as x whole. The essence of the book, Griffin said, debates the question: "What is a university?" "This question has been a problem since the University was established." Griffin said. "Early leaders were not sure what a university was or what its function was. This question has never been answered satisfactorily." "It should be read for the ideas it contains." Griffin emphasized. Griffin said he does not attempt to answer the questions he raises in the book, but instead wishes the reader to draw his own conclusions. This summer Griffin is writing the second draft of the book. Farm Bill to the House WASHINGTON — (UFI) — The House Agriculture Committee sent a multi-billion-dollar farm bill to the House yesterday with an apology for its cost and an admission it may raise bread prices by as much as a penny a loaf. Work Moves Ahead on Gym for KU By Bruce Erickson KU's new gymnasium, presently running slightly ahead of its construction schedule, will contain better facilities and more classrooms. But it will handle basically the same curriculum and "can only take care of the present physical education and intramural program." Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department, explained. THE STRUCTURE and new pool which will cost approximately $1,-150,000, is expected to be ready for occupation in February, 1966. Since it will not facilitate a larger curriculum, it is only the first phase of construction for the physical education department, Shenk said. The new two-story gym will contain a little more of everything than old Robinson now has; three indoor handball courts, instead of two, and three additional outdoor courts are being built; a bigger and better-equipped weight room and separate wrestling, fencing, and gymnastics rooms will provide permanent places or University teams to practice and work out. Two large gyms also will be included, each having cross-court basketball courts. These will serve the approximately 4,000 intramural participants who are expected for the next school year. Last year's program had 158 basketball teams, 70 touch-football teams, and 62 softball teams and hundreds of other students in the individual sports such as tennis and handball. A SPECIAL ASPECT of the new building will be the swimming pool and an over-hanging balcony seating some 700 spectators. Total cost for the natatorium will be $450,000. A proposed second phase of construction for the physical education department will have to wait its turn and allotment of appropriations, Shenk said. Present plans definitely call for an enlargement of physical education facilities in the future. Iarriman in Brussels BRUSSELS — (UPI)—Roving U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman arrived here yesterday from Moscow where two rounds of talks with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin apparently failed to budge the Russians from their tough stand on Viet Nam. 'Liliom' Will Begin KU Run Tuesday By Christine Howard Ferene Molnar's "Liliom," produced by the drama section of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, will open July 27 for four night performances and two 3 p.m. matinees on July 28 and 30. "Lilium," written more than 50 years ago, can be considered a fantasy and one of the great modern plays. The play is about a young Budapest rebel, an amusement park baker, who falls in love but can find no way to express his love. "Carousel" was the musical version of "Lilion" which was reset in the United States. According to Dr. William Kuhke, director of "Lilium," rehearsals have been going very well and there have been no major problems. He expects the play to be "very enjoyable." "I FEEL THIS is an excellent group of students. They are one of the best groups that have attended this camp. What they lack in experience they make up for with their devotion and enthusiasm," stated Dr. Kuhke. The main character, Lilium, is portrayed by Mike Dandler. Gina Bikales and Gwena Steffen are doublecast for the leading lady, Julie, whom Lilium loves and who teaches Lilium to express his love. The entire cast consists of 41 theatre majors and four theatre minors. Some members of the cast will play two parts. The rest of the cast, with their roles, includes: Marie—Beverley Krug; Mrs. Muskat—Alph Larsen; four servant girls—Debbie Singer, Lynn Horowitz Mona Matilock, and Ellen Garrison; policemen—Bob Seward and Brian Demarest; captain—Danny Tutcher; Mother Hollounder—Ronnie Underwood; Wolf Beifeld—Jay Epstein; Linzman—Kent Young; First mounted policeman — Ed Drake; second mounted policeman—Steve Sirridge; doctor—Brian Demarest; carpenter—Ed Cazzola; first policeman of beyond—Steve Sirridge; second policeman of beyond—Bob Seward; richly dressed man—Brian Demarest; poorly dressed man—Ed Drake; old guard—Sam Gabhart; Magistrate—Cliff Librach; Louise—Barb Shurtz; peasants, townpeople, etc.—Laura Owens, Joan Wood, Bar Spear, Kathi Hardi, Liessa Liepman, Pat O'Neale, Onnalele Zimmerman, Harriet Franks, Karen Wastin, Dori Aldrich, Irene Newmark, Barbara Kahn, Johnanna Branson, Roger Markowitz, Fred Ide, Tim Switzer, Chris Heinman, Rose Sidler and Kirsten Kissinger. Midwestern Music and Art Campers are allowed to attend one of the six performances. All other tickets will be sold for $1.50 at the Murphy box office. Flood Area Cleaning Up By United Press International Residents of flood-damaged areas in Northwest Missouri took advantage yesterday of receding waters to clean the muck and debris from their heavily damaged property. Tentative estimates placed damage to $30 million. At least seven persons were dead and three more were missing. Not all the low-lying towns were out from the swirling flood waters. At Agency, a town of 200 where nearly all the residents were evacuated, water 12 feet high was still pouring through the main street late Wednesday night. Highway Patrol troopers quoted longtime Agency residents as saying is was the most destructive flood in their memory on the Platte River. As the water ebbed at Smithville, a town of 1,300 north of Kansas City, several buildings appeared to be badly damaged. Water covered much of the business district. An estimated 350 residences at Smithville were battered by the flood. The Red Cross estimated at least 900 families in Farley, Trace, Edgerton and Smithville in Platte County and in Riverside, Mosby, Execelsior Springs and Missouri City in Clay County would "require assistance toward resumption of normal living." [Image of a woman looking at artworks on a wall. The paintings include sketches of animals, such as deer and cats.] INSPECTING OWN DRAWINGS — Rogene Pfeutze critically evaluates her own sketches which have been on display in the exhibition gallery of Murphy Hall. Rogene's works have been popular in this summer's exhibits.—(Photo by Hugh Tessendorf; related story on page 3.) Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 23, 1965 From the Elderly of 45 With the fervent hope that it will not seem too unseemly (no attempt at alliteration) to our five readers, this is part three of a dialogue between the faculty adviser and the student editor of the Summer Session Kansan. The latter has called the former a "disillusioned liberal" and suggests that even to one of his senior citizen status there may have been causes back in those days before the New Deal or something. Well, let's take that word "disillusioned" to start with. Broken down it seems to say that illusions have been removed. Fine. I'll accept that. Illusions, but not hopes and dreams and even expectations. THE ILLUSIONS disappeared the day I came to realize (when was that terrible day?) that I no longer knew the meaning of truth, about which I was absolutely sure in my college days. The illusions disappeared when I got over some fuzzy-mindedness that hit me especially hard about 1947 and when I came to feel that the Communists were as bad as a number of people—but not my current idol, Henry Wallace—said they were. More illusions disappeared when the Korean War came along, when I finally accepted the fact that Alger Hiss had been a Communist, and when (and this one has come slowly and reluctantly) I decided that, like it or not, we did have a stake in South Viet Nam. Many of us from the disillusioned liberal generation, as my stern critic and good friend would label us, don't have the illusions about peace that we once had. We know that (or perhaps "think that") the racial problem doesn't admit to an easy solution. We have learned that there are varieties of free speech, and that hoisting placards into the air bearing four-letter words is not one of the freedoms worth fighting for. AND NOW, MY FRIEND from Ellsworth, about my age. If you want to raise hell with somebody's generation move up about 20 or 25 years. Blame our fathers, not us. We're just coming into public life. One of the finest products of "our generation" was also the man you loved so much, and somebody from "your generation" gunned him down almost two years ago. Age to Youth: On Liberalism Our generation may give you some surprises yet. We have Stewart Udall, for example (and McGeorge Bundy, whom many of you cordially hate). We have Martin Luther King. We have men so young they haven't yet become committee chairmen in Congress, and women, too. Just because a baseball player or boxer is an old man at 40 doesn't mean that we're old at that age. We might not move as rapidly as you do, or be as convinced about truth and falsehood and light and dark, but we still have some energy and vitality, and some of us even think of ourselves as young. And some of us would much rather be going into our forties (is this truly middle age?) than be your age. Be 20 again? Never!—CMP The old man and the boy were talking seriously about Vietnam, the hot pennant races in both major leagues, and why the kids giggle and scream at the wierd, long-haired a-go-go types on teeeve. Without warning, the boy turned to the old man and asked: "Granddad, what is a liberal?" The old man thought a minute and said: "Well, son, my dictionary explains that a liberal is one who favors reform or progress. The word liberal also suggests freedom from prejudice or narrowness, even generosity in praise of a rival. Liberals have long upheld the right of an individual to freedom of belief and freedom of association." The boy said, "Well, isn't that good?" "YES, INDEED, son, but the liberals of today are forasing the traditions of liberalism. Instead of upholding the true liberal concepts, they have become intolerant of the views of others and attempt to shout down anyone who may disagree with them." The boy looked puzzled. "I don't get it," he replied. "Explain what you mean." The old man smiled and offered to give a few examples, "You see," he said, "we have the Taft-Hartley Act which provides that the individual states may adopt laws which Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business office UN 4-3198 UN 4-3646, newsroom Jacke Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. say a man doesn't have to join a union to hold a job. "SUCH LAWS have been passed by 19 states and are in full force and effect. But the liberals want this changed by repealing the section of Taft-Hartley which gives the worker the freedom to join or not join a union as he prefers. "It is argued," continued the old man, "that a man can get another job if he doesn't want to join a union. But this is somewhat of a joke in the great industries and other highly unionized plants where you must belong to the union, or else. "Yeah, I guess so," said the boy, "but what else are the liberals doing?" "Now we're at the point where the liberals, who originally believed in individual rights, see nothing wrong in suppressing such rights. Do I make myself clear?" "WELL, SON," said the old man, "they want everything regulated. They push for every socialistic measure offered in Congress. They want more federal controls over education and housing and urge new and largely unneeded government agencies to direct the lives of every citizen. The huge costs of these projects never seem to bother them. THE OLD MAN relighted his cigar, then observed: "Well, they're what you might call the far-out liberals—no balance, radical, confusion-spreaders and often violent. "They and the civil rights extremists hate everything in the South. Presently they are trying to block the President's appointment of a distinguished Southerner to the federal court of appeals. This man, J. P. Coleman, is a former governor of Mississippi whose moderate approach to civil rights produced impressive gains in better race relations for his state. "They are the people, for instance, who are giving Mayor Daley of Chicago such a bad time by lie-downs in the streets and uncontrolled demonstrations because they don't like the superintendent of schools. "Shall I go on?" asked the old man. "Oh sure." replied the boy, "but you mentioned extremists. Are they liberals?" The boy interrupted at this point and said: "But isn't Mayor Daley a big political boss?" The old man laughed: "Yes, he's a boss all right but he is also a strong mayor who has done more for the Negro race, as columnist Bill White said the other day, than any half-dozen of the Senate ultra- "EXTREMISTS NEVER seek rational solutions to any problem. No matter what concessions are made to them, it is never enough. They generally discredit themselves after a time, but the harm has already been done. liberals who are beating the bushes for the Negro vote. "Then we have the extremists of the right. These hard-nosed 'patriots' are radicals who make a career of abusing anyone who believes there may be more than one side to any question. They are just as bigotred as the professional liberals, but work the other side of the ideological street." At this stage of the conversation, the boy asked one of those delightfully direct questions which are so typical of youth. "I THINK I understand what you have said, but don't the liberals do anything that is good?" The old man flicked the ashes from what was left of his cigar. "Yes, Son," he said, "they have. Through the years the liberals have spearheaded many needed reforms. The progressive measures advocated by such men as the elder Robert LaFollette, the late Sen. George Norris and the two Roosevelts are now laws of the land. "Moreover, the liberals have historically provoked many of the famous Senate debates on the great issues. Even the recent teach-ins, which aroused so much controversy on Vietnam, at least had the merit of getting both sides before the public. "BUT MOST OF today's liberals," continued the old man, "have gone back on their earlier teachings. They have become illiberal in their quest for the causes they foster. Present-day liberals prate about freedom of expression, but as every newspaper editor knows, they squawk and complain about every news story or editorial which isn't slanted their way. "With a doctrinaire liberal," spouted the old man, you can never be half-right. It's always their way, or nothing." Noting that the old man's cigar was now but a stub, the boy spoke once more: "What you have explained," he said, "is that a liberal isn't really a liberal at all, but a guy who goes around telling other people what they ought to do and then get's mad if they don't follow his advice." The old man slowly rose from his chair. "Yes, son," he said. "I guess that's about the nub of it. So run along, and thanks for listening." John S. Knight BOOK REVIEWS THE POPULIST REVOLT, by John D. Hicks (Bison Books, $1.75). One of the fortunate occurrences in the field of paperback publishing has been the appearance of a number of notable volumes of history and biography that stand as the virtually definitive works in certain areas. For more than 30 years John D. Hicks' "The Populist Revolt" has been the standard history of the Farmers' Alliance and the People's party (or Populists), and a big, sturdy, serviceable paperback of the book has been published by the Nebraska Press. This is a story of eminent concern to the student in Kansas, for many of the Populist wars were fought out in this state in the eighties and nineties. It is well known that William Allen White wrote "What's the Matter with Kansas?" out of his anger and annoyance with the farm rebels, and that Mary Elizabeth Lease, whom he quoted in the editorial, was the rabble-rouser who talked about less corn and more hell—one of the most quoted diatribes in American history. HICKS DOES NOT JUMP SMACK into the middle of the story but lays the groundwork—Populism did not emerge in a vacuum. There were the hard facts of economic life, there were the railroads, there was speculation. And there were hard times, which couldn't be laid at the door of Jay Gould but did help to build discontent. The author notes how a North Carolina farm journal said what a lot of people were thinking in the late eighties: "There is something radically wrong in our industrial system. There is a screw loose. The wheels have dropped out of balance. The railroads have never been so prosperous, and yet agriculture languishes. The banks have never done a better or more profitable business, and yet agriculture languishes." And so on. The railroads and the bankers and high freight rates and hard money policies bothered the farmer, who, with the laborer, was given only the scrapings and the crumbs from what Parrington has termed "the great barbecue." So a true revolution was building, and it broke in the nineties. There were precursors of Populism, notably the Grange and the Farmers' Alliance, and each had a wide setting, not only the Midwest, but the South and part of the West as well. But in the nineties Populism began to win key elections. In uniting with what was then called "the Democracy" in 1896 it lost a major one, possibly because of the silver issue that marked the campaign, possibly because of Bryan himself. Populism is like the League of Nations. It was once in bad odor, and it has been called a failure. Yet it was the foundation of something great that came in a later day. Progressivism, numerous pieces of legislation, much of the atmosphere of reform politics owe much to the radicals of late 19th century. OUR LANDED HERITAGE: THE PUBLIC DOMAIN 1776-1936, by Roy M. Robbins (Bison Books, $1.95). With a renewal of interest in the land and the soil and the outdoors of America, this important history that appeared in 1942 has special value for the modern reader. It is a history of the public domain, economic and social in its approach, and its concern is with the impact of the free lands upon American history, an impact considered from Frederick Jackson Turner's frontier writings to Henry Nash Smith's "Virgin Land" of 1950. Roy M. Robbins considers that there have been four periods in American land policy. From 1780 to 1850, when the pioneer became "the most conspicuous agent in the settlement process"; second was 1850 to 1862, when "the West began to become intensely interested in corporate capital and the corporation almost over night came to challenge the settler's claim to being the foremost agent in occupying and developing the vacant areas"; third, 1862 to 1901, the rise of industrialism and the exploitation of the lands, and fourth, 1901 to 1935, the period of conservation coming up to the declaration of the end of the open public domain. IT IS A detailed and well documented story that Robbins tells There are the frontier farmer, getting the system of the land started, and the settler who buys on credit. He deals with the development of sectional feeling, with the speculators who dabbled with western lands, with the campaign for a homestead act that culminated in 1862 when an act actually was passed. For many the third section of the book will be most appalling, even to those who know the story. For there are unprincipled buccaneers and profiteers abroad in the land (as there are today, though today they are under stronger curbs). And had it not been for latter-day conservation policies the magnificent system of national parks and forests might be entirely in private hands today. The conservation story is the glory of this book and in some respects of our history, even as we look about us today and fear for what is happening to America. The many pieces of legislation that started in the Roosevelt-Pinchot era are described in detail, along with the fights for and against them. Robbins wrote during the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, somewhat in a golden aura that surrounded New Deal days. His story is a vivid one, and the book is worth a first look by students of American history. VENUS IN SPARTA, by Louis Auchincloss (Crest, 60 cents). Riding high these days because of "The Rector of Justin" is Louis Auchincloss, many of whose earlier novels are appearing now in paperback. One of these is "Venus in Sparta." It's a story of modern love and marriage, of a man and his mistress, and of the man's infatuation with his own stepdaughter. TIMON OF ATHENS, by William Shakespeare (Signet Classics, 50 cents)—Latest in an excellent series of paperback Shakespeare. As usual there are a special introduction, a discussion of Shakespeare's life and times, dramatic criticism, commentaries and detailed footnotes. Page 3 Third Student Art Exhibit Called Outstanding in Several Details lling, ripped today, been na- ny. Bv Mike Shearer The third art display of the summer comes down today, and the final display of the summer goes up in the exhibition gallery of Murphy Hall. ocs, 50 re. As seare's foot- This critic found the third exhibit outstanding in most areas represented. The most outstanding areas were fashion design, figure sketch, and nature drawing in this exhibit. The oil paintings and water colors which we had earlier expressed disappointment in have improved greatly. Crafts were exhibited for the first time this summer. Joan Fowles and Barbara Moorehouse each had a vase exhibited, work that was beautiful and original in design. Miss Fowles' vase was a cream-colored one with brown texture. Miss Moorehouse's was brown with the center to the left. ALSO OUTSTANDING in the area of crafts were three jewelry projects. A bracelet by Judy Hershman was particularly unique and artistic. Mike Elzea had a very beautiful, rough-textured ring displayed, and a pair of cuff links by Cathy Harris was of splendid design and expert workmanship. Summer Session Kansan In the area of water color an interesting composition by Jill Wilise was done with clean strokes and was effectively presented. Another water color was one of three trees by Rogene Pfuetze. Miss Pfuetze had many things displayed in the exhibit, all of which were nothing short of professional. To say that it was a one-woman show would be incorrect though, because several other girl art campers also are exceptional. In the oil painting section interest was centered around a portrait by Mike Elzae. The mood was projected well by the free technique used. Rogene Flietze had an oil painting of a girl sitting which was very colorful. The two oils were by far better than the rest of the oils. THERE WERE MANY outstanding figure sketches, but we singled out one by Eetsy Warland as the best. It was done in red and showed freedom of movement in the two figures. The fashion designs by Judy Hershman and Kris Hermanson were terrific. Miss Hershman had one which was done in charcoal and one in wash that were two of the best fashions displayed. Miss Hermanson got some dramatic effects by the use of charcoal and pencil in her series of fashion designs which were displayed. The cartoons were refreshing and surprisingly original. Mike Elzea satirizes the music camper in his dainty Mets Sign Renko So He's Ineligible Steve Renko, KU junior athlete, has confirmed rumors of accepting a professional baseball bid by signing a $12,000 bonus contract with the National League New York Mets. Joe McDonald, director of the Mets farm team in Marion, Va., announced that Renko had officially reported for work-outs after pitching and playing first base in the Basin League at Rapid City, S.D., for KU Coach Floyd Temple. The hard-throwing right-hander will definitely be ineligible for all college sports because of this action. It also was rumored that if Renko had accepted an offer from the Mets after his sophomore year he would have received a $40,000 bonus. Because he has been playing below par the last two years his bonus was lessened. Arrest Egyptian Editor CAIRO, U.A.R. — (UPI) — The semi-official Middle East News Agency said Mustafa Amin, editor of the newspaper Al Akhbar, was arrested while passing political and military information to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The agency identified the alleged CIA agent as Bruce Taylor Odell, a political officer at the American Embassy here. and effective technique. Niel Shapiro had two large and outstanding cartoons which probably were the most noticeable. Both Shapiro and Elzae were in the camp last year and have shown talent in many areas of the camp. SHAPIRO AND MICK Thompson made some free and expressive sketches at the Swope Park Zoo in Kansas City when the art camp took its field trip there last week. The pastels displayed were not one of the show's strong points. Most of those displayed were rugged and unfinished looking. Particularly weak were several pastel portraits. An exception was one by Mick Thompson which was done on textured paper and finished with touches of ink. The portraits exhibited were not up to those displayed previously. Past years have shown much better portraits than the ones seen this summer. Exactly what is wrong with the portraits is hard to describe but the faces lack form and perspective. TWO DESIGNS which were superior were by Judy Hershman and Karen Thompson. Miss Hershman's design was in subdued colors on a dark blue. The effect was very dramatic. Miss Thompson's design was a bird done in mild blues and greens. Both were exceptionally good. The other designs were also superior. The nature drawings were all well done but two by Rogene Pfeutze were probably the most outstanding articles in the entire exhibit. Done in water colors and pen and ink, the two animals show character and the artist's original style. The exhibit was terrific. Today's will probably be even better. But this year the biggest talent would apparently be feminine in contrast to previous years, when the males outranked the females. Names to look for in today's exhibit? Try Hershman, Hermanson, Warland, and especially Pfeutze. For male art there are Norland, Elzea, Day, Thompson, and Shapiro. But if past exhibits are any prophet, the girls will be best. Friday, July 23, 1965 'Carmina Burana' Ready For Concert on Sunday Bv Mike Holder SINGING THE SOLOS will be college students. Martha Clark, soprano, and David Holloway, baritone, two of the three soloists, are teaching at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The third soloist will be Richard Wright, a tenor. Orff has given rhythm a place of prime importance in all his compositions in order to establish a basis for a "new musical order." He holds rhythm as a "balance between sentiment and intellect," and as an independent form-building element. Orff has his melodies develop from rhythmic structure instead of having a melody evolve from a basic harmonic form. "Our production of the 'Carmina Burana' will be just about the same as the one the University did the first semester of this year. How good it will be performed remains to be seen." Carl Orff, German composer, educator and musicologist, has set his aim of educating the lay public with his creative musicianship. He has made an attempt through his musical compositions to make the dormant "powers of musical expression" useful with dance and musical improvision. Clayton Krehbiel, choir director, was speaking of how this week two choruses, the orchestra, and three soloists have been working hard in preparation for presenting the number at the Sunday afternoon concert. Yesterday both of the choruses practiced together for the first time and today the orchestra worked with the choruses for the first time. Saturday will be the first time all of the groups have come together to go through the whole number. This is the only combination number planned for the rest of the season, and if it is a success Sunday there will possibly be similar numbers planned for next year. THE "CARMINA BURANA," composed in 1935-36, was Orff's first composition for the stage. He admired and made use of the Wagnerian principle of "Gesamtkunstwerk," or totally organized work of art. However, his style was an entirely new interpretation. His works were greatly simplified since he deplored the increased complexity of the Wagnerian principle. Orff's inspiration for the "Carmina Burana" was a collection of secular poems from a 13th century manuscript written in low Latin and low German. "Goliards," who were wandering minstrels and scholars of that time, better known for their satire and riotous living than for their scholarship, wrote these poems. The work is described by Orff as a "scene cantata" to be performed with dancers, but his valid musical setting of the poems eliminates the necessity for the staging of this work, and it can successfully be presented in concert. THE PERCUSSION section of the orchestra is enlarged by Orff, giving it equal status with the strings and winds. Percussion is used to heighten the feeling of gaiety and frivolity which was so evident in the life of the Goliards. Both the poetry and music of the "Carmina Burana" show the influence of the Catholic chants. However, there is little that is solemn or "churchly" about most of the resulting combinations. Orff often used plainchant type melodies which would develop into something worldly and vivid. In direct contrast, he also presented the plainchant type melodies in a setting of delicacy and beauty. Orff was interested in "the spiritual realities" included in the texts he chose. The spiritual reality of "Carmina Burana" is an unquenchable assertion of life and its joys. Orff does not hesitate to make use of any musical means in order to express the texts. The original manuscript bears a cover design which acts as a motto for the entire collection, the Wheel of Fortune. THE RED DOG INN PRESENTS "THE RISING SONS" Smash Hit "HOUSE OF THE RISING SUN" Saturday, July 24 with lots of MUSIC, DANCING DOORS OPEN 7:30 and YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE SHOW STARTS 8:00 AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED AIR-CONDITIONED Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday. July 23, 1965 Year Abroad Granted to 13 Thirteen KU graduate students have been awarded travel grants for direct exchange graduate study at overseas universities during the 1965-66 academic year. These travel grants are in addition to scholarships covering tuition and expenses. KU recipients for the direct exchange are chosen by the institutions they plan to attend, and KU selects the students from each of the European universities. KU has the largest direct exchange program in the United States. Ten of the exchange scholars will receive travel grants from the KU Endowment Association funds which are administered by the Council for International Programs under the direction of George M. Beckmann, associate dean of faculties. FOR THE FIFTH year, Maupin-tour Associates travel agency, with home office in Lawrence, will award a travel allowance to New York, and then round-trip between New York and the British Isles. Lucy Tribble, Jafrey, N.H., will receive the Maupintour Travel Grant for study at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. Justine Broberg, Fargo, N.D., has received a Fulbright Travel Grant for Ecole Superieure de Commerce, Clarmont-Ferrand, France, and Thorold E. Roberts, Lawrence, has been awarded a German Student Service Travel Grant to the University of Kiel, Germany. Those who have been awarded Endowment Association travel grants are: Joy C. Bullis, to the University of Exeter, England, Davenport, Ia.; James F. Conger, to the University of Tubingen, Germany, Lakota, N.D.; Pauline C. Courchesne, to the University of Strasbourg, France, Holyoke, Mass; John P. Donovan, to the University of Birmingham, England, Somerville, Mass; Sharon L. Foster, to Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales, Paris, France, Birmingham, Mich.; Walter M. H. mull, to the University of Leeds, England, Eureka Springs, Ark; Robert L. Iversen, to the University of Mainz, Germany, Cedar Rapids, Ia.; Phyllis K. Rueb, to the Technische Hochschule Stuttgart, Germany, St. Francis; Jane Schendel, to the University of Hamburg, Germany, Topeka, and Larry Yarkin, to the University of Tubingen, Germany, Brighton, Mass. Chaplain Backs Religious Union By Robert Lovelace "United we stand. Divided we fall." Church Union is a pressing question in many church councils today. The question that seems to be asked most is, "What good will church union do?" A common reply is that in the case of church union Christians will be able to stand over other religions in a unified body. FATHER THOMAS WOODWARD FATHER THOMAS WOODWARD of Canterbury House and campus Episcopal chapell has his own views on church union. He believes thoroughly in the efforts of missions of combined Catholic and Protestant churches in the big cities. He also feels that Protestant church union is probable in the near future and that Catholic-Protestant union is possible in the distant future. Father Woodward said he feels the problems of church union lie both with the hierarchy and laymen of most churches. The problem is that both feel loyalty to their particular church. In a church union some rights possibly could be changed, creating an enmity that would dissolve the church union and spread them farther apart. "Father Tom" feels that church union is an eventuality. The task now is to educate people on church union so when the eventuality comes the people will be able to cast their vote for the most workable and efficient plan. Fund to Aid Studies In Speech Pathology The U.S. Office of Education has granted the University of Kansas $2400 for the training of graduate students in speech pathology. Prof. Margaret Byrne, principal investigator of the grant and chairman of the speech pathology and audiology division at KU, said the funds are being used for the graduate training of four students this summer. The students, who are studying as clinicians for public schools, are Edward Kelley, Bonner Springs; Mrs. Mae Mitchell, Topeka; Mrs. Frances Schapple, Topeka, and Dorothy Eby, Lawrence. COMPETITION SPORTS CAR CENTER Your Friendly TRIUMPH Dealer Is Giving Away FREE TICKETS They are not good for anything, but they are free. $100,000 in Average Square Mile Yielded by Minerals in Kansas GET YOURS NOW AT COMPETITION Just come on out and meet this wild bunch on E. 23rd St. OR Those price tags, with a couple of "ifs" were attached to the state's past and future mineral wealth by a group of geological experts who met at the University to consider the use of operations research for evaluating economic potential of Kansas mineral resources. An average square mile of Kansas earth has yielded $100,000 in minerals over the past 80 years. And in the next 20 years, it will produce $120,-000. OR Seventeen persons attended the meeting, sponsored by the University of Kansas department of petroleum engineering, the Kansas Geological Survey, and the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Concepts from several scientific disciplines were used in the geologists' attempts to develop reliable models for measuring, expanding, and improving the region's mineral endowment. Can you stand competition? Have your machine Psycho-Sun-Analyzed Schizoid Tune-Ups Our Specialty the chemical and cement industries is plentiful in that area, too, and clays used to make brick, tile, and lightweight concrete blocks, can be found in north central and eastern Kansas. "Salt exists in almost unlimited amounts in the western half of the state and so do construction materials such as stone, sand, and gravel," says A. L. Hornbaker, head of the mineral resources division for the State Geological Survey. Volcanic ash used in making insulation materials and filters is abundant in western Kansas, adds Floyd W. Preston, petroleum engineer for the survey, Chalk, used by Interesting, but that $120,000 figure is not very meaningful, the geologists quickly explain. Not many square miles fit into the "average" category. Instead, mineral production is clustered in a few areas, so most landowners don't see much of this underground wealth. Take petroleum, for example. The geologists estimate that during the past 80 years, oil and gas have accounted for about 75 per cent of the state's total $8.2 billion mineral production. Roughly one-third of that 75 HERE'S HOW the group arrived at the $120,000 projection: If 1960 production rates continue the next 20 years, more than $9.8 billion in minerals will be dug in Kansas. Divide that by the state's 82,276 square miles, and you end up with a staggering $120,000 value per square mile. What then will take up the slack? There are numerous possibilities, according to the geologists. East Asian Studies Assisted by Grant A $50,000 continuation grant for support of the University of Kansas East Asian Area Studies Center has been received from the Language and Area Center section of the U.S. Office of Education. per cent was piped from the Ellis-Russell-Barton County area; another one-third from Butler and adjoining counties; and about one-fifth from the Hugoton area. That doesn't leave much production for the rest of the state. FIGURES LIKE THESE boost up the state-wide average value per square mile to $120,000. Though the dollar value of mineral production can't possibly be distributed equally on a square mile basis, the geologists hope their facts and figures will provide the groundwork for expanding and diversifying the state's mineral economy. For, as they emphasize, pin-pointing undeveloped mineral areas and determining production shifts in the past are essential first steps in initiating a planned program for mineral development. Principal investigator of the grant, which will cover the 1965-66 academic year, is Thomas R. Smith, director of the East Asian program at KU. Smith said the grant will help finance salaries, library books, area specialists, and staff and faculty travel. Unless spectacular new finds occur, geologists predict that oil and gas will decline in total dollar value during the next 20 years. While petroleum products have made up about 75 per cent of the state's mineral wealth during the past 30 years, that percentage likely will drop to 50 per cent or below in the future. The grant, Smith said, has been continuing since 1959. This year's stipend is a substantial increase, coming to almost twice as much as it was last year. Professor to Attend Insurance Institute Harold C. Krogh, professor of business administration, has been awarded a scholarship to attend a weeklong insurance seminar at the University of Wisconsin July 25-31. The scholarship is for the 43rd CLU Institute, a graduate-level educational program sponsored by the American Society of Chartered Life Underwriters for its members. SUA FRIDAY FLICKS PRESENTS "IF A MAN ANSWERS" SUA STARRING SANDRA DEE & BOBBY DARIN Friday, July 23 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Friday, July 23, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 STATEN ISLAND MAGAZINE STEPPING OUT THIS WEEKEND? MAKE IT A NIGHT TO REMEMBER BY STARTING YOUR EVENING WITH A DELICIOUS STEAK OR SEAFOOD DINNER SERVED IN THE INTIMATE ATMOSPHERE OF THE PRAIRIE ROOM. Dinner Hours: 5:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Sunday 12:00-9:00 p.m. Closed Tuesday Prairie Room KANSAS UNION FOOD SE KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 23, 1965 Sunday's Program of Concerts Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Russell L. Wiley, Guest Conductor University Theatre 3 p.m. Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Romeo and Juliet, Overture-Fantasy ... Tschaikowsky Mr. Wiley, conducting Intermission Carmina Burana by Carl Orff Carl Orff Concert Choir and Chamber Choir James Ralston and Clayton Krehbiel, Directors Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Martha Clark, Soprano Richard Wright, Tenor David Holloway, Baritone Conducted by Thomas Nee, Guest Conductor Fortune, Empress of the World Chorus—O Fortune, variable as the moon Chorus—I lament Fortune's blows with weeping eyes In Springtime Chorus.The bright face of spring shows itself to the Baritone Solo—The sun pure and fine, tempers all Chorus-Behold the spring, welcome and long waited On the Lawn Orchestra Chorus—The noble wood is filled with buds and leaves Chorus—Hail, o world so rich in joys Orchestra Chorus—Here are maidens in a circle Chorus—Come, come, my pretty maid Chorus—Here are maidens in a circle Chorus—Were the world all mine, from the sea to the Rhine Earitone Solo—A wise man builds his house upon a rock, I, fool, am like a gliding river which follows no straight path Tenor Solo and Male Chorus—The roasted cygnet sings Baritone Solo and Male Chorus-I am the Abbot of Cucany Male Chorus-When we are unmindful of the grave The Court of Love Soprano Solo and Women's Chorus-The God of love flies everywhere Baritone Solo-Day and night and all the world are Soprano Solo—There stood a maid in a red tunic Baritone Solo and Chorus—My heart is filled with signed Male Chorus—A boy and a maiden Double Chorus—Come, come, do not let me die Soprano Solo—Sweetest boy Chorus—Hail to thee, most beautiful, most precious gem gem Chorus—O Fortune, variable as the moon Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Thomas Nee, Guest Conductor Gerald Carney, Guest Conductor KU Outdoor Theatre Symphonic Band 7:30 p.m. Newsreel: In Five Shots ... Schuman Horse-race Fashion Show Tribal Dance Monkeys at the Zoo Parade Valtres, March ... J. Hanssen Fanfare and Rondo ... Fritz Velke Suite of Old American Dances Robert Russell Bennett Cakewalk Schottische Western One-Step George Washington Bicentennial, March ... Sousa Mr. Bloomquist, conducting Concert Band Fugue a la Gigue ... Bach-Holst Stewball, four variations ... Gail Kubik Moderately fast Fast Slow Fast Mr. Nee, conducting Inglesina, concert march ... Delle Cese Marche Slave ... Tschaikowsky Mr. Carney, conducting Hary Janos, Suite ... Kodaly Prelude. The Fairy Tale Begins Viennese Musical Clock Song Entrance of the Emperor and his Court Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Mr. Wiley conducting Botany Professor at Work On Research into Cancer By Kim Freshwater Important work in cancer research is going on at KU's Lawrence campus, as well as at the Medical Center. The man conducting the study is J. Eugene Fox, associate professor of botany, who does his work tucked far away in the older section of Snow Hall. THROUGH STUDY already completed using radioactive hormone solutions and the deprivation of hormones in some cultures, the doctor and his four associates, two of whom are KU undergraduates, have been able to trace the concentration of this substance in plants to the cell's RNA, or ribonucleic acid. He conducts his experiments (which involve the study of the effects of hormones on the growth of plants) using laboratory-grown specimens of tobacco, radishes, and the not-too-well-known haplopappus plants. This substance is thought to control plant and animal development. The researchers also have cultures which they refer to as "0-1" samples, that appear to grow without the help of ordinary hormones, just as does a cancer cell. The main steps involved are the growing of small, sterile pieces of tissue in a culture medium that includes vitamins, minerals, the hormones known to be needed for growth, and the sugar that is generally produced through photosynthesis. Because of this latter addition, the plants can be grown in the dark, although they lack the usual green color. According to Dr. Fox, "all living things, from a biochemical point of view, are just about alike," so if he can determine what makes these "0-1's" tick, science will begin to have an answer to stopping their occurrence. prevention and cure of cancer, Fox and his project are supported by the National Cancer Institute. This organization also has given him valuable equipment, including a high-speed centrifuge, a sensitive analytic balance, and the ultraviolet analyzer which he is using for his latest work. THE PREVIOUSLY mentioned haplopapus plant is one that is particularly useful in this study because it has a unique two-chromosome structure, whereas in other organisms he would have to observe many pairs of these little bodies which are known to contain the hereditary material controlling growth and development in each cell. If these (the chromosomes) and the hormone experiments are successfully completed, science may finally be on its way to knowing what is necessary chemically for the regeneration of organs and limbs and how to retard some of the physical defects that now plague mankind. KU Cadets Get Aid Because his research is so closely allied to other programs for the The Department of the Army has announced the names of 600 college men who have been selected to receive two-year ROTC scholarships at colleges and universities offering the ROTC Program. EVANSTON, Ill. — (UPI)— More than 100 representatives of the broadcast industry met yesterday for the third annual national broadcast editorial conference. Broadcast Editors Meet The awards are being made to selected ROTC students who will enter their junior year of college this fall. Thomas C. Hewitt and Sam I Jordan, juniors-to-be at KU, were recipients of these awards. Jordan will transfer to KU from Wichita State University this semester. De Gaulle dislikes the Common Market because of its supranational aspects. He dislikes NATO for the same reason. Until the present Common Market crisis De Gaulle cooperated fully with it, probably largely because it was to France's advantage to do so. Now that the disadvantages seem to outweigh the advantages in De Gaulle's mind he has staged a boycott and halted all further progress towards a complete six-nation customs union. It pays to look your best. There is more than a casual parallel between the two cases. IN THE CASE OF NATO De Gaulle has been reducing his cooperation progressively on the military side for a number of years. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. MANY DIPLOMATS believe De Gaulle might use just the same tactics with NATO, if he should fall out with it. Morris Gets Award Now all but two French divisions and a number of tactical air force squadrons in Germany have been withdrawn from NATO command. French participation in the military side of the alliance is skimpy. Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 PARIS — (UPI) — French President Charles de Gaulle's current boycott of the European Common Market could well set a pattern for similar action toward the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). By using the "empty chair" technique at Common Market headquarters in Brussels, De Gaulle has succeeded in bringing its operations to a standstill without staging an actual walkout. Donald Craig Morris, third-year student in KU's department of architecture, has been awarded one of Desco International Association's second annual $400 scholarships for academic achievement. Morris is one of four regional recipients of the annual Desco International scholarships presented through the cooperation of the American Institute of Architects and the American Institute of Architects Foundation, Inc. Purpose of the scholarships is to help young architects financially so that they may complete their studies and further contribute to future advancement in their chosen profession. Students must be in their fourth or fifth year of architectural study to apply for scholarships. Fire in Perry Store PERRY — (UPI) — A pre-dawn fire raged through the Reusch Hardware Store in the business district yesterday causing a loss estimated at $42.000. skyrocket 65 IT IS KNOWN that De Gaulle wants the 16-year-old treaty to be completely rewritten and NATO to be revamped so as to bring it more into line with what he considers present-day conditions. There have been increasing rumors of late that De Gaulle might pull France out of NATO altogether in 1969 when the Atlantic treaty comes up for renewal. University Theatre Presents for instance, it is certain that De Gaulle would like at that time to eliminate all the supra-national aspects of NATO. Much obviously will depend then on how De Gaulle's allies react. If they reject his demands for a total overhaul of NATO, many diplomats—including some informed French officials—believe De Gaulle might in fact walk out. Others believe he simply would use the "empty chair" boycott-particularly if it turns out to be effective in the Common Market crisis. High School Showcase TONIGHT Admission: FREE Starts 8:20 p.m. ENDS TONIGHT! 'WHAT'S NEW PUSSY CAT?' THEN HELD OVER — AND MOVED TO THE SUNSET Granada THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5780 Wa Un Starts SATURDAY . . . The literally of water of Kar water KUl for its progra wastes the or and p have wester 100 Century-Footprints FRANK SINATRA TREVOR HOWARD VON RYAN'S EXPRESS COLOR BY DE LUXE Varsity Evening Only THEATRE .. Telephone VI 3-1065 KU FRI. & SAT. — "THE TRAIN" Now grant Health more and to source Starts SUNDAY . . . LOVE IS MORE THAN A GOODNIGHT KISS! M - M - M RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN YVETTE MIMIEUX JOY IN THE MORNING METROCOLOR Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE : West on highway 40 Starts At D THIS will to master diidate The rectec man o of the Health Smith source Reso Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE - West on Highway 40 "Gr facul both plied said. FRI. & SAT. - Th resot have With ulty velog sour 4 Piston-Poppin' Racing Features! SUN. & MON... HELD OVER! AND MOVED OUT "WHAT'S NEW PUSSY CAT?" ADULTS ONLY! Friday, July 23, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 7 ing only Water Research Brings University $46,328 Grant Starts At Dusk The Midwest and Kansas have been literally consumed with the subject of water this year, but the University of Kansas has been occupied with water research for some time. KU has gained national recognition for its leadership in water-related programs. Studies of the disposal of wastes by means of bacterial action, the origin of floods, water pollution and purity, and related problems have proved valuable in the mid-western area. Now with a second year renewal grant of $46,328 from the U.S. Public Health Service, KU will train four more students at the master's level and two at the Ph.D. in water resources and environmental health. THE RESEARCH supporting grant will total $277,000 and will support 25 master's candidates and 12 Ph.D. candidates over the five-year period. The water research program is directed by Ross E. McKinney, chairman of civil engineering and director of the C. L. Burt Environmental Health Laboratory, and by Robert L. Smith, Parker professor of water resources and director of the Water Resources Institute. Resources Insulted "Graduate students will work with faculty on water problems which are both local and fundamental to applied water research." McKinney said. The graduate programs in water resources and environmental health have mushroomed in the last years. With the addition of three new faculty members this year we will develop a Ph.D. program in water resources." W sources: KU NOW OFFERS the master's degree in both water resources and environmental health engineering, and the Ph.D. in environmental health. Masters' candidates selected for research under the Public Health grant this year are Terence J. McGhee Chatham, N.J.; Delbert Franz, Walton; Alan Lumb, Brentwood, Mo. and Martin Leiter, Brooklyn, N.Y. Ph.D. candidates will be Richard Dague, Lawrence, and John Carter, Topeka. Parachuting Film Scheduled Monday A 30-minute color film showing free flight falls and techniques will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 206 Military Science Building. Jim Garrison, central conference director of the Parachute Club of America, will answer questions on the sport of parachuting and explain the use of different items of parachute equipment. Garrison is a veteran of more than 600 parachute jumps. Although the film is being shown primarily to a local Cub Scout pack, interested persons may attend. Today's Outdoor Films Three movies will be shown east of Robinson Gymnasium at 8 p.m. today. They are "Spirit of Aloha," "Where Is Winter a Pleasure?" and "Romance of Old German Town." Patronize Kansan Advertisers Business Directory Staf-O-Life Health & Diet Store - Vegetarian - Arabic - Indian Oriental 17 W. 9th VI 2-2771 Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Complete — one stop service STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE V1 3-9897 SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. FOR RENT Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tt 601 Mass. For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double, triple block to Fraser High Schools, institutions, colleges and utilities paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. FOR SALE Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $25.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6:00 p.m. tf Stameles kittens. Blue point and seal point. Call VI 2-1484 after 4.30. 8-3 Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies, Trans- parent Apples and Honey. 8 miles South. 2 West. $ \frac{1}{2} $ South of Eudora. 8-3 Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 1960 Opel sedan. Body damaged but in good mechanical condition. $125. Call VI 2-2265. 7-30 TYPING Topeca students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers from a variety of sources. Topica writer by experienced typist, call us Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Slims. Topeca tf. Large Electric SMC 400 typewriter with carbon ribbon—like new—will sell for $1½ price—accept reasonable trade to $100.00. Excellent for theses. VI 2-1546, 7-1560 Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portals; rentals, sales, service Portola, capita Oliveira, lirrines, Xoex copies Ioe. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass., VI t-3-364. VW Sedan, 1963, all equipment, new car body, new tires. See price. Any time VI 2-084. 7-30 Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. Will type all kind of theses and exames. Electric typewriter. CALL Mar, Marsh at VI 3-8262. CALL tf Will do typing for reports, theses, manu- service. Call VI 2-0430 Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. L., VI 3-7485. tf Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable and fast. VI 2-1561. tt Experienced Typist would like typing in her home. Theses—term papers and letters. VI 3-2651. tf Dependable Cars - Complete Auto Servicing - Dependable Cars WANTED Open 24 Hours SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! If we don't have what you want— we'll call it! Wagner's Texaco 23rd & La. VI 3-0131 23rd & La. Have an apartment? Looking for a roommate to share expenses for the 1965-66 year? Grad. student in history would like to hear from you. Contact Darrel Bigham, 1252 Tremont St., Roxbury, Boston, Mass. 02120. Tel. 617-485-8843. Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various projects, job and resume to the Daily Kansan, Box 10, as soon as possible. tt New corrugated boxes—for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. MISCELLANEOUS Classical Guitar instructions in technique and musicianship. Beginners and more advanced pupils. VI 2-0002. 8-3 1rd KYU—Karate wants instructor for advancing through 1st KYU—Karate. Call VI 3-8803 after 5 p.m. 8-3 HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING OPEN 24 HRS. DER BIRSTUBE: Singen, trinken undessen German Style. Featuring students' favorite dark bev. and students' favorite light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwiches. AIR-CONDITIONED. Party room available: Liter steins for sale. VI-2-941I, 14th & Tenn. tf Need any sewing or mending done? Reasonable rates. CALL after 5:00 p.m. Mon.-thru-Fri, or all day Sat. or Sun. Phone VI 3-8395. tf BAR-B QUE—Treat yourself to some real B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B Que, Ribs, and Wings. Call 212-653-7800 or 11:00 a.m. Phone 9-21501. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. tt Across From The High School 19th & La. VI 3-9631 For the best in — for the best in — ● dry cleaning ● alterations ● reweaving VI 3-0501 New York Cleaners Merchant's of NEW YORK GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center 926 Mass. 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 Complete Center under one roof Established — Experienced Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers FREE PARKING Features Reading Material Supplementary Textbook The TOWN CRIER Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Greeting Cards, Gifts --- RELAX at the Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday 912 Mass. Miniature Golf Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY Boeing 737-800 TRAVEL TIME LET Ph. V1 3-0350 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 Make Your Summer Reservations Now! MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY 616 Vt. HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Chips, nuts, cookies Variety of grocery items Crushed ice, candy OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING Prompt Electronic TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changers Service We Radios Transistors Car Radios Service All RCA Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Makes - Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 23.1965 Yes, KU Has Its Fish Lab By Kit Gunn "Could you direct me to the fish lab?" "The what?" So little known is the Fisheries Laboratory, located west of Iowa Street and south of 19th Street, that the average student is somewhat surprised to learn of its existence. However, the lab, under the direction of Dr. Frank B. Cross, associate professor of zoology, is actually a thriving operation. The laboratory was constructed on Endowment Association property in 1954 by legislative appropriations. The buildings at the lab are made of two small houses taken from what is now the parking lot of Allen Field House. THE STATE Biological Survey operates the lab. Enclosed by a high wire-link fence, the laboratory is composed of 11 rectangular ponds and a larger reservoir. Each pond has a surface area of 1/10 acre and is filled from the reservoir, which is located above and north of the ponds, to a depth of .745 meters (approximately 29 1/3 inches). The reservoir itself is filled by rain running off the hills surrounding it. Nine of the ponds are open their entire length, but two of them are fenced into five divisions. This allows conditions to be kept more even among the fish being tested. FOR EXPERIMENTS that require even more controllable conditions than the sectioned ponds allow, a bank of concrete troughs exist. These troughs were filled with city water that had stood in a large metal tank to eliminate the chlorine and other chemicals harmful to fish. The troughs are not in use this summer. Working at the Fisheries Laboratory this summer are John Vandermeer, graduate student; Bill Simco, Mt. Burg, Ark., graduate student; Fred Busey, Emporia graduate student, and Ron Nolan, who graduated from Lawrence High School this spring. The main project currently under study at the laboratory concerns the "experimental growth of channel catfish." For this experiment, the catfish in the sectioned ponds are fed respectively 2 per cent. 3 per cent, and 4 per cent of their body weight daily. They are fed Purina Fish Chow, a commercial preparation. EVERY TWO WEEKS the ponds are seined (the fish removed by long nets) and the fish weighed. The data are then tabulated and sent to the Computation Center in Summerfield Hall for processing. There the information is fed into computers and the results sent back to the lab. These results include percentage gains and losses, graphs of the tabulated results and future feeding schedules. This is not the only project underway, however. Also current is a study to determine the effect of thinning the numbers of catfish in mid-year. Chemical factors influencing catfish also are being investigated. Besides catfish, bass and bluegill are under observation. The main project involving these is a study of hybrids between small-mouth bass and spotted bass. These hybrid bass are still small, but fathead minnows and red shiners have been introduced into the ponds containing the bass to feed them when they become large. THE MINNOWS breed on floating logs. Information gained by the fish lab is used by local farmers, in addition to the Kaw Valley Fish Farm, which is an outgrowth of research at the Fisheries Laboratory. Not all projects are conducted in the large outdoor ponds. Two indoor rooms are filled with aquariums and held at a constant temperature. In these aquariums the bass for the hybrid experiment are bred. Also being conducted indoors is a study by Ron Nolan, concerning "a predator-prey relationship." For this experiment small mosquito fish are placed in tanks containing larger carnivorous fish, and the reactions of both observed. One outgrowth of Nolan's study is the adoption of a lab "mascot," a large shovel-nosed sturgeon. THE EFFECT of the forces of nature is kept at a minimum at the fish lab by such devices as divided ponds designed to insure that all fish experimented upon receive the same conditions, except for the factor being tested. However, "acts of God" occasionally take their toll. Last year's drought reduced the water level in the reservoir so far that ground plants sprang up on the bottom. When the reservoir was filled again, the decaying of the plants produced so much carbon dioxide and used up so much oxygen that several ponds of fish were killed. The workers at the Fisheries Laboratory are pleased at recent rains. ... SEINING THE POND-Every two weeks the ponds at the fish lab are seined to remove the fish for weighing. Holding one end of the long net is Fred Busey, Emporia graduate student. SEINING COMPLETED - Ron Nolan returns one of the pond's large channel catfish to the water after the fish has been checked. Fred Busey holds the net while John Vandermeer, graduate student, removes dead algae from the seine. The algae, harmless to the fish in small quantities,makes seining difficult by clogging the net and concealing young fish. TAMARA STUDIO PHOTO CHECKING WATER SAMPLE-Ron Nolan, who graduated from Lawrence High School this spring, checks a specimen of the water in one of the 11 experimental ponds at the Fisheries Laboratory west of Iowa Street. Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 27, 1965 53rd Year. No.12 Lawrence, Kansas SDS Demands U.S. Halt Viet Bombing A resolution calling for the immediate cessation of the bombing of North Viet Nam by the United States was introduced last night at a meeting of KU Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) at the Oread Room of the Kansas Union. Also specified in the resolution were a rapid withdrawal of all foreign troops from South Viet Nam under the supervision of the United Nations, and a guarantee of the territorial integrity of South Viet Nam by the UN. The author of the resolution termed it "somewhat Utopian" but "something I could defend very strongly." NO ACTION was taken on the resolution at last night's meeting. Seventeen members attended the meeting, presided over by John Garlinghouse, Salina junior and head of the KU chapter of SDS. Garlinghouse estimated the full strength of KU-SDS at some 40 members. National membership is about 3,000. Future meetings of KUSDS until the beginning of the fall term will be held at the Garlinghouse home, 1023 Vermont St. Next week, it was announced, a report on the CORE national convention as related to SDS would be given. The SDS describes itself as a "radical national union of students." The SDS constitution states, "Students for a Democratic Society is an association of young people on the left. It seeks to create a sustained community of educational and political concern; one bringing together liberals and radicals, activists and scholars, students and faculty." A peace conference in Washington, D.C., to be held Aug. 6-9, was announced at the meeting. The conference was described as "an assembly for unrepresented people." IN AN INTERVIEW after the meeting, Garlinghouse said the work of KUSDS in the near future would be "mostly dialogue: literature, education, and public relations." "We don't envision any picket lines here for the SDS in the near future," he said. He said the KU chapter had received permission from Hans Morgenthau, professor of political science at the University of Chicago, and Paul Goodman, editor of the magazine Liberation, to use their works in KUSDS publications. Garlinghouse concluded by explaining that although the SDS's position on civil rights is similar to that of CORE, and although the SDS is sympathetic to the peace demands of the Student Peace Union, the SDS strives to be a broader organization that concerns itself with all facets of the beliefs of the democratic left. Rains Pound Much of U.S. By United Press International Scattered thundershowers roamed the Southland yesterday from the Atlantic Coast to Arizona. Heavy rain in Colorado raised the threat of new flooding. A funnel cloud was reported during the night 25 miles northwest of Denver, where a cloudburst dropped 1.95 inches of rain in a half hour. The California Zephyr passenger train derailed west of Denver Saturday night and railroad officials said the tracks were undermined by 4-inch rains. Three crew members suffered minor injuries in the accident Two deaths were confirmed in the Colorado flood area, and three per sons were reported missing. Gov. John A. Love said the weekend eastern Colorado floods caused $50,000 damage to public facilities alone and estimated damage to temporary highway facilities. The weather bureau said .78 of an inch of rain fell at Laramie, Wyo., during the night and Chadron, Neb., was hit with the same amount. Northern Alabama was swept with heavy showers, with Huntsville recording 68 of inch in one hour. Temperatures were unusually high Sunday in the Northwest, Ephrata, Wash., recorded a high of 102 degrees and Pendleton, Ore., swelled in 100-degree heat. J. HAWK DYCHE'S "J-HAWK?" — These words inscribed on a gargoyle on the front of the Museum of Natural History frequently go unnoticed by the tourist, as well as the student. (Photo by Hugh Tessendorf.) J-Hawk Among KU Gargovles THE GARGOYLES which adorn the museum fit this description perfectly. The only thing which causes the gargoyles to be the least bit unusual is the inscriptions which two o/ the animals bear. Gargoyles, as defined by Webster, are "waterspouts, often carved grotesquely, projecting at the upper part of a building, usually from the roof gutter." By Tanya McNaughten Dyche Hall, home of the Museum of Natural History, is not only the scene of some unusual exhibits, but of some unusual gargoyles. Although no one seems to know the exact reason, E. Raymond Hall, director of the museum, ventured a guess. When the building was being built, two sculptors from Italy were asked to decorate the exterior of Dyche with their work. "THESE MEN (Joseph Robalde Frazee and his son, Vitruvius) may have heard these words and added a touch of humor to their work by inscribing them." Hall said. "Rock Chalk" adorns an anima facing south. "J-Hawk" reads the gargoyle facing east. Why do these animals bear these particular words' This theory seems fairly sound since everyone has heard the words: "Rock Chalk, J-Hawk." Yet there is still the question: "Why is the question mark after J-Hawk inscribed?" Rush Activities to Open University Fall Program BARBADOS HEROINE OF THE DRAMA—Gina Bikales, above, appears as Julie in the play "Liliom," which is being produced by the Theatre Division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. The play will open tonight and will be performed for four nights and two three afternoon matinees. Wednesday and Friday. The main character, "Liliom," is portrayed by Mike Dandliker.-(Kansan photo by Dan Partner.) Sjeklocha, Polly Gambel Reign as Camp Royalty Mike Sjeiklocha, a science apprentice in mathematics from Indianola, Iowa, and Polly Gambel, a music major from Galesburg, Ill., were crowned king and queen of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp Saturday. The announcement was made at the annual formal dance by Prof. Russell L. Wiley, camp director, and Gerald M. Carney, associate director. The crowning climaxed a week of strenuous campaigning by 22 candidates nominated by their respective wings July 19. at floor meetings. Other candidates for camp king were Dave Stone, 3N; Steve Smith, 3S; Tom Hasker, 4N; Richard Laws, 4S; Paul Gilbert, 5N; Frank Bibb, 5S; Tom Potter, 6N; Harold Keen, 6S and Burt Stoeker, 7N. The other queen candidates were Debbie Quick, 2S; Liz Harris, 3N; Cindy Menendez, 3S; Tanya McNaughten, 4N; Gina Bikales, 4S; Shay Slack, 5N; Joan Wood, 5S; Mary Gale, 6N; Patty Ashley, 6S; Linda Schrieber, 7N, and Vicki Johnson, 7S. The week was filled with active campaigning and everyone worked hard to promote his candidate. Posters hung in both cafeterias and throughout the dorms. Fans of Tom Potter and Mike Sjekloka set up public address systems in the boys' dorm. Steve Smith served Kool-Aid on the patio one evening. Those campaigning for Tom Hasker wore shirts with their candidate's name on the back. The girl candidates kept the pace by displaying various and different posters Kindness Pays Off LEICESTER, England — (UPI) — Mrs. Biance Sannazzari, a cleaner at the Hillcrest Hospital here, has been left 100 pounds ($280) by a former patient, Miss Jane Chapman, as thanks "for her kindness in providing me with a glass of water when I requested it." As summer school nears completion, KU officials already are involved in fall activities. These activities will begin Aug. 1 with men's open rush. During the month of August, pledgings will take place in the rushees' home communities. All men whose applications for admission to KU have been approved and who have registered for rush will be able to sign, upon invitation, an official pledge card for the fraternity of their choice at this time. DURING FORMAL rush the 27 fraternities on the KU campus will give dinners and parties for the rushees. Donald K. Alderson, dean of men, said more than 400 men are expected to go through rush this fall. Men who do not sign pledge cards during August and who wish to have an additional opportunity to meet fraternity members on campus may attend formal rush Sept. 7-10. During this period the rushes will stay at Templin Hall. Women's formal fall rush will be held Sept. 8-12. Fall rush is limited to upperclasswomen who have at least a 1.2 cumulative grade point average for all college work completed by the end of the regular academic year prior to rush. Women rushees will move into Lewis Hall from 5 to 8 p.m. Sept. 8. At 9 p.m. there will be a meeting of all rushees and Panhellenic representatives. THURSDAY, SEPT. 9, the 13 KU sororites will hold open house. On Friday morning, Panhellenic counselors will issue invitations in rushees' rooms. The rushees will return the invitations in person. Saturday, the second invitationals will be held. Each rushee will attend two parties between 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. Immediately after she attends her last party, she will go to the office of the dean of women, 220 Strong, to fill out her preference card. Sunday morning the final invitations to pledge will be issued, and Rushees will move into the sorority houses. As women's rush closes, another fall activity begins—the orientation program for new students. Orientation ceremonies will begin with a reception for students and parents from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 12, in the Kansas Union. PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS will begin at 7:30 a.m. Monday, and continue throughout the day. Women students will meet from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the University Theatre, and men students will meet at the same time in Hoch Auditorium. Physical examination evaluations, conferences with faculty advisers, and enrollment will take place from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sept. 15 to 17. A buffet for freshmen women will be held at 5:30 p.m. Sept. 16 in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall. At 6 that same night "Transfer Treat," a picnic for transfer students living in residence halls, will begin in the Temple Hall recreation area. Registration packets may be picked up at 1 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium. New students will meet their deans at 1:30. A new student convocation and induction ceremony will be from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. Following the ceremony, an activities carnival will be held at the Kansas Union. Foreign language proficiency examinations will be given at 8 a.m. Saturday. Sept. 18. Classes will begin at 7:30 a.m. Monday, Sept. 20. However, 9:30 a.m. classes will be dismissed to permit students to hear Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe speak at the all- University convocation in Hoch Auditorium. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 27, 1965 The Last Word - I Hope! For the benefit of "our five readers" I will explain that the following treatise is an attempt by this fiery, reformist student editor to get in "the last word" with her disillusioned, liberal news adviser: I STILL APPLY the word "disillusioned" to you in a negative sense. Abandon the delusions, yes, but never the illusions. For ideals, hopes, dreams "and even expectations" are all illusions. And no one can fight effectively for the former without having the latter. To represent your generation well, you are going to have to stop playing hide-and-go-seek with semantics and logic. We have no delusions of simplicity about racial policy problems. We do have illusions and are trying to jolt you "oldsters" and your elders out of a lethargic muddle so solutions can be found. Obviously, we can't carry the ball alone. And it irks us that we're getting no help from a generation preoccupied with deciding if it's really young or not. Assuming the pearly eminence of an old age complex to tell us how young you are is a shabby defense for inaction, but it does keep your hands from getting dirty. TRUE, HOISTING placards bearing four-letter words—when considered out of context—may not be crucial to the nation's future. But Michelangelo did not sculpt the Pietà by concerning himself only with major policy decisions; its beauty came through careful attention to detail. You (old age complex and all) have a responsibility to work for the "illusions" of my generation, if only because you begat us into this mess. So let's cut the senior citizen jazz and get to work! IT WOULD BE GOOD for both our five readers and for us to reflect upon the words of Dag Hammarskjold in "Markings": Our "illusions" are not so different, my dear Dr. Pickett—only our approaches. Whitley Austin once said that the hardest lesson for a newspaperman to learn is to accept fools gladly. Both being newspapermen, fledgling and "aged," let us bury the hatchet and accept each other's failings. And, for God's sake, let us consider apathy as anathema. "The man who is unwilling to accept the axiom that he who chooses one path is denied the others must try to persuade himself, I suppose, that the logical thing to do is to remain at the crossroads. "But do not blame the man who does take a path—nor commend him, either." Jacke Thayer Uncle Robert's Bedtime Story Today Uncle Robert will tell you about the great WUDS controversy. A controversy of such bitterness and importance is usually relegated to such luminaries as a Lippmann or Reston for comment, but by the nature of the beast(s), somehow the Uncle Robert Treatment seems in order. It all started when the seagulls down at the dump found themselves without a home. A very sad situation. Of course some of the birds had already been moving out into the "District" in anticipation of the coming catastrophe, but most of them were caught with their pin feathers down, as it were. Soon, all over the University District, displaced seagulls were walking in the gutters, pecking at whatever might come along. Often there were long periods between garbage cans and the situation became serious. The controversy developed when a group of the older residents, called WUDS (White University District Seagull) formed their Jim Seagull Must Go Movement and made, through their local Gutter Estate Dealer, an alliance with the Seattle street cleaners. The Dump birds were to be washed out of the gutters and into the streets! "Why, my dear," said one prominent WUDS, "they do terrible things to the value of your gutter and I'm sure they all want to lay eggs with our daughters! Summer Session Kansan 111-112 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Telephone UN 4-3198, business UN 4-3646, newsroom Jacke Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Why just the other day at our Daughters of the American Seagull meeting, we were talking about how they were all card carrying members of the Herring Gull Party!" "Them Dumpies sure can dance and sing though," commented her friend. Soon the controversy broke out into the streets and seagulls were seen everywhere carrying picket signs and "sitting in" at "WUDSonly" garbage cans. The fact came out that a number of the demonstrators were northern birds that had come down from the Bellingham area. When asked to comment on the situation, local Seagull-Patrol member Clark Bird said: "Them damn Dumpies been tearing around and talkin' about votin' and eatin' in WUDS garbage cans and stuff like that. Man, that's against the law! Any of them kind gets beaky with me I'm gonna clip their wings!" Meanwhile back in Washington the other Washington), S.B.I. Director J. Edgar Vacuumbird commented on reports of Herring Gull infiltration into the Civil Bird Movement: "There are no less than one hundred card carrying members of the Herring Gull Party taking part in the recent disturbances in Seattle. Half of them, of course, are members of the S.B.I." Seagull University President Charles Odorib remarked that he was disturbed over the fact that certain members of the student body had been seen flying in formation with Dumpie demonstrators, but felt that there was no basis for charges of Herring Gull activity "on HIS campus by God!" How is this mess going to end? No one can be sure, but the comment of Mario Seagull, leader of the student faction of the demonstrations, seems appropriate: "___!" Comments by other principals in the dispute, notably Gov. Seagull Wallace, are much greater in length, but tend to boil down to essentially Mario's statement. Uncle Robert will keep you informed of the goings on in this area and will comment later in length on the new student F.S.M. (Free Seagull Movement). Remember, however, the next time you get decorated by a passing seagul, it was probably less a call of nature than a political comment. Univ. of Washington Daily —"Uncle Robert's Dregs" L.B.J. CONGRESS LEGISLATIVE WORK © 1965 HENBLOCK LAKE CHARLTON POP. "Thanks—Thanks A Lot—Thanks Again— Can I Lean Back Now?" BOOK REVIEWS FREEDOM'S FERMENT, by Alice Felt Tyler (Harper Torchbooks, $2.75). One of the grand historians of America is Alice Felt Tyler, of the University of Minnesota. In "Freedom's Ferment" she brought to vivid life the story of reform in the 19th century. The book is as solid and as absorbing today as it was when it appeared in 1944, and this paperback edition is a worthy purchase. the practical realist may scoff at some of the visionaries who inhabit these pages, but these are the people who laid the foundation for present-day institutions (though some of them—the utopians and the millennialists and the spiritualists—have survived only in history). These were people looking for a better life in a time of history when children labored at the looms and black men were in bondage. THE HISTORY ACTUALLY begins in the colonial era, for the author chooses to treat the optimism of the Enlightenment and its meaning in America, and to consider the Constitution, the role of Jefferson, the influence of the frontier. She also writes in detail of religion, of Jonathan Edwards and missionary societies, of the revivalists of the frontier, of the place of religion in our early-day colleges. Then there are what she calls "cults and utopias." There are portraits of Emerson and Margaret Fuller and the other transcendentalists, of the Millerites and the Fox sisters with their spiritualism, of Joseph Smith and the Mormons, of the various communistic cults that thrived in churches, of the Shakers, and the Oneida community, and the dreamers of Brook Farm and Hopedale, of the followers of Owen and Fourier. Most important is her treatment of the humanitarian crusades of the day. No one can scoff at the persons who fought for better education, the common school, the high school, training for women. Few can scorn those who looked at our prisons and the treatment of our debtors and found the systems evil. Admiration must go to those who worked for the poor, the deaf-mutes and the blind, and the insane. And especially there were the abolitionists—Phillips. Lovejoy, Garrison and the many minor figures. The author brings her excellent history down to the Civil War, and one finds himself wishing that she would continue with the postwar period, when temperance and woman's rights, in particular, came upon even more interesting days. FOR SOME, THE TEMPERANCE reformers were a different matter. This is a story that will amuse and annoy as it educates. And there were the nativistic movements and the various kinds of bigotry that marked the 19th century as they mark the 20th. There were peace crusaders, and there were those tough women who labored for woman's rights. It is good that such a book has been written, but even better that it is out in an inexpensive form for the young scholar in the university. Coke was attorney general, speaker of the House of Commons, and chief justice of England. In 1628 he was author of the Petition of Right, so significant in both British and American tradition. He was also a husband, and Mrs. Bowen gives a vivid description of his manifold battles with the beautiful Lady Hatton whom he married. Popularized history and biography have always been the strong suit of Catherine Drinker Bowen, whose most memorable books have been about John Adams and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. This well received book came out in early 1957, and its canvas and setting are quite different—England in 1552-1634. For her hero is Sir Edward Coke, the "oracle of the law" in the days of Elizabeth and James I. Sir Edward Coke was both a great lawyer and a popular man at court. This was the time of England's great flowering, and there are portraits of the monarchs as well as of the adventurers, the Raleighs and the Essexes, and Bacon, with whom Coke had a celebrated rivaly. Generally speaking the book is a reputable and exciting exercise in both biography and the law. It is long and detailed, and Mrs. Bowen recognizes the need to make her complex subject matter understandable. Sometimes, as in her earlier books, she does a bit of fictionalizing, but we may forgive her those minor transgressions. THE LION AND THE THRONE, by Catherine Drinker Bowen (Little, Brown, $6; also available in paperback edition). WINDOW ON THE SQUARE, by Phyllis A. Whitney (Crest, 60 cents); THE CASE OF JENNIE BRICE, by Mary Roberts Rinehart (Dell 50 cents); OPERATION CROSSBOW, by Richard Wormser (Dell, 50 cents); BACKGROUND TO DANGER, by Eric Ambler (Dell, 60 cents). (Den, 60 cents). Four for those times when "Herzog" or "Ship of Fools" is just too much to handle. The basic theme is excitement and danger; otherwise the four have little in common. "Window on the Square" is about a damsel in distress, a girl who fears that a man is a killer. It's an exciting whodunit. "The Case of Jennie Brice" is a Rinehart mystery classic that goes back to 1913—a beautiful actress and the circumstances around her disappearance. "Operation Crossbow" is one of those new literary novelties—a book based on a movie. This one is a spy drama of World War II. And "Background to Danger" is a peerless spy thriller, done by Eric Ambler in the days before the war—earmarked for spooky types like Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet and Zachary Scott. THE AGE OF AUTOMATION, by Sir Leon Bagrit (Mentor, 60 cents)—A British industrialist shows how automation only recently has come into its own as an industrial tool but how it has launched a revolution that already is transforming society. The book is an adaptation of the author's Reith lectures given over BBC in 1965. Summer Session Kansan Page 3 les of edu- Few of our who ane. erent And gotry were boored wejoy excel- ishing grance esting Bowen strong books holmes. as and is Sir th and exercise d Mrs. matter s a bit issions. man at there are aleighs celebrated mommons, *petition* on. He a of his carried. after that ne uni- rest, 60 linehart Formser Ambler just too other- girl who Case of 1913—aearance. —a book II.And by Eric types like mentor, 60 recently launched book is an in 1953. Tuesday, July 27, 1965 JONES AND CO. space about ten feet in diameter. In one place the walk had settled more than elsewhere, had held water when it rained and also was responsible for twisted ankles.—(Photo by Hugh Tessendorf.) SIDEWALK REPAIR—Workmen are shown tearing up an old sidewalk in front of Watson Library and getting ready to pour the new. The old sidewalk had settled about two inches over a 22 Spend Week in CORE Work By Martha Teitelbaum During spring break in the last school term, 21 students and former students and one faculty member of KU went to Louisiana on a CORE sponsored project. The group was split in half. Eleven students went to Bogalusa and 11 went to Jonesboro. The Egalalusa group included the faculty member, Mildred Dickeman, assistant professor of anthropology. The project for the group was voter registration. THE STUDENTS who went to Jonesboro had a specific goal. During the nine days they spent there, they helped in the rebuilding of a Negro Baptist church burned down by Klansmen because it was a center of civil rights activities. One of the students in Jonesboro was Loretta Estelle. She explained that donations paid for the trip to Louisiana, and that the students went down in three cars. Miss Estelle was surprised at the attitude of the southern Negroes toward the students. "They were more friendly than you can imagine," she said. Miss Estelle added that she felt the white students who went to Jonesboro began to understand what it was like to be a Negro in the South. THE FINAL RESULT was that the foundation and floor of the church were rebuilt. Students from another university were supposed to come down after the Lawrence students left to finish the rebuilding. After the spring trip, two members of the Lawrence chapter of CORE decided to stay down and work for a longer period. Geraldine Maddocks was there for three months and only recently returned. She worked as a secretary in the southern regional office of CORE. The other student who remained in Louisiana is Pamela Smith, one of the successful defendants in the KU sit-in case. She is a field worker. THE SPRING PROJECT was expanded to a summer program. Volunteers were asked to help in voter registration, freedom schools, community centers, and community organization. The project started June 10 and ends Aug. 30. The volunteers for the program attended a one-week training institute held in Mississippi in mid-June. Following this they were assigned to various projects in the South. Richard Burke, assistant professor of human relations, said the volunteers must be at least 18 and self-supporting. A NEW GROUP which started as a result of CORE projects in the South and which seems to be in direct conflict with CORE's philosophy of non-violence is the Deacons for Defense of Justice. This group believes in striking back when hit. Round Corner Final Summer Clearance Sale at Drug Store Many, Many Items Reduced for Clearance. See these Values on the "Shoppers Special Table" at the Front of the Store. Round Corner Drug Store Seminar, Opera Troupe Are Centennial Features 801 Mass. During four days in 1966, April 11 through 14, the KU campus will be the scene of wide activity as the University celebrates its centennial. VI-3-0200 Held during those days will be the Inter-Century Seminar. In general, the seminar is a discussion of the "challenge of the next hundred years." For this purpose, world leaders in science, letters, the arts and the professions have been invited to come to speak. On April 18, the Robert Shaw Chorale will appear, and the Cleveland Symphony will be here on April 21. company at the John F. Kennedy Memorial. The opera company will do "Susannah," an American opera, for the centennial. At the end of April, the Centenial Opera will be performed. "Portrait of Carrie" was commissioned from the composer Douglas Moore and is based on a part of the life of Carrie Nation. Man in a Mass Culture, Man and the World Community, Man and the Realization of Human Potentials, Man and Freedom of Mind, and Man and the Design of Higher Education are the five main issues to be discussed. JAMES GUNN, chairman of the screening subcommittee, said the Inter-Century Seminar will launch the celebration. However, the Metropolitan Opera National Co. is scheduled to appear in late March, prior to the seminar. IN AN EFFORT to share the Centennial with the state, the "Speakers' Performing Artists" service and the Centennial Observance Committee are setting up two Concert and Lecture Series circuits in 10 selected Kansas communities. The Metropolitan company is the traveling group of the parent organization and will be the resident Each town will have three concerts, a lecture and a panel discussion. KU faculty and students will stage these monthly events. During the commencement period next year, there will be a second period of celebration. According to Gunn, this is not planned in detail. SUNRISE 65 UNIVERSITY THEATRE presents "LILIOM" Tuesday - July 27 THROUGH Friday - July 30 Admission: $1.50 KU ID Redeemable at Murphy Hall Box Office Starts at 8:20 For Reservations Call Murphy Hall UN4-3982 Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday. July 27,1965 Post Editor Stresses Need for Specialties Bv Mike Shearer Dan Partner Sr., military and space affairs editor for the Denver Post, sees a trend toward specialties in the newspaper field. Partner spoke to 20 journalism campers in Flint Hall last Thursday. He discussed his career in journalism and the importance of journalism in a free society. Delighted with his present position on the Denver Post, Partner reviewed for the campers his earlier years in journalism as being demonstrative of the background necessary in journalism. AFTER BEING graduated from Kansas State University, Partner worked for the Manhattan Mercury as a sports writer. "The pay was only $35 a week, but I think that was where I got my best experience," Partner said. Sports writing is good experience for any journalist, according to Partner, and it is an excellent field to start in. Partner cited as one of the tragedies of journalism the number of persons on every newspaper staff who should not be working on a newspaper. "YOU SHOULD join the profession because you are good in journalism and not because you see glamor or easiness in it or because of your inability to do anything else." Partner said. "Some people see a prestige in 'the power of the press' that is not there. Some people think of reporting as free passes to the games and theatre or meeting celebrities. They don't see the hard work." Partner went from the Mercury to the Kansas City Star, where he worked as a sports writer before and after serving in the Navy. From the Star he went to the Denver Post, where he started as a sports writer and became sports editor. DESCRIBING HIS first experience on the news staff, Partner recalled the shock which he had experienced at the time. He had been sent to cover a collision and stuck his head in the wreckage and saw a sight which caused him to turn away ill. He did not get the story but he learned a lot from the experience which Partner said he would never forget. Discussing weak points of newspapers, Partner said most interviews as being boring because they are not newsworthy. He said most newspapers should use more discretion in the selection of interviews. "IT'S IMPORTANT that each writer think his story is the most important, whether it be front page or an obituary," he said. After such jobs as picture editor, rewrite man, assistant news editor, and news editor, Partner was elevated to his present position. Partner talked about the trend toward specialism in reporting and compared it to that of the medical profession. The Denver Post has specialists in politics, area police, water, education, the court, and many other areas. Specializing in military and space affairs has taken Partner to such places as New Zealand, Australia, South America, and Europe. Partner has been over the North Pole in a B-52 bomber and under Antarctica. RECALLING HIS days in South Viet Nam, Partner said it was a "dirty, frustrating experience." He was there when the war had just begun and says that since it is worse now he has no desire to return. "Nearly every major newspaper has written lengthy articles on the Viet Nam situation and each has come to the same conclusion as both President Johnson and McNamara. There can be no conclusion," Partner said in emphasizing the frustration of the Viet Nam situation. W. Laird Dean Award Is Made The first W. Laird Dean scholarship in the School of Business will be held by Melvin C. O'Connor of Wichita, who will be a senior in accounting. The scholarship is provided by friends of the late W. Laird Dean, former president and chairman of the board of the Merchants National Bank of Topeka and a KU alumnus. Criteria are academic record and need, and preference is given Kansas with interests in finance and banking. O'Connor has all "A" grades in business administration and economics courses and an overall A-minus record for three years at KU. O'Connor plans to enter the field of tax accounting after graduation. tax account Administration of the W. Laird Dean scholarship fund is by William M. Mills Jr. and Stephen M. Hall of the Merchants National Bank and Mrs. W. Laird Dean, all of Topeka. syncret 65 Their opinions of some necessary rules for dress and action mirror those of the regular KU students. Cartoons depict everyday occurrences in residence hall life, as well as satirizing the various departments of the camp. Still another shows a counselor talking to a camper and saying, "Till the musician or the scientist is not certain. ANOTHER PREDICAMENT illustrates a repair man shouting "man on seventh floor" as the girls in the lobby, scantily clad and recuperating from the heat and heavy schedule of the day, run for cover. One shows a girl in a towel with hair dripping wet, obviously just emerged from the shower. The intercom in her room has called her and is blaring forth with, "You have a caller in the lobby . . ." High school artists attending the Music and Art Camp reflect a sophisticated humor in cartoons. Many of the cartoons center on costumes seen at the recent Sadie Hawkins dance, and others on an earlier art camp field trip to the Kansas City Swope Park Zoo where the animals seem to have turned the tables on the sketchers. One shows a beatnik artist behind the bars with the label "art camper" and another has the monkeys throwing their stock of peanuts out at the campers. "LILIOM" Presents Two Matinee Performances OF University Theatre Cartoons Show Talent of Campers The cartoons are only one section of the display of art camp work, however. The remainder shows serious ability in fashion illustration, architecture and interior design, portraits, landscapes, and still life. Much of the architecture is of KU campus buildings, especially the soon-to-be-razed Fraser Hall and of nature life in the Museum of Natural History. 3:00 Wed. & Fri. trade my white shoes for your skate board." The counselors, most of them KU summer students and many of them former campers, come in for their share of being objects of satire. One cartoon is a sheet-robed group of campers approaching a counselor's door with a dead chicken and other instruments of pranksters. Admission: $1.50 KU ID Redeemable at Murphy Hall Box Office Strictly in the camp vein, cartoons by the youthful artists include a science camper laden with a biology, physiology, and physics book. At the bottom is a Playboy magazine, proving that the campers aren't all of academic seriousness. INGENIOUSNESS IS displayed in a depiction of the uses of the curving coils of the tuba—this time used as a still with the mouthpiece dripping liquid into the open mouth of a reclining boy. Whether this satirizes How to Make Your Wardrobe Work for You Dry clean your clothes the Sanitone way at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Our exclusive Sanitone process flushes away embedded soil that wears out fibers . . . adds special fabric finishes for softness and body . . . removes spots scientifically . . . and presses your clothes on special equipment. Only Sanitone-clean clothes can complement your natural good looks in such subtle good taste. Let us Sanitone clean your wardrobe and it will look better and wear longer. You will look and feel better because you will know your clothes are cleaned and pressed perfectly. LAWRENCE launderers and dry cleaners 1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711 Pick-up & Delivery Service not onie an the treed the the r" w- the on rik, ri- ion, on, fa. afe. the and of Tuesday, July 27, 1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 4 THE --- UNION CAFETERIA SERVING DELICIOUS MEALS THREE TIMES A DAY BREAKFAST 6:30 to 8:30 LUNCH 11:00 to 1:20 DINNER 5:00 to 6:30 --- Union Cafeteria KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE Page 6 Summer Session Kansan tuesday, July 27, 1965 'Carmina Burana' Is A Qualified Success By Tim Miller The Concert Choir, Chamber Choir, and Orchestra scored a limited success Sunday in their presentation of Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana." It was produced in just one week and could be considered a good presentation for that limited preparation, but there were several noticeable weaknesses in the work. In general, the softer parts of the work lacked the power and feeling which are essential to the understanding of the mood Orff tries to convey. The loud parts came through more clearly. There seemed to be an undercurrent of restlessness on stage, indicated by a continuous rustling of pages, and at times the audience also was made restless. THE PIECE STARTED well with the powerful "Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi" section. The next section, "Primo Vere," contrasts with the first one; it was handled well except for a number of bad attacks on opening notes that were to characterize the entire presentation. The following section, "Uf dem Anger," opens with a dance played by the orchestra only, which did not achieve sufficient feeling. It was saved, however, by a fine flute solo. Throughout this section the orchestra had some difficulty staying together. The chorus had some trouble with the sudden changes in volume which abound in this section. The women sat down for the next section, "In Taberna," which is a rousing piece for a male chorus. It was here that the orchestra did its best work, particularly in the little song "Cignus ustus cantat," which is full of difficult and strange harmonies, but which the orchestra fully mastered. The chorus also did well in its difficult part, except that a shouted "Ha Ha" at the end of one song failed to materialize. THE SOPRANOS were inconsistent in the "Carmina"; one of their better performances came in the opening song of the final section, "Cour d'Amour." Later in this section, however, they sounded like a chorus of young Girl Scouts who didn't have the faintest idea that the Latin words they were singing said such things as "yielding gratifies me; refusing makes me grieve" and "my maidenhood excites me, but my innocence keeps me apart." The whole work, in fact, enshrines the worldly joys of love, a fact which was probably not sufficiently appreciated. It is to the credit of the "Carmina Burana" that it closes with the powerful "Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi." Its power is quite great when performed as it was Sunday, and through it the audience forgets the weak parts that have passed and is swept up into the grand finale. This conclusion was very well done and brought the audience to their feet for a prolonged standing ovation. THE SOLOISTS Sunday were University students of music. Two of them sang the same parts last January in the University presentation of the "Carmina," and both were improved this time. Richard Wright, tenor, did quite well, particularly in difficult falsetto parts. David Holloway, baritone, deserves special note for outstanding It pays to look your best. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. vocal work throughout. His voice was filled with power and feeling. The soprano soloist, Martha Clark, was new to the "Carmina"; her singing was good except that she could not quite reach the highest notes of the solo "Dulcissime" and her voice broke. This solo, however, is one of the most difficult anywhere and does not detract from her total performance. Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 On the whole, the "Carmina Burana" was well done and was quite well received by an appreciative audience. Allergy Institute Receives Grant The Allergy and Infectious Diseases Institute of the U.S. Public Health Service has granted a third year renewal for KU research. The principal investigator is William H. Coil, assistant professor of zoology, who is studying the reproduction of an unusual group of tapeworms that live in marine birds. Coil began this study when he was doing summer research at Duke University marine laboratory in 1962. Steals Wrong Clothes WATSONVILLE, Calif. — (UPI)- The thief who stole $800 worth of clothes from a parked car here is probably looking for a good tailor. The clothes belonged to Alan Glueck of Salt Lake City, who is six-foot-six and has his clothes custom-made. University of Kansas students interested in creative writing are going to have more and better opportunities. Special Writing Classes Offered In 1965-66, new courses in advanced fiction and poetry writing will be offered, with established writers instructing the sessions periodically. Available this fall will be "Writing of Fiction," taught by Edgar Wolfe, associate professor of English. Toward the end of the semester, two novelists will come to the class, each for a two-week period. The novelists are John Hawkes, Providence, RI, and Wright Morris, Mill Valley, Calif. Hawkes, who teaches at Brown University, is author of "The Cannibal," "The Lime Twig," and "Second Skin." Morris teaches at San Francisco State College and has written "Ceremony in Lone Tree," "One Day," "The Messenger," and a critical study, "Territory Ahead." The course will be open only to students who show special ability in fiction writing. Then, next spring, a class in advanced poetry writing will be offered. Similarly, two professional poets will attend the class and work with the students. As yet, the poets have not been selected. Two Killed in Crash On Kansas Turnpike LAWRENCE — (UPI) — A car crashed into a bridge pillar on the Kansas Turnpike Sunday near Lawrence, killing the two occupants. Officers said the victims were Pfc. Donald P. Dillon, 23, of Norristown, Pa., and Pfc. Robert Gorski, 24, of Bridgeport, Pa. Both were stationed at Ft. Riley. The accident occurred four miles east of the Lawrence service area. Radio Program Provices Real Test for J-Campers By Kim Freshwater Last week was a rough one for the journalism students of Midwestern Music and Art Camp. It was their turn to be "under fire" and have a performance reviewed by the other sections of the camp. Fortunately, some of them feel, no more than a handful of their fellows witnessed their "embarrassment." It consisted of a radio program which was broadcast over the University radio station. KUOK, that lasted one day from 4-9 p.m. However, the journalists could see the humor (and still can) in almost any situation. They not too earnestly "laughed it up" throughout the whole grueling 300 minutes of "news, music, and general entertainment" arranged in five one-hour shows. AS A MATTER of fact, their radio and television class adviser in lab work thought the whole thing was hilarious: almost every time some confused "board op" would have to frantically search for an unknown switch or lever, or try to correct a mistake, Gene Boomer would just sit back in his ribside seat and collapse into gales of laughter. Admittedly, he later assured some of the "devastated few" that the programs "were superior to many of those put on by the KU sophomores who plan to make a career of it." The extravaganza began with David Stone as disc jockey, Kit Gunn as "board-op," and Mike O'Hara, Anita Wicke, and Martha Teitelbaum as news announcers. They were followed by Jonathan Block and Phil Higdon, board technicians, and news reporters Frances Galawas and Hugh Tessendorf. TO ADD SPECIAL allure, Tanya McNaughten, girl D-J from New July 28 SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS "Antony and Cleopatra" Italian Cine Classic — 1914 Mexico, entertained for another hour, assisted by technician Dan Partner of camp Hootenanny fame, and "your favorite newsman" as one of them happily introduced himself, Shelley Bray, Stan Oftelie and Bruce Erickson. Then, "female disaster" as she put it, Kimberly Freshwater, arrived on the scene with not only dialogue, but tidbits of Egyptian news, live Navy recruiting (a particular promotional tape that never seemed to get played), and a little Japanese. Wednesdays Forum Room Kansas Union (AIR CONDITIONED) Her partners in crime were board man Robert Lovelace and press personnel Mark Catiom and Christine Howard. The finale of this little interlude was left mainly on the broad shoulders of the journalism camp's remaining male marvels. Dick Dodge was dee-jay, Mike Holder, board man, Mary Ann Dodge (music camper) and Mike Shearer, newsmen. 7:00 p.m. The percentage of errors could have been remarkably less. But congratulations are due this handful of ad-lib artists and quick learners. U.S. Envoy Is Subject Of Indonesian Protests Admission: 50c JAKARTA, Indonesia — (UPI) An estimated 3,000 Indonesian youths chanting anti-American slogans demonstrated yesterday when U.S. Ambassador Marshall Green presented his credentials to President Sukarno. Some demonstrators carried signs and banners reading "Green go home." The protest was held at the headquarters of the Communist youth group, just down the street from the presidential palace where the ambassador was meeting Sukarno. Granada THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-5788 NOW! at 7:00 & 9:10 A Classic Suspense Hit! FRANK SINATRA TREVOR HOWARD VON RYAN'S EXPRESS A MARK ROBSON PRODUCTION COLOR BY DE LUKE ENDS TONITE — "What's New Pussy Cat" Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Evening Only Starts WEDNESDAY LOVE IS MORE THAN A GOODNIGHT KISS! M.G.M. RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN YVETTE MIMIEUX JOY IN THE MORNING METROCOLOR Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 90 Starts At Dusk TUES.-WED.-THURS.— Paul Newman in "THE PRIZE" and "NIGHT OF THE IGUANA" VON RYAN'S EXPRESS A MARK HUGSON PRODUCTION COLOR BY DE LUYP 一 Varsity Evening Only THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Varsity Only THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065 Starts WEDNESDAY LOVE IS MORE THAN A GOODNIGHT KISS! M-G-M presents RICHARD CHAMBERLAIN YVETTE MIMIEUX JOY IN THE MORNING METROCOLOR JOY IN THE MORNING METROCOLOR Summer Session Kansan 'Sunflower' Is Voice Of 13 in Costa Rica Page 7 Costa Rican reaction to the Dominican Republic crisis, coffee plantations, houses on stilts, and a "hunger for English" are among the varied subjects discussed in the second issue of "The Sunflower," a newsletter published by University of Kansas students spending their junior year in Costa Rica. Thirteen students, accompanied by director Carlyle H. Smith, left Kansas in February to begin their study at the University of Costa Rica in San Jose. Comments from the student-written articles in the issue include: Regarding the Dominican Republic crisis, David Diepenbrock from Shawnee Mission wrote: "... We (the United States) had statements of support or condemnation from the three major political parties of Costa Rica. Their opinions ranged from apoplexy on one hand to gullibility on the other. ... The (University of Costa Rica) student government denounced the intervention and this was the signal for all the lunatic fringe organizations to run off hand-bills of denunciation..." JUDY BEEMAN, Oxford: "Costa Ricans love to have a good time, and dance seems to be their favorite way of expressing their gaiety. As in most countries of Central and South America, the Latin rhythms are favorites although there are a few people who have accepted the 'twist' and 'shake.'" Terry Fouts. Shawnee Mission: "Here in Costa Rica there is a hunger for English. This interest is both academic and practical. The practical side is easily seen by comparing the salary of a non-English-speaking secretary ($500 per month) to that of a bilingual secretary $1,200 per month). The ability to speak English comes in handy in almost every business because of the tremendous amount of trade with the U.S. and the ever-increasing U.S. tourism to this part of the hemisphere. . ." AND FROM DIRECTOR SMITH: AND FROM DIRECTOR SMITH. "We have had good times together, have worked hard and it is quite revealing to see the changes which have come over each member. Most have matured and have become more self-reliant. Some of us have taken on some Costa Rican characteristics and if things continue as they have been going, we should return home a far better group than that which landed here in February." The group will remain in Costa Rica through November as part of a broad exchange program with the University of Costa Rica, largely financed by both national governments and the Carnegie Corporation of New York. Other members of the group, which includes four University of Colorado students, are: Ralph Loeffler, Kansas City, Mo.; Judy Myers, Overland Park; Judy Holden, Basehor; Marilee Neale, Galveston, Tex.; Theda Herz, Olathe; Kathy Sayers, Centerville; Karen Hamil, Sterling, Colo.; Kathryn Jend, Colorado Springs; Constance Jeanna Sweet, Fort Collins, Colo., and Margaret Ann Weimer, Denver. Business Directory- Health & Diet Store Staf-O-Life - Indian - Oriental 17 W.9th VI2-2771 - Vegetarian - Arabic Hours: Mon. 2-6 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri, Sat. 10-6 Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Season are offered to all students without regard to color, exec, or national origin. Complete one stop service Tuesday, July 27, 1965 Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. lovely, large, cool sleeping room, nicely urnished, kitchen attached. Pri. Ent. furnished, kitchen attached. $490, $158, $158, $20.00 per month, bills paid, VI C 3-1028 or VI C 3-7830. 8-3 CLASSIFIEDS FOR RENT BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE FOR SALE STANDARD 960 Volkswagen sedan. R & H, good condition. Owner must sell. $600 cheap). See at 1523 Kentucky, VI 2-2254. 7-27 KU faculty member going to Europe has been through May 1955-1966. Phone VI 2-0253. Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tt Refrigerator, $30.00; gas range, $10.00; chest of drawers, $10.00; desk, $15.00; 3-speed bike, $25.00; string bass, $0.00. See at 1528 Kentucky, VI 2-2254. 7-27 ART NEASE For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. 15's blocks to Fraser Hall. Private kite schools. Summer camps. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. Wedding gown. Floor length, candlelight satin. A-line skirt from empire bodice of alencon lace. Chapel length, 180 cm. Wedding dress for Larry's Bridals in K.C. Will rent for $25, must be returned cleaned and pressed. Call VI 3-0064 after 5:15 p.m. 7-30 Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. **tf** 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $25.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI -6365 after 6:00 p.m. tf Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM, Olympia Oilvette, Hermes. Xerox. Werner. Typewriters, 700 Mass., VI t-3-6441. 1960 Opel sedan. Body damaged but in good mechanical condition. $125. Call VI 2-2265. 7-30 Large Electric SMC 400 typewriter with carbon ribbon—like new—will sell for $1 % price—accept reasonable trade up to $100.00. Excellent for theiess. VI 25-30 Reg. German Shepherd Puppies, Trans- West, 1 West, 1 South of Eudora. 8-3 VW Sedan, 1963, all equipment, new paint, low mileage, engine; great. Low price. See any time. VI 2-0084. 7-30 MISCELLANEOUS 3AR-B-QUE-Treat yourself to some real bar-B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B-Que, Ribs, Ribs. 1:10 p.m. Phone I 2-9510. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 515 Mich. St. tr Slimames kittens, Blade after and seal call. Point VI 2-1484 at 4:30. 8-3 DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken und essen German Style. Featuring a classic light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwiches. WELCOME [ADDITION]. Part of available: Liter stels for sale. VI 2-9441, 14th & Teenn. 3rd KYU—Karate wants instructor for 6th KYU—Karate. For 3:30 a.m., 8:35 miles after 5 p.m. 8-5 Classical Guitar instructions in technique and musicianship. Beginners and more advanced pupils. VI 2-0002. 8-3 New corrugated boxes-for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. f WANTED Needed: Illustration & Design Majors to do commercial illustrations for various magazines, create a portable portfolio and resume to the Daily Kansasan, Box 10. as soon as possible. tt Experienced Typist would like typing in her home. Theses—term papers and letters. VI 3-2651. tf SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Accurate typing by experienced Term papers, themes, theses and tations. Reasonable and fast. VI HELP WANTED - Complete Auto Servicing Open 24 Hours Used luggage, light weight. Must be in good condition. Phone VI 2-0253. tf - Dependable Cars VI 3-0138 If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscripts, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I., VI 3-7485. tf 23rd & La. TYPING Have an apartment? Looking for a roommate to share expenses for the 1965-66 year? Grad. student in history would like to hear from you. Contact Darrrel Bigham, 1252 Tremont St., Roxbury, Boston, Mass. 02120. Tel. 617-4845-8843. tf typist. disser- 2-1561. Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher. typewriter. Electronic keyboard. EK-enhanced. Electric typewriter. CALL Marsh. Marsh at VI 3-8262. tf Wagner's Texaco Will do typos for reports, thesas, man- service. Call VI 2-0439. effluent Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers typed fast and in a manner experienced typist, call Mrs. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeka t R & R Drummer. Minimum age KU freshman next term. Call Jack at VI 3-5266 for tryout. 8-3 NewYork Cleaners Mmercial of the movement dry cleaning alterations For the best in — - dry cleaning - alterations - alterations * reweaving 926 Mass. VI 3-0501 Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers Patronize Your Miniature Golf Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. at the RELAX Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. TRAVEL TIME Make Your Summer Reservations Now! HONN'S Greeting Cards, Gifts OPEN 24 HRS. JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY VI 3-9631 Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 图 LET Features and DRY CLEANING Reading Material Supplementary Textbook Ph. VI 3-0350 Crushed ice, candy OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING 19th & La. Across From The High School Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Chips, nuts, cookies COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY Variety of grocery items LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY HAVING A PARTY? 616 Vt. Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Ice cold beverages Chocolate cookie We are always happy to serve you with Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. DAILY—Including Sunday under one roof MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE FREE PARKING Complete Center under one roof GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center 912 Mass. 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921 [ ] Established — Experienced The TOWN CRIER Prompt Electronic TV Color TV Antennae on Hi-fi Stereos Changers Service Radios Transistors - We Service All Makes RCA Car Radios Motorola Airline GE Zenith Makes - Silvertone Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Tuesday, July 27,1965 FRIENDSHIP SCENE REHEARSAL—Dori Aldrich and Ken Young rehearse a scene in which Miss Aldrich plays the part of a prostitute luring a 17-year-old, Young, into drinking and indulging in sin. All the theater campers perform in a scene taken from different plays. The reason: some campers wouldn't get to be on the stage because the production they produced is not big enough to include everyone. The scenes are only about 15 minutes long, and they are purely for practice.—(Photo by Hugh Tessendorf.) Major Changes Few at Library By Dave Stone "We have had no major changes here at the library since September of 1964," Donald A. Redmond, assistant director of the Watson library, said. "Of course," Mr. Redmond continued, "we have made some minor changes in the past weeks, such as new furniture and shelving in the East Asia room." LAST YEAR at this time, the library was undergoing more major changes. The most significant change has been the control desk as one leaves the building. This was installed to make it easier for both the people who use the library and also the librarians. The man behind the desk double-checks the dates of the books, making sure that no error is made that could complicate the return of the book. At some universities—like Wichita State—the books are checked out by the checker at the desk, but at the larger Watson center, the checker serves another purpose. "Our only complication so far has been right before closing, when a long line usually forms, but this is where the use of a skilled man behind the desk becomes evident," Redmond said. "AT FIRST this caused some confusion and some unhappiness, but it has worked out excellently, we feel," he added. Redmond said that one new development for the library is a gain of 10 new staff members. With these 10 coming in the next few weeks, the total staff of Watson library will number 92-and-a-half. Of these 92-and-a-half, nearly 50 are professional librarians. To be classified as a professional librarian, a person must have a master's degree. All the librarians are under the supervision of the University, and receive their checks from the state. Hard Work Is Routine for Music Students By Mike Holder After almost six weeks at camp most of the music campers have agreed that this is the most work they have ever done on their instruments and voices. One camper admitted that "in one day I have done more work than I usually do at home in a week." In the average day the music students who are in the band and orchestra or orchestra and choir possibly the band, orchestra, and choir start at 8 and finish at 5.30. During this time they may have full rehearsals, lessons, sectionals, theory or conducting class. THE WEEKLY concerts form the work schedule of the students for the week. If they have especially hard numbers they naturally have to practice longer and harder during the week. Maybe certain sections have the toughest part and it is necessary for them to have an extra sectional during the week. Many students spend two or more hours a day in the practice rooms, and it is not unusual in the least to find every practice room in Murphy occupied at 8 o'clock at night. Marvin E. Arth of Cincinnati, 1951 graduate of KU, lawyer for the past five years, and veteran of both newspaper work and radio and television newseasting, will be news adviser of the University Daily Kansan next year. He also will teach courses in reporting and editing. By listening to the concerts each Sunday it is easy to tell that all the work these students have done was worth it. Even though the first concert was excellent it is noticed by practically everyone that each week the choirs are singing music that is harder and the bands and orchestra are playing music that is more difficult and that they are still doing a fine job. Kansan Adviser Named for Year Burton W. Marvin, who is leaving his post as dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism in August, said Arth will hold the title of "lecturer in journalism" under the one-year appointment. MANY STUDENTS have commented on the "great" guest conductors that the camp has provided for their learning experiences and profit. They feel that this has been one of the "best learning experiences" they have had at the camp, since it has given them an insight on what a professional career in music would mean to them. He will replace John DeMott, assistant professor of journalism, who will be working on his doctor's degree in journalism at the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill. Arth is 35, married and the father of two. He worked for the Salina Journal for a year after his graduation, and then for the Cincinnati Times-Star until 1958. From 1958 to 1960 Arth was news director for station WCPO-TV in Cincinnati. He then obtained his law degree from the Chase School of Law in Cincinnati. He was an Ohio assistant attorney general from 1960-63 and was head of the news staff of station WKRC-TV, Cincinnati, in 1963-64. Arth will return as adviser to the same paper of which he was editor in his senior year. His appointment becomes effective Sept. 1. Call Is Expensive BUNGAY, England — (UPD)—Mrs. Mary Debenham's four-penny 5 cent call to a friend may have actually cost her up to 6,000 pounds, $16,800. One of the pennies she put in the telephone box was a 1333 coin—a collector's piece. Her husband put the coin aside to have it valued but forgot to tell his wife. Racial-Religious Ticket Is Assembled by Lindsay By Lyle Wilson United Press International United Press International In the capital city of civil rights, a Republican politician named John V. Lindsay has put together a ticket which he will head as a candidate for mayor of New York City. The racial discrimination implicit in John Lindsay's mayoral ticket in New York City is another element of the vast and rapidly accumulating evidence that rural America and the great urban areas are growing apart rather than together. Their interests oppose. In this era of absolute integration imposed by federal law, Lindsay picked his running mates on the discredited basis of race and religion. You pick 'em that way in New York or you get licked. Lindsay's ticket is described as balanced. It consists of a Republican Protestant, a Liberal party Roman Catholic and a Democratic Jew. This ticket is not merely balanced racially and religiously. It is balanced politically as well. THE CANDIDATES in addition to Lindsay are Dr. Timothy W. Costello, Liberal Party state chairman and a Roman Catholic, candidate for president of the city council, and Milton Mollen, a Democrat and a Jew who is candidate for controller. No Negro is represented on this slate for the top three offices in New York City. But there will be a Negro candidate for the office of borough president of Manhattan. IT IS REASONABLE to assume now that the cull between New York City and William Allen White's Emporia, Kan., is as great or greater today than in the closing years of the 19th Century when White established his immortal Gazette. At least it could have been said when White opened his print shop that there was a real political bond between most of White's fellow townsmen and a great many inhabitants of New York City. They were members of the same political lodge, the Republican party. Times have changed so that a Kansas Republican today scarcely is even a kissin' cousin of a New York Republic. LINDSAY IS FAIRLY typical of New York Republicans and he scarcely is a Republican at all. It will be observed that he seeks the mayoralty as a fusion candidate in company with a Democrat and a left winger liberal and not as a Republican. Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller is hardly in the mainstream of Republican principles as the Midwest understands them. Republican U.S. Senator Jacob K. Javits is the party's best New York state votergetter but hardly a model of Midwestern Republicanism. The rural counties, coast to coast, are losing their political muscle by order of the Supreme Court which compels reapportionment of state legislatures. But the Republicans were cut down in the great Missouri, Mississippi and Ohio River basins by more natural causes—the decline of agriculture as a political force. BEFORE LONG, no doubt, the farm vote will have become a memory comparable to the Anti-Saloon League. At that point racial and religious considerations will become wholly dominant in U.S. politics with the big city egalitarians running the national show. SUA FRIDAY FLICKS PRESENTS SUA "Under The Yum Yum Tree" STARRING JACK LEMMON, IMOGENE COCA EDIE ADAMS, CAROL LYNLEY Friday, July 30 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 30, 1965 53rd Year, No.13 Lawrence, Kansas Weekend Is Busy One At KU Camp By Jonathan Block The final weekend of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp's 1965 season appears to be as hectic as the other five have been. At 6 p.m. today the final playback of Sunday's concerts will be heard. This will be the last opportunity for campers to order records of the student concerts. Saturday, campers will be kept busy since they have been asked to leave the campus as soon as classes are over. Also on Saturday, the Ballet camp will present its concert for campers. This performance will begin at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre and will be free to campers presenting their ID's. While the tapes are being played, a Tempo signing party will be held, beginning at 7 p.m. in the Templin Cafeteria. The science campers will not be able to attend much of the signing party because at 7:30 p.m. the traditional Science Camp Commencement will be held in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. THEATRE CAMPERS also will be absent from the signing party because the final performance of "Lil'ore" takes place at 8:20 p.m. today. THE LAST DANCE of the season will be held on the All Purpose Court at 8 p.m. Saturday. Closing time will be at 10 p.m. and lights out will be at 10:30 p.m. At 6 p.m., the Theatre Camp will go to the Starlight Theatre in Kansas City to see "West Side Story." At 8 p.m. the Ballet division will present its second recital. The price of tickets will be $1.50 and $2 for all interested in attending. The last day of camp will have only the two Sunday concerts for camp activities. The Choir/Orchestra concert will take place at 3 p.m. in the University Theatre and the Band Concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Outdoor Theatre. M.A. Showcase Plays Are Set Three one-act plays will be presented in the M.A. Showcase in the Experimental Theatre Tuesday, August 3. "The Party Through the Wall', which takes place in a bomb-damaged street of London, is directed by Nancy Stockwell. The cast; Gary Mitchell—Dr. Fell; Nan C. Scott—Miss Efhel Carson; Connie Tunis—countess; Annora Bryant — housekeeper; and Steve Grossman, Kathy Melcher, Mary Bradish, Brandy Speck, Gary Mitchell, Lois Miller—party voices. The three plays will be "The Party Through the Wall" by Muriel Spark, "Like Haunted Limbs on a Tree of Night" by Burt Eikleberry, and the "Infanta" by Lewy Olfson. "Like Haunted Limbs on a Tree of Night" was adapted from a story by Truman Capote by Burt Eikleberry, its director. This play is set late at night on a southern train. The cast: Kathy Melcher—girl; Mary O'Connell—woman; Bruce Levitt—man, and Richard Gibson—conductor. Clayton Crenshaw is directing "Infanta," a story about a Spanish infanta and a dwarf. The cast list is unavailable. Today's Outdoor Films The movies to be shown at 8:30 p.m. today east of Robinson Gymnasium are "Carefree Ireland," "High in the Himalayas," and "Lake Wilderness." These movies will be the last to be shown this season. A REMNANTS OF SPRING FLING?—The ducks on Potter Lake are a recent addition, but the benefactor (if there is one!) is apparently unknown. Buildings and Grounds, and sundry other campus authorities, aren't sure where the ducks came from. We're willing to hazard a guess that they're left over from Spring Fling! Gale to Leave Soon For Central America Dean Gale is head administrator and consultant for the program. Gale himself will leave for Guatemala in August to spend several days at the Regional Organization for Central America and Panama (ROCAP). ROCAP is an agency of AID. After a few more days in Costa Rica, Gale will visit each of the five universities involved. Rv Kit Gunn Thomas M. Gale, assistant dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will leave next month for Central America to begin the next program in a series of cooperative ventures with Latin American institutions of higher learning. The program is designed to strengthen the humanities and social sciences departments of the universities of Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. A two-year contract has been signed with the Agency for International Development (AID), an organ of the Department of State. Later, the contract will be renewed to extend the program to five years. KU'S FUNCTION will be to send to the five universities professors to act as consultants and advisers to the universities themselves and to the Consejo Superior Universitario Centroamericano (CSUCA), a secretariat of the five universities, located in San Jose, Costa Rica. However, no professors will be sent down on long-term basis until next year, although some may be in Central America for brief periods before then. ACCOMPANIED by his wife, Mary Margaret, and his two sons, Thomas and John, Gale will spend between one-and-one-half and two years abroad. His son, Thomas H., was born in Costa Rica in 1961, and thus has the choice of becoming either an American or a Costa Rican citizen at age 21. The coming program is actually the fifth recent KU venture involving Central America. The first, organized in 1960, was the junior year in Costa Rica. This program has involved between 10 and 15 students each year, and is still in progress. The second was a Carnegie Foundation exchange program with the University of Costa Rica in which KU professors spent one month one summer and three months the next summer teaching in San Jose. About 50 to 60 professors have participated. The fourth contract was with the Ford Foundation to build up the basic science program at the University of Oriente in Venezuela. For this, Oriente faculty members were sent to KU for study and KU students taught at the Venezuelan university. ORGANIZED IN 1962, the next project was with the Peace Corps to further secondary education in Costa Rica. One of the first universities to participate in such a program, KU supplied the administrators and trained the volunteers. The universities of Latin America, some of which pre-date Harvard, until recently were constructed on the European system of education, in which professional training was stressed. Students had to choose early whether to enter medicine, law, (Continued on Page 3) Humanities Series Starts October 12 The Humanities Lecture Series at KU will start its 19th year with a lecture, October 12, recognizing the 700th anniversary of the birth of Alighieri Dante, 13th-century renowned Italian poet, author of "The Divine Comedy." The opening lecture in the 1965-66 series of seven, will be given by Dr. Joseph Mazzeo, Columbia University professor of English and comparative literatures—a widely-recognized Dante scholar. Ballet Camp Concert Set The ballet division of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp will present its annual concert Saturday, marking the close of the session. Forty-five dancers will perform on the University Theatre stage in a variety of dances. Mrs. Marguerite Reed, ballet mistress and choreographer with the Tulsa Opera Ballet Co., directed the dancers. Assisting was Larry Long, guest artist, choreographer and teacher with Ruth Fage's Chicago Opera Ballet. Costumes will be handled by Chez J. Haehl, assistant professor of speech, drama, and theater. The costumes will represent many different looks, from Spanish flamenco to gypsy, early American to contemporary and the main classical look. Each dancer will appear interesting and effective. There will be two performances: a matinee at 3 p.m. for camp students and summer session students only, and an evening performance at 8 p.m. Reserved seats will be on sale at the University Theatre box office. Admission is $2.1.50, or $1. Party Votes to Kill Government in Greece ATHENS—(UPI)—A large majority of the ruling Center Union party — supporters of ousted Premier George Papandreou—voted yesterday to bring down the government of Premier George Athanassiadis-Novas. The action indicated that Athanasidis-Navas could not hope to win a formal vote of confidence when Parliament takes a vote, probably Aug. 9. The party action left King Constantine's appointee with only a handful of votes in his own party. THE OTHER LECTURERS, just announced by Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism and chairman since 1952 of the Humanities Committee, will be: - October 26—Dr. Robert Champigny, Indiana University, research professor in French and Italian literatures. - November 9—Dr. George Mylonas, Washington University, head of the department of art and archaeology. Mylonas has been president of the American Institute of Archaeology and was decorated by King Paul of Greece for his archaeological discoveries. - February 22—Dr. G. Wallace Woodworth, Harvard University music theory scholar who is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a trustee of the New England Conservatory of Music. - January 6—A lecture by a University of Kansas scholar, to be announced - March 29—Dr. Robert Rosenblum, Princeton University scholar in art history, specializing in contemporary and neo-classic and romantic art and architecture. - April 26—Dr. Susanne Langer, Connecticut College distinguished philosopher, author of several challenging books, and member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. During the 18 years since the Humanities Series began, 116 lecturers have been presented, including 17 members of the KU faculty. Visiting lecturers, all of them distinguished scholars in their fields, visit the KU campus for three days, giving one formal public evening lecture and meeting with classes, seminars, faculty and student groups. FIFTEEN SPEAKERS have come from Italy, Spain, France, England, Lebanon, and Germany. Among the most famous visitors have been Alexander Moiklejohn, Aldous Huxley, Arnold Toynbee, Allan Nevins, Virgil Thomson, Gilbert Highet, Vladimir Nabokov, Sir Ronald Syme, Alfred L. Rowe, Thomas Hart Benton, Germaine Bree, Margaret Mead, S.I. Hayakawa, F. S. C. Northrop, Loren C. Eiseley, William F. Albright, and John Hope Franklin. Graduate Art Exhibit Is Being Shown in Union By Mike Shearer Now on display in the main lounge of the Kansas Union is a graduate exhibit from the art education department. Oils, prints, photographic experiments, and crafts comprise the exhibit. With the abstract dominating the oils, colors are abundant. Harry Hart has an abstract which is concentrated on golds and auburns. The effect is colorful and refreshing. Robert Pringle did an oil in basically blacks, whites, and shades of gray. Here too the contrasts prove exciting. ONE OF PAT WOLF'S oil paintings is done in oranges and reds and the mood is brought out quite effectively. Marvin Spomer has two small texture experiments displayed which proved successful. Royce Fleming has two of the best oils in the show. One is a beautiful abstract with large areas of ochre. The effects in perspective achieved with the ochre were tremendous. Even better than the one in ochre was one done in deep browns. Both paintings are moving. Marieta Spurgeon is the artist of four decorative prints named Horseman #1, #2, #3, and #4. The form captured by the artist in these is tremendous. IN THE CRAFT area, Mary Sue Foster has a large number of exceptional articles. Her weaving is beautiful in two products, one of which is beaded in an interesting manner. A large pot which thickens at the top and a set of original cups also are displayed. Both are artistic and imaginative. Kenneth Ebling created a unique pot and lid which shows a freedom of form hard to capture in pottery. A plate by Connie Oakson is original and interesting. The plate has a dark, textured area across it which is beautiful. Fails to Pay $2 Bill LONDON—(UPI)—James Aylmer Hamilton was sentenced to five years in prison Wednesday for failure to pay a $2 bill at a Chinese restaurant. Page 2 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 30, 1965 So What Do I Say? Never look down to test the ground before taking your next step: only he who keeps his eye fixed on the far horizon will find his right road.—Dag Hammarskjold Well, it's that time again: time for the annual Farewell To The Campers As They Leave Beloved Mt. Oread editorial. And that is one of the most nerve-wracking topics ever to face an editorial writer. What can I say—"it's been nice having you?" And what advice can I give to 1500 high school kids—"Seek the Truth" or some similar platitude? Tis indeed a hellish predicament, because if I sav what I mean, it's bound to be a truism: Campers, it has been nice having you. You've made old KU a much livelier place these past six weeks! Your ingenuity and imagination have taxed both the strength and intellect of us "old-timers." Your presence has surrounded even this 19-year-old with an aura of age which has been both blessing and plague—depending upon whether it is Monday morning or TGIF-time! IF THIS SUMMER has been only half as enriching for you as it has been for me, I know it's been a howling success. And I do hope that all well, almost all-of you come back to KU for four years. Being a neophyte myself, I'm not too adept at dispensing the wisdom of life. But I'm an old hand at lifting the words of others who can say "it" far better than I ever could. So, in farewell, I leave your thoughts with the prologue to this editorial, and the following epitaph of George Gray from Edgar Lee Masters' "Spoon River Anthology": I have studied many times The marble which was chiseled for me- A boat with a furled sail at rest in a harbor. In truth it pictures not my destination But my life. For love was offered me and I shrank from its disillusionment; disillusionment; Sorrow knocked at my door, but I was afraid; Ambition called to me, but I dreaded the chances. Yet all the while I hungered for meaning in And now I know that we must lift the sail And catch the winds of destiny Wherever they drive the boat. Writing To put meaning in one's life may end in madness. madness, But life without meaning is the torture Of restlessness and vague desire— It is a boat longing for the sea and yet afraid. Jacke Thayer Scopes Relives Famous Trial Ed. Note: The following interview with John Scopes, 64, took place in his lakeside home on the outskirts of Shreveport, La., recently. The article, written by Kaye Northcott, editor, appeared in The Summer Texan, the University of Texas.) Forty years ago this month, a young Kentuckian. John Thomas Scopes, was tried and found guilty of teaching evolution in Dayton, Tenn. Fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan, the Cross of Gold orator, represented the State of Tennessee in prosecuting the teacher for violating the Butler Law. Bryan himself had initiated this anti-evolutionary law in Tennessee and others in several states. CLARENCE DARROW, the brilliant criminal lawyer who had successfully defended murderers Leopold and Loeb a few months before, defended Scopes in the dramatic confrontation of scientific rationality and emotional fundamentalism. John Scopes, now 64 years old, prefers to remain in the shadows of American history. He says he would rather forget about the trial and insists that it was not of great personal significance. A retired geologist, he laughs at the idea of his being a crusader. His recollections of the trial are unromantic, matter-of-fact. Although the name "Scopes" is familiar to any reader of American history, it brings to mind a history-making conflict, not an individual. The young teacher, who never took the witness stand, was overshadowed by the compelling personalities of Bryan and Darrow. Summer Session Kansan 111-141 Flint Hall University of Kansas Student Newspaper Telephone UN 4-3198, business office UN 4-3646, newsroom Jacke Thayer ... Managing Editor Tom Magur ... Business Manager Iom Magur ... Business Manager University Daily Kansan (regular session) 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.NE 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. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. Contrary to popular belief, Scopes was never a science teacher, but he "did substitute for a few days in a biology class." A University of Kentucky graduate, he was teaching math and physics to earn money for more schooling. A FEW TOWN LIBERALS wanted to test the new Butler Law, and they asked Scopes to be their guinea pig. Scopes says he was reluctant to participate in the test, and he was not even sure that it could be proved that he had taught evolution. (A recent New York Times article says that Scopes was not at school on April 24,1925,the day on which he reputedly taught the lesson in evolution. Scopes said he does "not remember" if he was at school on that particular day.) Scopes described Dayton as a typical small town and its inhabitants as typically apathetic. "I don't think half the people in town had ever heard about the anti-evolution law, and furthermore, they didn't care," he said. THE CONFRONTATION of Darrow and Bryan made the Scopes trial big news throughout the United States, and the trial became a circus. Fundamentalists flocked into town to hold endless revival meetings. One entrepreneur charged the curious visitors 10 cents apiece to look at his mangy chimpanzee, but he was outdone by a Ringling Brothers employee who brought a whole troupe of apes to the trial. The most famous of these reporters was iconoclast H. L. Mencken of The Baltimore Sun. He characterized the main participants this way: "Darwin is the devil, Scopes is the Harlot of Babylon, and Darrow is Beclezub in person." A radio team from Chicago broadcasted the trial live, and more than 100 reporters molded the story into sensational copy for readers around the world. ACCORDING TO SCOPES, "Mencken was as much responsible for the circus as any body. He named it the Monkey Trial and then he created instances and wrote biting satire that would reach people. . . Mencken typified the type of reporter of the day. He was considered the ace." Scopes feels that Mencken misrepresented the atmosphere of the trial. "There was a circus all right, but it was more like a real carnival than a witch burning." And unlike Mencken, who despised Bryan, Scopes had some sympathy for the Great Commoner who died of diabetes in Dayton only five days after the trial ended. "Bryan depended more on his emotions than he did upon his mental capacities," Scopes said. "He swayed people by playing upon their emotions, but he was basically a very honest person. I'd call him slightly on the fanatical side, but I wouldn't label him like Mencken did." MOST TOWNSPEOPLE favored Bryan at the beginning of the trial "because he talked something like they thought." By the end of the trial, however, few still had faith in the defender of fundamentalism. With crystalline logic, Darrow exposed to ridicule Bryan's literal belief in the Bible. A broken man, Bryan was compelled to admit that the Bible could be read figuratively. Scopes had great respect for the 68-year-old Darrow, who had offered to take the case without charge because he wanted to "put Bryan in his place as a bigot." "Darrow didn't electrify anybody. He just talked sense to them," Scopes remembered. John Scopes left Dayton after the trial, and he has never been back. He abandoned teaching to become a geologist, but he insists that the change of occupation had nothing to do with the notoriety of being "that John Scopes." "I had only one job that I didn't get because I was John Scopes—a fellowship in one of our famous southern universities. They said I could peddle my ideas to somebody else." THE TRIAL LASTED from July 10 through July 21. Although Scopes was found guilty, Darrow had dealt fundamentalism a sharp blow. THE LAW PROHIBITING the teaching of evolution is still on the books in Tennessee as are similar laws in Arkansas and Mississippi. Evolution is taught in spite of the laws." They just don't call it evolution." Scopes said. "I think if you put it to a vote in Tennessee it would be eliminated. But the public officials are afraid of losing some votes," he explained. SPU Will Protest Members of the KU Student Peace Union will march in protest against American policy in Viet Nam Saturday at 11 a.m. Demonstrators will march from the Military Science Building to the main Post Office, according to Tim Miller. acting SPU chairman for the summer. Miller expects nearly 20 demonstrators to participate in the protest. BOOK REVIEWS AMERICAN FOLKLORE, by Richard M. Dorson (Phoenix, $1.95). Here is a completely delightful and perceptive book, now about six years old, which takes the reader through some fascinating byways of American life. Though the old and reputable (if folklore is ever truly reputable) legends are here there are others, too. Like, for example, those of the college student. For this, too, is folklore—"When she comes tripping by, stone lions will bark. A Revolutionary War cannon will fire out. Two facing statues will solemnly dismount from their pedestals, walk to the center of the courtyard, and clasp hands in congratulation. A series of boulders, delicately balanced atop each other by nature's art, will suddenly collapse. When she gazes their way, the Flattop Mountains will turn people with rage." AND WHY WILL ALL these things happen? Because a virgin has passed these spots. These are among the entertaining things Richard M. Dorson tells us about the folklore of the campus—the way that papers get corrected (sometimes by the baby of the family), the star athlete and how he got through classes, the deans of women who give fascinating advice to the freshman coeds, the grisly outcome of certain fraternity initiations, the toasts and the drinking bouts and the songs, some of them that some old grads remember as being a bit too raw for print. Dorson gives us the familiar folk heroes—Davy Crockett, the spurious Paul Bunyan, Mike Fink, Casey Jones, Johnny Appleseed, John Henry and Jesse James. He treats the development of folk humor on the frontier, the folklore of the Negro and the immigrant, the songs and legends of our various regions. Dorson scoffs at the idea that folklore is dying out (and the popularity of folk singers bears him out). He can mention numerous examples, and you can find others in the daily papers, of how new stories begin and old ones get perpetuated. AND THE WAR CAME, by Kenneth M. Stampp (Phoenix, $2.45). Though the Civil War centennial is over, there has been and will be no abatement of interest in the war. Both scholars and readers on a more popular level continue to have available those already reputable works that deal with numerous aspects of the conflict. One of the best is "And the War Came," which appeared some 15 years ago. Its author is A. F. and May T. Morrison professor of history at the University of California, and he has written eloquently on slavery and the reconstruction period as well as on the war itself. Even today, 104 years after the Civil War started, one may read "And the War Came" with a sense of frustration. For it looks as though what one historian calls the blundering generation could have avoided war. Stampp considers the development of public opinion in the North prior to April 1961. And he is one of those historians who suggests that much of the blame for the war may be laid at the door of the "no compromisers." THERE IS A CONSIDERABLE gallery of characters in this engrossing history. Here we see Lincoln, faced with the question of sending aid to the beleaguered forces at Ft. Sumter, and Maj. Robert Anderson, commander at the fort. Here is poor old Buchanan, one of our more inept presidents but one who might have gotten a better shake from history could he have been in office at a different time. Here are the radical Republicans, Sumner of Massachusetts, sour-faced Chandler of Michigan, "Bluff Ben" Wade of Ohio. And the more moderate group, too—Charles Francis Adams, who spent the war in the British Embassy; William H. Seward, who had foreseen an "irrepressible conflict." And the abolitionists, Garrison and Phillips, who had been stirring it up for many years and were ready for war when it arrived. This is not "southern revisionism." but Stampp does place much blame on the North for the war as well as for the attitudes that continued after the war and made reconciliation such a complex task. THE BENCHLEY ROUNDUP, edited by Nathanial Benchley (Dell, 75 cents). We may suppose that somewhere on this campus there are students who have never heard of Robert Benchley—a man dead now for 20 years, known maybe for some of those old movies on late television, found in certain anthologies of humor. Benchley's son has collected some of his father's finest humor in this enjoyable volume. These are all short sketches, and there are a good many of them in this book. Once again we have the fun of reading about "Uncle Edith," one of Benchley's memorable creations, of seeing the old master wreck Shakespeare and dissect Mozart and make fun of our legal system and our incompetent husbands and life among the newts and what it's like in our business offices and what's happening in crime prevention (he is concerned with the matter of determining who is criminal and who isn't). Will this book hold up for the new generation of Lenny Bruce and Dick Gregory? We hope so. Benchley was a gentle man, and maybe it's just as well that he died about the time World War II was dying and didn't have to face up to the "new humor." PA THE STORY TELLING STONE: MYTHS AND TALES OF THE AMERICAN INDIANS, edited by Susan Feldmann (Dell Laurel, 60 cents). This is an original, and it's an exciting kind of book to dig into, especially for any of us who find American culture as interesting as that of some of Margaret Mead's people of the South Seas. What the editor has done is to collect stories from the Indians about men and animals and gods and the supernatural and love, hate, jealousy and magic and such matters that absorb the sophisticated white as well as the more primitive red man of earlier days. The author, an anthropologist, has grouped the stories under general classifications. First are stories of the days of creation, legends from many tribes. Eskimos on down south. Then there are those she calls "The Trickster." The largest category is stories of heroes, the supernatural and related folk tales. U. total yean Uni gran gend R I Summer Session Kansan Page 3 who had ison were much con-ask. Dell, stu- now tele- has ume. them Uncle eold of our g the ening mining Bruce and II was THE reel, 60 ing into, asiding as that the seen and they and as well Public Health Service Awards $500,000 to KU under n, lege e those heroes, U. S. Public Health Service grants totaling nearly $500,000 over five-year periods have been renewed for University of Kansas training programs in microbiology, mammalian genetics and immunology. Fifth-year renewals were granted to the microbiology and mammalian genetics graduate trainee programs. Both are concerned with master's and Role of Police In City Is Told The community policeman, in making the everyday arrest for minor offenses, is in the best position to create good or bad public relations for his department and for law enforcement officers generally. Dr. N.J. Colarelli, associate director of Psychological Associates, St. Louis, Mo. told the opening session of the 19th annual Peace Officers Training School at KU Monday. Dr. Colarelli, formerly on the staff of Topeka State Hospital, said that a considerable segment of our society is already confused and immature in the areas of law and order, freedom, and power, and that the police officer, in "meat and potato" cases, can either reinforce or reverse this attitude. "IF THE POLICEMAN is courteous, if he does not treat the offender like an immoral reprobate or a naughty child, he is likely to earn respect and cooperation." Dr. Corarelli said. "He may even instill a sense of the importance of self-regulation, which is the central key toward maturity and a better society. "On the other hand, if he is badgehappy and officious, the policeman can cause the public to feel humiliated and will almost inevitably provoke irrational attitudes. The person so treated will revert to childish behavior and outbursts and work off part of his steam by running down the police force to anyone who will listen." DR. COLARELLI defined the following as mature attitudes: - Law and Order—Laws are made so that a large society can have guidelines and can cooperate within known ground rules to insure the most benefits for all, not just for protection to keep everyone from running wild. The first definition assumes that people generally want to cooperate; the second assumes that they are basically bad. - Freedom—Freedom does not mean the absence of law or the right of unrestrained personal judgment. The ideal is self-regulation, which earns the individual more freedom. In a free society, the more we have recourse to mutual respect of the law, the farther away we keep the jungle. - Power - Power generates mistrust and hate. The United States and Russia, by virtue of their power, are natural targets of hate. The policeman, through his power, even though it is controlled, is also an inevitable object of mistrust and hate. The policeman who "comes on strong," who is gruff and personal, falls right into the trap and confirms public expectations. About 150 peace officers from all over the state registered Monday for the week-long training session. Kansans Vote to Back Right-to-Work Clause WASHINGTON—(UPI)—All five Kansas congressmen voted against repealing Section 14-B of the Taft-Hartley Act. The House voted 221 to 203 to repeal the section. Voting against repeal were Bob Dole, Robert Ellsworth, Chester L. Mize, Garner E. Shriver and Joe Skubitz, all Republicans. Section 14-B allows states to pass right-to-work laws which prohibit closed-shop labor contracts. doctoral degree candidates for work in teaching and research. In addition, KU mammalian genetic trainees will fill critical shortages in research laboratories such as cancer institutes. The microbiology program is directed by David Paretsky, department chairman, and Delbert M. Shankel, associate professor of microbiology. John A. Weir, professor of zoology, directs the mammalian genetics training. Find Bomb in Tokyo The five-year training program in immunology received a second year renewal. Directed by Charles A Leone, the program will train pre- and post-doctoral fellows in teaching and research for the university level. The program will also provide broad training in several biological disciplines and is the only program in the United States to emphasize molecular taxonomy, the classification and comparison of animals by means of their proteins. TOKYO — (UPI) — Construction workers unearthed a 550-pound American bomb dropped on Tokyo's Ikegami area during World War II. Extension grants for these training programs may be available beyond the initial five-year period. 1964 VOLKSWAGEN Allergy sufferers may eventually be less allergic, thanks to a University of Kansas professor of microbiology and a lot of rabbits. Allergy Study Is Being Made Good Condition Sun Roof, Radio Low Mileage. VI2-3998 M. J. Freeman is conducting studies on immunoglobulins with a $14,400 research grant from the National Science Foundation. He is studying anti-body responses in rabbits to learn more about the types present and their times and conditions of appearance These studies will determine different methods for the immunization of rabbits. A by-product is that studies of how these anti-bodies are formed and repressed may well give clues to treatment and possibly prevention of certain allergies common to man, such as asthma and hay fever. This study is related to other research Freeman has conducted on immunology and immunochemistry. Freeman practiced veterinary medicine before turning to full-time teaching and research. He is a specialist in diseases of swine, especially arthritis. SUA Recreation Winners Named Results of summer SUA recreation activities have been announced in pool, bridge, and table tennis tournaments. In straight rail billiards, Frank G. Clark, Prairie Village, placed first. Pravin Kothari, Bombay, India, captured the snooker championship. The pool tourney began Monday, July 12, and ended the following week. Joseph Lee, Taiwan, finished first in the singles division of the table tennis tourney. Frederic Mandel, Berkeley, Calif., was second, and Paul Shao, Hong Kong, placed third. In doubles competition Paul Shao and Ibrahin Yila, Sierra Leone, were the winners. In the July 14 duplicate bridge tournament, first place winners were graduate students Mr. and Mrs. Bobbv R. Patton of Wichita. Phil H. Rueschloff, head of art education at KU, spoke at the University of Nebraska Teachers College conference Wednesday in Lincoln. He discussed the enhancement of visual perception and its application to teaching procedures with children. Speaks at Nebraska It pays to look your best. Downtown STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Mass. Last Camper Concert Set for Sunday Regular Haircut $1.50 Open 8:00 to 5:30 Concert Choir and Chamber Choir James Ralston and Clayton Krebiel, Directors 2:30 p.m., Aug. 1 University Theatre Kantate I, opus 29 ... Webern Mr. Krehbiel, conducting Combined Choirs with Ensemble Singers Mr. Krebbiel, conducting Combined Choirs with KU Brass Choir Psalm 150 ... Schutz Mr. Ralston, conducting Concert Chair Concert Choir Agnus Dei Fergolesi He Watching Over Israel Mendelssohn Sure on This Shining Night Barber Valse Toch De Camptown Races Shaw-Parker Chamber Choir Agnus Dei ... Persichetti Bouree ... Bach Nobody Knows ... Shaw-Parker Grossfaders Historiker Versen ... Pfautsch Zadok the Priest ... Handel Mr. Pfautsch, conducting Mr. Fitzgerald Intermission Orchestra Gerald Carney, Director Victor Alessandro, Guest Conductor Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Prince Igor, Overture to the Opera ... Borodin Mr. Carney, conducting Third Movt. Poco Allegretto The Pines of Rome Respighi Mr. Carney, conducting Symphony No. 3 Brahms The Pines of the Villa Borghese Pines near a Catacomb The Pines of the Jamiculum The Pines of the Appian Way Mr. Alessandro, conducting Concert Band Russell L. Wiley, Director Symphonic Band Kenneth Bloomquist, Director Victor Alessandro,Guest Conductor 7:30 p.m. KU Outdoor Theatre Symphonic Band Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry ... Grainger Tocata Frescobaldi Fleisch's Procession to the Cathedral from "Lohengrin" Wagner Jericho, Rhapsody Morton Gould Semmer Fidelis Sousa Mr. Bloomquist, conducting Concert Band Celebration Overture Creston Intermezzo from "Vanessa" Barber Overture to "Tannhauser" Wagner Mr. Alessandro, conducting William Tell Overture Rossini 1812 Overture Tschaikowsky L'Arlesienne Suite No. 1 Bizet-Godfrey Meditation from "Thais" Massenet-Issai Jubilee March Kenny Theme Song Irish Tune from County Derry... Grainger Mr. Wiley conducting... Gale to Leave Soon for Central America- (Continued from page 1) pharmacy, engineering, or similar fields. Little or no liberal arts schooling was offered. Gale stated. HOWEVER, NOW MOST of these universities desire to pattern themselves after the United States system and offer a broader general studies program. KU is a leader in helping the Latin American schools accomplish this goal, explained Gale. Gale said the overall purpose of these programs was to help the universities "reform basic structure and academic programs so they can participate in the social and economic development of their country." By Involvement with Latin America also has helped KU, said Gale. "Interest and competence in Latin America have increased here." training the kinds of people most needed by the country and by acting as basic research organizations American universities can help do this. he went on. --- FRIDAY FLICKS SUA PRESENTS SUA "Under The Yum Yum Tree" STARRING JACK LEMMON, IMOGENE COCA EDIE ADAMS, CAROL LYNLEY Friday, July 30 IN AIR CONDITIONED DYCHE AUDITORIUM Admission 35c TWO SHOWS 7:00 p.m. & 9:00 p.m. Page 4 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 30, 1965 Last Camp Art Exhibit Is Best in Several Areas By Mike Shearer The last exhibit of the camp year proved to be the best in most areas. The biggest surprise in the exhibit was the fantastic crafts displayed. The pottery was outstanding, as it has been all summer. A large two-necked vase was one of the more interesting products displayed. It was done by Margaret Schadt. The weaving displayed was all superior. A pillow fabric by Betsy Wilkinson and matching bags by Lynn Gallagher were particularly fascinating. Sculpture by Todd Williams and Janice Howell was representative of the very imaginative and creative sculpture which was exhibited. THE WATER COLORS of the last exhibit were a tremendous improvement over earlier displays. Peggy Perkins' interpretation of Potter Lake was one of the more beautiful articles in the exhibit. Miss Perkins uses a clean and even stroke which produces a very beautiful and graceful effect. A water color by Barbara Lee Moorehouse was very dramatic. Her seated figure was done in tones of gray and showed a very artistic technique. Jill Wilise had another water color up which demonstrates a very bold and clean style. Janet Sundbury painted owls in a twisted tree skeleton. The browns were used very professionally and effectively. The water color display as a whole was very good. MOST OF THE OIL paintings displayed over the past few weeks were not as good as this week's selection. The painters have taken on a more progressive style. Kris Hermanson and Mike Elzea both had oil portraits displayed which showed unusual talent. Judy Hershman, who was selected second best girl art camper, had two very good abstracts displayed. The larger of the two was the more dramatic. The oil painting by Rogene Pfeutze, who was selected best girl camper, was one of the best articles exhibited this summer. With well-defined colors, Rogene captured an expression in the portrait which gave the painting a light mood and many enhanced exhibit viewers. In the cartoon section, Mike Elzea had a delightful little cartoon in his usual beautiful style. Neil Shapiro had a series of cartoons exhibited which well represent his distinctive style. Blair Martin, whose style is not as developed as Shaprio's and Elzea's, has had some very imaginative ideas which proved to be very comical. THE FASHION DESIGNS have been continuously delightful and the number of persons who have had excellent fashions exhibited is very high. Some of the more dramatic and outstanding fashions were done by Marta Waggener, Dave Norton, Margo Hamlin, and Cathy Lennon. The fashions which were done in color added an attractive variety to the fashion section. Sandy Downum seemed to be one of the more successful in fashion colors. After an earlier critique, in which the sketched portraits were called lacking in form and perspective, an art camper advised that that was the desired effect and the sketches were not meant to be finished drawings. THE FIGURE SKETCHES were once again one of the show's strong points. The figure sketching instructors have evidently been successful in getting the figure sketcher to be free and relaxed as they sketch. Two figure sketches by Betsy Warland were among the best displayed. In the area of design, Lucia Willman had one of the more interesting designs in the show. Her walrus was done in a very carefully selected purple arrangement. Rogene Pfeutze had two nature sketches of plants exhibited which showed very dramatic lighting and a free wash technique. A drawing by Neil Shapiro was also displayed which drew many comments from exhibit viewers. He used a very fine pen point and black ink to produce a very textured and interesting drawing of a man. KANSAS CITY Mo. - I1 pre-season ticket sales continue at the current brisk pace at all Big Eight Conference schools, many of the nearly 30 single-game and single-season attendance records set last year will be broken before the season starts. Big 8 Attendance Records Loom Last year, behind a better than 11 per cent increase in average total attendance, new marks were set at all eight institutions, and the conference's all-time total attendance and per-game standards were upped to 1,421,245 and 36,174. It was the fourth time in the past five years the conference had set an all-time per-game record. NEBRASKA FIGURES on the sale of 40,000 season tickets to the general public, faculty, and students, with more than 27,000 going to the public, a new high for the Cornhuskers. Again this year, the new season and per-game records are sure to be established at Nebraska, where Memorial Stadium has been expanded to hold 52,450, and at Missouri, to nearly 55,000. Both institutions indicate sales well ahead of last year's pace. Missouri looks for a total sale of about 27,000 and Oklahoma guesses its final public-sale mark could hit 25,000, marking the ninth straight year the Sooners have sold that many season tickets to the public. Kansas set a new season-ticket sales mark last year, but if the current trend continues, that record will be broken with over 16,000 public tickets moved. SELLOUT PREDICTIONS are beginning to pop up now; however, only three games thus far have been put in that class—the Kansas-Nebraska and Wisconsin-Nebraska games at Lincoln and the Oklahoma-Texas clash in Dallas. With deadlines for renewal of season tickets differing at each institution, and no deadline for new purchases, a final accounting of the number sold cannot be made for at least another month. C. Kim Tidd, business manager at Iowa State, says, "At the current rate of ticket applications, we are assured of either full houses or near full houses for each of our home games." Iowa State entertains University of the Pacific, Missouri, Oklahoma State, and Kansas State at Ames. In addition to these games, prospective sellouts appear to be Oklahoma at Nebraska. Navy at Oklahoma, Kansas at Oklahoma, Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, Missouri at Kansas, Nebraska at Missouri, and Oklahoma at Missouri. None of these games has been announced as a sellout vet. Here is the way sales look around the Conference: IOWA STATE—Season ticket requests are keeping pace with last year's sale, when requests were up 20 per cent in all categories, even though this is a rebuilding year for the Cyclones. Officials predict "either full houses or near full houses" for each of the four home games. KANSAS STATE—Sales running about even with last year, when there was a marked increase over the previous season. "I think the enthusiasm generated by last year's team (3-4 in the Big Eight) will increase our attendance this season, and subsequently increase the demand for tickets to Kansas State games," says H. B. Lee, director of athletics. OKLAHOMA STATE—Revival of football fortunes under Phil Cutchin makes prospects for increase in season ticket sales quite good, with an expected increase over last year's total. The Cowboys will not have advantage of hosting rival Oklahoma this year, but do have Missouri and Nebraska at home, both of whom are good draws in Stillwater. COLORADO—Moving toward a target of 10,000 public season tickets, which would be just under all-time high of 11,000 set in 1961 when the Buffs won the Conference title. Expect single-game sales to increase with prospects for renewed football fortunes. KANSAS- Well on way to surpassing the record of 15,610 public season tickets sold last year, not including the more than 10,000 that have been set aside for the students. If season ticket sales hold up at the about 10 per cent increase pace, single-game requests could put total at new season and game-average records. MISSOURI-Reporting that public season ticket sales are up almost 10 per cent over last year and that a total of over 27,000 season books will be sold, there is little doubt that the Tigers will break all crowd records in newly expanded stadium. Nebraska and Oklahoma will probably attract capacity crowds. NEBRASKA — Nebraska officials are certain the stadium is sold out for the Kansas and Wisconsin games, with more than 40,000 season tickets sold to the general public, faculty, and students—more than 27,000 went to the general public, a new record for the Cornhuskers. Almost 6,000 seats are being added to the stadium this year, insuring new all-time and per-game attendance records for the third year in a row. OKLAHOMA—A public season ticket sale of nearly 25,000 is predicted for this year, which is almost equal to the total of last year—Oklahoma's season ticket requests have not been below 25,000 since 1956. $^{\textcircled{v}}$or the 17th straight year, Oklahoma's quota of the Oklahoma-Texas tickets at the Cotton Bowl were sold out by May 4, with another full house for this one virtually assured. Navy and Kansas games loom as sellout possibilities. Flicks in Fraser Moved to Dyche The destruction of Fraser Hall, a much discussed procedure, is now creating still another problem. No longer can the three-years-running Friday Flicks be shown in its auditorium, which seated approximately 600 people. The new location (when the fall session begins) will be the 200-seat auditorium in Dyche. Because of the decreased seating capacity, the movies (which are sent to educational institutions like KU after they are a certain age) are to be shown not only twice on Friday night, as before, but twice on Saturday also. The "Friday Flicks" are now becoming "Frequent Flicks!" Dancer Midwestern Music & Art Camp presents Ballet in Concert at the University Theatre Saturday, July 31 Special FREE Mat. at 3:00 p.m. Camp Students & Summer Session Students Admitted on I.D. Evening Performance at 8:00 p.m. Reserved Seats On Sale at University Theatre Box Office. For Reservations Call UN 4-3981. Admission $2.00 - $1.50 - $1.00. 10. (1) $ \frac{3}{2}x-4 > 8 $ 011 erage Kamper Kansan public post 10 that a will at the records raska attract Hall, a now m. No nunning audi- inately officials h out names, rackets culty, went record 6,000 dium e and or the as on medi- tionlmost Okla- have 6. or oma's ickets ut by se for y and possi- ne fall no of the movi- tational are a not only are, but ow be- Lawrence, Kansas Vol. III, No. 2 Ballet Artists To Perform At Concerts On Saturday, July 31, a flare of beautiful colors and graceful dancers will appear on the stage in the University Theatre. This will be the ballet concert closing the 1965 ballet camp. Friday, July 30, 1965 Directing the dancers this year have been Mrs. Marguerite Reed, ballet mistress and choreographer with the Tulsa Opera Ballet Company, and Larry Long, guest artist, choreographer and teacher with Ruth Page's Chicago Opera Ballet. EACH DANCER IS PRESENTED on a professional level displaying all types of dances. This year all the dancers were given an equal amount of work and each in effect is worthy of solo work. The ballet division actually does a year's work in six weeks and therefore the concert will represent many different musical and choreographical stages. Mrs. Reed and Mr. Long will both participate in the concert. Chez J. Haehl, assistant professor ef speech, drama, and theatre, is the head of the costumes for the performance. All types of costumes will be presented from Spanish flamenco to gypsy, Early American to contemporary, and the main classical look. Each dancer will appear interesting and effective. THE CHOIR WILL PARTICIPATE in the opening ballet, a la Baroque, Larry Long is the choreographer for this dance and Bach, Handel, and Mozart are the composers. Gerald M. Carney will direct the music for the concert. Mr. Long and Mrs. Reed are the co-choreographers for La Plus Que Lente and Soiure Militaire. Mrs. Reed will direct Der Rosenkavalier, Beautiful Galatea, Rhapsody, Americana, and Reverence; and Mr. Long, Incredible Magician, l'Image, and the Square Root of Six. THIS PERFORMANCE will be taped for television and handled through Tulsa, Okla. This is mainly for educational purposes. Jonathan Block Mad Reviewer Strikes Again By Jonathan Block It was uninspired, mechanical, and even lousy. Their voice control was bad, and I've heard better DJ's on "talk shows." If Eric Sevareid had heard the newscasts, he would have retired from newcasting and would have concentrated on writing comic books. When the Journalism Division seized radio station KUOK on July 20, General Sarnoff cringed. Our guest conductor, Gene Boomer, did a fine job, but when we needed him (when we had five minutes to ad lib) he just laughed. I should say that he cackled, rolled in the aisles, roared. Funny fellow, that Gene Boomer. What a warped sense of humor! BUT ONE HAS to admit, it was a swinging five hours, highlighted by such singers as Robert Merrill leading our salute to the "Rolling Stones." But the log was the most fun of all: let the FCC try and read it! The only thing that saved the poor God-forsaken Journalism Division from being laughed out of camp was that the movie "Lust for Life" was being shown in the Templin Cafeteria, and the majority of campers smartly left their radios in their rooms. Long live Vincent Van Gogh! All campers are required to move out of their respective dorms one day after their classes have ended, unless special permission from the supervisors has been given. I have engrassed all in the SMILES FROM ALL—Camp Queen Polly Gamble is congratulated by Liz Harris as Steve Smith, King candidate, looks on. Formal Dance Rounds Out Successful Summer After four days of campaigning, Mike Sjeklocha and Polly Gamble were crowned King and Queen of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp last Saturday night at the camp's formal dance. The king and queen candidates were nominated earlier that week by their fellow campers from each wing in the two dorms. Each wing then started campaigns for their candidate. Mike Sjeiklocha, Indianola, Iowa, is a science apprentice in mathematics. He is also an athlete, participating in football, basketball, baseball, and the hurdles in track. Mike plans to major in biochemistry at KU next year and to later study medicine. Upon completing his medical training, Mike plans to go into medical research. This year marks the second year that Polly Gamble has been part of the music division. She has taken two years of voice lessons, 12 years of piano, and nine years of organ. Polly is participating in choir, piano, and organ this summer. She also finds camp very enjoyable and feels it is one of the best opportunities available to high school students to fill their summers. Mike Sjekloka had excellent backing by his fellow apprentices. He not only used effective posters, but also a public address system to gain votes. The dance itself was a great success with music provided by the counselors and campers. The counselors' dance band started the dance out with some very good dance music, and were relieved later by the campers' band who played for the remainder of the night until the king and queen were crowned. After the coronation recorded music was used Refreshments were served and the campers, who came out in full force, seemed to enjoy the dance and the music. FREELINES TAKEOVER AT KUOK—Kit Gunn acts as board operator with Dave Stone as disc jockey during the journalism division's stint operating KUOK radio station. Awards Earned By 40 Campers Awards were distributed in an allcamp assembly to forty outstanding campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp Monday night. According to Mr. Wiley, camp director, and to comments made by several of the department heads, this has been the best year the camp has ever had. Wiley added that this camp also has the finest array of talent he has ever seen. Ed Down, of the Audio House, 909 New York, began the presentations by awarding free recordings of the camp music concerts to the three artists who designed the best covers for the recordings. Third place and one record went to Dick Laws, second place and three records to Neil Shapiro, and first place and six records to Mike Zeena. Letters of recognition were presented to the students having perfect scores in Music Theory I and II. Dean Samoelson received a letter in Theory I and Becky Jones and Rebecca Lindholm in Theory II. In theatre, Gina Bikales and Fred Ideas received the best girl and boy campers. Jonathan Block, Mike Holder, and Bruce Erickson of the journalism division received news writing awards. Dan Partner and Phil Higdon were awarded best news writing certificates. LaRee Gray and Phil Higdon received the top honors in debate, with Cindy Bracken and Pat Sirridge placing second. In oratory, Lee Gray won first, Cindy Bracken—second, and Nancy Taylor—third. Nancy Taylor placed first, Colombe Leland—second, and Rick Smith—third in oral interpretation. Hugh Tessendorf was awarded best photographer. Feature writers, Tanya McNaughten and Shelley Bray, were chosen best in that area of journalism Shelley Bray was awarded the top honor in the field or advertising. Kit Gunn, a returning journalism camper, was named the best journalism camper and Mike Shearer was named the best beginning camper. Prof. Shankel of the science camp announced that the science camp awards could not be made at this time. Many of the science campers will still be working next week and the final exams were not completed at this time. Prof. Arvid Jacobson presented the art camp awards to four artists, two girls and two boys. The best boy award went to David Norton and second to Mick Thompson. Rogene Pfuetze was selected as best girl camper and Judy Hershman was selected as second best. Thompson and both girls are returning campers and Miss Hershman was last year's second best girl. In the music division Kenneth Heath and Margaret Tyson were named the outstanding music campers. Kenneth was also recipient of a $50 scholarship to the music department of the college of his choice. The award is made possible by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, a professional fraternity for music majors. An anonymous award of $50 went to Miss Tyson. Also recognized in the assembly for outstanding work were John Wolfe, Caryne Dockery, Jeff Stielman, Andrew Soll, and Polly Gamble. Miss Gamble presented Mrs. Spurrier with an award of appreciation. a scrapbook from the whole camp. Mrs. Spurrier was given a standing ovation by the campers. Wiley conducted the evening's program and concluded it with congratulating all campers for their devotion to their particular fields of endeavor. Science Campers Develop Interests in Many Areas gram. They will stay eight weeks, from June 13 to August 7, and were students last year. Commencement exercises marked the close of the tenth annual University of Kansas Science and Mathematics Camp. During the past six weeks science campers were allowed time for considerable development of their interests and knowledge in specific areas of science of his own choosing. The first week of camp was spent in experimenting in eight scientific areas: sociology, microbiology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, physiology, radiation biophysics, and zoology. Each of these areas was explored and demonstration lectures were heard. THEN, AT THE end of the first week each camper chose two scientific areas in which he concentrated for the remaining five weeks of the session. The student spent approximately ten hours per week in lectures and laboratory or field work in each of his two chosen courses. The science camper could be seen all over the campus during his six weeks stay because classes were held in various buildings. Such buildings as Malott Hall, Snow Hall, Strong Hall, Dyche Museum, Haworth, and the Nuclear Reactor Center were occupied by the young scientists. AT THE COMMENCEMENT exercises the top student in each class was given a grant to come back as an apprentice to a research scientist on the staff of the University of Kansas next summer. The scientific area may be the student's own choosing. This summer there were twenty-five participants in the apprentice pro- THE RESEARCH apprentice roster for this summer was: Robert C. Colwell, Neodesha, (Physics), Cheryl Mae Craff, Richmond, Ky., (Zoology), Ronald Guy Fraass, Mankato (Microbiology), George Carey Fuller, Knoxville, Tenn., (Physics), Robert Lee Harper, Charleston, Mo., (Chemistry), David Knox Hill, Nevada, Mo., (Mathematics), Kenneth K. Hickin, New Orleans, La., (Mathematics), Willa Jean Holmberg, Lau Cruces, N. Mex., (Psychology), Barbara Helen Hughes, Ottawa, (Microbiology), Glen A. Kroger, Ellis, (Mathematics), Stephen J. Lucas, Thorntown, Ind., (Microbiology). Diane Marie McMahon, Valinda, Calif. (Microbiology), and Jerome K. Osburn, Bentley, (Radiation Biophysics). CAROL SUE SABATA, Brainard, Nebr., (Zoology), Michael James Sjeklocha, Indianaola, Ia., (Mathematics), Randall Lee Smith, Trenton, Mo., (Radiation Biophysics) Richard W. Stone, Evansville, Ind., (Chemistry), Walter Rees Stromquist, Lawrence, (Mathematics), William Lee Thompson, Melrose, N. Mex., (Physics), Gary Lynn Trammell, Chanute, (Chemistry), James Pritchard Viney, West Covina, Calif. (Anthropology), Keith Brent Waldron, Denison Ia., (Psychology), Eric Francis Wieschaus, Birmingham, Ala., (Physiology), Paul Yarowsky, Kansas City, (Mathematics), and Larry Franklin Yeager, Jacksonville, Ill., (Mathematics). 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Comment Bv Phil Higdon This column shall attempt to act in the absence of Drew Pearson and Walter Lippmann in that the views expressed here are strictly my own, and do not attempt to reflect the views of anyone else. However, there are some things which I feel need to be said, in an effort to bring peace on earth and good will t'ward men. SIX WEEKS AGO, we came from all over the country: musicians, scientists, orators, engineers, dancers, artists, and even journalists, looking forward to a summer of education, recreation, fun, and friendship. We all had justifiable pride in our various divisions. The Science Camp probably best typified this fact at the camp meetings, but we all felt pride in who we were and in what we were doing. Kamper Kansan Pride in itself is good. It is desirable. It's essential to the success of any undertaking. The pride which campers felt for their various divisions made their divisions the successes they were. And the pride which everyone, from the administration to the camper, feels for this Midwestern Music and Art Camp have made that camp what it is today-one of the finest anywhere. BUT THERE IS a big difference between pride in one's division and open competition with other divisions. The purpose of this camp was not to come here to prove that one division is any better than the other, but rather to be an educational experience in the various fields in which the campers were most interested. That a certain camper is more interested in one field than another is merely happenstance, and does not indicate either inferiority or superiority. We are all learning; none of us claim to be professionals. WE SHOULD BE interested in what the other campers are doing. We should attend the concerts, and view the exhibits, and read the papers. We should be most concerned with our own divisions, for this is what concerns us most. But we should not compete. We should not find fault for the sole purpose of finding fault. We are all here for different reasons and in different fields. Let us all remember that. Let us also bear in mind the fact that this is a great camp only because there are so many fields and so many areas of endeavor. This is a great camp only when all those involved can work together, play together, and get together to work for the success of the entire camp. THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas did not have to provide this camp. The administration of this camp did not have to put the time and effort into this camp that they did. But they did so. And they did it in order that each one of us could have the opportunity that we have been granted. We must always bear that fact in mind. Let us use this camp for our individual and collective good. Let us use this camp for the purposes for which it was intended. Let us not allow petty divisional competition mar the greatness which twenty-eight years of this camp have achieved. Let us work together, as musicians, as scientists, as speakers, as artists, as dancers, as journalists, but most of all, as campers, to make this the most successful yet. TAKE PRIDE IN what you are doing. Take pride in your division. Take pride in your instructors and in your work. But most of all, take pride in this camp, in this university, in this tradition. Let that pride be your constant guide. Kamper Kansan The Kamper Kansan is published every three weeks during the session of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp by students of the journalism division of the camp. STAFF Editor-in-Chief Shelley Bray Asst. Editor-in-Chief Kitt Gunn News Editor Dan Partner Asst. News Editor Cynthia Hilgadon Editor-in-Chief Phil Higdon Asst. Editorial Editor Kim Freshwater Feature Editor Tanya McNaughton Asst. Feature Editor Robert Edelman Editor Mike O'Hara Asst. Sports Ed. Jonathan Block Reporters Mike Shearer, Frances Galway Alanwyn Stone, Hugh Tessendorf, Bruce Erickson Stan Otelle, Anita Wicke, Martine Teftelbaum, Mike THE CAMP COUNCIL IN SESSION—Working closely with Mr. Duncan, camp supervisor, the council has acted as the middleman between the METROCITY CONFERENCE The Metropolitan Council of the City of Metropolitan City is holding a meeting to discuss and resolve various issues related to the city's development. The meeting will be held on Thursday, February 25, 1984, at 6:00 PM at the City Hall in New York City. Attendees are encouraged to bring their own ideas and suggestions for improvement. The meeting will be followed by a public comment period until no comments are made. The Metropolitan Council of the City of Metropolitan City is responsible for ensuring that the city remains safe, clean, and well-maintained. The council has established guidelines and procedures for managing its affairs, including the management of public spaces and the prevention of conflicts and disturbances. The council is also committed to providing services to the city's residents, such as the provision of medical care and the maintenance of public facilities. The Metropolitan Council of the City of Metropolitan City is working towards creating a more sustainable and equitable metropolitan city. It is dedicated to addressing the needs of its citizens and promoting the growth of the city. The council is committed to keeping its members informed about new developments and initiatives and to helping them make informed decisions. The Metropolitan Council of the City of Metropolitan City is proud of its achievements and continues to work towards making the city a better place for everyone. gripes and suggestions of the campers and the reactions of the administration. Camp Council Not Quite Perfect, But First Session Effective We, the staff of the Kamper Kansan, can honestly say that the new Camp Council is the kind of effective organization that we would many times like to be. Our job, too, is to observe, to sometimes judge, and then to act and inform on controversial subjects. THE SCIENCE STUDENTS, who often have a great deal of outside work, and not enough time to do it in, need a time and a place to do it. The tended to spirit the camp into The council has and will continue to work on the practical problems that plague each and everyone of us; the problems that can either make the camp a pleasant experience or a trying one, depending upon their solution. controversial subjects. THE STUDENTS who were elected from the dorms of Templin and Lewis this year are doing just that.Certainly a great many of the subjects discussed and acted upon by that body,such as paper towels in the girls' rest room,are not of an earth-shaking import,but it has not shied away either from the controversial issues that have tended to split the camp into rival factions. place has been arranged for, and since its beginnings were inadequate, it is being improved. The extra time for study is being worked on now. There have been a few times when the serving lines in the kitchen have been up to ten minutes late; this makes everyone a little late. The problem is being worked on by Mr. Herbert Duncan, a camp administrator, who usually goes more than overboard to do everything he can to see that all of us are healthy and happy. MR. DUNCAN, who presides at the gatherings is generally as honest about the policies of the camp and the reasons for them as he hopes we are about our complaints. Since this is a new organization, obviously it can't be working at maximum efficiency just yet, but in years to come we can hope for a body much more effective than those, say, at most public high schools. If the campers of future years can maintain the high standards set by this year's group, the camp can look forward to an effective vehicle for voicing complaints. Makes You Appreciate Democracy, Doesn't It? Lights Out One situation at the camp needs a solution. A suitable effort should be made to provide an arrangement for extra study time for the students. rangement for earth stress. The need truly exists. The earnest proposals and suggestions made by the students are not capricious pleas for a loosening of controls or an exorbitant demand for freedom. They are proposals that must be taken with serious consideration and not put off with dogmatic proclamations. These projects, which must be completed in a week, consume 20 to 25 hours. Because the students are not allowed to stay up after 10 p.m., it is not uncommon for them to get up at one or two in the morning in order to work on their projects and also have assignments completed for their other courses. TAKE FOR EXAMPLE, students in sociology class. They conduct projects dealing with conformity, presidential qualities, and taking the public's pulse on the Viet Nam crises, to name a few of their research projects. THIS IS AN established and existing situation. These and other students with similar burdens of work have just as valid a reason for extra sleep- opening. Certainly a solution can be worked out. Two potentially suitable proposals have been made that of a lounge-study program, and that of abolishing the doubtfully-valid inspection system. ing time as certain music and theatre students who work on scenery or who practice late in the evening. The lounge-study might be held from 10 p.m. to 12 p.m. in the wing lounge, and students who truly needed extra time could work in a quiet atmosphere while the counselors also did their work. It would essentially be a proctored study hall. THERE HAS ALSO been much dissention as to the validity of the room-inspection system. The two hours that students are not allowed in their wings is only for the convenience of the supervisors, and in many ways, defeats the purpose for our being here, wasting much valuable time. Regular inspection by the floor counselors would surely be an adequate system and a more acceptable one to the students. These are only two suggestions, neither is designed to serve as a panacea, but some acceptable arrangement can and should be devised. Forum Editor's Note: This letter was sent to the Kansan on the private initiative of the campers listed as its signators. K A B We appreciate the fact that the signators of the letter came to the Kansas with their suggestions. This can be an important function of the camp paper in future years. As the editors of this paper, we suggest that the criticisms offered here be taken into consideration, discussed, and dealt with by both campers and the administration. Editors: As campers of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, we would like to inquire as to the purpose of the room inspection held every morning in our dormitories. Since our primary purpose here is academic or aesthetic training in our various fields, it seems strange to put such an emphasis on picayune tidiness in our rooms. While we are not advocating that the rooms be left in violent disarrangement, it does seem that the details for which they are inspected are comparatively minor with regard to our purposes here. IT IS ALSO difficult for some of the campers to finish their required assignments and studies and at the same time be absent from their rooms during a lengthy period of daily inspection. Does it seem fair to limit our time in such a way as to, at times, prevent the completion of our assignments? It is also evident that many of the campers are not fulfilling the requirements for rest each night; not withstanding the fact that we are to be in bed eight hours. cive to study. Many campers have advanced the suggestion that they be allowed to study past 10 p.m. in order to compensate for the time lost during the inspection. This seems a reasonable request as long as they do so quietly and with regard to their fellow campers who are in bed. In such a case it would be necessary, of course, for the counselors to exercise some control if those studying become boisterous or remain up past a reasonable hour. Of course, it may be necessary to allow later sleeping in the morning following such study, but most agree that an assignment can be best dealt with in a single period rather than piecemeal. THE BURDEN OF travail is pressing, especially in view of the fact that the dormitory lobbies' atmospheres are not particularly conducive to study. While we are not in any way advocating relaxation of that control which keeps order, we do believe that the purpose of this camp could be better served in the consideration of the above suggestions. Sincerely, Mike Seyfrit (science) Greg Rechnitz (music) Jay Epstein (theatre-music) Ron Shull (science) James Bredfeld (science) Enrollment High This summer's Music and Art Camp has attained a total enrollment of 1,530 campers drawn from such places as New Jersey, Washington and California. ton and Cambridge The majority of students come from the music division directed by Mr. Wiley. It claims 700 of the students. The art division, headed by Prof. Marjorie Whitney, is second on the list with 255. SCIENCE BOASTS of 125 students taking such courses as microbiology, sociology and physics. Theater, which is run by Prof. Bill Kuhke has 70. They will present the play "Lilium" at the end of the session. Ballet, which has 60 campers, will present their show also near the end of the session. It is headed by Marguerite Reed. Speech has a total of 30 persons under the direction of Prof. Linkugel. The journalism department which presents the Kamper Kansan and the Summer Session Kansan, has an enrollment of 20 and is under the supervision of Prof. John H. Knowles. The junior high division with 300 two-week campers is under Richard Brummett. Kamper Kansan 3 Retirement Planned By Mrs. Spurrier By Robert Lovelace "You are only as old as you feel and I'm not that old." These are the words of Mrs. Frank Spurrier, one of the supervisors of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. Art roll- from thing- Mrs. Spurrier is a veteran of many a campaign to help confused students. Mrs Spurrier, a very competent counsellor, has worked at KU for nine years and with the camp for the last five years, but will retire at the end of this session. come ced by e stu- ced by ed on students biology, neater, uhike the play session. wills, will the end Mar- persons L. Lin- artment Kansan Kansan, is un- John H. Mrs. Spurrier has witnessed many improvements in dorm activities in the time she has been here. Some of these improvements, she said, have been in the dividing of eating areas, more recreation, and the presentation of movies twice a week in the Templin cafeteria. SHE FEELS that the students have benefited greatly from living in dormitories. They have benefited through meeting students from all over the country, having to cooperate with the idiosyncracies of roommates and living with people of their same field and different fields. This experience, she feels, will prepare students for the type of living that they will meet when the begin college. with 300 Richard Irene McKinnon Mrs. Frank Spurrier Mrs. Spurrier believes that her biggest reward is to see the students that she has counseled attain a better outlook on their problems. She feels that she always leaves a "benefit of the doubt" to the student and hears his entire outlook on his problems. Mrs. Spurrier has helped many students over problems that they have encountered here at camp. This reward should be the only thing that dedicated people strive for, she said. SHE FEELS that the entire camp matures from this program. They gain an insight of the competition that they will run into when they arrive at college. This, Mrs. Spurrier said, was a great part of the campus life. The competition that the students have experienced here is enlightening and will make them even Mrs. Spurrier has two grandsons that are attending the camp this summer. They are Steven and Patrick Sirridge and are in the Speech and Theater divisions. She also has a granddaughter who attended the camp last year as a counselor. better students in their areas back home. Mrs. Spurrier's home is in Kingman, Kansas. She had worked in New Mexico with Spanish speaking students before coming to the campus of KU. She plans to move to Kansas City in order to be near her daughter, who is a doctor in Kansas City. The retirement of Mrs. Spurrier will be a loss to the Campus of KU and the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, said Herbert Duncan, camp administrator. People like Mrs. Spurrier, with a vast background in counseling, are few and far between. They are dedicated to their job, which is the advancement of young people. Mrs. Spurrier is the type of worker that commands a salute from the people that have benefited from her counseling and everyone else on the KU campus. Technical Flaws Detract From Outstanding Acting By Kim Freshwater The Theatre camp's opening night production of "Lilium," by Ferenc Molnar, was complete with bright young actors and actresses, colorful costumes, and not quite as outstanding sound effects. The seating of the audience—nearly on top of the performers—probably served to give both groups claustrophobia, along with taking away somewhat from the "professionality" of the work, but the performances by the campers certainly did much to dispel this initial misimpression. Miss Gina Bikales, leading lady this first night, did a masterful job of the many difficult dramatic parts of her role as Julie. There were, however, a few complaints voiced in the farther sections of seats about not being able to hear the actress. Her partner in excellence, Mike Dandliker — "Lilium" — put forth a Long-time Camper Tells of Changes This is the fourth year at the Midwestern Music and Art camp for Andy Soll from University City, Mo. THOUGH HE WASN'T allowed to take private lessons that first year, he became acquainted with the organ instructor, Dr. Laurel E. Anderson. Anderson encouraged him to come back and because Andy "liked the camp in general" he did come back. He has come every year but one since then. One of his friends, Jeff Spielman, has been here every year with Andy plus the year that Andy missed. Andy was in the junior high division his first year of camp. At that time the junior high campers lived in the same dormitories as the senior high campers. Andy said, "It was great, more like senior high." Villain "Fiseur," so sinisterly portrayed by Sam Gabbart, for some reason in a coat much too large for him, came through with all his gangster overtones somewhat exemplified (as did the "police of God" for some unknown reason); something which would turn this particular reprobate into the laughing stock of the pick-pocket industry if his cohorts were ever to spot him. truly remarkable effort in delivering both his mood and his lines. No complaints here about either audibility or sense of communication, which, incidentally, was certainly not one of Miss Bikales' problems either. Supporting these promising stars were comedienne (and a very funny one too) Beverly Krug, as Marie, and "her intended," Wolf Beifeld, played by Jay Epstein. Out-of-State Students Are Half of Camp The most disappointing aspect of the production centered around what looked like the over-doing of a few parts; one of the more noticeable of which was Mrs. Muskat's. Miss Alph Larsen, who played that lady, seemed to be suffering from understandable nervousness and ended up making the blase Mrs. Muskat a great deal less nonchalant than one in her position would be. I would very much like to comment on the performance of policemen No.1 and No.2, as listed in order of appearance on the program, but I wasn't entirely sure which of the four uniformed legs that appeared on the stage at the same time was "winning." For the observant few who know, I think you'll agree that our timid "clown" did a very nice job. Ending on a pleasant note seems necessary; the play was a pleasant surprise and it has my, if not the entire audience's, whole-hearted approval and recommendation. Any problems are, I am sure, temporary or inherent in this type of production and those that are able will soon be rectified. "And where are you from?" the typical camp introduction question is again repeated. Yes, students from all over the United States have come to this camp to learn and take home with them a little of what they have learned. learned. Their homes range from Minnesota in the North to Texas in the South, from Maryland on the Atlantic, to California on the Pacific. Altogether there are forty states represented at the camp. Even though there are no foreign students attending it can be seen in the near future that there will be. "AND WHERE ARE you from?" Who can tell where a student is from? Sometimes an accent can be detected and this does help, but so this person does have a southern accent? There are a lot of states in the south and most of the people who live in them do have detectable accents. The Eastern accent is harder to detect unless the person is from New Joisey. The Californian students talk practically as thouh they were born in the Midwest (no offense), but going further north one comes to the pronunciation specialists: the students from Wisconsin. It may not seem like it, but half of the students at the camp are from Kansas. Not so many are from Lawrence but there are quite a few from small towns all over the state. There are campers from Beloit, Lindsborg, McPherson, Parsons. Bonner Springs, and all those other "big metropolis" you have never heard of before. OF COURSE, the way to get acquainted is to know someone from the town of a person you have just met. Impossible? Maybe, but it's surprising how many people do know kids from YOUR home town or at least they think they do. What is tough is to be from New York City, St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago, or San Diego and have someone ask you if you know Henry Galawaskiteoghpfle, or maybe someone you don't know. Now, if you are a boy and a good looking girl asks you this you say "of course I know Henry" and try to carry on an intelligent conversation. If you are a girl and a good looking boy asks you this you say "of course I know Henry" and try to carry on an intelligent conversation. "It IS REALLY wonderful how these students from all over the country get along so well together." said a Kansas student. "When I thought about coming here I expected practically all of the campers to be from Kansas." The most common complaint from the out of state students and even the Kansas students has been the weather. THE NEW YORKER DEPARTING FOR STARLIGHT—Campers board their bus to Kansas City to see the Starlight Theatre production of "The Music Man." Two "Music Men" Seen by Campers By Tanya McNaughten "Ya got trouble with a capital 'T,' an' that rhymes with 'P', and that stands for Pool." These words are very familiar to most of the Midwestern Music and Art campers now that they have had a chance to see two productions of Meredith Willson's "The Music Man." THE FIEST performance campers viewed was put on by the University of Kansas Theatre group. Although the cast had to be small because it is a USO tour production, the play was amazingly alive and did not seem to be hampered by the lack of orchestra accompaniment. Monday night, July 12, was the night of embarkation for seven busloads of campers on their trip to Starlight Theater in Kansas City to view "The Music Man" for the second time. THIS TIME the production was full-scale and starred the widely known personality, Bert Parks, as Professor Harold Hill. In spite of his impressive record, campers largely did not seem to enjoy Park's acting as well as expected. Some felt that his singing was none too good and others thought he overacted. OF COURSE, a role such as Professor Harold Hill demands acting at its highest level. This brassy and glib-tongued salesman makes his entrance into the play by way of train. This particular train is approaching River City, Iowa—the date: July 4, 1912. The audience learns the story of Professor Hill by way of "shop talk." The professor, it seems, sells band instruments and uniforms, guaranteeing to teach the kids to play the instruments . . . "and he doesn't know one note from another." IN RIVER CITY, people gather as Harold starts his rip-roaring sales spiel, telling the townpeople that "va got trouble." He convinces the people that their children will be swept up in delinquency with the presence of a pool table in their community. The answer to River City's problem is a "Boy's Band," Hill claims. Harold sells the town on buying instruments for their children and in due time the instruments are handed out. Complications develop as Harold, accustomed to skipping town at this point, finds himself in love with Marian, a local librarian, and hesitant to leave. The children have their beautiful instruments but don't know how to play them. The band uniforms arrive and Harold plans on skipping town that night. THE TOWN FINDS they're being swindled and Harold is promptly handcuffed. As townpeople assemble to decide his fate, the Boys' Band enters and plays a slightly recognizable version of "Minuet in C" much to everyone's amazement. Under-the-stars musicals are always exciting and "The Music Man" was no exception. For a mere $4.25 campers received professional entertainment, a trip to Kansas City, and best of all, a chance to stay up past 10 p.m! Templin Food Supervisor Says Cooking Not Learned in Books "Cooking is technique, and technique cannot be learned from textbooks." This is the philosophy of Mrs. James T. Hoffman, Food Supervisor at Templin Hall. visor at Tempelman Mrs. Hoffman, who attended Kansas State University to receive her formal training as a dietitian, lives in Lawrence and is employed by KU all year. ACCORDING TO Mrs. Hoffman, her husband is a great help with her work. Like herself, he loves to cook and experiment in the kitchen. Mrs. Hoffm.n said that she has not only tried her ideas for new meals on her husband, but she has also used some of his ideas at camp. When asked what was involved in her job. Mrs. Hoffman said there are basically five different areas involved, but supervising what goes on in the kitchen is her main job. kitchen is her main job Besides the supervising, Mrs. Hoffman does the ordering of the food. This has three main areas: state letting, fresh produce, and fresh meats. In addition there are menus to be planned. BOOKWORK, SUCH as food costs, monthly inventories, and payrolls, work schedules and work descriptions of each job for every person, and the cleaning of the kitchen are Mrs. James T. Hoffman (1) all a part of the work which Mrs. Hoffman does. One thing that Mrs. Hoffman noted and was happy about was that the campers are good eaters. She stated that no matter what was prepared most of the campers ate it and there was very little waste. Another thing that has made Mrs. Hoffman especially happy this summer was overheard. The kitchen had put in a lot of extra work to fix the box lunches that the art campers took with them on their field trip to Kansas City. It was the following day that Mrs. Hoffman overheard one boy say to another that the box lunchees were really good. SOME OF THE campers have been employed in the kitchens this summer and Mrs. Hoffman added a word of praise for them saying they had been extra good help. been extra good "it's been a real pleasant summer," said Mrs. Hoffman, when asked how the work was this summer. Mrs. Hoffman also said that part of the reason for this was that the campers were eating in two dorms instead of just one this year. A. C B. D C. A D. B E. C F. A B D Kamper Kansan The Column By Mike O'Hara and Mike Holder Continuing in the dubious tradition of columns by sports editors, we present this journalistic masterpiece. We would like to acknowledge the aid given to us in writing this column by the University Summer Session Kansan's ace troubleshooter, Jon Block. Anything in this column that you may find incorrect, inaccurate, prejudiced or just disagreeable—Jon wrote! THE KING AND queen program produced at least one great campaign effect; that of cleaning up all the litter on campus. They just picked it up and stuck it on the nearest wall. We would like to take this opportunity to commend the journalism students on the tremendous job they did in taking KUOK over for five hairraising hours. Word has it that Coke sales on Campus have more than doubled since the station has left the air. THE TENNIS tournament has really had rousing support. One of the more skillful or more persuasive players managed to get all the way to the semifinals on defaults. Two North of Templin, thinking that they have been lacking competition, challenged any all-star team to a basketball game. It was reported that a YWCA team accepted the challenge, but was denied a game. It seems that after the 2-northers saw the girls in action, they picked up their purses and ran. THE VOLLEYBALL tournament has had all the excitement of a well played chess match, as wing teams match forfeit against forfeit in their race to the top. The only question mark in competition now is which team will crack first in the championship match. The surviving basketball teams' games seem to have decreased in quality; for most of the starting players on the teams have been put out of action by the post in the middle of Robinson gym. AS WE SEE all the names of the science campers and their accomplishments enblazoned on every poster, we wonder, "what price glory?" We would like to wish everyone a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, since we will not be seeing any of you over the holidays. By the way, Holder lives in Kansas City, Stone in Beloit, Kansas, and O'Hara in Rochester (Minn.), so if you want to drop us a little gift, "we're in the book." Variety of Sports Offered to Campers By Dave Stone Basketball, chess, ping-pong, tennis, volleyball—these are the athletic groups that surround the campers at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp. "These sports give the camper every opportunity to take full advantage of all the recreational facilities on the camp grounds," said recreation director Mr. Darrell Nelson. Wing activities give the camper the chance to take part in team games. The spirit of competition shines through here with probably the greatest amount of fury. To see tough, inspired competition on the basketball slab behind Templin is reminiscent of a key game in a high school league. VOLLEYBALL CAN BE the scene of fiery action, as the teams with the tallest men always seem to have a distinct advantage over shorter teams. Ping-pong, tennis, and chess are the sports in which the campers can excel individually. These sports are for the campers who have not quite the time or the desire to practice with their teammates, but who would rather compete by themselves. Some campers have expressed their desire for some more activities to be introduced next year for the campers. A popular sport that many campers play and feel should have a tournament is the intriguing game of bridge. Whether for just fun, or TOUCH FOOTBALL or any adaptation of the game has been said by some to be very popular, though Mr. Nelson said "the difficult part of this would be the establishment of a game, no matter how safe or practical it was, with a name that has the word 'football,' attached to it." master points, this game could easily be promoted and introduced to the camp, they feel. Unfortunately, the University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence cannot provide swimming facilities with any amount of adequate capacity," said Mr. Herbert Duncan, camp administrator. Probably no other sport has the support of all the camp. Some just swim to relieve the hot Kansas sun, while others take an active part in competitive swimming. Undoubtedly, the camp will provide adequate swimming facilities in the future, and with this swimming competition will eventually come about. Many campers compete actively on their school swimming teams, and to go six weeks without proper or consistent swimming facilities is not in the best interests of training, some feel. ALL THINGS CONSIDERED, the campers feel that the athletic program has been excellent. Even the most unathletic person has an opportunity to participate in the various sports. TEDDY EWES Willie Nunnery Campers Aid In Setup of Recreation Ever wonder who arranges your tournament games, keeps your wing's interest high and unites your wing's recreation program, besides keeping up diligently with his own studies? Well, these are all the responsibilities of the "moonlighting" recreation chairman, a post created this year by Darrell Nelson. the camp's recreational, social, and religious head, to help coordinate activities between wings. Typical of all these wing directors is Willie James Nunnery, a serious science student from Hammond, La., and a resident of third floor, north. BUT WILLIE UNDERRATED his job. "Mr. Nelson has the recreation program set up tremendously, therefore the duties of the recreational chairman are very simple. The only serious problem is setting up all the events." Although other wing chairmen may disagree Willie thought the "spirit of cooperation" among the campers was excellent. He also offered some suggestions which he and other chairmen thought would improve the program. Among those he mentioned were: more meetings with the supervisor, probably about three times a session; an all-star team in each major sport; officials for each game; and standardized national rules for each game. Boys' Athletics End in Flurry BUT HIS MOST provocative idea was that of having separate recreational programs for the divisions. He thought that some divisions had more studying than others and separate programs would facilitate scheduling and alieviate other related problems. The other recreation chairmen are Steve Lucas, 2 north; Jim Bredfelt, 3 south; Richard Ulatoski, 4 south; Bill Moses, 4 north; Frank Bibb, 5 south; Barry Buchle, 5 north; Harold Keen, 6 south; Joe Conroy, 6 north; and Burt Stoeker, 7 north. Champions in all tournament divisions have been crowned as recreational competition for 1965 Midwest Music and Art Camp comes to a close. At press time, most of the major outdoor divisions: basketball, volleyball, tennis, and softball, have completed their semi-final matches and will have their respective winners crowned. But here's a rundown on all championship play. In basketball, a veteran 2 North squad will meet an underdog 3 South team in the finals. North, led by Steve Lucus and Brent Waldron, returns from last year's championship team, has run up tremendous scores in coasting through to the final round, beating 6 north, 89-14, and then blasting 5 north, 77-28. On the other hand, 3 south had a much tougher time, slipping by 4 south first, 44-40, and then 3 north, 34-30. But the sharp-shooting South team, led by Steve Smith, will definitely pose a problem for 2 north. In Volleyball, 2 north has also reached the finals, with victories over 7 north and 3 north. They will again meet 3 south in the final match. the tennis finals pit Mike Holder of Kansas City, Mo., against Dave Hill of Nevada, Mo. Holder ha Youthful Stars Invade Campus All of us have probably come in contact with some camper from each of the other six divisions at one time or another in our tenure here. But how many of us know of the athletic talent hidden in these same divisions? IN A BRIEF SURVEY conducted in Templin dormitory, four boys were found who had received notable recognition in their respective sports. Two of the campers, Steve Lucas, Lebanon, Indiana, and Richard Wotoski, Kingsville, Texas, received full athletic scholarships; Lucas for basketball at KU, and Wotoski for football at Texas A&I. THE OTHER TWO CAMPERS Brent Waldron, Denison, Iowa, and Mike Sjeklhohe of Indianola, Iowa, received all-conference and all-state honors. Waldron was named all-southwest Iowa his junior year and all-conference his senior year—both for basketball. Sjeklhohe was named all-conference halfback his senior year. Both these boys will be back at KU next year, but as students instead of science campers. Besides these examples, there are many other athletes destined for "stardom" in their various sports. So the next time you cross the campus, look around—there is talent hidden amidst you. reached the finals with victories over Tom Scammon, Gary Lemmon and David Smith; and Hill with victories over Gene Burlison, Eric Avery, and Brent Waldron. Softball play finds ubiquitous 2 north playing against either 6 south or 3 north. North has combined forfeits and a 10-4 victory over 3 South in advancing to the finals, while the two semi-finalists were scheduled to play their first game Tuesday. From an original total of 55 boys, the ping pong tournament has reached semi-final stage, with only 3 boys remaining. Rob Colwell is a finalist, having beaten Steve West in the semil's. The other two boys, Jim Hedrick and Randy Porter, will clash in a semi-final match to decide who will go up against Colwell. But ping pong is not the only activity where competition runs high. The chess tournament has proceeded as far as the semi-finals where Jim Pierce will meet either Glen Lindwall or Randy Porter. Pierce advanced to the finals by upsetting favored Mike Terrin in the semi-finals. Terrin defeated Walter Stromquist in the quarter-finals. To get to the semi-finals, Lindwall defeated Ken Hickin and Porter beat Clark Wall. Pierce advanced to the finals by upsetting favored Mike Terrin in the semi-finals. Terrin defeated Walter Stromquist in the quarter-finals. To get to the semi-finals, Linwall defeated Ken Hickin and Porter beat Clark Wall. In bowling, the axioms edged the petunias, 10-2 and 9-3 to grab first place in the camp class "A" bowling league, while the ball busters captured the class "B" title. For the axioms, Steve Smith has been the leading keegler, posting a 145 average. He's backed up by Larry Yeager, with a 140 average, Anita Wicke, 124, Glen Lindwall, 121, Kathy Martin, 97, and Aileen Buie, 85. The ball busters continued their mastery over the hurricanes and pin busters as they ended the season with a 9-3 won-lost record. The second place hurricanes posted a 7-5 record, followed by the pin bursets with an even 6-6 log. The ball busters were paced by Olden Ball's 142 average, Jim Clark's 131, Mary Wandmaker's 122, John Zimmerman, 90, and Phyllis Pigges, 87. Science Camp Sports Every Saturday morning, between twenty and forty science campers gather in front of Robinson Gym and begin their weekly voluntary athletic program. DR. DELBERT SHANKEL, head of the camp science division organized these activities for science students, and has Glenn Martin directing the athletics. Science LECTURE today AND THAT'S WHAT LITTLE GIRLS ARE MADE OF Friday, July 30.1965 Summer Session Kansan Page 5 A MEAL A SNACK + A COOL DRINK A PLACE TO RELAX HOURS: You'll find them all in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union 4 Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Saturday 7:00 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. Closed Sunday The Hawks Nest KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE The Hawks Nest KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE 7 4112 7138 Summer Session Kansan Page 6 Friday, July 30, 1965 Mitchell Is Enthusiastic In 8th Year By Dan Partner Jack Mitchell, head coach for the KU grid squad, is entering his eighth season with a young but enthusiastic ball team. The team for this season consists of 31 sophomores, 29 juniors, and 10 seniors. The morale for this team is "as good as we've ever had," according to Coach Mitchell. Mitchell says the players for the KU fans to watch this season are Bob Skahan, Columbus junior, playing quarterback; Mike Johnson, Garden City junior, halfback; Harold Montgomery, Wichita junior, tackle; Jerry Barnett, Wichita junior, tackle, and Jeff Elias, Miami, Fla., junior, end. All of this group will be starting this season. MISSOURI AND Nebraska are anticipated by Mitchell to be the toughest Big Eight games. "Nebraska and Missouri have more lettermen back than anyone else," he said. Mitchell considers KU's meeting Texas Tech as the toughest non-conference game. KU will be ready to meet Tech's Don Anderson, whom Mitchell considers the best halfback in the nation. KU's first conference game is with Iowa State. Mitchell wants to win this game because "The first conference game is always the most important one" for the team to win. DURING HIS PREVIOUS seven years as head coach for KU, Mitchell has coached his teams to one conference championship, four second places, and two thirds. Before coming to KU Mitchell was head coach at Wichita University for two years and head coach at Arkansas for three years. Although the team has many sophomores on the roster, Mitchell plans to have a good season with better ones in the future because the sophomores this year will have good experience for next year and the year after. Many good high school players are coming to KU in the fall and Mitchell says KU has "as fine a freshman crop as we've ever had." Coach Mitchell reflects the good morale of the team when he says that "We plan to beat everyone we play." Hersh Receives Award Renewal Dr. Hersh will continue research of ribosomes in cell proteins and the structural proteins of microsomes. His research of protein syntheses in the body concerns the growth of cells, particularly abnormal growth. The NIH fellowship was first presented to the KU department of biochemistry in 1960 for a $66,000 career development award to Dr. Hersh. The amount of the first year of the five-year renewal is $17,580. Dr. Robert T. Hersh, associate professor of biochemistry, has received a five-year renewal for the National Institutes of Health career development award. The NIH senior research fellowships are awarded on the basis of demonstrated promise for a career in independent research and teaching. They are held in the period between completion of post-doctoral research training and eligibility for permanent higher academic appointment. SCENE FROM GRID PAST—Coach Jack Mitchell helps end Mike Deer, 87, off the field at the 1961 Bluebonnet Bowl. KUMC Student Center Houses Bookstore, Dorm, Grad Program BALDEN, N.J. — The University of Texas football coach, Dennis Koch, has joined the university's staff. Camp Official, 49. Taken to Hospital George Neaderniser, 49, assistant supervisor and director of Templin Hall at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, was stricken Tuesday morning at the breakfast table with what was diagnosed as a kidney allment. By Frances Galawas He was taken to Stormont-Vaill Hospital in Topeka, where hospital reported good progress. He was back on the job Thursday. During the regular school year, Mr. Neaderhiser is director of the Topeka High School band. A red brick building located on the southwest corner of the campus is the pride and joy of the students and faculty at the KU medical center. This building is their Student Union. Its bookstore is one of the largest in the county. The bookstore sells mostly medical books, both textbooks and clinical books. It is the only bookstore in the nation that operates on a 24-hour, seven days a week basis. The store keeps the same hours as the hospital. THE UNION was dedicated in 1954 and was built by three funds totaling $750,000. These three funds were the Battenfeld Memorial Fund, the C.D. Francisco Fund, and a fund in honor of Lt. William Fitzsimmons; the first American killed in World War I. Fitzsimmons was a graduate of the KU School of Medicine. The student center was built for two purposes. The first and most important was to house the post-graduate medical program. The second purpose was service to students, faculty, and others at the center. The number of students in the past two years has increased considerably. Because of this growth, a dormitory was added to the two story building. The three-story dormitory built on top of the union houses 74 students. IT ALSO houses recreational activities and study rooms for the students. The union is now owned by the state and is operated by the Student Union and Dorm Corporation. KU Ph.D. Candidate Selected For State Department Study Former Wittenberg University professor and Dean Mover's volleyball coach, Jim Coleman, was selected Monday by the United States Volleyball Association to carry out a study of the world's top volleyball powers in Poland this fall. Electron microscopes allow researchers to "get inside of the cell and study certain formations or ultra-structures." Prof. Burton said. Research now planned for the electron microscope laboratory will include both basic and applied study of cell ultrastructures. THE PURPOSE of the tour, sponsored by the U.S. State Department and the Polish Olympic Committee, is to attempt to raise the level of U.S. volleyball to that of the Iron Curtain countries. The U.S. team finished ninth in the 1964 Olympics in which some of the Iron Curtain countries were eliminated in zone competition. Coleman was selected from among all the volleyball coaches in the United States. Coleman rose to national volleyball prominence as a college All-America player at KU in 1957. He then coached the Dayton YMCA to three seventh-place finishes in the U.S. open He will leave the U.S. Aug. 7 and will carry out his study for two months. The climax of the study will be the World Cup Matches (the world's volleyball championships) to be held in Warsaw the last two weeks in September. Principal investigator for the resulting ultrastructure research is Paul R. Burton, assistant professor of zoology. The grant is expected to total $80,000 over a three-year period. Electron Lab Grant Aids Cell Study An electron microscope laboratory to study ultrastructure of cells will be installed at KU under a first-year grant of $60,327 from the U.S. Public Health Service. One which might well have application for diabetics is a study of the ultrastructure of the pancreas to determine how insulin is formed in the body. Various vertebrates such as reptiles, birds and mice will be used in the research. 4. Prof. Burton will also study ultrastructures of parasitic flatworms to determine how the cell walls and sperm are formed. He will collaborate with Prof. Karl Stockhammer of the entomology department in correlations of ultrastructure and function in bug eyes. For All Your School Supplies Shop at the Round Corner Drug Store We carry a complete line of school supplies. ★ Paper ★ Notebooks Erasers ★ Ink competition. In 1961-62 he coached the Wittenberg University volleyball club to national recognition. ★ Glue Pens ★ Rulers ★ Binders ★ Carbon Paper and many many more items. Stop in soon. Open every evening until 9:30 p.m. ★ Round Corner Drug Store IN 1631 he organized the Dean's Mover's team from Springfield, Ohio, and coached them to two ninth-places in the country. This record placed his teams at the top of the non-west coast teams in the United States. He also coached an all star team in the 1964 Olympic trials. In 1634 the United States Volleyball Association gave him its highest award, Leader In Volleyball. VI-3-0200 801 Mass. Coleman is now completing his Ph.D. in chemistry at KU and will become an associate professor at George Williams College (Chicago) in January. He will coach the George Williams volleyball team and conduct research in the field of physiology of exercise. After his return from Europe he will conduct volleyball clinics in key cities around the U.S. EN ENDS TONIGHT “VON RYAN'S EXPRESS” Granada TREATKE-Telephone VI 3-5788 Starts SATURDAY... L of th KU tenn con WALT DISNEY presents THE MONKEY'S UNCLE TECHNICOLOR® Cont. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 - 4:30 - 6:45 - 9:00 Varsitu DEARED ... Stankina U1 2945 --- Varsity Evening Only THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065 TONIGHT & SAT... Richard Chamberlain Yvette Mimieux "JOY IN THE MORNING" Starting SUNDAY... WHAT WAS HARLOW REALLY LIKE? THE JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents CARROLL BAKER 'HARLOW' TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 60 Starts At Dusk TONIGHT & SAT... "THE CADDY" "NEVER TOO YOUNG" Plus 2 Bonus Hits Saturday Only SUN. & MON... "ROBIN & 7 HOODS" "OCEAL'S 11" Summer Session Kansan Eagle Editor Named at KU Page 7 Lance Gilmore, assistant city editor of the Wichita Eagle, has joined the KU staff as a special writer of Centennial materials for the observance continuing through 1966. A member of the Eagle staff since 1960. Gilmore for two years was its education writer and won the 1965 National Education Writers Association prize for outstanding coverage of statewide issues in education. Among his other assignments there were assistant to the promotion director and assistant editor of the Eagle's Kansas Centennial edition. After graduation from Kansas State University in 1958, where he held the Fay N. Seaton working scholarship, Gilmore was with the Oberlin Herald two years as assistant editor and editor. He was for one year chairman of the Decatur County Red Cross chapter and general chairman for Oberlin's Diamond Jubilee in 1960. The 27-year-old Gilmore was born in Sterling and was graduated from the high school at Turon. At KU Gilmore is in the University relations department. Sounds Like an Offer LONDON—(UPI)—Bachelor Edward Heath, new leader of the Conservative opposition, was asked by a woman journalist who would be the official hostess of the government if he became prime minister. Heath peered at his questioner. "Are you making me a proposition?" he inquired. Faculty Gains In Fine Arts Two instructors in music and two in art have been added to the faculty of KU's School of Fine Arts. They will begin their duties in September. John Kozar and Paul Tardif will be instructors in piano and Peter Thompson and Richard Knox instructors in drawing and painting. KOZAR EARNED the bachelor of music degree from Indiana University in 1962 and was a graduate assistant for two years. After receiving the master of music degree in 1964, he held a fellowship to the Balkan nations of Europe to student-teach and perform. Tardif earned B.M. and M.M. degrees from the Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester in 1960 and 1963. He held a Fulbright Scholarship to Germany the past two years. THOMPSON received the master of fine arts degree from Yale University this year, where he was a teaching assistant. He holds the B.F.A. degree from Rhode Island School of Design (1963). Knox has combined studies in art, liberal arts and education for five degrees. He holds the bachelor of arts (1960), bachelor of science in education (1962), bachelor of fine arts (1960) and master of fine arts from Kent State University in Ohio; and the master of arts from Stanford University. The two master's degrees were received in 1965. He has been a teaching assistant at both Kent and Stanford. Business Directory Health & Diet Store - Arabic - Vegetarian - Indian Staf-O-Life - Oriental 17 W.9th Hours: Mon. 2-6 VI2-2771 Friday, July 30, 1965 Thurs. 10-7:30 Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6 Complete one stop service Open 7:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Accommodations, goods, services, and employment advertised in the Summer Hanson are offered to all students without regard to color, creed, or national origin. STANDARD BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE Lovely, large, cool sleeping room, nicely furnished, kitchen attached. Pri, Eni, Jacobs, Kitchen Attached, Suite, Sak, 15th, $20.00 per month, bills paid, CLI V 3-01289 or VI 3-7830, 8-3 FOR RENT ART NEASE CLASSIFIEDS KU faculty member going to Europe has furnished home for rent. September through May, 1965-1966. Phone VI 2-0253. Wedding gown. Floor length, candlelight satin. A-line skirt from empire bodice of alencon lace. Chapel length trai- chase of chandelier. Wedding shoes in钻als in cleaned and pressed. Call VI 3-0064 after 5:15 p.m. 7-30 Nice apartment, very near campus for one or two men. Private parking, utilities paid. May work out part or all of rent. Phone VI 3-8534 or VI 2-3475. tf Siamese Kittens: 2 mischievous monsters for sale—age 8 weeks. Owner leaving town must sell at bargain price. $7.50. Call VI 2-0736. 8-3 For graduate or older undergraduate men, extra nice furnished bachelor apartments, single or double. 112 blocks to Fraser Hall, excellent facilities, utilities paid. Ideal study conditions, low, low summer rates. Call VI 3-8534. tf Police Monitor, 30-50 megacycles, tunable and crystal receiver. Call VI 2-9100 Gary Grazda. Leave your name and number if I am not in. tt FOR SALE Model 348 Beretta 22 caliber automatic pistol, NRA, very good condition. Excellent buy at $35.00. Call UN 4-3198 or VI 3-6365 after 6:00 p.m. tf Siamese kittens. Blue point and call. Point VI 2-1484 after 4:30. 601 Mass. VI 3-9897 Typewriters—Manuals, electrics, portables; rentals, sales, service. Royal, SCM. Olivia Olivette, Hermes. Xerox viper. Lawrence Typewriter, 700 Mass. VI t-3-3644. Large Electric SMC 400 typewriter with carbon ribbon—like new—will sell or $1% price—accept reasonable trade up to $100.00. Excellent for the viens. VI 2-10 7-20 VW Sedan, 1963, all equipment, new new body. See any time. VI 2-0084. 7-30 See any time. VI 2-0084. 7-30 Small RCA console radio with 45 RPM turntable and attached FM tuner. Nice apartment piece, reasonable. See at 2236 East Drive. 7-27 MISCELLANEOUS 1960 Opel sedan. Body damaged but in good mechanical condition. $125. Call VI 2-2265. 7-30 BAR-B-QUE—Treat yourself to some real B-bar B-Que at Mich. St. Bar-B-Que, Ribs, cicken 11:00 am. Phone 1-V 29510. Closed Sunday and Wednesday. 315 Mich. St. tf DER BIERSTUBE: Singen, trinken uno essen German Style. Featuring students' light beverage from Golden Colorado; also deluxe hamburgers and thuringer sandwiches. AIR-CONDITIONED Pantz, mobiliabile for sale for $1. 24th, 14th & Teen. Classical Guitar instructions in techn- ic tutorials for the guitar. More more advanced pupils. VI 2-0002. 8-3 3rd. KYU—Karatar wants instructor for KYU—Karatar for KYU—Karatar 3:830–1804 at 5 p.m. 8-3 New corrugated boxes—for moving, shipping, and storage. Different sizes for linens, clothing, dishes and books. Roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. roy Anderson, 511 Lake, Phone VI 3-6964. Reg. German Shepherd Puppies. Trans- 2 West. 1'5 South of Eudora. 8-3 WANTED Used luggage, light weight. Must be in good condition. Phone 1-20532. tf Have an apartment? Looking for a roommate to share expenses for the 1965-66 year? Grad. student in history would like to hear from you. Contact Darrel Bigham, 1252 Tremont St., Roxbury, Boston, Mass. 02120. Tel.: 617-3845-8843. HELP WANTED Experienced Typist would like typing in her home. Theses—term papers and letters. VI 3-2651. Accurate typing by experienced typist. Term papers, themes, theses and dissertations. Reasonable and fast. VI 2-1561. tt Experienced typist will do dissertations, manuscriptss, theses, and term papers on electric typewriter with carbon ribbon, special symbols. Prompt service and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook, 2000 R. I., VI 3-7485. (t) SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! We need two full- and part-time salesmen to call on, retailers in this area. Experience not required. Excellent salary. Period August 9 till approx. Sept. 10. Must furnish own car. For appointment call VI. 2-0304. 8-3 TYPING R & R Drummer. Minimum age KU freshman next term. Call Jack at VI 3-5266 for tryout. 8-3 VI 3-0138 Open 24 Hours PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS - Dependable Cars Will do typing for reports, theses, manuscripts, etc. Experienced typist, efficient service. Call VI 2-0439. tf If we don't have what you want— we'll get it! Fast service, accurate typing. Done by former high school typing teacher, typewriter, and these ex- referred. Electric typewriter. CALL Marsh. Marsh at VI 3-8262. tt Topeka students desiring theses, dissertations, rough drafts, or term papers on topics she has written by experienced typist, call Mrs. Cook, CR 2-1479, 1715 Sims, Topeka. tf - Complete Auto Servicing Wagner's Texaco 23rd & La. 19th & La. OPEN 24 HRS. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANING - alterations - alterations - reweaving VI 3-9631 New York Cleaners Mortgage of two properties VI 3-0501 Across From The High School - dry cleaning For the best in — Patronize Your Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers 926 Mass. Miniature Golf --- Greeting Cards, Gifts Reading Material FREE PARKING Paperback Books, Magazines, Newspapers Jayhawk Fun Fairway S. Hwy. 59 by KLWN Rd. Open daily from 5:00 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Complete Center under one roof Supplementary Textbook Features 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2821 Come out for an evening of fun and fresh air. GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center RELAX Established — Experienced at the Hours: 8:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. JAYHAWK FUN FAIRWAY The TOWN CRIER 912 Mass. DAILY—Including Sunday A Malls Shopping Center VI 3-1211 TRAVEL TIME LET Make Your Summer Reservations Now! MAUPINTOUR Reservations Now! TRAVEL SERVICE Ph. VI 3-0350 LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY HAVING A PARTY? We are always happy to serve you with Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies 616 Vt. OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING ice cold 6 pacs all kinds Crushed ice, candy Variety of grocery items Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies TV Electronic Color TV Antennae on Stereos Hi-fi Changers Service RCA - We Service All Radios Transistors Car Radios Motorola Airline GE Zenith Silvertone Makes - Philco Magnavox Coronado Bird TV-Radio Service PHONE VI 3-8855 908 Mass. St. — Lawrence, Kans. — Page 8 Summer Session Kansan Friday, July 30, 1965 Composer, Chemist to Be Rose Morgan Professors A London professor who has lectured in the United States as an American Chemical Society visiting scientist and a noted composer who has been commissioned for the Centennial opera will be the 1965-66 Rose Morgan visiting professor at KU. Martin L. Tobe of University College, London, will teach in the chemistry department during the fall semester, and Douglas Moore will premiere his opera, "Portrait of Carrie," during the spring semester KU Centennial celebration. Armed Services Aid in Education Rv Anita Wicke Believing that the more education that a person receives, the further he can go in life, and the more rewarding his future will be, the armed services help the men in uniform advance their education. Yeoman F. R. Ringle, assistant instructor in naval science, says the Navy promotes a program which consists of 27 seamen and four marines. The Navy enlisted scientific education program provides the servicemen with a college education by allowing them to attend classes while on active duty, as a part of their training. The men in this program retain their regular serviceman's pay. The Air Force program this summer is the Air Force Institute of Technology. This program differs from others in that it is open only to officers. At present there are three men in the program. Capts. John C. Tashner, John F. Kendig, and James E. Bousser are all graduate students in the AFIT program. All three men are working in radiation biophysics. Col. Gerald E. Hallas, professor of air science, indicated that AFROTC is available on campus at KU and also, the only way to get into the AFIT program is through the ROTC. The Rose Morgan chairs are filled by distinguished scholars, usually from abroad, each semester. The bequest of her home adjoining the campus by the late Rose Morgan, emerita professor of English, provides a rent-free residence for the visiting scholar and his family. TOBE RECEIVED his bachelor degree with first class honors in 1951, and his doctorate with the Ramsey Memorial Medal in 1954, both from University College. He was a research assistant for two years at Kings College, Newcastle-upon-Tyme, before returning to teach at University College. In 1962 Tobe taught summer schoo at the University of Illinois and lectured widely in the U.S. under the American Chemical Society visiting scientist program. He has published widely on his specialty, substitution mechanisms of inorganic reactions. FOR THE SPRING semester Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Moore will highlight the KU centennial with his opera on the fame of Carry Nation and teach in the School of Fine Arts. Moore is now MacDowell professor of music, emeritus, having retired from Columbia University in 1962 Moore won the Pulitzer Prize in 1950 for his "Giants in the Earth" and the New York Critics Circle Award in 1959 for "The Ballad of Baby Doe." Another well known composition, "The Devil and Daniel Webster," to a libretto by Stephen Vincent Benet, has become something of an American classic. He also has received the Henry Hadley Medal, the Columbia Great Teacher Award, and the Huntington Hartford Foundation Award in Music, and has been awarded honorary music doctor degrees from the Cincinnati Conservatory, Yale University, the University of Rochester and Adelbhi College of New York. Tom Rea and William Kuhlke, both KU actors-in-residence and speech and drama instructors, will be joined by a group of experienced actors and actresses to form a repertory company next year. KU Repertory Theatre Is Set The members of this company will have leading roles in "The Taming of the Shrew," Dec. 3, 4, 10, and 11; "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf"; Feb. 9 to 12; and "The Bedbug," March 11, 12, 18 and 19. James Hawes, assistant instructor of speech and drama, also will be a member of the company. In addition to the faculty members, six or seven persons will be selected from the following group: Dennis Dalen, graduate student, and wife, Marcia, St. Louis Park, Minn.; Nancy Vunovich, Arkansas City graduate student; Ann Runge Glaze, Higginsville, Mo., graduate student; Vincent Angotti, Independence, Mo., graduate student; Steve and Julia Callahan, Lawrence graduate students, and Mr. and Mrs. Hoite Caston, KU graduates. Lewin Goff, director of KU theatre, said some members may form a tour group which will make appearances outside Lawrence in connection with KU's centennial celebration. U.N. Crisis First Job Facing New U.S. Envoy UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. —(UPI) Arthur J. Goldberg plunged into his new job as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations yesterday with solution of the world organization's paralyzing constitutional crisis as his first order of business. Goldberg presented his credentials to Secretary General Thant and delivered a letter from President Johnson asking for U.N. help to remove the Viet Nam conflict "from the battlefield to the negotiating table." Sweden Pledges Funds UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI) Sweden announced it is contributing $240,000 to the cost of the U.N. peace-keeping force on Cyprus for June 20 through Dec. 26. 161 Jayhawks Pass English Pro. 80% Passed Last Three Exams An every man-for-himself war was waged June 19. This war was a struggle by 202 KU students to conquer the English Proficiency Examination. Armed with pens, dictionaries and notebooks, the 202 students took the examination in Flint Hall. This was the smallest number yet this year to do battle with the test. There were 715 KU students trying in the spring, and 1133 in the fall. However, it seems that the number of students taking the test did not affect the percentage passing it. In each case 80 per cent of the students passed and 20 per cent had to try again, according to James E. Seaver, chairman of the English proficiency committee. Those passing the June 19 exam (number indicates year, initial indicates school): Richard Noel Adams, 3B; Cheryl L. Alexander, 3F; Carol Lynn Alvey, 3A; Diane Jane Anderson, 3F; Mike Frank Armstrong, 3F; Karen Ann Baldwin, 4D; Larry Cast Bast, 3F; Dorothy Bause, Cary Baste, Billy Hill K, 3A; Calvin B, Berggren, 3B; Victoria Bergin, 4D; Judith Kay Bernhardt, 3D; Walter H, Biddle, 2A; Peter Vane Bierly, 3A; Virginia C, Bliesner, 3A; Mary Louise Bolton, 2A; Charles W. Bowen, 2A; James H. Boylan, 2A; Robert Bridges, 4D; James Eastgate Brink, 3A; Nancy Marie Brown, 4F; Rosaie T. Bruington, 4D; Peggy Ann Cade, 3F. Carole Ann Calano, 3A; David W. Carrillhers, 3A; Murry Alvin Carter, 3A; Marcia Kline, 3A; Richard C. Clock, 2A; Linda Anne Cooksey, 3A; Carolyn Sue Crain, 3D; Elizabeth S Cummins, 3A; Charles M Thomas, 3A; Katherine Maith An Dason, 3A; William C Dehaas, 4A; Eugene Dermaumel, 4D; Mary Lee Dewdert, 3D; Lois Lorene Dody, 3D; Duncan Banks, 3D; Kwilenin Z. Eden, 3A; Patricia E Edwards, 3D; Ronnie Inc Eickemeyer, 4D; Nancy Einsel, 3A; J Randy Elmore Efwanga, 4B; Embrey, 3A; Ebensee N Fkwanga, 4B Lowell Eugene Farr, 3B; Ruth L. Faulhi, 3A; Robert Allen Ford, 4A; Richard A. Fornelli, 2A; Norman Stanley Fott, 5E; Carlo Barducci, 3A;arry L. Barry, 2A; John Howard Gilbert, 4A;Robert Alan Glantz, 4A; Julie Marjean Glenn, 3A; Grant D. Goodman, 3B; Gwynn Arlene Grady, 4D; Earl Lee Haehl, 3J; Marnie Louise Hall 4F; Momans R. Hannon, 3B; Jonathan Holmes, 3B; Jane Braham, 3D; Jane Kenyon Hansen, 4D; William Larry Hanson, 4B; Deborah Rue Hardman, NM; Kathleen Harrington, 4D; Chery Gay Henszel, 3A; G. H. Harrellson Jr., 4A; Jo Hentts Hetzel, 2F; Mona Gayle Hobson, 3A. PAUL WALLACE HOBSON, AF; Gerald Lee Holcomb, 3A; Nancy Rose House, 4D; Patricia Ann Hudson, 3A; Robin John Huggins, 3A; Lisa Hauser, 3A; Thomas W. Hutchinson, 4A; Judith Ann Jackson, 5F; William G. Johnson, 4D; Harold W. Kaeckley, 4D; James Wn. Kapp Jr., 4A; Richard J. Noll, 4A; Karin Kleins Klampen, 4D; Frances Leekoda, 4D; Stephen Guy Lake, 3A; Larry A. Lawrence, 4D; Walter Edwin Lietzen, 3A; Lawrence R. Lindberg, 3D; Finn Johan Malmberg, 3B; Barbara Kearne, 3A; Mason, 4D; Patricia Ann Grew, 3A; Lois Dorothy Metzler, NM. Mary Esther Meyer, 2A; Thomas H. Mitchell, 4B; Fred B. Montgomery Jr., 2J; Joseph Robb Moore, 3A; Larry Lee Morris, 3E; Richard L. Morris, 4D; Reinhard C. Moxon, 3A; Catherine Murray, 3E; Drew C. Wagner, 3B; Bet A. Noe, 3D; Martha Sue Norris, 3D; Frank L. O'Brien, 4A; Karen Kay O'Brien, 2A; Sharon D. Oouzar, 4L; Lynda Lee Parkkison, NM; Raymond L. Pendleton, 3E; Patricia R. Phipps, 9L; Victoria C. Williams, 9L; Pierce, 3A; Suar, Pierce, 3D; Roger G. Pilley, 4L; Carol Ann Pishny, 3A; Shirley E. Potter, 3D; Jo Ward Presbury, 4F; Owen Wayne Prince, 4D. Garold Alva Pryor, 2A; Barbara Jean Qandil, 3A; Larry Dean Ratzell, 4R; Richard Dean Reitzel, 4A; Pamela Kay Reynolds, 4D; Ralph W. Roddeck, 4A; Sharon Kay Rogers, 4D; Jay Cauley, 4R; Routler, Mary Dealer, 4E; Jane L. Sawyer, 2F; Linda E. Sayers, 4A; Jane Schendel, 4A; Clinton Ray Schmidt, 4A; Mary Ann Schneider, 3D; Julia Penn Shaw, 4D; Larry Dean Simpson, 4A; Robert B. Sklar, 4F; Stephen Stone, 5E; Susan Jay Cauley, 2D; Candace Glen Tolars, 4D; Josephine Thomson, 3A; Dlores J. Tolar, 2A; Thomas K. Tucker, 4F. Gus Steve Vakas, 34; Manuel J. Vargas, 2F; Richard Kent Nove, 3F; Terry Finger, 2F; David Wheeler, 4D; Harry Wever, 2A; Kenneth G. Wilson, 5J; Eerry J. Ainburn, 5E; Thomas Dale Windelau, 3A; John Todd Winkler, 2B; Wintet Tice, 3F; Mary Anna C. Tru- 4A. Terms in War Fraud ROME — (UPI) — A Rome court sentenced 40 defendants in a war pension fraud case to prison terms ranging from nine months to five years. They were convicted of forging medical certificates so that war invalids could get higher pensions. Patronize Your Kanson Advertisers For aid to study ... Review For Final Exams ... COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES • By SCHAUMS Theory and sample problems worked . . . Physics Calculus Algebra Chemistry Trigonometry Analytic Geometry • By BARNES & NOBLE LITTLEFIELD